Star Trek: The Next Generation s05e25 Episode Script

The Inner Light

Captain's log, stardate 45944.
1.
Following a magnetic-wave survey|of the Parvenium system, we have detected an object which|we cannot immediately identify.
Magnify it.
- Mr Data?|- It appears to be a probe.
But there is no record|of this design.
Is it scanning us? No, but it is in a relative position|and is holding course with us.
It is made of paricium and talgonite,|a ceramic alloy.
Not a sophisticated technology.
Sir, I detect a low-level nucleonic|beam coming from the probe.
Shields up.
Stand by phasers.
The beam is scanning|the shield's perimeter.
The probe is emitting|a particle stream.
- It is penetrating our shields.
|- Increase speed to Captain! It's alright! Captain, I've got you.
It's Well, finally.
How are you feeling? Kamin, can you answer me? - What is this place?|- You're still feverish.
Computer, freeze program.
Computer, end program! Kamin.
Picard to Enterprise! Kamin, please don't get up.
|You're still not well.
I asked you, what is this place? This is your home, of course! Space, the final frontier.
These are the voyages|of the Starship Enterprise.
Its continuing mission,|to explore strange new worlds, .
.
to seek out new life|and new civilisations, .
.
to boldly go|where no one has gone before.
Am I a prisoner here? You've had a high fever|for three days.
You mustn't push yourself|too quickly.
Kamin! You really shouldn't go outside! Kamin! Please, come back inside.
Thank you.
This sapling is planted|as an affirmation of life, in defiance of the drought|and with expectations of long life.
Whatever comes,|we will keep it alive as a symbol of our survival.
Kamin! You're back on your feet.
|How do you feel? Are you in charge here? - In charge?|- I want to be returned to my ship.
What ship is that? Please.
Just tell me, what is this place?|Where am l? The fever.
It's taken your memory.
That must be it.
- Perhaps you can help me.
|- Anything, my friend.
- My name is Kamin?|- Yes.
- And you are?|- Batai.
Council Leader Batai.
Batai.
And you say I've been ill? For more than a week.
Eline|should have put you in the hospital, but she insisted on caring for you.
- Eline?|- Your wife.
If you don't remember that,|maybe it's safer not to go home! And what is this place? - Perhaps you should see the doctor.
|- No, please.
I'm sure it will all come back to me.
Well, this is the community|of Ressik.
Northern Province.
- What planet?|- Let me take you home.
No, really, I'm quite alright.
|Just answer me.
What planet? This is the planet Kataan.
Kataan.
Not a Federation planet.
I think I'll just take a walk.
But you've been ill for a week! The exercise will do me good.
I'll try to reacquaint myself|with the surroundings.
Thank goodness! I've had people out trying to find|you.
Why did you worry us like that? Are you hungry? Hungry, thirsty, exhausted.
I suppose that proves|this is not a dream, doesn't it? You think that this|your life is a dream? This is not my life! I know that much.
I've kept something hot for you.
Where did you go? I walked.
For hours.
And you're just out of bed! It's delicious.
You always say that.
Would you answer some questions,|no matter how strange they seem? Of course.
Are there other planets in this star|system? Do you visit other systems? Alright.
Do you have|a communications system here? How do you send messages|to other communities, other places? The usual way.
|By voice-transit conductor.
- Do you want to send a message?|- Yes.
- When can that be arranged?|- Tomorrow.
- Don't you want to ask about us?|- Of course.
Anything you can tell me|will be helpful.
We We We're married? Three years ago.
The happiest day of my life|was the day we got married.
And what do I do here in Ressik? You're the best iron weaver in|the community.
At least, I think so.
You prefer playing the flute,|of course.
- The flute?|- Yes.
When did I learn to play this? I'm afraid you never did, dear,|but you keep trying.
I see what you mean.
Well, thank you for the soup.
Thank you for your help.
Tomorrow, will you help me|send a message? Of course.
|Now, will you come to bed? - I'll sleep here.
|- Kamin, please come with me.
I've been sick.
I'll be tossing and|turning.
It wouldn't be fair to you.
Let me be the judge of that.
Where did you get this? Kamin, this is the first gift|you ever gave me.
Riker to sickbay,|the Captain's hurt.
Pulse and blood pressure are normal.
Hyperactive fibrogenic activity.
|This is odd.
- What is it?|- There's no evidence of injury.
