Fabula
S6E14 · Face of the Enemy

Enterprise confirms empty coordinates

The Enterprise arrives at the Kaleb sector coordinates provided by Ensign DeSeve, only to find no trace of the expected Corvallen freighter. Data’s sensor sweep confirms the absence of any ships within three light years, forcing Picard to confront the possibility of deception. The crew’s unease escalates as Riker questions whether the entire mission has been a hoax, prompting Picard to summon DeSeve for a private debrief. This moment deepens the narrative tension by exposing the fragility of their intelligence—was the freighter destroyed, or was DeSeve’s contact misleading? The scene underscores Picard’s methodical leadership as he shifts from investigation to confrontation, while also highlighting the crew’s growing distrust of Romulan involvement. The absence of the freighter serves as a narrative pivot, forcing the story toward a reckoning with DeSeve’s loyalties and the mission’s true stakes.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

1

The Enterprise arrives at the designated coordinates in the Kaleb sector but finds no sign of the Corvallen freighter. Data confirms the ship is the only one in the area.

anticipation to disappointment

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

5

Unknowable to the crew, but inferred as either desperate (if the freighter’s absence is genuine and he’s being set up) or calculating (if he’s orchestrating a trap). His absence amplifies the crew’s paranoia, making him a silent but dominant presence in the scene.

Though physically absent from the bridge, DeSeve looms large in this moment—his coordinates, his promise of a freighter, his defection. His name is invoked as the source of the crew’s dilemma, and Picard’s order to bring him to the Ready Room transforms him from a distant figure into the immediate focus of suspicion. The crew’s reactions—Riker’s accusation, Picard’s measured response—reveal how deeply DeSeve’s actions (or inactions) have inserted themselves into the mission’s fabric.

Goals in this moment
  • To either prove his loyalty to Starfleet and the Federation (if innocent) or to manipulate the *Enterprise* into a position that serves Romulan interests (if guilty).
  • To survive the scrutiny of Picard’s debrief, where his story will be tested against the absence of the freighter.
Active beliefs
  • The crew’s distrust is a hurdle he must overcome to achieve his objectives, whether they align with Starfleet or the Romulans.
  • His actions are driven by a personal reckoning—whether with his past, his betrayal, or his desire for redemption.
Character traits
Elusive (by absence) Potentially deceptive Central to the mission’s credibility A catalyst for conflict
Follow Stefan DeSeve's journey

Logically detached, but his presence amplifies the crew’s tension—his confirmation of the freighter’s absence is the catalyst that shifts the scene from investigation to confrontation. There’s no emotional subtext, but his role as the voice of objective truth makes him pivotal.

Data, at his station, delivers the sensor readings with clinical precision—‘Sensors indicate no other ships within three light years.’—his tone devoid of judgment but carrying the weight of the crew’s unspoken fears. His confirmation is the bridge’s tipping point, transforming suspicion into action. Data’s role here is not just to report data but to serve as the neutral arbiter whose findings force the crew to confront an uncomfortable truth: the freighter is gone, and someone may have lied.

Goals in this moment
  • To provide Picard and the crew with accurate, unverified data to inform their next steps, ensuring no decisions are made based on incomplete information.
  • To maintain the bridge’s operational efficiency, even as the crew’s emotions threaten to disrupt it.
Active beliefs
  • The absence of the freighter is a factual anomaly that must be addressed through further investigation, not emotional reaction.
  • His duty is to serve as a stabilizing force, counterbalancing the crew’s skepticism and urgency with logical analysis.
Character traits
Precise Neutral in delivery Analytically indispensable Unemotionally authoritative
Follow Data's journey

Controlled puzzlement with a steely resolve—he is not yet angry or accusatory, but his mind is racing through possibilities, weighing DeSeve’s potential betrayal against the mission’s larger stakes. There’s a quiet urgency beneath his composure.

Picard stands at the center of the bridge, his puzzlement giving way to strategic calm as he processes Data’s confirmation of the freighter’s absence. His measured response—‘That’s one possibility.’—reveals his ability to compartmentalize doubt while maintaining command. When he orders Worf to bring DeSeve to the Ready Room, it’s not just a summons; it’s a chess move, isolating DeSeve to extract the truth without the crew’s collective skepticism clouding the interrogation.

