S2E10
· The Dauphin

Engineering Grounds the Ship — Wesley Sent to Stores

After the Enterprise drops out of warp, Chief Engineer Geordi La Forge reports overdue deuterium conduit work that will disable warp for hours. Picard and Riker weigh mission tempo against safety and order standard orbit, turning a technical maintenance need into an operational constraint that raises time pressure on the upcoming rescue. Geordi immediately delegates a parts run — asking a eager Wesley for an S‑C‑M Model Three — both establishing Wesley's active, hands‑on role and setting up interpersonal stakes beneath the ship's technical crisis.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

1

THE ENTERPRISE establishes orbit about a large yellow planet; GEORDI crosses to WESLEY, requests an S-C-M, model three from stores, and WESLEY answers 'Right away' before exiting, initiating the hands-on work that will occupy Engineering.

steady to proactive ['orbit about a large yellow planet']

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

5

Enthusiastic and attentive—eager to be useful and demonstrate competence, with undercurrent of wanting approval from senior officers.

Present in Main Engineering, accepts Geordi's request without hesitation, offers a prompt verbal acknowledgement, and physically exits to retrieve the requested S‑C‑M Model Three from stores.

Goals in this moment
  • Retrieve the S‑C‑M Model Three quickly and correctly.
  • Demonstrate reliability and technical aptitude to Geordi and the senior crew.
Active beliefs
  • Following orders promptly is the right and expected behavior.
  • Small, competent actions will earn respect and advancement.
Character traits
eager dutiful responsive youngly ambitious
Follow Wesley Crusher's journey

Controlled and pragmatic—seeking information to weigh operational choices, then deferring to Riker's judgment while maintaining command responsibility.

On the Main Bridge, Picard asks for the estimated repair time, receives the report, acknowledges Riker's decision with a nod, and allows the engineering work to proceed under command authority.

Goals in this moment
  • Ascertain the duration of repairs to evaluate diplomatic and rescue timing.
  • Ensure decisions align with Starfleet protocols and overall mission priorities.
Active beliefs
  • Informed decisions require precise technical estimates.
  • Command choices should balance mission objectives with crew safety.
Character traits
measured diplomatic authoritative inquisitive
Follow Jean-Luc Picard's journey

Measured and authoritative—pragmatic acceptance of necessary constraint, prioritizing crew and ship safety over speed.

On the Main Bridge, Riker interprets Geordi's report for command implications, advises Picard, authorizes La Forge to proceed, and orders the ship into standard orbit—balancing mission urgency with safety.

Goals in this moment
  • Prevent risking the ship by denying warp while critical repairs are needed.
  • Maintain mission control and keep diplomatic timetable within safe bounds.
Active beliefs
  • Operational safety supersedes haste in uncertain technical situations.
  • Chain-of-command decisions should be clear and promptly executed to avoid confusion.
Character traits
decisive practical command-focused protective
Follow William Riker's journey

Focused and dutiful—professional acceptance of orders and immediate action to comply.

At the Conn on the Main Bridge, Gibson acknowledges and executes the order to assume standard orbit, translating bridge commands into precise ship handling.

Goals in this moment
  • Establish and maintain the commanded standard orbit precisely.
  • Execute bridge orders without error to support engineering operations.
Active beliefs
  • Following bridge commands quickly preserves ship safety and mission integrity.
  • Technical constraints must be respected and implemented exactly as ordered.
Character traits
attentive procedural reliable
Follow Young Ensign's journey

Concerned and businesslike—alert to operational risk but calm and efficient in managing logistics and delegating to crew.

At Main Engineering, Geordi reports the overdue deuterium control conduit repairs, gives a time estimate via comms, crosses to Wesley and delegates the parts requisition for an S‑C‑M Model Three before repairs begin.

Goals in this moment
  • Complete necessary deuterium conduit adjustments correctly and safely.
  • Obtain required replacement part (S‑C‑M Model Three) quickly to minimize downtime.
  • Follow Starfleet protocol while protecting the ship's operational readiness.
Active beliefs
  • Delaying maintenance risks greater system failure or danger.
  • Proper delegation to capable crew (Wesley) is both efficient and part of his responsibility.
Character traits
pragmatic procedural decisive technically focused
Follow Geordi La …'s journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

2
Ship's Stores Compartment

The Ship's Stores Compartment is invoked as the source location for the requested S‑C‑M Model Three; it becomes the immediate logistical destination for Wesley's parts run, converting an abstract technical need into a tangible retrieval task.

