“Such Great Patience”
Directed by: Bryan
Spicer
Written by: David
Kemper
Summary: The seaQuest
discovers a million year old spaceship while looking into an underwater
earthquake, but things aren’t as dead as they seem. A group is sent over to
investigate the ship, but things start going wrong and some of the crew vanish.
An alien boards the seaQuest and starts taking the crew, who can do
nothing to stop it. But it soon becomes apparent that Darwin is the link
between the alien and the crew.
Guest Starring:
Kent McCord as Scott Keller
W. Morgan Sheppard as Professor
Martinson
Jesse Doran as General Frank Thomas
Dustin Nguyen as Chief William Shan
Co-Starring:
none
Featuring:
Thom Sherman as Ensign Shephard
Karyn Malchus as Alien
The twenty-first century
... Mankind has colonized the last unexplored region on Earth – the ocean. As
Captain of the seaQuest and its crew, we are its guardians; for beneath
the surface, lies the future.
- Kuril Trench, 1000 miles northeast of Japan, 5 miles deep, seaQuest
DSV, bridge -
Kristin Westphalen: It’s
very exciting. No one has ever reached the epicenter of an undersea earthquake
less than an hour after it’s happened, let alone a nine point two.
Nathan Bridger: Instant
creation of a fifteen hundred foot cliff that stretches two hundred miles, this
is gonna be wild.
Miguel Ortiz: WSKR on the
west flank malfunctioned and crashed into the bottom sir.
Katie Hitchcock: That’s
the second one, Mr. Ortiz, in almost in the same place.
Miguel Ortiz: I can’t
explain it, Commander.
Nathan Bridger: Well
adjust course. I want to take a look at this wall.
Jonathan Ford: Come
starboard eight degrees, Mr. Shan?
William Shan: Some kind of
a headache, sir. I’m having trouble focusing.
Manilow Crocker: Mr.
Rader, take his position.
Rader: Aye, aye, sir.
Nathan Bridger: This is
the fifth headache that’s been reported since we’ve been down here.
Darwin: Rock, water.
Lucas Wolenczak: Captain,
he’s doing it again.
Darwin: Fire, cloud, unit,
center.
Nathan Bridger: What is
it, my friend?
Darwin: Fast voice, heard.
Lucas Wolenczak: He’s
hearing things; we have no idea what he’s talking about.
Nathan Bridger: Mr.
O’Neill?
Tim O’Neill: I’m at a loss
to explain it, Captain. Sensors show a sound out there, but I can’t find it;
high frequency, well out of our acoustical parameters.
Nathan Bridger: Is it
something he could hear?
Tim O’Neill: Technically
no, it’s out of his range too.
Darwin: Declination,
luminescence, ecliptic.
Nathan Bridger: Do you
understand this?
Darwin: People words, not dolphin.
Nathan Bridger: I want
this sound traced gentlemen; I wanna know what it is.
Tim O’Neill: Aye, sir.
Miguel Ortiz: Captain.
Nathan Bridger: Woah, oh,
oh, oh.
Kristin Westphalen: You’d
better warn the crew; we may be here for some time.
Nathan Bridger: These
sedimentation layers are so clearly marked. The time line is as precise as I’ve
ever seen it.
Kristin Westphalen: What
are we looking at?
Nathan Bridger: This layer
(points at screen) used to be the bottom of the ocean about nine hundred
thousand years ago.
Jonathan Ford: Wow!
Miguel Ortiz: Captain,
aftershock coming, it’s a big one.
Nathan Bridger: Sound
collision, head us into the epicenter, nose down.
Jonathan Ford: This is
Commander Ford, brace for shock wave, bow to stern.
Katie Hitchcock: Closing
all watertights.
Computer: All hands brace
for collision. (ship rocks, all see ship on screen)
Lucas Wolenczak: This is
the coolest thing I’ve ever seen.
Nathan Bridger: Isolate
this picture; no one sees this except the bridge.
Tim O’Neill: Done.
Ben Krieg: That looks like
some kind of ship.
Lucas Wolenczak: A
spaceship?
Jonathan Ford: No such
thing.
