S2E19
· Manhunt

Lwaxana Declares an 'Alternate Plan'

Picard slips into the Dixon Hill fantasy just as a family complication intrudes: Lwaxana Troi appears, affronted that ‘ship’s business’ makes Picard unavailable. Her hurt flashes through petulant banter — she dismisses Picard as "too old" — then pivots from wounded indignation to command. Circling Homn and the impossibly colored drinks, she announces an "alternate plan," effectively seizing control of the social dynamic. This beat functions as an escalation: personal rivalry and protocol collide, and Lwaxana’s bold move sets up the episode’s comedic chaos and ethical pressure that will force other characters to react.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

2

Lwaxana confronts Deanna about Picard being 'unavailable' and balks at ship’s business outranking her, then masks the bruise by dismissing him as too old. Deanna stays firm and unruffled.

surprise to dismissive confidence

Pivoting fast, Lwaxana launches her 'alternate plan' with Homn amid multi-colored drinks while Deanna questions her. Lwaxana claims total control and drives the pursuit forward.

concern to determined momentum ['near several tall glasses of multi-colored …

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

4

Pleased and amused on the surface — using the holonovel as respite and deflection — quietly avoiding domestic accountability while masking any irritation with practiced charm.

Enters Chandlerland reception, greets the secretary with a pleased smile, removes hat and coat to assume the Dixon Hill posture, delivers the comic ritual line about paying the tailor and stalling the landlord, and retreats toward his office seeking refuge from duty when family intrudes.

Goals in this moment
  • Indulge briefly in a controlled escapist ritual (Dixon Hill persona).
  • Maintain comic rhythm and personal composure in front of the secretary.
  • Avoid immediate confrontation with family/social obligations.
  • Preserve the illusion of control in his private refuge.
Active beliefs
  • Small rituals restore his equilibrium and are worth preserving.
  • Ship's formal business legitimately supersedes personal entreaties.
  • Maintaining decorum keeps situations from escalating.
  • He can step back into duty without long-term personal cost.
Character traits
ritualistic measured wry evasive
Follow Jean-Luc Picard's journey

Embarrassed and apologetic, trying to reconcile filial obligation with professional responsibility; internally bemoans the public awkwardness while upholding duty.

Revealed standing across from Mrs. Troi; speaks briefly to confirm ship's business takes precedence, appearing more surprised and embarrassed than angry at her mother's intrusion while remaining professionally restrained.

Goals in this moment
  • Defend the captain's duty and the ship's schedule.
  • De-escalate her mother's public complaint and embarrassment.
  • Maintain professional decorum despite family intrusion.
  • Protect Picard from overt domestic embarrassment.
Active beliefs
  • The mission and ship's business must come first.
  • Family entreaties are secondary to diplomatic/professional obligations.
  • Her mother's behavior, though unpredictable, must be managed delicately.
  • Public displays of familial conflict harm operational legitimacy.
Character traits
dutiful mortified protective restrained
Follow Deanna Troi's journey

Calm, deferential, and nonreactive; his physical bow speaks compliance rather than opinion or emotion.

Stands quietly sampling several tall, multi-colored drinks; when Mrs. Troi announces her 'alternate plan,' Homn responds with a deep, formal bow signaling assent and readiness to follow instructions without verbal comment.

Goals in this moment
  • Serve and support Mrs. Troi's social agenda.
  • Provide silent, ritual endorsement of her commands.
  • Anticipate and enact her instructions as needed.
  • Stabilize the social scene through ceremonial behavior.
Active beliefs
  • Mrs. Troi's directives merit immediate, unquestioned obedience.
  • Silent ceremony (bowing) suffices to communicate alignment and respect.
  • Maintaining formal ritual calms social unpredictability.
  • His role is to materially and symbolically back Mrs. Troi.
Character traits
taciturn obedient ceremonial attentive
Follow Mr. Homn's journey

Amused and teasing; she plays companion to Picard's ritual and amplifies its comic cadence while subtly exposing mundane pressures.

Perched behind the reception desk, she produces a small notepad, reads off two calls with a comic quip invoking Hitler, laughs to herself, picks up and hangs up the phone, and repeats the barber/landlord refrain that punctuates Picard's ritual.

