Fabula
S7E16 · Thine Own Self

Data reveals radiation’s cellular destruction

In Garvin’s home, now repurposed as a makeshift laboratory, Data demonstrates his refined microscope to Talur, revealing irrefutable evidence of cellular damage in the villagers—proof that their affliction stems from radioactive contamination rather than infection. Talur’s suspicion of Data’s lab activities forces this scientific revelation, which deepens the crisis: the villagers’ suffering is now directly tied to Data’s actions, escalating the urgency of his self-sacrificial mission. Gia’s weakened state and the pendant she wears (made from the radioactive fragments Data sold to Skoran) further implicates him, while Talur’s growing distrust underscores the emotional and moral stakes of his discovery. The moment marks a turning point, shifting the narrative from suspicion to certainty about the cause of the illness, and from external conflict to an internal reckoning for Data as he confronts his unintended role in the villagers’ suffering.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

2

Talur enters Data's makeshift laboratory and questions his activities, as Data studies tissue samples to identify the cause of the villagers' illness.

curiosity to concern ['dining room', 'laboratory']

Data shows Talur his refined microscope, explaining its high magnification and his findings of extensive cellular damage, which he believes is not an infection.

curiosity to skepticism

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

5
Garvin
primary

Implied despair and physical decline—his refusal to eat suggests resignation or pain, while his absence looms as a silent accusation. The villagers’ fear and Data’s guilt are projected onto him, making him the emotional core of the scene despite not being present.

Garvin is absent from the scene physically but is a central focus of the dialogue and investigation. His illness is the catalyst for Data’s microscope analysis, and his recent purchase of Gia’s pendant (from Skoran, who bought the radioactive fragments from Data) becomes the critical clue linking Data’s actions to the contamination. Gia’s mention of his refusal to eat broth underscores his deteriorating condition, heightening the urgency of Data’s discovery.

Goals in this moment
  • To survive the radiation poisoning (implied, though he is unaware of the cause)
  • To protect Gia, even in his weakened state (shown through her concern for him)
Active beliefs
  • His illness is a natural affliction, not tied to Data’s arrival (a belief Data will soon disprove)
  • Trust in Talur and the village’s traditional healing methods (which have failed him)
Character traits
Indirectly pivotal to the revelation (his illness drives the investigation) Symbolic of the villagers’ vulnerability and Data’s unintended harm Represents the human cost of Data’s actions, even in his absence
Follow Garvin's journey
Gia
primary

Worried and exhausted, but determined to help her father. Her physical decline is evident, yet she suppresses her own needs to care for others. There’s a fragile hope in her trust of Data, though the pendant revelation introduces a subtle undercurrent of dread—she may begin to question his role in their suffering.

Gia enters the room visibly weakened—skin blotches, painful movements, and difficulty focusing—carrying a bowl of broth for her father. She reports Garvin’s refusal to eat, her voice trembling with worry. When Data questions her about the pendant, she hands it over without hesitation, her trust in him evident despite her illness. Talur urges her to rest, and she obeys, though her concern for her father lingers. Her physical frailty contrasts with her emotional resilience, making her a poignant symbol of the villagers’ plight.

Goals in this moment
  • To ensure her father eats and recovers, even as her own strength fades
  • To cooperate with Data and Talur, trusting their efforts to find a cure
  • To suppress her own pain and fear to maintain a sense of normalcy for her family
Active beliefs
  • Data is a benevolent outsider who can help them, despite the village’s suspicions
  • Her father’s illness is a temporary setback that can be overcome with care
  • The pendant is a harmless gift, not a source of contamination (a belief Data will shatter)
Character traits
Loyal and devoted to her father, prioritizing his care over her own health Trusting of Data, despite the village’s growing suspicion of him Physically weakened but emotionally strong, masking her pain to fulfill her duties Observant and cooperative, providing critical information (e.g., the pendant’s origin)
Follow Gia's journey

A mix of awe, frustration, and creeping fear. The microscope’s revelations challenge her authority as a healer, and Data’s logical detachment contrasts with her emotional investment in the villagers. She’s reluctantly impressed by his methods but deeply unsettled by the implication that an outsider—one she’s interacted with closely—may be responsible for the suffering. Her suspicion hardens as the pendant clue emerges, though she remains professionally composed.