Before: Organized and stocked with spare modules including S‑C‑M …
After: Awaiting retrieval of an S‑C‑M Model Three by …
Before: Organized and stocked with spare modules including S‑C‑M Model Three components, awaiting requisition.
After: Awaiting retrieval of an S‑C‑M Model Three by Wesley; inventory will be decremented once the part is removed for engineering use.
Deuterium Control Conduit

The Deuterium Control Conduit is identified as overdue for routine adjustments; its required maintenance is the causal trigger for the operational decision to forgo warp. It functions narratively as the technical fault that forces command-level tradeoffs between speed and safety.

Before: Installed and active within Main Engineering but exhibiting …
After: Scheduled for hands-on adjustment; effectively taken offline for …
Before: Installed and active within Main Engineering but exhibiting wear; showing scorch marks and diagnostic flicker indicating overdue maintenance.
After: Scheduled for hands-on adjustment; effectively taken offline for the duration of the repairs, which will preclude warp operation for several hours.

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

4
Main Bridge

The Main Bridge functions as the decision node converting an engineering report into command action. Picard and Riker assess risk and issue the order to assume standard orbit, translating technical constraints into strategic choice.

Atmosphere Disciplined and formal, with calm but decisive exchanges and the low tension of operational consequence.
Function Command center where tactical and diplomatic ramifications are weighed and orders issued.
Symbolism Embodies institutional authority and the burden of command; decisions made here shape the ship's fate.
Access Restricted to bridge officers and authorized personnel during active operations.
Curved LCARS consoles glow; forward viewscreen displays the nearby yellow planet. Clipped confirmations, the hum of processors, and the Conn officer awaiting orders.
U.S.S. Enterprise Orbiting Velara III

The Enterprise's orbit around the large yellow planet provides the contextual constraint: proximity to the diplomatic objective heightens the cost of delay and frames the operational consequence of the repair.

Atmosphere A sense of suspended motion — the ship halted in orbit, time compressed by maintenance …
Function External setting that makes the decision to assume standard orbit tactically visible and narratively urgent.
Symbolism Symbolizes the mission's pause and the friction between duty and speed in service of safety.
Pale amber sunlight on hull plates visible from the bridge. Orbital visuals on the viewscreen anchoring the crew's awareness of location and timing.
Main Engineering

Main Engineering is the site where the technical problem is discovered and managed. It hosts Geordi and Wesley's hands‑on exchange, diagnostics, and the immediate logistics for repair — the practical heart of the ship's operational response.

Atmosphere Focused, alert, and technically intense with a low hum of machinery and clipped procedural speech.
Function Workspace for diagnostics and repair; staging area for delegating tasks and preparing for downtime.
Symbolism Represents the ship's mechanical vulnerability and the quiet professionalism that keeps the Enterprise running.
Access Typically restricted to engineering personnel and authorized crew during maintenance operations.
Diagnostic displays flicker; handheld probes are in use. Catwalks, hum of reactor-related systems, and the tactile movement of engineers and apprentices.
Ship's Stores

Ship's Stores is invoked as the logistical source for the S‑C‑M Model Three; it stands ready to convert the engineering request into a physical component and thus shorten repair time if accessed efficiently.

Atmosphere Utilitarian and slightly cramped, humming with machinery and the faint smell of oil—practical and unceremonious.
Function Supplier location for spare parts and consumables, enabling repairs and sustaining operational tempo.
Symbolism Represents the mundane but essential supply chain that underpins larger heroic efforts.
Access Accessible to authorized maintenance personnel and stores clerks; not a public space.
Metal shelving with labeled crates. Narrow aisles and fluorescents casting hard light over inventory tags.

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

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Themes This Exemplifies

Thematic resonance and meaning

Key Dialogue

"GEORDI: Bridge, this is Engineering."
"RIKER: That would preclude use of our warp drive engines."
"GEORDI: I am going to need an S-C-M, model three, from stores. WESLEY: Right away."