Picard receives interrogation summons
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Nellen delivers a PADD to Picard, informing him that Admiral Satie has ordered him to report to the interrogation room for questioning before the committee, leaving Picard stunned.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Neutral on the surface, but internally exultant—she is the messenger of Picard’s humiliation, and the role suits her. Her emotional state is one of quiet vindication, as if this moment validates her own rigid adherence to Satie’s investigative zealotry.
Nellen Tore strides onto the bridge with purposeful efficiency, her expression unreadable as she hands Picard the PADD containing Satie’s summons. Her delivery is clinical and devoid of inflection—'Admiral Satie has ordered you to report to the interrogation room at oh-nine-hundred hours tomorrow morning. You are to be questioned before the committee.'—yet the subtext is unmistakable: a palpable sense of triumph simmers beneath her professionalism, as if she is the harbinger of Picard’s downfall. She does not linger, her duty fulfilled, but her presence lingers like a shadow, a reminder that Starfleet’s bureaucracy has become an instrument of suspicion rather than justice.
- • To execute Satie’s orders with precision, leaving no room for misinterpretation or delay
- • To reinforce the gravity of the summons through her demeanor, ensuring Picard understands the seriousness of his position
- • That loyalty to Starfleet’s security mandates absolute compliance with Satie’s directives, regardless of personal consequences
- • That Picard’s distraction and shock are evidence of his guilt—or at least, his inability to lead under scrutiny
Triumpphant and ruthlessly focused—though not physically present, her emotional state is inferred through Nellen’s suppressed glee and the weight of the summons. She is a woman who believes she is cleansing Starfleet of disloyalty, and Picard’s shock is the first sign of her success.
Admiral Norah Satie is indirectly present through Nellen Tore’s delivery of the summons, her authority looming like a specter over the bridge. Though she does not appear in this moment, her influence is absolute: the PADD in Picard’s hands is her instrument, the interrogation room her domain, and the committee her extension. Her absence is more ominous than her presence would be, as it allows her to remain untouchable, the architect of the witch hunt while others—like Nellen Tore—execute her will. The summons is not just a piece of paper; it is Satie’s declaration of war against Picard’s leadership.
- • To break Picard’s composure and force him into a position of vulnerability, undermining his command
- • To use the interrogation as a public spectacle to justify her methods and consolidate her power
- • That the ends (security, loyalty) justify the means (witch hunts, personal attacks)
- • That Picard’s distraction and silence are admissions of guilt—or at least, weakness
Stunned into silence, oscillating between disbelief and a creeping sense of betrayal—his emotional state is one of institutional violation, as if the very fabric of Starfleet’s ethical foundation has been torn away beneath him.
Picard sits in his command chair, visibly distracted and lost in thought, his usual composure fractured by the weight of Admiral Satie’s investigation. He snaps back to attention when Data repeats his report, but his response is delayed and distracted ('Yes... ? Oh... yes, Mister Data. Proceed.'). Riker’s concern—'Are you all right, Captain?'—hangs unanswered as Nellen Tore approaches, handing him the PADD with Satie’s summons. Picard’s stunned silence and wide-eyed stare reveal the depth of his shock, his grip on the PADD tightening as the reality of his own interrogation sinks in. His physical stillness contrasts with the turmoil beneath, a man suddenly confronted with the collapse of his authority and the erosion of trust in Starfleet’s ideals.
- • To maintain composure despite the personal attack on his integrity
- • To process the implications of being summoned for interrogation (a direct challenge to his leadership and moral authority)
- • That due process and fairness are non-negotiable, even under suspicion
- • That Admiral Satie’s methods are a perversion of Starfleet’s values, and resisting them is a moral obligation
Neutral, but with an undercurrent of curiosity—Data does not understand the subtext of the summons, but he notes Picard’s distraction and Riker’s concern. His emotional state is one of detached observation, a scientist studying a fascinating but incomprehensible human interaction.
Data turns to Picard after his initial report on the warp engines goes unanswered, prompting him with a simple 'Sir?' His tone is neutral, his expression unreadable, but his intervention serves as a grounding force amid the chaos. Data does not react to the tension between Picard and Nellen Tore; he is a machine observing human drama, his role confined to operational updates. Yet his presence—steady, logical, and unflappable—contrasts sharply with the emotional turbulence around him, a silent reminder of the Enterprise’s dual nature: a vessel of both human conflict and cold, unyielding efficiency.
