[rec.arts.startrek.info] Synopsis: "Remember Me"

tlynch@nntp-server.caltech.edu (Timothy W. Lynch) (10/25/90)

WARNING:  The following post contains critical plot information relevant to 
this week's TNG episode, "Remember Me", in the form of a synopsis.  Therefore, 
anyone not wishing advance knowledge of such information is hereby advised to 
duck.

The Enterprise is docked at Starbase 133, and Bev greets her old friend Dr. 
Dalen Quaice, who's departing the base after his wife's death (the Enterprise
will be taking him home when they depart).  After getting him settled, Bev
thinks about his comments on losing everyone he knows, and goes to see Wesley.
Wes is in Engineering, working on some warpfield experiments.  As Bev watches,
Wes tinkers a little, and then there's a bright, completely unexpected flash.
There doesn't seem to be any lasting effect, though, and we see the ship
depart the base.

The next morning, Bev goes to Quaice's quarters to invite him to breakfast, but
after he doesn't answer the ring, she enters--and finds neither him nor his
belongings.  Further, the computer claims that no such person is on board.
She calls Worf, who is apparently not aware of Quaice's presence either, but he
agrees to start a search.  Stranger still, Picard doesn't remember seeing any
mention of his visit, despite Bev's insistence that she sent the electronic 
paperwork about it to him weeks ago.  Even more bizarre, the starbase claims to
have no record of Quaice's existence--and he worked on the base for SIX YEARS.
Then, as if that weren't enough, O'Brien, whom we saw beam Quaice on board, 
doesn't remember doing so--but does remember Bev coming in alone, looking
around, saying "Thank you" and leaving.  And, of course, there's no transporter
trace of Quaice's existence, either.

While Worf, Riker and others start looking to see if the ship's somehow been
tampered with, Bev checks O'Brien to see if he's all right.  He's fine, but Bev
finds that Drs. Hill and Selar, and four other medical personnel are gone as
well--and they've all been on board for months.  After she reports this to
Picard, the two of them proceed to Engineering, where Wes talks about his 
experiment.  He'd been experimenting with Kosinski's warpfield equations, and
when he tried to create them (i.e. make a stable warp-bubble), it destabilized.
While a bubble could theoretically have swept up Dr. Quaice, it was limited to
Engineering, so it can't be the culprit--and there's no way it could alter 
computers and memories like that either.

Bev goes back to sickbay--and finds it completely empty.  When she reports the
absence of her staff to the bridge, they seem unsurprised--after all, says 
Data, she's never had one.  And the complete crew assigned to the ship only
numbers 230.  As Bev reacts with somewhat understandable shock, Picard takes 
her aside and begins expressing concerns for her mental state.  He believes 
her, and even sends the ship back to SB 133 based solely on her plea, but she
agrees to talk to Troi.  

Then, not much later, Bev's in sickbay, when suddenly a bright vortex appears
out of nowhere, blowing papers and books everywhere, and nearly sucking Bev in.
Geordi, however, looks for it after it disappears and finds no trace of it--or
any evidence that it ever existed.  By now, an analysis has shown that there
are no malfunctions--but now the complete crew only numbers 114.  Worse yet,
when Bev suggests working with Worf on something, she finds that no one knows
whom she's talking about.  She asks Deanna if she's going mad, and Deanna
comforts her, telling her that if it turns out this is all a mistake, all that
happens is that they're a little late at their next destination.

Bev goes to find Wes in Engineering--fortunately, he's still there.  She tells
him that they've got to find someone who can help--someone who understands all
about warp-bubbles.  Unfortunately, Kosinski's no help, and they're his damned
equations.  However, Wes mentions that Kosinski's "assistant", the Traveller,
might be able to assist--but no one knows where, or even _if_, he is.  The two
of them head up to talk to Picard--but only Bev gets as far as the turbolift.
Now truly panicked, she runs to the lift and goes to the bridge, finding a 
sole occupant--Picard.

Picard has no memory of any of the people she mentions (Riker, Data, Troi, 
O'Brien, Worf, and Wesley), insists that the ship's "never needed a crew 
before", and doesn't remember the Traveller.  To make her feel better, he 
agrees to have his vital signs continually monitored, and the computer starts
talking about them continuously in the background.  She promises not to forget
any of them, and to try to get them back.  She tells Picard that she's got 
something to say to him--but his seat is suddenly empty, and the computer is
silent.  Then, the vortex appears again, and Bev again just manages to avoid
being sucked in.  However, as we see her starting to recover from the vortex's
influence, we hear Geordi and Wes trying to maintain something--but then they
fail, and the vortex (in reality, a gate they tried to open) collapses.  Wes
gives up, saying they'll never get Bev back now.  But a voice says "It's not
over, Wesley...", and the Traveller phases in.  "There's still a way."

The Traveller, on board the _real_ Enterprise, says that Bev is still alive,
for as long as she THINKS she is.  It would seem that a warp-bubble did capture
someone--her; and while inside, Bev's thoughts created the reality she's
currently in.  He cannot go in and get her, any more than he can enter her
thoughts, but together, he and Wes might be able to open a gateway.  (However,
she'll have to choose to go through it.)  

Meanwhile, Bev tries to reason things out, but gets nowhere.  She tries to 
contact the Traveller's race, and then orders a course to Tau Alpha C, that 
race's homeworld.  But as she says "Engage", she finds that the planet has
vanished from the computer's starfield.  As the real ship heads back to SB 133,
and Wes begins to rework the equations, Bev tries to raise the starbase and 
finds she cannot.  She calls up the viewscreen, but sees only a mist outside,
which the computer describes as a mass-energy field 705 meters in diameter.
She continues her enquiries, and finds that according to the computer, the
known universe is a spheroid that is only 705 meters in diameter.  

The Enterprise arrives at the starbase and begins to assume the _precise_
location and position they had when the bubble formed.  The Traveller senses
the bubble, and Wes sees it again on his panel, but then the Traveller 
shudders slightly, and says that the bubble's collapsing.

Bev calls up a graphic of the universe, and when she finds it looks exactly 
like the schematic she saw in Engineering of the warp-bubble, realizes that
she's trapped inside it herself.  Then there's a sudden hull breach--when she 
investigates, she finds that reality is shrinking further; and she's only got 
4 minutes 17 seconds left.  As the Enterprise reestablishes the exact 
coordinates, Bev theorizes that her thoughts created this reality, but she
can't figure out what to do next.  

With about three minutes left, the Traveller starts phasing--and Bev realizes
while talking to the computer that the vortex she saw must have been the
gateway out of this reality.  She decides to go to where the bubble originally
established itself, in Engineering, traveling just to deck 36 when she finds
the lift won't go directly to Engineeering.

By this time, both the Traveller AND Wesley are phasing, and the gateway is
beginning to form, but now time's running short.  Seconds after Bev leaves the
lift, it vanishes, and now she starts outrunning entropy.  She makes it to
Engineering, and manages to dive through the gate just as the bubble vanishes
entirely.  She embraces Picard, thanks the Traveller, and clings to her
somewhat exhausted son.  And all is as it should be.

NEXT WEEK:

TNG breaks TOS's airtime with a visit to Tasha's world...and her sister.  Is
she loyal or not?  Is she a murderer or not?  Was she holding a lightsaber
or not?  (No, I'm not kidding.)  We'll find out.

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
"We will start with the assumption that I am _not_ crazy."
			--B. Crusher, MD
--
Copyright 1990, Timothy W. Lynch.  All rights reserved, but feel free to ask...