Picard's Long‑Range Transport Gamble
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Worf snaps the bridge to alert, reporting an emergency transponder signal that identifies Commander Riker; the bridge stiffens and Troi averts her eyes, the emotional temperature rising instantly. The announcement converts quiet routine into immediate crisis, forcing command to respond.
Picard orders Chief O'Brien to align the transporter with the emergency transponder and touches his com link, converting alert into directed action. The bridge pivots from notification to tactical preparation as command seeks a way to recover Riker.
O'Brien reports the Transporter Room is empty, the ship is out of safe range, and defensive shields remain raised, establishing a hard technical constraint. The realization forces the command team to weigh risk against the imperative to recover Riker.
Picard authorizes a risky extension of the transporter range—'on my command'—while Worf announces distance metrics, turning a tactical problem into an imminent gamble. The decision hardens resolve and raises the stakes: someone will push the transporter past safe limits.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Alert and clinically prepared; willing to act without theatricalism but alert to potential casualties.
Obeys Data's order and moves with Worf into the Transporter Room to assist medically if needed; present for the technical handoff and prepared to assess any recovered personnel.
- • Provide immediate medical assessment and treatment if Riker is beamed aboard.
- • Support transporter operations to ensure the safety of personnel during the risky transfer.
- • Medical readiness is essential in any recovery; early intervention improves survival.
- • Following orders and being physically present at the transporter optimizes patient outcome.
Anxious but dutiful — audible nervousness tempered by commitment to accurate timing.
Performs the distance countdown aloud ('Forty‑five thousand', 'Forty‑four thousand', etc.), reporting closing range and displaying nervous concentration while assisting the Transporter Room as instructed.
- • Provide accurate range readings critical to transporter timing.
- • Execute orders precisely to facilitate a safe transfer despite risk.
- • Strict adherence to measured timing is necessary for transporter success.
- • Protocol and careful counting will mitigate the danger introduced by stretching range.
Controlled determination — calm externally but resolute in accepting operational risk to recover a crew member.
Receives the bridge report, touches the com link and issues the decisive order to align with the emergency transponder despite safety constraints; authorizes stretching transporter range 'on my command' and delegates shield control to the Transporter Room.
- • Recover Commander Riker as quickly as possible.
- • Balance the obligation to crew safety with willingness to bend protocol when necessary.
- • Command responsibility includes taking measured risks to save subordinates.
- • Chain of command and coordinated procedure will minimize the danger inherent in stretching transporter safety.
Measured and composed; acting as a stabilizing intellect amid rising tension.
Assumes operational clarity by assigning personnel and sequencing actions: sends Worf and Pulaski to the Transporter Room and orders Mendon to take over the count — providing structure and immediate delegation.
- • Organize a technically sound recovery operation with clear roles.
- • Maintain bridge order and ensure tasks are delegated to minimize error.
- • Clear instructions and role allocation reduce risk in high-stakes technical operations.
- • Procedural discipline is the best defense against unforeseen complications.
Focused and resolute; externally calm but primed for immediate action.
Detects and announces an emergency transponder signal identifying Riker, calls out range updates (e.g., 'Forty‑eight thousand'), gives Mendon a final warning look, then leaves his bridge station and moves toward the Transporter Room to participate in the recovery.
- • Ensure the transporter operation proceeds correctly and safely under orders.
- • Protect the officer to be recovered and follow Starfleet protocol while accommodating Picard's directive.
- • Starfleet duty requires immediate, competent response to a distress beacon.
- • Technical precision (timing and procedure) can compensate for risk introduced by stretching transporter parameters.
Quietly anxious and concerned; contains visible emotion to avoid disrupting command functions.
Reacts to the announcement of the emergency transponder by averting her eyes to hide her emotion, a small, private response that reveals personal concern while remaining professionally silent.
- • Contain personal feelings to preserve crew focus and command cohesion.
- • Offer emotional support to the command structure if needed while monitoring crew morale.
- • Emotional composure is necessary on the bridge to prevent contagion of panic.
- • As counselor, she must be emotionally present even while holding her own feelings in check.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The Enterprise defensive shields are the operational obstacle: their being raised makes the transporter transfer unsafe at current range. Picard’s order requires the Transporter Room to take control of shield modulation, turning the shields into a tactical variable the crew must manage to attempt a stretch of transporter range.
The emergency command transponder serves as the catalytic clue: it broadcasts a signal whose frequency and code identify Commander Riker, prompting the entire recovery sequence. The beacon's detection forces command to consider stretching transporter parameters and directly drives orders, role assignments, and shield-control decisions.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The Main Bridge is the detection and decision hub where the emergency transponder is identified, orders are given, roles allocated, and emotional micro‑reactions measured. It functions as the institutional center that converts a sensor ping into a coordinated, risky operational response.
The Corridor Outside the Transporter Room functions as the literal and symbolic threshold between policy (bridge) and execution (transporter). It is the passage Worf and Pulaski traverse as they move to implement Picard’s risky order, compressing the transition from decision to action.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Worf gives Riker the emergency transponder in the corridor (18c3fe...) and that device later triggers the emergency transponder alert on the Enterprise bridge when Riker activates/uses it (3e42cd...), enabling the rescue sequence."
"The transponder alert on the bridge (3e42cd...) forces Picard to authorize a risky extension of transporter range (0271cc...) as part of the plan to recover Riker, linking detection to a decisive tactical gamble."
"The transponder alert on the bridge (3e42cd...) forces Picard to authorize a risky extension of transporter range (0271cc...) as part of the plan to recover Riker, linking detection to a decisive tactical gamble."
"The bridge detection of Riker’s transponder (3e42cd...) causes Picard to align the transporter and execute the long‑range lock that results in Captain Kargan dematerializing aboard the Enterprise (cb9329...)."
Themes This Exemplifies
Thematic resonance and meaning
Key Dialogue
"WORF: We are getting an emergency signal from a command transponder. Location nine-three-five mark six-one-three... Frequency and code designate it as Commander Riker."
"PICARD: Chief O'Brien, align with emergency transponder signal."
"CHIEF O'BRIEN: Yes Captain. We are not yet in safe range for a transfer and defensive shields are still in place."