Fabula
S3E1 · Evolution
S3E1
· Evolution

Protocol B: Containment and Conjecture

After a near-fatal electrocution in sickbay, Picard moves quickly to contain a now-proven shipboard emergency: he orders Protocol B, restricts access to power components, and places Data on sensor duty. The bridge fractures into competing hypotheses — Worf's tactical alarm, Riker's pragmatic reading of the data, and Troi's unnerving null-detection — while Wesley silently confronts the possibility that his work has precipitated something beyond human control. This beat functions as a decisive turning point, trading medical rescue for shipwide quarantine and ratcheting the ethical and tactical stakes.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

2

Beverly Crusher reveals the severity of the situation, stating that if the crew member had been alone, he would have died.

concern to alarm

Picard issues immediate orders to restrict access to power components and ensure protocol "B" is enforced.

alarm to command

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

7

Worried, shameful, and quietly panicked; trying to reconcile youthful ownership of experiments with potential catastrophic consequences.

Wesley is physically present but silent; the report and Picard's measures send him inward, considering that his own experiment might have precipitated the emergency and feeling mounting guilt and fear.

Goals in this moment
  • Understand whether his nanite experiment caused the incident
  • Avoid further harm and, if possible, take corrective action
Active beliefs
  • His work could have unintended, dangerous side effects
  • Owning up to responsibility is necessary even if it risks blame
Character traits
introspective guilt-ridden anxious responsible
Follow Wesley Crusher's journey

Resolved and urgent with an undercurrent of concern; outward control masks the gravity he feels about potential shipwide harm.

Picard hears the medical report, instantly translates medical danger into command measures: orders quarters, invokes Protocol B to restrict power component access, and assigns Data to sensor watch while sitting heavily and thinking.

Goals in this moment
  • Contain the immediate technical/biological threat to crew and ship systems
  • Preserve command control by restricting access and channeling technical work through Riker
  • Establish reliable external intelligence via sensors to determine if threat is external
Active beliefs
  • The safety of the crew and integrity of the ship supersede other considerations
  • Immediate, centralized control of critical systems reduces risk of further accidental damage
  • Conflicting sensor reports must be reconciled before escalating to lethal measures
Character traits
decisive authoritative strategic morally weighty
Follow Jean-Luc Picard's journey

Clinical concentration; dedicated to the assigned analytical duty without panic.

Data is ordered to remain on the sensors; he becomes the bridge's external eyes, tasked with continued detection and analysis of anomalous signatures beyond the ship.

Goals in this moment
  • Detect and identify any external phenomena impacting the Enterprise
  • Provide objective sensor data to inform command decisions
Active beliefs
  • Sensor data can reveal the origin and nature of the threat
  • Sustained monitoring increases the likelihood of catching transient signals
Character traits
focused methodical reliable emotionally neutral
Follow Data's journey

Alarmed and combative beneath a restraint of duty; assumes hostile intent as default when ship safety is at risk.

Worf reacts to Picard's look and voices a tactical hypothesis: the incident might be an attack rather than mere computer failure, injecting suspicion and urgency into the bridge's threat assessment.

Goals in this moment
  • Identify whether the anomaly is hostile in origin
  • Prompt defensive measures to prevent further harm
Active beliefs
  • When vital systems fail, external attack is a plausible and dangerous explanation
  • Immediate tactical caution is preferable to optimistic technical explanations
Character traits
alert suspicious direct defensive
Follow Worf's journey

Concerned but controlled; leaning toward confirming Picard's worst suspicions and preparing to execute orders.

Riker reports sensor reads (no life in the stellar system), endorses the gravity of the situation, and offers the operational reading that the Enterprise is being compromised, acting as Picard's pragmatic foil.

Goals in this moment
  • Provide accurate sensor-based situational awareness
  • Support command decisions and manage enforcement of restrictions
Active beliefs
  • Hard sensor data should drive operational response
  • The ship must be treated as vulnerable until proven otherwise
Character traits
pragmatic supportive analytical steady
Follow William Riker's journey

Concerned and serious; prioritizing human life and using medical authority to push command toward protective measures.

