Turbolift Confession: Tasha's Fear for Castillo
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Tasha's distraction unsettles Data, leading him to question her uncharacteristic hesitation in the turbolift.
Tasha confesses her growing attachment to Castillo, revealing her fear for his fate if the Enterprise-C returns to its doomed past.
Data's logical response about temporal uncertainty magnifies Tasha's existential dread about changing timelines.
Tasha exits with uncharacteristic hesitation, leaving Data to process her human emotional complexity.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Surface professionalism fractured by private anxiety and tenderness; she shows fear for another's life coupled with quiet resignation.
Tasha enters the turbolift visibly troubled, admits a growing affection for an Enterprise‑C officer, expresses worry about his fate, asks Data a personal question about alternate timelines, then pauses and exits to Deck Six, leaving her fear unassuaged.
- • To briefly unburden herself of personal anguish about the Enterprise‑C officer.
- • To gauge whether alternate timelines would alter her life—seeking perspective or consolation.
- • To maintain composure and continue performing duty despite emotional distraction.
- • That personal attachments are fragile in wartime and may require sacrifice.
- • That outcomes of the temporal mission will determine whether personal losses are visible or erased.
- • That confiding to a logical, unemotional colleague (Data) may be safer than exposing vulnerability to others.
Calm, detached, and curious; maintains procedural equanimity while recognizing the human weight of Tasha's disclosure without feeling it.
Data stands with professional stillness, notices Tasha's distraction, asks clarifying questions, translates her expression into an objective observation, provides a temporal-probability response about the other timeline, and refrains from offering emotional consolation.
- • To gather accurate information about crew dispositions and destinations.
- • To offer logically grounded perspectives about the temporal uncertainty affecting outcomes.
- • To perform his duty as an officer by observing and reporting rather than consoling.
- • That objective analysis is the appropriate response to uncertainty.
- • That temporal mechanics create outcomes which may render current suffering unknowable.
- • That expressing empathy is outside his functional programming, so he prioritizes information over comfort.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The Captain's Ready Room turbolift doors provide the physical punctuation of the confession: they open to admit the two officers, frame Tasha's pause in the doorway, and finally close after she exits, sealing the private exchange and symbolically leaving her worry behind the metal seam.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The Enterprise turbolift car is the cramped, semi-private setting that allows a candid exchange between officers. Its transit function compresses time and forces intimacy, making a quick confession possible between duty-bound movements.
Engineering is named as Data's initial destination and as a possible shared duty station; it functions briefly as a practical warp point in the dialogue that contrasts operational routine with the emotionally fraught subject Tasha raises.
Deck Six functions as the immediate destination and point of egress for Tasha; it is the practical route she takes to remove herself from the emotionally charged exchange and continue her duties.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
No narrative connections mapped yet
This event is currently isolated in the narrative graph
Key Dialogue
"TASHA: "I was just thinking... a lot of things... I've been working with one of the officers from the Enterprise-C... he's nice, you know? I like him. I'm worried about what's going to happen to him.""
"DATA: "We may never know what happens, Tasha. If they succeed, we will not even realize any of these events occurred.""
"DATA: "The possibilities are too numerous even for me to calculate, Tasha.""