At Riker's Door — Worf Seeks Counsel
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Worf approaches Riker's cabin, hesitating momentarily before ringing the bell.
Riker grants Worf entry into his quarters with a simple command.
Worf enters Riker's quarters, the door closing behind him.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Conflicted and restrained — surface stoicism masking the pressure of Klingon blood‑memory and a need for guidance; anxious about impending moral action.
Worf approaches Riker's cabin, hesitates on the threshold, rings the bell, then enters at Riker's invitation — physically present but inwardly braced, seeking counsel while containing a rush of conflicted impulses.
- • To seek guidance or permission from his commanding officer on handling the Romulan survivor.
- • To reconcile his Klingon urge for vengeance with his obligations to Starfleet procedure and honor.
- • Believes his Klingon heritage demands honor and potentially violent retribution for wrongdoing.
- • Believes Starfleet duty and chain of command require restraint and that senior officers' counsel is legitimate and binding.
Measured and quietly attentive — outward calm that contains an understanding of the issue's gravity and readiness to counsel or command as needed.
Riker responds to Worf's knock with a terse 'Come.', opens the door and admits him, projecting controlled authority and creating a deliberately private setting for a potentially fraught conversation.
- • To hear Worf out and assess his mindset before the imminent moral decision.
- • To assert Starfleet protocol and provide leadership that will prevent rash, culturally motivated violence.
- • Believes chain of command and private counsel are effective means to resolve internal conflicts among crew.
- • Believes Worf respects him and will be receptive to reasoned guidance delivered in a private, respectful setting.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
Riker's quarters functions as the private locus where public duty yields to candid counsel; the opened door and admission convert a brief corridor encounter into an intimate moral confessional that enables frank advice and command influence.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
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Key Dialogue
"Riker: "Come.""