Talur enters the laboratory in astonishment, her initial suspicion of Data’s activities giving way to reluctant fascination as he demonstrates the microscope. She peers through the eyepiece, reacting with surprise at the magnified cellular damage, though she feigns understanding of Data’s scientific explanations. Her concern for Gia’s health is genuine, and she advises the girl to rest, but her growing distrust of Data is palpable. She connects his arrival to the illness, even as she acknowledges his lack of symptoms as contradictory. Her role as the village healer is undermined by the microscope’s irrefutable evidence, forcing her to confront her own limitations.

Goals in this moment
  • To determine the cause of the illness and protect the villagers, even if it means relying on Data’s expertise
  • To maintain her role as the village’s healer, despite the microscope’s threat to her authority
  • To prepare for the possibility that Data’s actions have harmed the community, and to decide how to proceed
Active beliefs
  • Traditional healing methods should suffice, but the microscope’s evidence forces her to reconsider
  • Data’s arrival is **too coincidental** with the illness to be ignored, though his lack of symptoms is confusing
  • She must **adapt quickly** to new information, even if it threatens her status in the village
Character traits
Skeptical but curious, drawn to Data’s scientific methods despite her initial distrust Protective of Gia and the villagers, prioritizing their well-being over ego Pragmatic and adaptive, willing to accept new evidence even if it challenges her beliefs Defensive of her role as healer, though the microscope exposes her knowledge gaps Diplomatic, avoiding direct confrontation with Data despite her suspicions
Follow Skoran (Barkonian …'s journey

A tense blend of intellectual satisfaction (having solved the medical mystery) and deepening moral guilt (realizing his actions caused the suffering). His surface calm masks a growing internal reckoning—his usual logical detachment is fractured by the emotional weight of unintended harm. There’s a flicker of self-sacrificial resolve as he begins to accept responsibility.

Data is hunched over his refined microscope, meticulously analyzing tissue samples from Garvin and Gia. When Talur enters, he calmly explains his scientific process, demonstrating the microscope’s capabilities with precision. His demeanor shifts from analytical detachment to quiet urgency as he connects Gia’s pendant to the radioactive fragments he sold to Skoran, realizing his unintended role in the villagers’ suffering. His posture tightens, and his voice carries a rare weight of emotional conflict—logical certainty clashing with moral guilt.

Goals in this moment
  • To isolate the cause of the villagers’ illness using scientific rigor
  • To prove (or disprove) his own involvement in the contamination
  • To protect Gia and Garvin from further harm, even if it means sacrificing himself
Active beliefs
  • Scientific evidence is the most reliable path to truth, even when it implicates him
  • His amnesia has left him vulnerable to unintended consequences, but he must still act with integrity
  • The villagers’ suffering is his responsibility to rectify, regardless of personal cost
Character traits
Methodical and precise in scientific analysis Emotionally conflicted as he uncovers his role in the villagers’ illness Analytically detached yet morally engaged Quick to connect disparate clues (pendant → radiation → illness) Subtly protective of Gia, urging her to rest despite his own distress
Follow Data's journey
Supporting 1
Talur
Healer
secondary

Not directly observable, but inferred as selfishly indifferent to the consequences of his actions. His absence from the scene underscores how systemic distrust and greed (his traits) contributed to the crisis, even if unintentionally. The revelation about the pendant implicates him as a link in the chain of harm, though he remains oblivious.

Skoran is mentioned indirectly as the blacksmith who sold Gia her pendant—made from the radioactive fragments Data provided. His role in the contamination chain (Data → Skoran → villagers) is critical to the revelation, though he is not physically present. His greed and distrust of outsiders (implied from earlier scenes) are indirectly tied to the villagers’ suffering, as he unknowingly distributed the contaminated metal. His absence highlights the ripple effects of Data’s actions, as his decisions amplified the harm.

