Fabula
S6E11 · Chain of Command, Part II

Jellico orders covert scan of Lemec’s ship

In the Enterprise’s ready room, Captain Jellico promotes Data to first officer, subtly undermining Riker’s authority while acknowledging Data’s analytical precision. Geordi La Forge delivers Beverly Crusher’s tricorder report from Celtris III, revealing no anomalies—yet Data deduces the Cardassians deliberately targeted Picard for his theta-band subspace expertise, a rare skill among Starfleet captains. Jellico realizes the Cardassians likely lured Picard to extract future defense plans for the sector, which Picard never received. The revelation exposes a brutal irony: Picard is being tortured for information he doesn’t possess, while Jellico’s strategic maneuvering—ordering a covert scan of Gul Lemec’s ship—underscores the Cardassians’ calculated efficiency and Picard’s untenable position. The moment crystallizes the tension between Starfleet’s desperation and the Cardassians’ ruthless precision, raising the stakes for Picard’s survival and the Enterprise’s response.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

2

Jellico orders Geordi to discreetly scan Gul Lemec's ship for clues, indicating preparations for an attack. Jellico dismisses the idea that Picard knows those defence plans.

Focused to Dismissive

Data points out Picard might be tortured for information he doesn't have, and Jellico confirms Picard doesn't know the defense plans because he just received them, creating dramatic irony and emphasizing Picard's vulnerability.

Concerned to Grim

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

5

A mix of controlled urgency and underlying dread. Surface-level, he projects confidence and command, but internally, he grapples with the weight of Picard’s suffering and the realization that Starfleet’s security protocols may have failed. There’s a flicker of guilt when he confirms Picard never saw the defense plans—implying the torture is for naught—but he masks it with action, ordering the scan as a way to regain control.

Jellico stands behind the ready room desk, his posture rigid but his tone initially warm as he promotes Data to first officer—a decision that subtly undermines Riker’s authority. He moves about the room with calculated pacing, his fingers tapping the desk as he processes Geordi’s report. When Data reveals the Cardassians’ likely motive for targeting Picard, Jellico’s expression darkens, and his voice takes on a grim, strategic edge. He orders a covert scan of Gul Lemec’s ship, his orders sharp and decisive, but a flicker of unease crosses his face as he realizes Picard is being tortured for information he doesn’t possess.

Goals in this moment
  • To leverage Data’s analytical strengths to outmaneuver the Cardassians and protect Starfleet’s interests in the sector.
  • To uncover Gul Lemec’s intentions through a covert scan, thereby gaining a tactical advantage before the Cardassians can strike.
  • To maintain operational control over the *Enterprise*’s crew, even if it means sidelining Riker or exploiting Data’s loyalty.
Active beliefs
  • That the Cardassians are preparing for an imminent attack and that Picard’s capture is part of a larger, more sinister strategy.
  • That Starfleet’s security protocols are robust, but human error or Cardassian deception could still expose critical vulnerabilities.
  • That loyalty to the chain of command must sometimes be sacrificed for the greater good of the mission.
Character traits
Calculating and pragmatic Authoritative yet vulnerable Strategic thinker with a tactical mind Subtly manipulative (promoting Data to undermine Riker) Emotionally contained but internally conflicted
Follow Edward Jellico's journey
Lemec
Gul
primary

Projected as coldly triumphant. The crew’s realization that Lemec tailored a fake weapon to capture Picard suggests he operates with arrogant confidence, believing his plans are foolproof. His absence in the scene makes his presence all the more ominous—a silent, looming threat that the Enterprise crew must outmaneuver.

Physically absent but the driving force of the scene. Lemec’s actions—capturing Picard, staging the Celtris III deception, and preparing for an invasion—are the catalyst for the crew’s deductions. His ruthless efficiency is highlighted when Data reveals that Picard was targeted for his theta-band expertise, a skill the Cardassians deliberately lured him to extract. Jellico’s order to scan Lemec’s ship is a direct response to his perceived threat, framing him as a master manipulator who exploits Starfleet’s weaknesses with chilling precision.