Goals in this moment
  • Sustain the noir-reception rhythm and banter that comforts Picard.
  • Relay practical obligations that puncture the fantasy (calls/messages).
  • Use humor to manage tension in the room.
  • Anchor the scene's timing through small actions (notepad, phone).
Active beliefs
  • Ritual banter is essential to the Dixon Hill illusion.
  • Mundane obligations persist even in escapist spaces.
  • A wry aside can both entertain and deflate seriousness.
  • Her role is to facilitate the protagonist's comfort and cue the audience.
Character traits
sardonic efficient playful observant
Follow Dixon Hill …'s journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

6
Dixon Hill Reception Chair

The swivel chair provides the secretary mobility to pivot, pick up the phone, and punctuate timing; her swivels and gestures from the chair help set the scene's comic rhythm and reactions to both Picard and the unexpected family arrival.

Before: Occupied by the secretary behind the desk.
After: Remains occupied/nearby after the brief phone interaction; its …
Before: Occupied by the secretary behind the desk.
After: Remains occupied/nearby after the brief phone interaction; its motion has punctuated the action.
1940s Detective Trench Coat

Picard's 1940s detective trench coat is removed as he enters the reception, serving as a physical signifier of his Dixon Hill persona and his attempt to shed command stress; its removal marks transfer from duty into ritual performance.

Before: Worn by Picard as he enters the reception …
After: Removed and presumably hung or set aside as …
Before: Worn by Picard as he enters the reception room.
After: Removed and presumably hung or set aside as he moves into his office; the coat's presence in the room signals the ongoing holonovel.
Dixon Hill Reception Desk

The reception desk anchors the scene physically and ritually: the secretary sits behind it, uses its surface for notepad and phone, and it becomes the stage from which the Dixon Hill interplay and the intrusion of Mrs. Troi are played out.

Before: Set in place as the functional focal point …
After: Still in place, serving as the fixed center …
Before: Set in place as the functional focal point of Dixon Hill's reception, with props arranged atop it.
After: Still in place, serving as the fixed center of interaction between Picard, the secretary, and the arriving Troi family members.
Dixon Hill Secretary's Small Notepad

The small notepad is produced by the Dixon Hill secretary as a timing and comic device: she checks entries that cue her punchlines, reads off calls (tailor/landlord), and uses the pad to punctuate the ritual exchange that undercuts Picard's fantasy with mundane obligations.

Before: Resting on the secretary's desk, closed or lightly …
After: Returned to the desk after use; remains a …
Before: Resting on the secretary's desk, closed or lightly scuffed but readily accessible.
After: Returned to the desk after use; remains a visible prop anchoring the receptionist's ritualized actions.
Dixon Hill Secretary's Telephone

The period-styled telephone is lifted, used to simulate contact with the tailor and landlord, and hung up as part of the secretary's comic routine; the device turns off-stage obligations into an on-stage beat that interrupts Picard's escape.

Before: On the reception desk, idle and within reach.
After: Placed back on the desk; the call was …
Before: On the reception desk, idle and within reach.
After: Placed back on the desk; the call was hung up and the device remains unchanged but narratively active.
Tall Glasses of Multi-Colored Liquids

A small tableau of tall, multi-colored drinks functions as social mise-en-scène: Homn samples them and Mrs. Troi moves toward them when she shifts into command, using them as focal props that help her stage the 'alternate plan' and claim control of the room's atmosphere.

Before: Arranged on a side surface within the reception …
After: Being sampled and positioned as part of Mrs. …
Before: Arranged on a side surface within the reception room, untouched except for Homn beginning to sample them.
After: Being sampled and positioned as part of Mrs. Troi's social maneuver; remain on the table as tactile elements of her plan.

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

1
Dixon Hill's Reception Room

Dixon Hill's reception room (a Chandlerland holodeck locus) functions as Picard's short-lived sanctuary where ritual and identity are performed. The space's noir tropes (desk, notepad, swivel chair, colorful drinks) frame intimacy and comic role-play until Mrs. Troi's intrusion converts it into a public stage for familial power dynamics.

Atmosphere Warmly nostalgic and playful at first, shifting abruptly toward awkwardly charged and performative when family …
Function Private refuge and ritual stage that becomes the site of a public social confrontation.
Symbolism Represents Picard's need for controlled fantasy and the fragility of private rituals under real-world social …
Access Nominally a private holodeck recreation, but physically accessible to visitors who enter the program (no …
Dim, period-styled reception lighting and props evoking 1940s noir. Reception desk with notepad and corded phone as tactile anchors. A small array of tall, multi-colored drinks used as social props. Swivel chair motion and the spatial intimacy of the room making intrusions immediate and embarrassing.

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

"PICARD: "Pay the tailor and stall the landlord.""
"MRS. TROI: "Ship's business takes precedence over me?""
"MRS. TROI: "Homn, let's consider my alternate plan.""