Goals in this moment
  • To profit from trade, regardless of the origins or safety of the materials (implied)
  • To maintain his status as the village’s blacksmith and trader (implied)
Active beliefs
  • Outsiders (like Data) are untrustworthy and should be exploited for gain
  • His role as blacksmith gives him authority to make decisions about materials
Character traits
Greedy and opportunistic (buying/selling the fragments without question) Distrustful of outsiders (implied by his prior interactions with Data) Indirectly complicit in the contamination, though unaware of the danger Symbolic of the villagers’ economic vulnerabilities and superstitions
Follow Talur's journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

4
Data's Makeshift Lab Glassware (Test Tubes and Beakers)

The test tubes and beakers in Garvin’s home serve as props of scientific urgency, reinforcing the makeshift nature of Data’s laboratory. While they are not directly used in this event, their presence on every flat surface creates a sensory backdrop of hasty experimentation—glasses clinking, liquids swirling, the tactile evidence of Data’s desperate search for answers. They symbolize the clash between tradition and progress: Talur’s herbal remedies (implied by her role as healer) are outmatched by Data’s technology, and the beakers embody the villagers’ fragile hope that science can save them. Their sterile functionality contrasts with the emotional rawness of the scene, highlighting the stakes of Data’s discovery.

Before: Crowded with liquids and residues from earlier experiments. …
After: Remain in the laboratory, now part of the …
Before: Crowded with liquids and residues from earlier experiments. Some may contain failed attempts to isolate the illness’s cause, while others hold prepared samples for further testing. They are ready for use but not the focus of this event.
After: Remain in the laboratory, now part of the "before and after" narrative. Some may be discarded as irrelevant once the radiation is confirmed, while others could be repurposed for developing a cure. Their symbolic role persists: they represent the villagers’ dependence on Data’s expertise, even as they underscore his guilt.
Data's Refined Microscope

Data’s refined microscope is the linchpin of the revelation, serving as both a diagnostic tool and a symbol of scientific truth. Talur’s astonishment at its capabilities underscores the cultural and technological gap between the villagers and Data, while the microscope’s 500x magnification exposes the irrefutable cellular damage caused by radiation. Data uses it to rule out infection, shifting the investigation toward his own actions. The microscope’s clinical precision contrasts with the emotional chaos of the scene, making the truth it reveals all the more devastating. Its role is dual: it saves lives by diagnosing the illness but also condemns Data by proving his involvement.

Before: Assembled and functional, positioned on a table in …
After: Remains in the laboratory, now a permanent record …
Before: Assembled and functional, positioned on a table in Garvin’s repurposed laboratory. Data has already used it to analyze tissue samples from Garvin and Gia, confirming the cellular damage. It is ready for demonstration when Talur enters.
After: Remains in the laboratory, now a permanent record of the truth. Its lens still bears the magnified image of the damaged cells, a silent accusation. Data may use it again to develop a cure or confirm the radiation’s source, but its primary role here is as the instrument of revelation—one that cannot be unseen.
Data's Scientific Notes, Calculations, and Diagrams on Villagers' Illness

Gia’s metal pendant is the smoking gun that directly links Data to the contamination. When Data notices it and questions its origin, Gia reveals it was purchased from Skoran two days prior—the same Skoran who bought the radioactive fragments from Data. The pendant symbolizes the chain of harm: Data’s unintentional sale → Skoran’s greedy distribution → villagers’ suffering. Its physical weight (as Gia hands it to Data) mirrors the emotional weight of the revelation. The pendant is small but devastating: it collapses the distance between Data’s actions and the villagers’ pain, forcing him to accept responsibility. Its metallic sheen contrasts with the organic decay of the tissue samples, reinforcing the artificiality of the crisis—one caused by technology and greed, not nature.