Vital signs are normal.
But neurotransmitter production|is off the scale.
What's going on? This probe is doing something.
|Anything yet, Data? No, sir.
The particle emission|is unusual.
I am unable to block it.
We should destroy the probe.
|Phasers are ready.
That's not wise,|not until we know what it's doing.
Agreed.
|Stand down phasers, Mr Worf.
In the meantime,|take us out of range.
Thrusters only, 100 kph,|nice and easy.
- Aye, sir.
|- Data? The probe is moving with us,|holding relative position.
It's connected itself to him,|like a tether.
You've been dreaming about|your starship again, haven't you? I'm just charting the progress|of the course of the sun.
It might give a clue|to the cause of this drought.
I think you're still|trying to figure out where you are.
Where that ship of yours is.
How to get back to that life.
The memory is five years old now.
But it's still inside me.
Was your life there|so much better than this? So much more gratifying,|so much more fulfilling, that you cling to it|with such stubbornness? - Eline|- It must have been extraordinary.
But never in all the stories|you've told me have you mentioned anyone|who loved you as I do.
It was real.
It was as real as this is.
And you can't expect me|to forget a lifetime spent there.
Yes, I can.
|I've been patient, Kamin.
For five years,|I've shared you with that other life.
I've listened,|I've tried to understand.
And I have waited.
- When do I get you back?|- I know.
It has been hard on you.
When will you let go? When will you|start living this life? When will we start a family? - Kamin.
Eline.
Good morning.
|- Good morning, Batai.
Are you ready?|The Administrator's here.
Yes.
Will you come along? No, thank you.
|You do very well on your own.
She always was strong-minded,|even as a child.
It's not her fault.
These past few|years have been difficult for her.
And for you, I think.
There you are, Batai.
Perhaps you can explain,|when crops are dying all over, how this tree is flourishing? Well, this tree is our symbol.
|Our affirmation of life.
Everyone gives part of|their water rations to keep it alive.
We've learned, Administrator, that hope is a powerful weapon|against anything.
- Even drought.
|- A good point.
Perhaps I'll recommend a symbolic|tree in each of my communities.
What business have we today? We need help|to increase the water supply.
We think there are ways|to reclaim some of our water.
You're being a bit of an alarmist.
True, we're in a drought, but water|rationing has produced savings.
If the weather doesn't change,|we'll run out of water.
- Who is this?|- Kamin, sir.
Kamin! - Do I know you?|- No.
I haven't spoken to you before.
Kamin, I'm open|to all the people of this town.
I'm delighted to hear|what you have to say.
I suggest that we build|atmospheric condensers which could extract water|from the air.
I don't mean to quash|your very creative ideas, but building atmospheric condensers|would be a monumental undertaking.
We could not sustain such a project.
Each community|will be responsible for its own.
It's a choice between watering|our crops, and watching them die.
Well, I'll be glad|to pass along your idea.
This kind of participatory government|works for everyone.
Be well, Batai.
|I shall see you next month.
Good to meet you, Kanan.
Go carefully, Administrator.
That went very well.
|I think he was impressed with you.
But there'll be|no atmospheric condensers.
These things take time.
|But it will happen, I'm sure of it.
Come and have supper tonight,|old friend.
I'll make some vegetable stew.
Let's talk about building|our own condenser.
Kamin.
Hearing you talk|to the Administrator, I realise that,|for the first time in years, you were speaking as though you were|truly a member of the community.
It was good to hear that again.
You've been brooding|behind that flute all evening.
I'm not brooding.
|I'm immersed in my music.
Music.
I find that it helps me to think, but the real surprise is|I enjoy it so much.
No, the real surprise is|you're actually improving! - Batai.
|- Yes, ma'am.
- Go home.
|- Yes, ma'am.
- Goodnight, Kamin.
|- Goodnight, my friend.
Go carefully, Batai.
Don't forget these!|I won't put them away for you again.
Yes, ma'am! I've done nothing but nag all day.
|I'm sorry.
No, I'm the one who's sorry.
Everything you said this morning|was absolutely correct.
I feel that I have given you so|little and you have given me so much.
No.
You're a good man.
|A wonderful husband.
I didn't mean No, not such a wonderful husband.
I spend my time charting the stars.
I disappear for days at a time,|exploring the countryside.
My life is very much as it was.
|Old habits.
