The Catwalk

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Star Trek: Enterprise episode
"The Catwalk"

Trip & T'Pol take shelter
Episode no. 38
Prod. code 212
Airdate December 18, 2002
Writer(s) Mike Sussman
Phyllis Strong
Director Mike Vejar
Guest star(s) Scott Burkholder
Zach Grenier
Aaron Lustig
Elizabeth Magness
Danny Goldring
Brian Cousins
Sean Smith
Year 2152
Stardate unknown
Episode chronology
Previous "Precious Cargo"
Next "Dawn"

"The Catwalk" is the 38th episode (production #212) of the television series Star Trek: Enterprise.

Contents

[edit] Synopsis

As Captain Archer prepares to lead a survey team to an uninhabited planet, Enterprise is suddenly hailed by a trio of aliens seeking refuge. The aliens warn Archer that a deadly neutronic wavefront is quickly approaching. After conferring with the crew, Archer surmises that everyone must take shelter somewhere protected in order to survive the storm's deadly radiation. Trip suggests that the one heavily-shielded place on board that might suffice for the eight-day ordeal is the cramped quarters of the catwalk, the maintenance shaft that runs the length of each nacelle. Only one problem – the temperature in the catwalk can reach 300 degrees when the warp coils are online, so Trip will have to shut down the main reactor and set up a makeshift bridge in one of the catwalk compartments.

The crew and their alien visitors evacuate to the catwalk, and as the days wear on, tensions run high among them. The storm envelops the ship, making for frequent, sudden bouts of turbulence. Also, the alien trio doesn't do much to endear themselves to the Enterprise crew, and even endangers the crew by trying to cook their food near a plasma manifold. To make matters worse, Trip and Archer discover a problem in Engineering – the matter and antimatter injectors have come online, endangering the crew's safe haven in the catwalk. Trip cannot shut the injectors down from the catwalk, however – outfitted in an EV suit, he must make the trek to Engineering. The suit will only protect him for 22 minutes, so he has to work fast.

Once Trip reaches Engineering, he notices something even more peculiar – alien intruders, who appear to be interfering with the ship's systems. Trip manages to hide from them, and attempts to ascertain what they're doing aboard Enterprise. As he peers out a window, he notices an alien ship docked alongside Enterprise. He also manages to activate a monitor and witnesses the aliens on the bridge – oddly enough, they're the same species as the trio of aliens taking refuge in the catwalk. Trip returns to the catwalk and relays his findings. Phlox runs a scan on the alien visitors, deducing that the aliens are actually immune to the effects of radiation. Angered, Archer demands to know what's going on. The trio confesses that the aliens Trip saw are actually looking for them – they're considered fugitives. They explain to Archer that they were officers in the Takret Militia, but they escaped when they learned that the commanding officers were corrupt. The trio apologizes for lying to Archer, and tells him that these alien intruders have a history of seizing vessels like Enterprise and murdering the crews.

Reed reports that the alien intruders are trying to re-initialize the warp reactor, putting the crew in danger. Realizing that he must act quickly, Archer formulates a plan. He, T'Pol and Reed suit up and head down to the main area of the ship. While T'Pol and Reed work to shut down the warp reactor, Archer distracts the alien leader, claiming to be the only survivor on board Enterprise. He demands they leave, or he'll destroy the ship. He then breaks contact, and orders Mayweather to change course, heading straight for a destructive plasma eddy. As T'Pol and Reed finally succeed in shutting the reactor down, the alien leader realizes that Archer is serious, having set Enterprise on a suicide course towards the plasma eddy. He and his men flee the ship, and Mayweather manages to steer clear of the eddy just in time.

Soon after, Mayweather maneuvers Enterprise out of the storm, and the crew is able to return to their quarters. The alien visitors, meanwhile, apologize for all the trouble they've caused, and head for the Gyrannan System. Relieved that the whole ordeal is over, Archer wishes them luck and bids them farewell.

[edit] Continuity

  • A female crewman doing a crossword puzzle asks Archer who the first Vulcan ambassador to Earth was and he replies he believes it to be Solkar. Solkar was the name of Spock's great-grandfather as established in Star Trek III: The Search for Spock. Given the long history of diplomatic achievement in Spock's family – Spock and his father Sarek were also veteran Vulcan ambassadors – it possible that the man Archer mentions and Spock's great-grandfather are one and the same.
  • This is one of the few episodes that show many of the people aboard the Enterprise besides the main cast.
  • The Kahs-wahn ritual mentioned in the Star Trek: The Animated Series episode "Yesteryear" is mentioned in this episode. Although The Animated Series is not considered canon by Paramount, that episode is the one episode that is treated as such by Michael and Denise Okuda in their 1996 Paramount-approved reference book, Star Trek: Chronology: The History of the Future because it establishes important information about Spock's early years.[1] It is also referenced in episodes of Star Trek: The Next Generation[2] and Star Trek: Deep Space Nine,[3] and in other episodes of Enterprise, such as "Fusion", and the fourth season three-parter, "The Forge", "Awakening", and "Kir'Shara".
  • This is the only episode to show "Chef", the ship's cook, though only from the waist down.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Okuda, Mike & Okuda, Denise; Star Trek: Chronology: The History of the Future; Pocket Books; Pages vii; 39-40.
  2. ^ It is mentioned in the 1994 seventh season episode "Eye of the Beholder".
  3. ^ It is referenced in the the 1998 sixth season episode "Change of Heart", and the 1998 sixth season finale, "Tears of the Prophets".

[edit] External links