It is Stardate 2369.2, and Enterprise is docked at Starbase One. Chief Fleet Inspector Commander Pelia from Operational Support Services and her team are performing systems checks and upgrades.
No lawyer will take up Unaâs case, not even the lawyer Pike and Una have in mind. The authorities have offered Una a plea deal but Pike advises urges her not to resign. Pike offers to confront the lawyer face to face. She is on the other side of the quadrant, 2.5 days round trip in âone of the newer shuttlesâ, indicating they are warp capable. Spock becomes Acting Captain, although he points out the lack of a Chief Engineer, a Security Chief and Unaâs absence.
MâBenga notes Spock seems to be suffering from stress. He points out that Vulcan emotions are stronger than human ones, but that they control them through suppressive cognitive blocks. Spock removed those blocks to fight the Gorn (SNW: âAll Those Who Wanderâ), so his emotions are flowing more freely.
MâBenga presents Spock with a lyre, to help him channel emotion into expression. The lyre was first seen in TOS: âCharlie Xâ, and subsequent appearances in canon have established it as a Vulcan lyre (or lute). This suggests that it was MâBenga who gifted Spock his lyre at this moment. This is consistent with MâBenga being familiar with Vulcans because he did his internship on the planet (TOS: âA Private Little Warâ). Spockâs heart rate goes down as he plays it, only for him to stop and have it shoot up when Chapel enters.
Chapel tells MâBenga sheâs thinking about applying for a fellowship in archeological medicine, which will be 2 months on Vulcan. This is probably how she will meet her future fiancĂ© Dr Roger Korby (TOS: âWhat Are Little Girls Made Of?â), who was a renowned figure in the field.
Ortegas has reversed the pitch and yaw controls on her helm console because the standard configuration wasnât fast enough for her. Uhura is at the communications station and is no longer wearing her cadet insignia, indicating sheâs graduated and is an Ensign.
Uhura tells Spock she has detected a distress signal from LaâAn originating in the Cajitar system, on the edge of Klingon space. April denies Spock permission to investigate, despite the message saying that there is a dangerous, anti-Federation threat on Cajitar IV and Enterpriseâs resources are critical. Cajitar IV is a rich dilithium mining planet - the Federation alternates access to it with the Klingons thanks to a carefully negotiated treaty and for this month itâs the Klingonsâ shift. If Enterprise shows up it will be an act of war.
Spock briefs the featured crew, including navigator LT Jenna Mitchell, on his plan to get the inspectors off the ship and steal the Enterprise to help LaâAn. This foreshadows Kirk & Co. famously doing the same thing to help Spock in ST III, a sequence called âStealing the Enterpriseâ on the soundtrack album.
Mitchell triggers an intermix chamber coolant leak alert in Engineering. Plasma coolant dissolves flesh, as seen in ST: First Contact, and lack of coolant can cause a warp core breach.
Pelia teaches a course in warp core breaches at Starfleet Academy. Heightened temperatures around an intermix chamber is the most common factor mistaken for a breach. Purposely simulating coolant leak on the sensors violates about 17 Starfleet regulations.
Pelia notes the Vulcan inability to lie (a myth, as weâve seen on several occasions, and Spock will get much better at it in future) and that they donât do things without a good reason. She reveals she knows that Spock is Amanda Graysonâs son and suggests Ortegas to vent ionized plasma from the warp nacelles. Doing so triggers an alert on Starbase One, with Docking Control blowing the docking clamps and ordering Enterprise to make space between the ship and the station.
Pelia offers her services as Chief Engineer and says itâs been 100 years since sheâs gone out with engines of her own. Ortegas scoffs, and Pelia says itâs a really long story. Uhura identifies her accent as Lanthanite, and Pelia confirms it.
Spockâs go-to-warp catchphrase is, âI would like the ship to go. Now.â Mitchellâs previous captainâs was âZoomâ, and Ortegas has been workshopping âvĂĄmanosâ (âletâs goâ in Spanish).
On Cajitar IV, LaâAn wins a bloodwine drinking contest with a Klingon, KrâDogh. She gets a meeting with someone named Greynax. One wonders how LaâAn is outdrinking a Klingon since the sense was that she was not genetically enhanced like her relative Khan - unless weâre being set up for another revelation like with Una, which might be over egging it with two genetically modified people in the main cast.
MâBenga approaches LaâAn, drawing a line under his eye with a finger like he did in SNW: âStrange New Worldsâ.
Cajitar IV became a valuable source of dilithium during the war. When it ended, a new mining syndicate made up of ex-Klingon and Federation soldiers decided peace was bad for business and want to restart the war. To an unknown end, they are acquiring Federation technology, and a recent mining explosion exposed the town to ion radiation, including Orianaâs parents. MâBenga says that ion radiation isnât from dilithium, but can be created by photon torpedoes.
Both Chapel and MâBenga served in the Klingon War (she implies that they served together). MâBenga likes reading up on weapons systems, and notes that the war produced 100 million Federation deaths for âa parsec of space or twoâ.
MâBenga and Chapel go to offer aid to the afflicted, and Oriana recognizes them. MâBenga suggests inducing recombination to repair genetic damage on her parents, which Chapel administers via a hypospray. They are then taken at gunpoint by a female Klingon and her henchmen.
(Continued in comments)
The showrunners have hinted that theyâre gonna play a little loose with established canon this season â I think in particular with regard to Spock/Chapel, but also likely with the Gorn. Which honestly is an interesting choice â SNW is supposed to appeal to folks who miss TOS (and the vibe of TNG, even if LDS and PIC are more literal successors to TNG), and so I wonder if they are counting on that âcredibilityâ to seek âforgivenessâ from fans who object to continuity issues.
(On the other hand, they also seem to be doubling down on certain elements from canon; for example, they are taking very seriously this notion that 2250s Spock is noticeably greener, no pun intended, than 2260s Spock, drawing much more on âThe Cageâ than his later appearances. To me, this is in contrast to the Kelvinverse interpretation of the character, who, while still more emotive than 2260s Spock Prime, nevertheless seems to be drawing primarily from that version of Spock, rather than the one from âThe Cageâ.)
Iâm not sure if it contradicts Arena so long as we never have a face-to-face confrontation with adult Gorn.
We know by the 2380s the Gorn are on better terms with the Federation, so it would be cool to somehow flesh out Gorn culture even in SNW.
The difficulties are not about the physical appearance of the Gorn - itâs about the fact of the Gornâs existence in the first place (Kirk being seemingly ignorant of the species name) and that they didnât know Cestus III could be considered an incursion on Gorn territory.
and
Then again, McCoy does refer to the alien as a âGornâ without seemingly having previously heard the name (there are multiple possible explanations for this), so thereâs that. My point really was that mental gymnastics already need to be employed to square âArenaâ with SNW, and weâre getting into areas which need even more.
well, perhaps the Farragut is on the other side of the Federation, and the foreshadowed conflict with the Gorn might play out in some way where they end up not going very far into that region of space?
(Is this the aforementioned mental gymnastics?)
Yep. The map shows Cestus right there close to outlined Gorn territory, so the establishment of Cestus III being seen as an incursion on Gorn space canât really be much of a surprise - at least not in the way Spock put it in TOS: âArenaâ.