[rec.arts.startrek.info] Synopsis: "Galaxy's Child"

tlynch@nntp-server.caltech.edu (Timothy W. Lynch) (03/14/91)

WARNING:  The following article contains spoiler information regarding this 
week's TNG episode, "Galaxy's Child."  All personnel not cleared for access to 
this information should remain well clear.

The Enterprise stops at Starbase 313 to pick up some scientific equipment, and 
Geordi has the pleasure of welcoming on board Dr. Leah Brahms, whose image he 
fell in love with on the holodeck, and who is coming on board specifically to 
talk to him.  He's ecstatic about finally meeting "his dream", but the ecstasy 
sours when Leah greets him as "the one who's fouled up my engine designs."

As the Enterprise diverts to investigate some interesting radiation readings, 
Geordi and Leah's relationship goes further downhill.  His justifications of 
his many modifications (that theory doesn't equal reality, mainly) are met with
a cold shoulder, and Geordi's repeated slips about things he assumes Leah knows
and things he does know about her make her rather uneasy.  This comes to a head
when Geordi sets the stage for a textbook seduction in his quarters, but Leah 
is still mostly business and doesn't stay long.

Meanwhile, the Enterprise encounters the source of the strange radiation--a 
space-born lifeform.  Unfortunately, it attacks them, and the only way they 
save themselves is with a minimal phaser burst which kills the creature.  
Picard is thunderstruck at what he's been forced to do, and very depressed, 
but before he leaves the bridge, Data picks up some new readings from the 
creature...indications of a separate, smaller entity inside.  "No wonder it 
attacked us..." says Picard.  "It was about to give birth!"

As the bridge crew, on Bev's advice and over Worf's objections, prepare to 
help the child's birth by using the phasers to give a Caesarean section, Leah 
finally asks Geordi about his odd attitude towards her.  He tells her that 
he's admired her (though not about the holodeck), and that he hopes they can 
become good friends--and she's flattered, but surprised that Geordi doesn't 
already know that she's *married*.  A rather bitter Geordi rails about how 
wrong the computer was to Guinan, until she brusquely points out that all 
Leah's done is failed to live up to his false expectations.

The Caesarean, in the meantime, is successful, and the baby is born.  The 
Enterprise prepares to leave, but before it can do so, the baby follows and 
attaches itself to the ship.  Apparently, it's imprinted--on the ENTERPRISE,
and it begins to drain the ship's energy.  After a brief conference where it's 
decided to head for wherever the mother was probably heading and then blow the 
baby off (by depressurizing the shuttle bay it's right over), Leah asks Geordi 
if she can take a look at a file of all the modifications he's made.  He 
rushes off to the bridge, but she looks at the file--and THEN heads, 
unknowing, for the very holodeck simulation Geordi fell in love with Leah in.
Geordi hears about this too late, and enters just in time to greet a very 
angry Leah who feels invaded and used.  Geordi eventually calms her down (or 
at least quiets her down) and angrily claims that the only thing he's guilty 
of is offering her friendship.

The ship reaches the mother's destination--an asteroid belt made up of those 
elements the creature needs to survive.  Unfortunately, blowing off the 
creature fails, succeeding only in draining power much further and in making 
the baby call its relatives for help.  Eventually, Leah and Geordi, by working 
together, reason that by changing the auxiliary power away from the frequency 
the creature is used to, they might "sour the milk."  It works in the nick of 
time, and Geordi and Leah each realize that the "real" people aren't so bad.

NEXT WEEK:

Nightmares, nightmares, who's got the nightmares?  Everybody, it seems--I just
hope said dreams are interesting.

S'long for now...

Tim Lynch (Cornell's first Astronomy B.A.; one of many Caltech grad students)
BITNET:  tlynch@citjuliet
INTERNET:  tlynch@juliet.caltech.edu
UUCP:  ...!ucbvax!tlynch%juliet.caltech.edu@hamlet.caltech.edu
"Captain, I'd like to announce the birth of a large baby..._something_."
			--B. Crusher, MD
--
Copyright 1991, Timothy W. Lynch.  All rights reserved, but feel free to ask...