Wormhole Revelations — Ral Flagged, Caution Ordered
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Riker and Mendoza discuss the negotiating parties, with Riker identifying Devinoni Ral as the most significant threat due to his composure.
Riker and Data volunteer to explore the wormhole, but Picard insists on thorough sensor analysis first to ensure safety.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Practical and motivated (as inferred) — primarily concerned with her people's survival and access to resources.
Premier Bhavani is referenced indirectly — Mendoza suggests she would not object to a Federation inspection, positioning her as a pragmatic client with survival interests in the wormhole's outcome.
- • Secure the best possible outcome for Barzan survival and technological independence.
- • Avoid exploitation while obtaining the resources her people need.
- • Access to the wormhole could be transformative for Barzan survival.
- • Neutral guardianship or measured cooperation better preserves Barzan sovereignty than outright sale or domination.
Externally calm (as perceived by others); his internal motives are treated as potentially manipulative by the crew.
Devinoni Ral is not present in the ready room but is referenced by Riker as the composed negotiator to watch; his presence functions as a diplomatic psychological variable in the crew's strategic thinking.
- • (Inferred) To leverage interpersonal influence to gain advantage in wormhole negotiations.
- • (Inferred) To remain socially dominant and unruffled to shape outcomes without overt force.
- • Surface composure grants effective control in diplomatic settings.
- • Influence can be more powerful than overt resources in negotiation.
Portrayed as blustery and opportunistic by others; perceived threat level is more theatrical than structural.
DaiMon Goss (the Ferengi) is discussed as the boisterous, commercial bargainer whose showiness masks limited capacity; he functions as the visible antagonist whom Riker and Mendoza judge less strategically dangerous than Devinoni.
- • (Inferred) To secure commercial advantage and possibly control of wormhole access.
- • (Inferred) To use showmanship to intimidate or secure concessions from negotiation partners.
- • Loud displays of wealth and confidence produce leverage in commercial settings.
- • Direct financial incentives are the primary currency of influence for the Ferengi.
Slightly defensive and risk‑conscious — protective of Starfleet's commercial position and wary of being duped by appearance.
Mendoza offers the negotiation perspective, warning about contractual obligations and the commercial stakes; he engages in light banter about poker skills while acknowledging uncertainty about the probe's limitations.
- • Prevent the Federation from making an unfavorable or premature contractual commitment.
- • Frame the situation in commercial terms so negotiation strategy remains cautious.
- • Contracts and obligations matter and can bind the Federation to risk.
- • Appearances and bluster (like the Ferengi) do not necessarily equate to real capacity or threat.
Cautiously pragmatic — curious about the wormhole's value but insistent on protecting the crew and Federation interests.
Captain Picard listens to Data's analysis, tempers excitement with institutional caution, and issues a clear, hierarchical plan: exhaustive sensors first, and only then a controlled manned foray if safe.
- • Protect the Enterprise crew and avoid premature, dangerous action.
- • Establish a disciplined, evidence‑first approach before authorizing human entry into the wormhole.
- • Extraordinary discoveries require extraordinary verification.
- • Command responsibility demands minimizing avoidable risk and following protocol.
Objectively engaged — intellectually excited about solving the unknown, with minimal human fear but a clear desire to be useful.
Data presents precise probe telemetry, explains the probe's transit to the Gamma Quadrant, clarifies the limits of the automated data, and volunteers himself as a participant in a controlled follow‑up mission.
- • Provide an accurate scientific account of the probe findings to inform command decisions.
- • Volunteer for reconnaissance to reduce uncertainty and gather direct evidence.
- • Empirical observation is the correct response to anomalous phenomena.
- • His capabilities can safely contribute to resolving technical unknowns.
Wary and focused — he senses political maneuvering and wants concrete information to counter it.
Commander Riker translates a diplomatic reading into tactical priority, naming Devinoni Ral as the subtler threat and pressing for direct reconnaissance — advocating action rather than passive negotiation.
- • Ensure the Enterprise verifies the wormhole's properties firsthand.
- • Shift the crew from armchair analysis to actionable reconnaissance to control the negotiation narrative.
- • Diplomacy can be a cover for covert advantage; information closes strategic gaps.
- • Composure and charm (as shown by Devinoni) are often proxies for influence and danger.
Prepared and professional by implication — seen as ready to execute a technical mission if ordered.
Geordi La Forge is referenced as the engineering/pilot link maintaining continuous visual contact with the wormhole; he is positioned as the logical shuttle pilot and technical lead for any manned probe.
- • Maintain continuous visual and sensor contact with the wormhole.
- • Be prepared to pilot or technically support a controlled manned entry if required.
- • Operational readiness and continuous monitoring are essential for safety.
- • His skills make him the logical choice for technical execution of reconnaissance.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The Observation Lounge viewscreen displays the Barzan probe telemetry — charts and graphs that translate abstract particle spikes into comprehensible evidence. It is the visual anchor for Data's revelation and the crew's shift from hypothesis to operational planning.
The Barzan Wormhole Purchase Contract is referenced as the material stake: Mendoza warns that a negotiated and closed contract would obligate the Federation and could convert scientific uncertainty into costly legal and commercial liability.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The Denkiri Arm is invoked as the proximate stellar region the Barzan probe supposedly passed; it provides spatial scale and underscores the improbability of the probe's transit, framing the wormhole's potential as both wondrous and dangerously unpredictable.
The Gamma Quadrant is named as the probe's destination beyond the wormhole, converting the anomaly into a geopolitical and navigational fact: this is not trivial local space but a connection to a far sector with unknown consequences.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Picard's skepticism about the wormhole's stability leads to the shuttle mission to confirm its reliability."
"Picard's skepticism about the wormhole's stability leads to the shuttle mission to confirm its reliability."
Themes This Exemplifies
Thematic resonance and meaning
Key Dialogue
"DATA: The data from the Barzan's probe into the wormhole is impressive, Captain. The wormhole delivered the probe beyond the Denkiri Arm, in the Gamma Quadrant."
"RIKER: I'd say that fellow Devinoni's the one to watch out for..."
"PICARD: Before anyone goes in there, we're going to conduct a full sensor analysis. I want to do everything possible to determine that it's safe. If we're satisfied, Data, you and Commander La Forge will enter the wormhole tommorrow."