You're gentle and kind.
You never once|raised your voice to me.
I'd like your permission|to build something.
You've built your telescope,|your laboratory.
- You don't need my permission.
|- In this case, I do.
What is it? A nursery.
Really? Really? Unless, of course,|you would prefer a porch.
It would be easier to build.
- I could make a start right away.
|- No.
Any progress identifying the probe? Maybe.
We've picked up|residue on the probe's shell.
It may be from the propulsion system.
|They used a solid propellant as fuel.
A solid propellant? Crystalline emiristol.
|It produces a trail we can trace.
We can send our own probe|and trace it back to the origin.
I'll get right on it.
I have analysed the nucleonic beam.
It may be possible to reflect|the particles back to the probe - to disrupt the signal.
|- Doctor? I don't know the risk|of shutting down the beam.
I won't let it|keep drilling into him! If somebody gets stabbed,|you don't just pull the knife out.
It may do more harm than leaving it.
The Captain is under attack.
|We must act.
I'm inclined to agree.
|Doctor, monitor him closely.
Mr Data, prepare to disrupt the beam.
We're going to try to cut this cord.
Meribor! Meribor, this is your brother's|ceremony.
Don't fidget, now.
We name this child for|a dear friend who died a year ago.
But now, his memory will live on|in his namesake.
We name you Batai, in his honour.
And he's starting out|in the warmth of friends.
Thank you.
Help yourselves to something to eat.
- Congratulations, Kamin.
|- Thank you.
It seems like only yesterday|we had Meribor's naming ceremony.
Go on! I remember.
I was so nervous,|I was afraid that I would drop her.
- Now look at the little lady.
|- She's no lady! Tromping through the hills|with you all day, digging up those soil samples|you insist on collecting.
She's her father's daughter.
I always believed that I didn't need|children to complete my life.
Now I couldn't imagine life|without them.
Kamin, what is it? Get the doctor.
Hurry! His respiratory system's in spasm.
Pulse is irregular and weakening.
- I'm losing him.
|- Somatophysical failure.
Data, get that beam back! Fluctuations in the isocortex.
|Synaptic responses failing.
Begin full cardiac induction.
Blood pressure is dropping rapidly.
|70 over 20.
- Data, re-establish that beam!|- I am attempting to do so.
- Losing response.
|- Cortical stimulators.
Start at ten percent.
The beam is fully restored, Doctor.
Blood pressure up to 90 over 40|and rising.
Isocortical functions stabilising,|vital signs approaching normal.
- Meribor.
|- Happy day, Father.
That's my hobby.
Find your own! You're the one who taught me.
Don't complain|if you turned me into a scientist.
What has the scientist|been up to today? Analysing soil samples.
There isn't any anaerobic bacteria.
|The soil is dead.
This isn't just a very long drought,|is it? My log entries go back ten years.
You have data preceding that|for 15 years.
You've reached the same conclusion.
I haven't reached any conclusion.
A good scientist|doesn't function by conjecture.
A good scientist functions|by hypothesising then proving or disproving|that hypothesis.
That's what I did.
You should see more|of that young man Dannick.
You are changing the subject.
I'm not.
I'm just hypothesising|that he's in love with you.
You've taught me to pursue the|truth, no matter how painful it is.
It's too late to back off now.
|This planet is dying.
Perhaps I should have filled|your head with trivia.
Games and toys and clothes.
- I don't think you mean that.
|- No, I don't.
It just It saddens me to see you .
.
burdened with the knowledge|of things you can't change.
I think I should marry Dannick sooner|rather than later, don't you? Seize the time, Meribor.
Live now.
Make now|always the most precious time.
Now will never come again.
I love you, Father.
His vital signs are holding.
They've been stable|since the beam was restored.
Cmdr Riker.
We've received telemetry|from the probe we launched.
Go ahead.
We charted|the alien probe's radiation trail.
Can you extrapolate an origin? A star system in the Silarian Sector.
|Kataan.
Never heard of it.
Data? An unmapped system of six planets.
- Any of them inhabited?|- Not now.
The star went nova.
All life in this system|was destroyed 1,000 years ago.
I've put away your shoes|for you again.
Yes, thank you, dear.
I've been looking through this thing|on and off for over 30 years.
And I still don't see what you|and Meribor find so fascinating.
Fine.
Then maybe you'll sit down|and have a rest like you should do.