Goals in this moment
  • To determine whether DeSeve’s intelligence is legitimate or a Romulan ploy, and to do so without tipping his hand to the crew or DeSeve.
  • To protect the *Enterprise* and its crew from being drawn into a conflict or trap, even if it means confronting a former Starfleet officer.
Active beliefs
  • DeSeve’s defection and return may be genuine, but the absence of the freighter suggests either bad intelligence or intentional misdirection—both of which require immediate clarification.
  • The crew’s morale and trust in the mission are fragile; he must act decisively to restore confidence or pivot the strategy.
Character traits
Strategic Composed under pressure Diplomatic in crisis Analytical
Follow William Riker's journey
Supporting 2

Calmly focused, with a hint of underlying concern—she recognizes the stakes but trusts in protocol and her training to guide her actions.

Ensign McKnight, at the conn, swiftly verifies the Enterprise’s position at DeSeve’s coordinates, her efficiency a quiet counterpoint to the rising tension. Though she speaks little, her confirmation—‘We're holding at the coordinates specified by Ensign DeSeve, sir.’—serves as the bridge’s factual anchor, grounding the crew’s growing unease in cold, undeniable data.

Goals in this moment
  • To ensure the *Enterprise*’s navigation is accurate and aligned with the mission parameters, regardless of the crew’s personal doubts.
  • To provide Picard with unambiguous data to inform his next steps, reducing the margin for error.
Active beliefs
  • Her role is to execute orders without question, but she is attuned to the crew’s collective unease, which subtly influences her awareness.
  • DeSeve’s coordinates, while verified, may still be part of a larger deception—her job is to confirm the facts, not interpret them.
Character traits
Precise Composed under pressure Professionally detached Reliable in crisis
Follow McKnight's journey

Focused and ready for action—his distrust of DeSeve (as a Romulan collaborator) is palpable, though he channels it into professional obedience. There’s a quiet satisfaction in being tasked with bringing DeSeve in, as if he’s been waiting for an excuse to assert control.

Worf, standing at tactical, receives Picard’s order to bring DeSeve to the Ready Room with a nod of acknowledgment. His role here is less about tactical action and more about enforcement—he is the bridge’s physical manifestation of Picard’s authority. Though he speaks no dialogue in this moment, his presence underscores the seriousness of the situation: DeSeve is no longer a guest but a subject of interrogation, and Worf’s Klingon intensity ensures the crew takes the summons as an order, not a request.

Goals in this moment
  • To ensure DeSeve complies with Picard’s summons without resistance, using his physical presence and Klingon demeanor to enforce the order.
  • To subtly communicate to the crew that DeSeve’s status has shifted from ‘guest’ to ‘person of interest,’ reinforcing the mission’s gravity.
Active beliefs
  • DeSeve’s defection is suspect, and his absence from the bridge during this revelation only deepens Worf’s skepticism.
  • Picard’s orders must be executed with precision, especially when dealing with potential threats to the *Enterprise*.
Character traits
Authoritative Disciplined Intimidating by presence Loyal to Picard’s command
Follow Worf's journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

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Ensign DeSeve’s Kaleb Sector Coordinates

The Kaleb sector coordinates, displayed on the bridge’s consoles, are the linchpin of this moment. They represent both the crew’s hope (the promise of a freighter and defectors) and their growing dread (the possibility of a trap). When McKnight confirms the Enterprise’s position at these coordinates, the data becomes a silent accuser—where is the freighter? The coordinates, once a clue, now feel like a dead end, their alphanumeric precision a cruel contrast to the uncertainty they’ve unleashed. Data’s sensor sweep confirms their emptiness, turning them from a tool of navigation into a symbol of the mission’s fragility.

Before: Stored in the Enterprise’s navigation system as the …
After: Confirmed as accurate but revealing no trace of …
Before: Stored in the Enterprise’s navigation system as the destination coordinates provided by DeSeve, treated as a reliable lead by the crew.
After: Confirmed as accurate but revealing no trace of the expected freighter, shifting from a promise to a point of contention and suspicion.
USS Enterprise-D Navigational Systems

Data’s activation of the long-range sensors is the bridge’s moment of truth. The sweeping scan data, displayed across three light years, confirms the crew’s worst fears: no freighter, no ships, no signs of life. The sensors, usually a tool of discovery, become instruments of revelation—exposing the absence where there should have been evidence. Picard, Riker, and Worf gather around the readouts, their faces illuminated by the glow of empty space. The sensors’ confirmation is the bridge’s collective gasp, the moment when hope gives way to hard questions: Was this a hoax? A trap? Or something worse?