Before: Hanging from Gia’s clothing, unnoticed until Data’s sharp …
After: Removed from Gia’s possession and held by Data, …
Before: Hanging from Gia’s clothing, unnoticed until Data’s sharp observation. It is a harmless-looking trinket, its radioactive properties invisible to the villagers. Gia wears it proudly, unaware of its danger.
After: Removed from Gia’s possession and held by Data, who examines it closely. It becomes physical proof of his guilt, a tangible connection between his past actions and the present crisis. Data may study it further to confirm the radiation’s source or destroy it as a symbol of his mistake. Either way, it no longer represents a gift—it is now a relic of harm.
Garvin’s and Gia’s Microscope Tissue Slides

The tissue samples from Garvin and Gia are the physical evidence that Data uses to prove the radiation’s effects. Placed under the microscope, they reveal blackened, disintegrating cells—a stark contrast to the villagers’ earlier belief in an infectious disease. These samples bridge the gap between suspicion and certainty, as Talur’s reaction (pulling back in astonishment) confirms their devastating impact. The samples are passive but pivotal: they do not speak, but their silent testimony forces Data to confront his role in the contamination. Their medical objectivity clashes with the emotional stakes of the scene, making the revelation all the more painful.

Before: Prepared on microscope slides, already analyzed by Data. …
After: Remain in the laboratory as documentation of the …
Before: Prepared on microscope slides, already analyzed by Data. They show extensive cellular necrosis, confirming the radiation’s damage. They are ready for Talur’s inspection when she enters.
After: Remain in the laboratory as documentation of the crisis. Data may reference them again to develop a treatment plan or convince the villagers of the danger, but their primary narrative role is complete: they have sealed the link between Data’s actions and the illness.

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

1
Back Door (Gia and Garvin's Home)

Garvin’s home has been repurposed as a laboratory, its dining room transformed into a sterile workspace cluttered with test tubes, notes, and the refined microscope. The shift from domestic to scientific creates a jarring atmosphere: the warmth of family life (implied by Gia’s care for Garvin) clashes with the cold precision of Data’s investigation. The narrow space forces intimacy among the characters—Talur, Data, and Gia crowd around the microscope, their breathing and movements echoing in the confined room. The stairs leading upstairs (where Garvin lies ill) serve as a visual reminder of the stakes: every footstep or cough from above underscores the urgency of Data’s work. The location embodies the tension between hope and despair—it is both a sanctuary (for Gia and Garvin) and a chamber of reckoning (for Data).

Atmosphere Claustrophobic and charged with urgency. The sterile glow of the microscope contrasts with the flickering …
Function A makeshift laboratory (for Data’s investigation) and a family’s dying refuge (for Garvin and Gia). …
Symbolism Represents the fragility of the villagers’ world—once a haven, now a battleground of ideas and …
Access Restricted to those involved in the crisis: Data (the outsider), Talur (the healer), and Gia …
The glow of the microscope’s lens, casting eerie shadows on the walls The sound of Garvin’s coughing from upstairs, a haunting metronome The clutter of test tubes and notes on every surface, symbolizing the chaos of the investigation The flickering firelight (implied) from the hearth, contrasting with the cold blue of the microscope The smell of herbs (from Talur’s poultices) mingling with the metallic tang of Data’s equipment

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

What led here 2
Causal

"Data studies tissue samples, leading him to show Talur the microscope he created."

Talur accuses Data of causing the sickness
S7E16 · Thine Own Self
Temporal medium

"Data and Gia retreat from the hostile villagers and the story cuts to Data's makeshift laboratory at home. The villagers anger and alienation motivates Data's actions."

Villagers Blame Data for Radiation
S7E16 · Thine Own Self
What this causes 1
Causal

"Data studies tissue samples, leading him to show Talur the microscope he created."

Talur accuses Data of causing the sickness
S7E16 · Thine Own Self

Part of Larger Arcs

Key Dialogue

"TALUR: Jayden... what are you doing?"
"DATA: I am studying tissue samples from Garvin and Gia in an attempt to isolate the cause of the illness."
"TALUR: Gia?"
"DATA: Yes. She is also beginning to show signs of the illness."
"DATA: As you can see, the cellular damage is quite extensive. However, based on the interstitial transparency and membrane integrity, I do not believe this is an infection or any form of communicable disease."
"TALUR: Still... it does seem to be more than a coincidence that shortly after you arrived, people started to become ill."
"DATA: I agree."
"DATA: When did you begin wearing that pendant?"
"GIA: Two days ago. Father bought it from Skoran. Why?"
"DATA: This was made from one of the metal fragments I sold to Skoran..."