Goals in this moment
  • To **extract Starfleet’s sector defense plans** from Picard, regardless of the methods used.
  • To **prepare for a Cardassian invasion** in the Minos Korva sector, leveraging Picard’s expertise as a key component.
  • To **exploit Starfleet’s internal divisions** (e.g., Jellico’s temporary command, Riker’s sidelining) to create further chaos.
Active beliefs
  • That **Starfleet’s security can be breached** through psychological pressure and targeted deception.
  • That **Picard’s theta-band expertise is a unique and irreplaceable asset** worth any cost to obtain.
  • That the **Federation’s response will be delayed or weakened** by internal conflicts.
Character traits
Psychologically adept at exploiting enemies’ vulnerabilities Militarily disciplined and **uncompromising** Strategic thinker with **long-term planning** Views Starfleet as **weak and divisible** Enjoys **tactical dominance** over adversaries
Follow Lemec's journey

Surface-level calm with underlying strategic alarm. Data does not exhibit human-like distress over Picard’s torture, but his focus on the tactical implications (e.g., ‘we could be at a serious disadvantage’) suggests a deep, if logical, concern. His promotion to first officer does not elicit pride or hesitation—only a sense of duty. The moment where he realizes Picard is being tortured for nonexistent information is the closest he comes to frustration, though it manifests as analytical urgency.

Data sits across from Jellico in the ready room, his posture erect and his expression neutral as he accepts the promotion to first officer. He questions Jellico’s decision regarding Riker but ultimately defers to his authority. When Geordi delivers the tricorder report, Data immediately analyzes the data, deducing the Cardassians’ true motive for targeting Picard. His voice is calm but urgent as he outlines the implications of theta-band expertise and the sector defense plans. The revelation that Picard is being tortured for information he doesn’t possess does not elicit emotional distress in Data, but his logical concern for tactical disadvantage is evident.

Goals in this moment
  • To **protect Starfleet’s tactical integrity** by uncovering the Cardassians’ true intentions.
  • To **support Jellico’s command** while ensuring his decisions align with **logical efficiency** (even if they conflict with Riker’s authority).
Active beliefs
  • That **emotional loyalty** (e.g., Riker’s bond with Picard) should not **overshadow strategic necessity**.
  • That the Cardassians’ actions are **rational and predictable**, making them vulnerable to **counter-strategy**.
Character traits
Analytically precise Loyal to Starfleet’s mission Emotionally detached but **concerned about strategic outcomes** Willing to defer to authority (even when uncomfortable) Highly observant of patterns and inconsistencies
Follow Data's journey
Supporting 2

Not directly observable, but inferred as detached and operational. Nechayev’s actions suggest she is focused on the mission above all else, even if it means exposing officers like Picard to risk. Her lack of presence in the scene underscores the impersonal nature of Starfleet’s bureaucracy—Picard’s suffering is a tactical setback, not a personal failure.

Nechayev is not physically present, but her influence is central to the scene. Jellico references her transmission of the sector defense plans—plans Picard never saw—implying her direct involvement in the chain of command. Her decisions (sending the plans to Jellico, approving his temporary command) set the stage for the current crisis. The crew’s realization that Picard is being tortured for information he doesn’t possess indirectly critiques Nechayev’s operational security, though no one voices this aloud.

Goals in this moment
  • To ensure Starfleet’s operational security in the face of Cardassian aggression.
  • To maintain the chain of command, even if it means sidelining officers like Riker or Picard temporarily.
Active beliefs
  • That **compartmentalization of information** is essential to Starfleet’s defense.
  • That **individual officers are expendable** if the mission’s success is at stake.
Character traits
Authoritative and decisive Prioritizes institutional security over individual officers Strategic but potentially **overly rigid** in her protocols Trusts Jellico’s judgment but may be **blind to its consequences**
Follow Alynna Nechayev's journey

Indirectly conveyed as simmering frustration. While not present, Riker’s loyalty to Picard and disdain for Jellico’s methods would be evident if he were in the room. The promotion of Data—someone he respects but sees as less experienced in command—would sting, reinforcing his sense of being sidelined. His absence makes the scene’s power dynamics more acute.

Riker is not physically present in this scene, but his absence is palpable. His authority is subtly undermined by Jellico’s promotion of Data, and the crew’s discussion about Picard’s capture implicitly references Riker’s loyalty to his captain. The unspoken tension is that Riker would never have accepted such a promotion under these circumstances, making Jellico’s move a strategic slight against him. Data’s promotion also highlights Riker’s marginalization during Jellico’s command.

