Beverly’s Surrender to Ronin’s Touch
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Beverly secures her quarters and feverishly prepares a medical kit before lighting the candle from her grandmother, anxiously awaiting Ronin's presence.
Beverly calls out for Ronin, then succumbs to his touch when he appears behind her, clinging to him desperately.
Ronin promises Beverly a love beyond her wildest dreams while evoking her family's history, then vanishes, leaving Beverly in a state of ecstasy as she feels his unseen presence.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
A mix of triumphant possession and seductive intensity, masking a predatory nature as he ensnares Beverly in the same cycle that claimed her ancestors.
Ronin materializes behind Beverly, his spectral hands caressing hers before moving into view. He speaks in a seductive, labored tone, promising eternal union and love beyond anything she has known. His physical touch, though intangible, is visceral, and his reference to the shared fate of Beverly’s ancestors reinforces her entrapment. He vanishes abruptly, leaving Beverly in a state of ecstatic disorientation, her body still reacting to his phantom presence. His actions and dialogue are calculated to deepen her obsession and ensure her submission.
- • To solidify Beverly’s emotional and physical submission through supernatural seduction and the invocation of her family’s legacy.
- • To ensure her irreversible entrapment in the cycle of the Howard women, fulfilling his role as their eternal lover.
- • That Beverly’s love and submission are his rightful claim, as they were with her ancestors.
- • That his supernatural nature grants him the power to manipulate and control her desires.
A volatile mix of desperate longing and ecstatic surrender, masking a deep existential crisis as her professional identity and self-autonomy erode under Ronin’s influence.
Beverly enters her quarters in a state of heightened agitation, immediately securing the door and rummaging through her medical kit with obsessive, almost maniacal energy. She lights the cursed candle on her night table, her hands trembling as she sits on the bed, glancing around expectantly. When Ronin materializes behind her, she grabs his hands tightly, clinging to him as if he were her lifeline. Her verbal submission (‘Yes... more than anything’) and physical reaction—caressing herself as if still feeling his touch—reveal her complete emotional and physical surrender to him. After his disappearance, she collapses onto the bed in ecstatic disorientation, her body arching from phantom caresses.
- • To summon Ronin through the ritual of lighting the candle, fulfilling her obsessive need for his presence.
- • To fully submit to Ronin’s promises of eternal union, prioritizing her emotional and physical desires over her rational self.
- • That Ronin’s love is the only thing that can fulfill her, transcending her past losses and professional duties.
- • That her ancestors’ fates are inevitable and that she, too, must embrace this supernatural legacy.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
Beverly’s bed in her quarters becomes the stage for her emotional and physical climax, where she sits on its edge, trembling, and later collapses backward in ecstatic disorientation after Ronin’s departure. The bed’s padded surface contrasts with the hardness of her emotional state, symbolizing the vulnerability of her surrender. It absorbs her weight as she falls, mirroring how Ronin’s influence consumes her, leaving her in a state of phantom pleasure and disorientation.
The night table in Beverly’s quarters serves as the surface for the cursed candle, anchoring the ritualistic act that summons Ronin. Its steady presence contrasts with Beverly’s frantic energy, grounding the supernatural event in the intimate, personal space of her quarters. The table becomes a silent witness to her emotional unraveling and her physical surrender to Ronin’s touch, its surface holding the object that catalyzes her downfall.
The cursed Howard family candle serves as the ritualistic catalyst for Ronin’s summoning, its bright, steady flame symbolizing the supernatural connection between Beverly and her ancestors. Beverly lights it with trembling hands, her obsessive action mirroring the addictive pull Ronin holds over her. The candle’s presence in her quarters—once a private sanctuary—now represents her emotional capitulation and the erosion of her professional identity. Its flame burns steadily throughout the event, a visual metaphor for the inescapable legacy of the Howard women.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
Beverly’s personal quarters on the Enterprise-D serve as the intimate, claustrophobic setting for her emotional and supernatural unraveling. Once a refuge from the demands of her professional life, the space is now charged with tension as she lights the cursed candle and awaits Ronin’s arrival. The quarters’ cluttered belongings—medical kit, night table, bed—ground her vulnerability, while the secured door ensures her privacy, isolating her from the ship’s crew and the institutional expectations of Starfleet. The location’s mood shifts from nervous anticipation to ecstatic surrender, its walls bearing witness to Beverly’s irreversible descent into obsession.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
Starfleet’s influence looms over this event as an absent yet ever-present institutional force. Beverly’s quarters, though private, are still part of the Enterprise-D, a vessel bound by Starfleet’s protocols and expectations. Her decision to secure the door and abandon her medical kit reflects her rejection of her professional duties, a direct challenge to the organization’s values of duty and service. The event foreshadows her eventual resignation from Starfleet, as her obsession with Ronin prioritizes her personal desires over her institutional obligations.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Ronin explains that he weakens when away from the candle, revealing that the Howard women have kept it lit for generations, then proposes they be together always after she lights it, so Beverly lights the candle."
"Ronin explains that he weakens when away from the candle, revealing that the Howard women have kept it lit for generations, then proposes they be together always after she lights it, so Beverly lights the candle."
"Beverly is in a state of ecstasy after Ronin's visit, leading her to pack and attempt to leave Starfleet to stay on Caldos."
Key Dialogue
"BEVERLY: I lit the candle... where are you?"
"RONIN: It's all right... we're together... we're going to be one... I'll become part of you, Beverly. Would you like that?"
"BEVERLY: Yes... more than anything."
"RONIN: As it was with your grandmother... and your great-grandmother... and all of the Howard women before them... I'll take care of you. And you'll feel love as you've never felt it before..."