Ishara reflects on Tasha’s legacy
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Ishara recounts her and Tasha's childhood, revealing how Tasha left Turkana Four due to her hatred of the cadres, while Ishara joined the Coalition.
Ishara questions her previous judgment of Tasha's departure, admitting she may have been wrong and expressing admiration for the Enterprise's collaborative environment.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
A storm of regret, shame, and fragile hope—her surface calm masks a turmoil of ‘what ifs,’ as she grapples with the possibility that her sister’s ‘weakness’ was actually strength, and that her own path has been a series of compromised choices. The admission that she ‘trusts’ Data and considers him a ‘friend’ is both a lifeline and a betrayal of her past self.
Ishara sits hunched slightly forward, her fingers tracing the rim of a drained glass as if it were a talisman. Her voice is low, strained with the effort of articulating a lifetime of buried grief and self-justification. She begins with clinical detachment—‘Our parents were killed in some crossfire’—but her composure fractures as she admits, ‘I always thought she was weak for doing that... But maybe I was wrong.’ The confession spills out in a rush, her hands trembling as she gestures to the Enterprise around her, symbolizing everything she’s been denied: collaboration, safety, friendship. When she calls Data her ‘friend,’ her voice breaks, and the vulnerability is so raw it borders on pain. The moment is a crucible, where her identity as a Coalition operative collides with her desperate longing for something better.
- • To articulate the unspoken guilt she carries over her sister’s fate and her own complicity in the Coalition’s violence.
- • To test the waters of trust with Data, seeking validation for her growing disillusionment with the Coalition.
- • That survival in Turkana IV required ruthlessness, and that Tasha’s defiance was a liability—until now, when she sees it as an escape.
- • That Starfleet’s collaborative ethos is both foreign and intoxicating, offering her a way out of her cycle of violence.
Thoughtfully engaged, with a hint of wonder at Ishara’s emotional rawness—his own ‘friendship’ algorithm seemingly activated by her trust, leaving him intrigued by the human capacity for self-doubt and redemption.
Data sits across from Ishara in Ten-Forward, his posture open and attentive, his golden eyes reflecting the dim light as he listens with uncharacteristic stillness. He responds to Ishara’s confessions with measured, empathetic questions—‘And Tasha did not?’—and validates her emotional shift with a simple but profound reciprocation: ‘I would like to consider you my friend.’ His curiosity is palpable, not as cold logic but as a genuine desire to understand human vulnerability, particularly the cost of loyalty and the weight of regret. His presence is a catalyst, offering Ishara a mirror of the trust she’s never experienced, which she clings to like a lifeline.
- • To understand Ishara’s internal conflict and the role of her sister’s legacy in shaping her identity.
- • To model Starfleet’s values of trust and openness, subtly influencing Ishara’s perspective on the Coalition vs. Federation.
- • That emotional bonds are a critical component of human decision-making, even for those raised in violent environments.
- • That Ishara’s conflict between loyalty to the Coalition and attraction to Starfleet’s ethos is a legitimate moral dilemma worth exploring.
N/A (Referenced only, but her ‘presence’ in Ishara’s mind is tinged with Ishara’s regret, admiration, and envy—emotions Tasha herself would likely reject as burdensome.)
Tasha Yar is invoked as a spectral presence in Ishara’s monologue, her defiance of the Coalition and eventual departure from Turkana IV serving as a foil to Ishara’s own path. Though absent, her legacy looms large: Ishara’s admission that she once saw Tasha’s choices as ‘weakness’ but now questions her judgment reveals Tasha’s indirect influence on the scene. Her sister’s memory is the catalyst for Ishara’s crisis of loyalty, embodying the ‘right choice’ Ishara now wonders if she missed. The contrast between their fates—one a Starfleet officer, the other a Coalition operative—frames the entire exchange, making Tasha a silent but pivotal character in this moment of reckoning.
- • N/A (As a referenced character, her ‘goal’ is the ideal Ishara now measures herself against: the courage to leave violence behind.)
- • N/A (Implied through Ishara’s reflections: that loyalty to a cause must be tempered by humanity, and that survival is not the same as living.)
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
Starfleet is invoked indirectly through the Enterprise’s physical and cultural presence—the collaborative ethos Ishara admires, the trust Data embodies, and the ‘something besides killing’ she envisions as an alternative to her Coalition upbringing. Though no Starfleet officer (other than Data) is present, the organization’s values permeate the scene, acting as a silent third participant in Ishara’s internal debate. Her confession to Data is, in essence, a test of whether Starfleet’s ideals can withstand the weight of her past, and whether she can imagine herself as part of something greater than survival.
The Coalition is the absent but looming antagonist in this scene, its influence manifesting in Ishara’s guilt, her self-justifications (‘I joined the Coalition because I had to’), and the physical traces of her past (the magnetic implants she mentions elsewhere). Though Turkana IV’s underground wars are not depicted, their shadow is cast over every word Ishara speaks, particularly her admission that she once saw Tasha’s defiance as ‘weakness.’ The Coalition’s power dynamics—survival through violence, loyalty through fear—are the foil against which Starfleet’s values are measured. Ishara’s conflict is, at its core, a rejection of the Coalition’s worldview, even as she grapples with the cost of leaving it behind.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Ishara regrets her decision, because she has begun to see the potential for good within the Enterprise. This feeling is not a feeling she has, however, showing potential for falsehoods."
"Ishara trusts Data, but regrets her decisions. The Enterprise is affecting her."
"New plan transitions the scene to Ten-Forward."
"New plan transitions the scene to Ten-Forward."
"Ishara regrets her decision, because she has begun to see the potential for good within the Enterprise. This feeling is not a feeling she has, however, showing potential for falsehoods."
"Ishara trusts Data, but regrets her decisions. The Enterprise is affecting her."
"Ishara has the potential for change, and wants to be apart. Quickly transitions to the next scene to relay this information."
"Ishara has the potential for change, and wants to be apart. Quickly transitions to the next scene to relay this information."
"Ishara has the potential for change, and wants to be apart. Quickly transitions to the next scene to relay this information."
"Ishara has the potential for change, and wants to be apart. Quickly transitions to the next scene to relay this information."
Key Dialogue
"ISHARA: Our parents were killed in some crossfire just after I was born. Some people took care of us for a few months... Then one day we came home and they were gone. So Tasha took care of me. And when I got old enough, I joined the Coalition."
"ISHARA: I always thought she was weak for doing that... But maybe I was wrong. Maybe she made the right choice."
"ISHARA: To work together for something besides killing... to be close to someone without having to protect your back. You're a perfect example. I hardly even know you, Data, but already I completely trust you. I even consider you my friend."