Lwaxana's Corridor Declaration: Naming Picard
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Deanna presses her mother about the 'stage' of her condition in a bustling corridor; Lwaxana breezes past with smiles and claims she has it under control.
Lwaxana admits it’s far enough along for her to enjoy, prompting Deanna to call out the revealing dress; Lwaxana laughs off the implication as harmless.
Shaken, Deanna asks what they should do; Lwaxana declares the 'honorable' course is to choose a partner and names the captain as front-runner.
Deanna forbids it, but Lwaxana counters with a telepathic jab—he was thinking about it all through dinner—turning the threat into a claimed reciprocity.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Worried and embarrassed on the surface; professionally alert and protective beneath the panic—balancing filial concern with duty to the ship's decorum.
Deanna Troi is animated and alarmed, repeatedly pressing her mother for the 'stage' of the Betazoid phase while registering mortification at Lwaxana's dress and the public setting; she voices practical worry and tries to contain the situation.
- • Determine how advanced her mother's 'phase' is to assess risk of public incident
- • Prevent public embarrassment and diplomatic fallout aboard the Enterprise
- • Her mother's Betazoid biology can cause socially disruptive behavior if unchecked
- • Maintaining decorum aboard the Enterprise (and protecting delegates/diplomacy) is a priority she must uphold
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
Mrs. Troi's provocative evening dress functions as the visible signifier of her Betazoid 'phase'—it triggers Deanna's worried reaction, anchors the verbal accusation and fuels the comic/diplomatic tension of the exchange by making private desire publicly legible.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The Enterprise corridor is the public stage where a private Betazoid condition is exposed; its narrow, utilitarian passage forces an intimate mother-daughter confrontation into view of passers-by, amplifying embarrassment and suggesting potential diplomatic consequences aboard the ship.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
No narrative connections mapped yet
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Key Dialogue
"TROI: "What stage is it in?""
"MRS. TROI: "I'm going to do the only honorable thing there is to do. And I'd say the captain has the inside track.""
"TROI: "Don't even think it!""
"MRS. TROI: "Why not? He was thinking about it all through dinner.""