Goals in this moment
  • To reclaim his rightful place as first officer and restore Picard’s command as soon as possible.
  • To challenge Jellico’s authoritarian decisions, particularly those that prioritize tactics over crew morale.
Active beliefs
  • That Jellico’s leadership is **temporarily necessary but ultimately harmful** to the *Enterprise*’s cohesion.
  • That Picard’s capture is a **personal failure** of Starfleet’s security, and that he must do everything in his power to rectify it.
Character traits
Loyal to Picard above all else Principled and resistant to authoritarian tactics Strategic but emotionally invested in his crew Potentially resentful of Jellico’s leadership style
Follow William Riker's journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

1
Geordi La Forge's Celtris Three Tricorder Report PADD

The Celtris Three Tricorder Report PADD is the linchpin of this scene’s revelation. Geordi delivers it to Jellico, who skims its contents—‘nothing out of the ordinary’—before Data reanalyzes the data, deducing that the Cardassians’ true motive was to capture Picard for his theta-band expertise. The PADD’s apparent mundanity (normal scans, tactical readings) hides a critical truth: the Cardassians staged the entire operation to lure Picard. This object symbolizes the deception at the heart of the crisis—what seems like a routine report unravels into a strategic nightmare, forcing the crew to rethink everything they thought they knew.

Before: Possessed by Geordi La Forge, freshly downloaded with …
After: Handed to Jellico, then analyzed by Data, who …
Before: Possessed by Geordi La Forge, freshly downloaded with Beverly Crusher’s tricorder readings from Celtris III. The data appears routine and unremarkable—scans of caverns and armed Cardassians—hiding its true significance.
After: Handed to Jellico, then analyzed by Data, who extracts its hidden meaning. The PADD’s contents shift from a dead end to a critical clue, prompting Jellico to order a covert scan of Gul Lemec’s ship. Its narrative role evolves from evidence of ‘nothing’ to evidence of a deliberate Cardassian trap**.

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

1
Captain’s Ready Room (Deck 1, USS Enterprise-D) [Command Hub]

The Captain’s Ready Room serves as the nerve center of this crisis, a clandestine war room where Jellico’s temporary command collides with the Enterprise’s loyal crew. The low lighting and polished desk (Picard’s personal space, now usurped by Jellico) create a tense, intimate atmosphere, amplifying the power struggle between authority and loyalty. Data’s promotion—symbolized by his RED uniform—happens here, a subtle but brutal undermining of Riker. The fish tank and crayon drawings (Picard’s personal touches) contrast with the cold, strategic discussions, highlighting the human cost of Jellico’s decisions. When Data deduces the Cardassians’ true motive, the room becomes a hub of tactical deliberation, its confined space mirroring the crew’s growing sense of urgency and entrapment.

Atmosphere Tension-filled with whispered urgency. The air is charged with unspoken conflict—Jellico’s authoritarian presence, Data’s detached …
Function Command hub and strategic war room. The ready room is where Jellico exercises his temporary …
Symbolism Represents the tension between institutional power and personal loyalty. The ready room, normally Picard’s sanctuary, …
Access Restricted to senior officers only (Jellico, Data, Geordi). The door chimes before Geordi enters, reinforcing …
Low lighting casting long shadows across the desk Picard’s fish tank and crayon drawings (personal touches now in Jellico’s possession) The polished desk (symbolizing authority, now usurped) Data’s RED uniform (indicating his promotion, a visual marker of the power shift) The PADD on the desk (the physical catalyst for the revelation)

Organizations Involved

Institutional presence and influence

2
Starfleet

Starfleet’s institutional presence is omnipresent but indirect in this scene, manifesting through Jellico’s temporary command, Nechayev’s transmitted defense plans, and the crew’s adherence to protocol (e.g., Geordi delivering the PADD report). The organization’s bureaucratic rigidity is exposed when Data reveals that Picard is being tortured for information he never received—a failure of operational security that Starfleet’s compartmentalization helped create. Jellico’s order to scan Lemec’s ship is a direct response to Starfleet’s vulnerability, but it also highlights the organization’s desperation. The crew’s loyalty to Picard (a Starfleet officer) clashes with their duty to follow Jellico’s orders, creating internal tension within the institution.