You treat me like some frail flower.
People have surgery all the time.
He loves playing.
He's quite good at it,|don't you think? He loves doing a lot of things.
Last week, all he wanted to be was|a botanist.
Before that, a sculptor.
I wish he would find|some focus in his life.
I think he has.
Maybe you should talk to him.
Batai! Father? Your mother thinks|you have something to tell me.
Yes.
I was waiting for the right moment,|but that will never come.
- I'm leaving school.
|- Leaving school? No, you're not! I want to concentrate on my music.
|That's what I care about.
Last year, it was mathematics.
|Before that, botany Through it all,|there was my music.
I think you know that, Father.
This is the life I want.
Well, we'll - We'll discuss it.
|- Thank you, Father.
Even after all these years, you still have the ability|to surprise me.
If music is what he wants,|why should I stand in his way? Anyway, who knows how much time|he'll have to follow any dream? Are you still planning to talk|to the Administrator tomorrow? There's a possibility|he'll dismiss me from the Council.
Unless you keep quiet.
No.
The evidence is too pronounced.
|I can't stay silent.
What a surprise Kamin, what do you hope|to accomplish? Spreading rumours that the planet|is doomed.
There could be chaos.
The facts are here! Show them|to someone who understands.
I won't be a party|to your making trouble! If you won't take them, I will! Your observations, your findings Our scientists reached|those conclusions two years ago.
What did you expect us to do?|Make it public? Imagine the effect! But surely, technology must exist|to save something of this world.
Perhaps|some people could be evacuated.
Evacuated where?|Our technology is limited.
We're just beginning|to launch small missiles.
A collection of genetic samples.
|Something! Anything! You cannot let this civilisation die! Enough! There is a plan in work.
|I can't tell you more than that.
Father! - What is it?|- It's Mother.
Hurry! Doctor? Kamin, I'm sorry.
See? I go to any lengths|to get your attention.
You always did have a flair|for the dramatic! Doctor, thank you.
Batai.
Leave us alone for a moment.
I I need to talk to my husband.
Did you show the Administrator|your evidence? I didn't have to.
They already knew.
So, he won't throw you|off the Council? No.
Good.
Remember, .
.
put your shoes away.
I promise.
Gotcha! Now I gotcha! Some children are certainly|making a lot of noise in here! You shouldn't be outside so long.
|It's damaging.
I'm wearing your skin protector.
And you, young man?|Do you wear your skin protector? You do? Good boy.
Happy day.
|It's time to see the launching.
What launching? What's he saying? They're sending up a missile.
|We are going to watch it.
I'm not going anywhere! Come on, Kamie.
Hurry up now.
Let's go see the launching.
It breaks my heart to look at him.
- Who?|- My grandson.
It breaks my heart.
He deserves a rich, full life|and he's not going to get one.
Please come, Father.
Why didn't I hear|about the launching? Did everyone know about this|except me? I'll|I'll be alright sitting here.
You go off with the others.
Hold on to my grandson|and watch the damn thing go up for all the good it'll do! What are they launching? You know about it, Father.
|You've already seen it.
Seen it? What are you talking about?|I haven't seen any missile.
Yes, you have, old friend.
|Don't you remember? Batai! You saw it|just before you came here.
We hoped our probe would encounter|someone in the future.
Someone who could be a teacher.
Someone who could tell|the others about us.
It's me! Isn't it? I'm the someone.
I'm the one you find.
That's what this launching is.
A probe that finds me in the future.
Yes, my love.
Eline! The rest of us|have been gone a thousand years.
If you remember what we were, and how we lived,|then we'll have found life again.
Eline.
Now we live in you.
Tell them of us, my darling.
Something's happening.
The nucleonic beam has ceased.
|The probe has shut down.
Cerebral functions are stabilising.
Mr Worf, get that probe|in bay two for examination.
Yes, Commander.
What? Please, Captain,|don't get up too quickly.
Captain? This is the Enterprise.
I'm Jean-Luc Picard.
How long? I want you in sickbay.
I'd like|to run a full diagnostic on you.
Dr Crusher Come! Hello, sir.
Feeling better? Yes.
Yes, thank you.
Well, I find that I'm I'm having to rediscover|that this is really my home.
We were able to open the probe|and examine it.
Whatever it was that locked on to you|was self-terminating.
It isn't functioning any longer.
|We found this inside.

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