Doctor Beverly Crusher delivers the clinical fact that the electrocution was nearly fatal and warns of lethal potential if the victim had been alone, framing the incident as urgent medical evidence rather than abstract anomaly.

Goals in this moment
  • Ensure crew safety and prevent further casualties
  • Convey the true severity of the medical incident so command takes it seriously
Active beliefs
  • Medical facts must shape operational decisions when lives are at risk
  • The electrocution is a symptom of a larger systems failure that could threaten others
Character traits
compassionate clinically precise grave protective
Follow Beverly Crusher's journey

Tentative and concerned; she provides measured counsel rather than certainty, highlighting unknowns about the phenomenon's nature.

Counselor Troi replies that she perceives no life force or ill will, but caveats her perception's limits — offering an empathic data point that undercuts and complicates tactical and technical theories.

Goals in this moment
  • Contribute psychological/empathic information to the threat assessment
  • Prevent premature escalation based solely on fear
Active beliefs
  • Her empathic faculty is a useful but limited tool for detecting non-human intelligences
  • The absence of sensed hostility does not guarantee safety
Character traits
empathic cautious honest temperate
Follow Deanna Troi's journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

1
Borg Vessel

A sensor return briefly painted a Borg vessel signature that the bridge later acknowledged did not exist; the false contact functions narratively as a red herring, escalating fear and prompting defensive hypotheses about external attack.

Before: Sensor readout flagged a geometric, machine-like contact consistent …
After: The detection was reinterpreted as a non-existent or …
Before: Sensor readout flagged a geometric, machine-like contact consistent with a Borg vessel, unnerving the bridge.
After: The detection was reinterpreted as a non-existent or false signature, leaving the crew uncertain whether sensors can be trusted.

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

3
Main Bridge

Science One (the aft science/sensors station on the main bridge) functions as the operational node where Data will remain to sweep for external anomalies; it anchors the bridge's attempt to convert fear into measurable data and houses the consoles that give the crew authority to act.

Atmosphere Tense, watchful, and tightly controlled; the bridge hums with suppressed alarm and concentrated attention.
Function Primary sensor and monitoring station; focal point for external detection and information flow to command.
Symbolism Represents the thin margin between knowledge and uncertainty — the place where objective data must …
Access Operational access limited by command orders (Data assigned; power component access restricted under Protocol B …
Humming consoles and sensor displays Close-knit seating of senior staff with narrow sightlines to the main viewer A silence punctuated by diagnostic readouts and terse speech
Delphi Ardu System

The unidentified stellar system serves as the external context referenced by Riker's sensor sweep — it yielded no signs of life and thus becomes part of the evidence that the anomaly isn't a local life-bearing threat but may be an engineered or synthetic phenomenon.

Atmosphere Cold and empty as represented by sterile sensor language; it deepens the crew's sense of …
Function External testbed for sensor reads; provides negative data that shapes tactical conclusions.
Symbolism Represents the emptiness and unknown that contrasts with the ship's interior vulnerability.
Sensor returns indicating no sign of life A spatial void that intensifies uncertainty about the anomaly's origin
Sickbay (USS Enterprise)

Sickbay is the origin point of the crisis: a near-fatal electrocution occurred there and Beverly's report from that location supplies the concrete human cost that triggers Picard's containment orders.

Atmosphere Grave and clinical in memory—Beverly's short report carries the sterile urgency of a medical bay …
Function Evidence source and moral catalyst; supplies the factual basis forcing command into quarantine posture.
Symbolism Embodies the human stakes behind technical failures, converting abstract system faults into real bodily danger.
Access Implied medical control and triage protocols; access would be limited to medical and authorized personnel.
Clinical tone in Beverly's delivery Implication of stretchers and diagnostic equipment (recent trauma) The echo of a life-or-death incident shaping bridge decisions

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

No narrative connections mapped yet

This event is currently isolated in the narrative graph


Themes This Exemplifies

Thematic resonance and meaning

Key Dialogue

"BEVERLY: If he had been alone, he would have died."
"PICARD: Advise everyone to remain in their quarters when not on duty. Protocol "B" access to all power components. Nobody else uses them unless it's cleared by Commander Riker."
"TROI: I perceive no life force, Captain... no feelings of ill will. But I am not attuned to every form of life."