- • To ensure Picard acknowledges the warp engines’ status, maintaining operational protocol
- • To subtly (and unintentionally) highlight Picard’s distraction by prompting him
- • That human emotions often interfere with rational decision-making (a belief reinforced by this moment)
- • That his role is to provide data, not to interpret the unspoken tensions around him
Deeply concerned, bordering on protective frustration—he wants to act, to defend Picard, but the summons from Satie has rendered him as powerless as his captain. His emotional state is one of impeded loyalty, a man who would normally step in but finds himself constrained by the very system he serves.
Riker leans toward Picard with quiet concern, his voice low and measured as he asks, 'Are you all right, Captain?' His question is laced with unspoken tension—the unspoken understanding that Picard is not merely distracted but unmoored. Riker’s role as first officer is to support his captain, but here, he is powerless to intervene, his concern met with Picard’s stunned silence. His presence underscores the fragility of the command structure, a silent witness to the erosion of Picard’s authority and the creeping paranoia aboard the Enterprise.
- • To offer Picard moral support, even if only through a brief moment of connection
- • To assess the depth of Picard’s distress and determine how to proceed without overstepping
- • That Satie’s investigation is a misguided witch hunt that threatens the *Enterprise*’s cohesion
- • That Picard’s integrity is beyond reproach, and the summons is a personal and professional affront
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The PADD handed to Picard by Nellen Tore is not merely a device—it is the physical manifestation of Satie’s authority and the witch hunt’s escalation. Its glowing screen displays the summons in stark, official text, the words 'interrogation room' and 'committee' jumping out like accusations. Picard’s grip on the PADD tightens as he reads, his fingers pressing into the edges as if trying to crush the weight of the order. The PADD is a clue, a weapon, and a symbol: a clue into Satie’s next move, a weapon wielded against Picard’s leadership, and a symbol of how Starfleet’s bureaucracy has been hijacked by paranoia. Its transfer from Nellen to Picard is a ritualistic passing of the torch—one that signals the end of Picard’s observer status and the beginning of his ordeal.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The Enterprise bridge, once a symbol of Picard’s unassailable command, now feels like a stage for his unraveling. The sleek LCARS consoles hum with routine operations, but the air is thick with unspoken tension—Data’s report on the warp engines is met with silence, Riker’s concern hangs heavy, and Nellen Tore’s arrival feels like an intrusion. The turbolift doors hiss open like a gateway to the outside world’s suspicions, and the viewscreen’s starfields, usually a source of wonder, now seem distant and cold. The bridge’s functional role as the nerve center of the ship is undermined by its symbolic role: a place where Picard’s authority is being systematically eroded, where the institutional machinery of Starfleet has turned against its own captain.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
Starfleet’s presence in this moment is omnipresent yet invisible—its authority is wielded through Nellen Tore’s delivery of the summons, but the organization itself is absent, a looming specter of institutional power. The summons is not just Satie’s order; it is Starfleet’s decree, backed by the full weight of its protocols and hierarchy. The bridge, a microcosm of Starfleet’s values, is now a site where those values are being tested: due process vs. paranoia, loyalty vs. suspicion, command vs. subordination. Starfleet’s influence is exerted through the mechanism of the interrogation, a tool that has been repurposed from a safeguard into a weapon.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"The confrontation between Satie and Picard leaves Picard deeply unsettled, causing him to be slow to respond when Data says warp engines are back online."
"The confrontation between Satie and Picard leaves Picard deeply unsettled, causing him to be slow to respond when Data says warp engines are back online."
"The confrontation between Satie and Picard leaves Picard deeply unsettled, causing him to be slow to respond when Data says warp engines are back online."
"Satie asserts she doesn't require Picard's approval, and shortly, Picard is informed he is to report to the interrogation room, escalating the conflict to a personal level."
"Satie asserts she doesn't require Picard's approval, and shortly, Picard is informed he is to report to the interrogation room, escalating the conflict to a personal level."
"Satie asserts she doesn't require Picard's approval, and shortly, Picard is informed he is to report to the interrogation room, escalating the conflict to a personal level."
"Picard is ordered to the interrogation room by Satie, where he delivers a passionate speech against the trial."
"Picard is ordered to the interrogation room by Satie, where he delivers a passionate speech against the trial."
"Picard is ordered to the interrogation room by Satie, where he delivers a passionate speech against the trial."
"Picard is ordered to the interrogation room by Satie, where he delivers a passionate speech against the trial."
Key Dialogue
"DATA: Captain, the warp engines are back on line. We are ready to commence restart sequences."
"RIKER: Are you all right, Captain?"
"NELLEN: Admiral Satie has ordered you to report to the interrogation room at oh-nine-hundred hours tomorrow morning. You are to be questioned before the committee."