Representation Through institutional protocol (Jellico’s command, Nechayev’s orders) and the crew’s adherence to chain of command …
Power Dynamics Exercising authority over individuals but operating under constraint. Jellico wields Starfleet’s power to promote Data …
Impact The scene exposes Starfleet’s fragility—its security protocols can be breached, its officers can be exploited, …
Internal Dynamics Tension between loyalty and pragmatism. The crew’s personal bonds (e.g., Riker and Picard) clash with …
To maintain operational security in the face of Cardassian aggression, even if it means sacrificing individual officers (e.g., Picard). To prevent a Cardassian invasion in the Minos Korva sector by uncovering their intentions (e.g., via the covert scan of Lemec’s ship). Through chain of command (Jellico’s orders, Nechayev’s protocols), Through resource allocation (e.g., assigning the Enterprise as command ship, transmitting defense plans), Through institutional loyalty (e.g., Data and Geordi following orders despite personal reservations).
Cardassian Union

The Cardassian Union’s shadow looms over the entire scene, driving the crew’s deductions and actions. While Gul Lemec is not physically present, his strategic deception (luring Picard to Celtris III, staging the metagenic weapon) is the catalyst for the crisis. The crew’s realization that Picard was targeted for his theta-band expertise—and that he is being tortured for nonexistent informationexposes the Cardassians’ ruthless efficiency. Jellico’s order to scan Lemec’s ship is a direct response to their threat, but it also acknowledges their tactical superiority. The Cardassians’ ability to exploit Starfleet’s weaknesses (e.g., compartmentalized intelligence, internal divisions) makes them a formidable, almost unstoppable force in this moment.

Representation Through Gul Lemec’s implied actions (capturing Picard, staging the Celtris III deception) and the crew’s …
Power Dynamics Exercising dominance through deception and psychological pressure. The Cardassians hold the upper hand—they initiated the …
Impact The Cardassian Union’s actions force Starfleet into a defensive, reactive stance, exposing its vulnerabilities. The …
Internal Dynamics Militaristic efficiency with a focus on territorial dominance. The Cardassians operate with precision and ruthlessness, …
To extract Starfleet’s sector defense plans from Picard, regardless of the methods used. To prepare for a Cardassian invasion in the Minos Korva sector, leveraging Picard’s expertise as a key component. To exploit Starfleet’s internal divisions (e.g., Jellico’s command, Riker’s marginalization) to create further chaos. Through psychological manipulation (e.g., torturing Picard, staging a fake weapon), Through strategic deception (e.g., luring the Enterprise team to Celtris III), Through tactical dominance (e.g., preparing for an invasion, outmaneuvering Starfleet’s responses).

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

What led here 2
Causal

"Jellico promotes Data, then seeks info. The conversation shifts to Geordi's report on the tricorder readings, which reveals nothing unusual, deepening the mystery of Picard's team being lured there, thus setting up Data's later analysis as a critical turning point."

Jellico promotes Data and probes Celtris Three
S6E11 · Chain of Command, Part II
Causal

"Jellico promotes Data, then seeks info. The conversation shifts to Geordi's report on the tricorder readings, which reveals nothing unusual, deepening the mystery of Picard's team being lured there, thus setting up Data's later analysis as a critical turning point."

Data reveals Cardassians targeted Picard
S6E11 · Chain of Command, Part II
What this causes 2
Causal

"Jellico promotes Data, then seeks info. The conversation shifts to Geordi's report on the tricorder readings, which reveals nothing unusual, deepening the mystery of Picard's team being lured there, thus setting up Data's later analysis as a critical turning point."

Jellico promotes Data and probes Celtris Three
S6E11 · Chain of Command, Part II
Causal

"Jellico promotes Data, then seeks info. The conversation shifts to Geordi's report on the tricorder readings, which reveals nothing unusual, deepening the mystery of Picard's team being lured there, thus setting up Data's later analysis as a critical turning point."

Data reveals Cardassians targeted Picard
S6E11 · Chain of Command, Part II

Key Dialogue

"DATA: It is possible that the Cardassians were interested in specifically capturing Captain Picard."
"JELLICO: Or maybe something that he was going to do in the future. In case of a Cardassian attack, the Enterprise will be assigned as the command ship for this sector. If the Cardassians got wind of that..."
"DATA: If Captain Picard is aware of our defense plans for this sector, we could be at a serious tactical disadvantage."
"JELLICO: Admiral Nechayev just transmitted the plans to me this afternoon. Picard never saw them."
"DATA: In that case, he may be tortured for information that he does not have."