Before: Operational and ready, awaiting activation to scan the …
After: Confirmed the absence of all expected contacts, transforming …
Before: Operational and ready, awaiting activation to scan the Kaleb sector for the Corvallen freighter and any accompanying vessels.
After: Confirmed the absence of all expected contacts, transforming from a tool of verification into a catalyst for distrust and urgency.

Organizations Involved

Institutional presence and influence

2
Starfleet

Starfleet’s protocols and values are the invisible framework guiding the crew’s actions. Picard’s measured response, Riker’s skepticism, and Data’s clinical confirmation all reflect Starfleet’s emphasis on verification, caution, and chain of command. The organization’s influence is felt in the crew’s reluctance to accept DeSeve’s intelligence at face value, their insistence on cross-verifying data, and their disciplined approach to potential threats. Starfleet’s distrust of Romulan motives—rooted in decades of conflict—shapes the crew’s reactions, making the absence of the freighter not just a logistical failure but a potential security breach.

Representation Via institutional protocol (cross-verification of intelligence, chain of command, and disciplined response to potential threats) …
Power Dynamics Exercising authority over the crew’s actions and decisions, ensuring that personal doubts or emotional reactions …
Impact The crew’s actions reflect Starfleet’s broader institutional tensions: the balance between compassion for a former …
Internal Dynamics The crew’s internal debate over whether to trust DeSeve or treat him as a potential …
To ensure the Enterprise’s mission aligns with Starfleet’s principles of verification and caution, especially when dealing with potentially unreliable intelligence. To protect the crew and the ship from being drawn into a Romulan trap or political maneuver, even if it means confronting a former Starfleet officer. Through institutional protocol (e.g., cross-verifying DeSeve’s coordinates and sensor data, isolating DeSeve for interrogation), Through the crew’s ingrained discipline and loyalty to Starfleet’s values, which shape their reactions and decisions. Through the threat of disciplinary action or reprimand for actions that violate Starfleet’s guidelines (e.g., blindly trusting a defector’s intelligence).
Tal Shiar

The Tal Shiar’s shadow looms over this moment, even in its absence. The crew’s suspicion of DeSeve and the freighter’s disappearance are not just about DeSeve’s credibility—they reflect a deeper fear of Romulan manipulation, a fear stoked by the Tal Shiar’s reputation for deception and control. The organization’s influence is indirect but potent: it’s the reason the crew questions DeSeve’s motives, the reason Picard orders a private debrief, and the reason the absence of the freighter feels like a trap. The Tal Shiar, though not present, is the ghost in the machine, the unseen hand that could be pulling the strings.

Representation Through the crew’s collective paranoia and the unspoken assumption that any Romulan-related intelligence could be …
Power Dynamics Operating as an unseen but dominant force, the Tal Shiar’s reputation for brutality and intelligence-gathering …
Impact The Tal Shiar’s influence in this scene highlights the broader institutional struggle between the Romulan …
Internal Dynamics The Tal Shiar’s internal dynamics are hinted at through the crew’s assumptions about DeSeve’s potential …
To undermine the Enterprise’s mission by sowing distrust and uncertainty, whether through deception (e.g., the freighter’s absence) or by exploiting DeSeve’s defection as a cover for a larger operation. To maintain control over Romulan defectors and ensure that no intelligence reaches the Federation, even if it means sacrificing a sub-commander like DeSeve. Through the crew’s preexisting distrust of Romulan motives, which the Tal Shiar has cultivated over decades of conflict and espionage. Through the use of deception (e.g., the missing freighter) to create doubt and force the Enterprise into a reactive, rather than strategic, position. Through the threat of reprisal against DeSeve or his contacts, ensuring that any defection or intelligence-sharing is met with consequences that deter future attempts.

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

What led here 1
Causal

"The warbird cloaks after destroying the freighter. Meanwhile, the Enterprise arrives to investigate."

Troi asserts Tal Shiar authority over Toreth
S6E14 · Face of the Enemy
What this causes 2
Causal

"The Enterprise's arrival at the coordinates leads to Picard questioning DeSeve."

DeSeve reveals freighter’s limitations under pressure
S6E14 · Face of the Enemy
Causal

"The Enterprise's arrival at the coordinates leads to Picard questioning DeSeve."

Picard exposes DeSeve’s Romulan contact
S6E14 · Face of the Enemy

Key Dialogue

"DATA: There is no sign of the freighter, Sir. We are the only ship in the area."
"RIKER: Is there anything on long range sensors?"
"PICARD: That's one possibility. Mister Worf, bring Ensign DeSeve to my Ready Room."