Non Sequitur (Star Trek: Voyager)

"Non Sequitur" is the 21st episode of Star Trek: Voyager, the fifth episode in the second season. Harry Kim is enigmatically stranded back on Earth, only to discover the lives of his companions have been radically altered. Much of the episode takes place on Star Trek's Earth in the same era as Voyager, but in alternate timeline caused by an anomaly.[1]

"Non Sequitur"
Star Trek: Voyager episode
Episode no.Season 2
Episode 5
Directed byDavid Livingston
Written byBrannon Braga
Featured musicJay Chattaway
Production code122
Original air dateSeptember 25, 1995 (1995-09-25)
Guest appearance(s)

Plot

Harry Kim is aboard a shuttlecraft as it is shaking violently. As he contacts Voyager, Captain Janeway attempts to beam him out, and he finds himself awakening on Earth in San Francisco next to his girlfriend, Libby, whom he had dearly missed. The date is the same as he remembered, but his life is completely different: Harry retains his memories of his time on Voyager, yet there is no evidence he was ever aboard. Kim finds he had been denied a posting on Voyager and then took an assignment working at the shuttlecraft development center at Starfleet Headquarters, learning that he has designed a new type of runabout, the prototype named USS Yellowstone.

After he leaves a briefing with staff admirals because of "sickness", he looks for any explanation for his current situation. Harry uses his knowledge of Voyager's security codes to obtain classified information on his ship. Kim realizes he has somehow swapped places with his friend Daniel Byrd. While skimming through the crew manifest, Kim notices Tom Paris is not listed as part of Voyager's crew either. He learns Paris now lives in Marseilles, France, after his parole, and goes there to try to enlist his help in figuring out what happened. An altercation with Paris forces him to leave without his friend's assistance. Nevertheless, Paris tells Kim that he'd lost his "advisor's" spot on Voyager after DS9's ill-tempered shapeshifting security chief threw him in the brig for getting into a fight with a Ferengi prior to Voyager's departure. (Kim and Paris met in the bar run by the Ferengi Quark in the pilot episode.)

Upon his return to San Francisco, Kim is apprehended by security and taken to Starfleet Headquarters for questioning because of his unauthorized access to restricted files about Voyager, and his recent association with Paris (a former Maquis). Kim is suspected of being a Maquis spy and is fitted with a security anklet to track his movements. Kim discovers that a shuttlecraft accident caused him to fall into a time-stream and enter a timeline where he was never a part of Voyager's crew. A time-stream alien has been sent to watch over Harry to help guide him through the "transition". The alien reluctantly gives Kim information on where the timestream is and tells him that if he recreates the conditions of the accident precisely, he might get back to his own reality, but there is considerable risk. Harry tries to tamper with his security anklet, but sets off the tampering alarm which alerts Starfleet. Paris comes to Kim's aid and bails him out of a tight situation. They transport to Starfleet Headquarters and steal the Yellowstone.

Kim recreates everything he can remember, but when he passes through the coordinates of the timestream, nothing happens. He suddenly remembers there was also an emergency beamout attempted by Captain Janeway before the accident. Kim has Paris transport him off the ship as they hit the timestream, just as Yellowstone is destroyed in the alternate timeline. Immediately he is returned to his own reality and is happy to find Paris is also aboard, and everything is as he remembers it.

Production

The episode is partly shot on the same set used as New Orleans in Star Trek: Deep Space Nine and reuses old footage from Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home and the Star Trek: The Next Generation episode "Relics".[2]

See also

References

  1. Star Trek Voyager Companion by Paul Ruditis, page 68
  2. Jones, Mark; Parkin, Lance (2003). Beyond the Final Frontier: An Unauthorised Review of the Trek Universe on Television and Film. London: Contender Books. p. 284. ISBN 978-1-84357-080-6.
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