Miguel Ortiz: There is
now.
Katie Hitchcock: Captain,
if what you said about the age of that rock is true...
Kristin Westphalen: That
ship must be a million years old.
Nathan Bridger: Or more.
- near the surface, directly above the alien ship, seaQuest
DSV, Bridger’s room -
Frank Thomas: (on screen)
What’s your take, Captain?
Nathan Bridger: I’m
convinced now that the sounds coming from this alien ship are giving the crew
headaches.
Frank Thomas: (on screen)
And you don’t consider that a threat?
Nathan Bridger: What?
Migraines?
Frank Thomas: (on screen)
Aren’t you being a little pie in the sky, Bridger? I mean that noise is coming
from an alien ship that you know nothing about.
Nathan Bridger: That’s
true, General. On the other hand, it has been entombed in this rock for over a
million years.
Frank Thomas: (on screen)
I still expect you to follow procedures. I mean we didn’t spend millions
developing an alien encounter program so you could make it up as you go. And
another thing, I want that kid Lucas Wolenczak off the boat.
Nathan Bridger: Why?
Frank Thomas: (on screen)
He doesn’t have the necessary security clearances.
Nathan Bridger: I need
him.
Frank Thomas: (on screen)
I know this is an amazing discovery and everyone wants to be part of it, but
that’s not enough.
Nathan Bridger: You see,
Darwin is somehow picking out words from this alien signal, and Lucas is my
vocal link to Darwin.
Frank Thomas: (on screen)
He plays you like a drum, Captain. Just once I’d like you to recognize my
authority and follow orders.
Nathan Bridger: When I get
back, we’ll have lunch.
- seaQuest DSV, launch bay -
Ben Krieg: (sliding box
over) OK Chief, this is the last of them.
Computer: Shuttle MR-3 is
set to launch in fifteen minutes. Shuttle MR-3 is set to launch in fifteen
minutes.
Shephard: Hey, Lucas, what
happened up there on the bridge? Why are we being off loaded?
Lucas Wolenczak: I can’t
tell you, Shephard. Just something.
Shephard: Well, you
gettin’ in line with us?
Lucas Wolenczak: I’m not
sure yet.
Shephard: (sees Bridger)
Good luck. (gets on launch)
Computer: All science
personnel check in with the deck officer before departure.
Crewman: Everything is all
set sir.
Nathan Bridger: OK.
Computer: All science
personnel check in with the deck officer before departure.
Ben Krieg: Surface fleet’s
in position, sir. When this launch leaves we’ll be down to thirty-two military
personnel and twenty-six science.
Nathan Bridger: Anything
else?
Ben Krieg: (hesitates) No,
sir.
Nathan Bridger: Carry on.
Manilow Crocker: (to
crewman) Set up the laser saw and the oxygen compressors in the launch MR-5 and
let’s get all of these handheld scanners down to the science lab for
calibration. (to Bridger) Well we’ve logged on board everything you asked for,
Cap, ready to get underway.
Nathan Bridger:
Environmental suits?
Manilow Crocker: Yes, sir,
right here.
Katie Hitchcock:
(entering) All external damage has been repaired, sir.
Computer: Lieutenant
Freebur, report to docking bay two. Lieutenant Freebur, report to docking bay
two.
Nathan Bridger: Thank you.
(walks over toward arriving launch passing Lucas, then stops) Uh, listen, do
you think you play me like a drum?
Lucas Wolenczak: Could I consult
my lawyer?
Nathan Bridger: You can
stay.
Lucas Wolenczak: All
right.
Nathan Bridger: Get with
O’Neill on that signal.
Lucas Wolenczak: Ta dump
bump ching.
Computer: Shuttle MR-1 has
arrived, docking bay one.
Jonathan Ford: (after
Keller exits a launch) Commander Keller, welcome aboard.
Scott Keller: Glad to be
back, Commander.
Nathan Bridger: (coming
up) Scott, how are you?
Scott Keller: Nathan,
General Thomas is hemorrhaging up on the aircraft carrier. How’d you keep his Alpha Commandos off this
mission?
Nathan Bridger: I said a
welcome wagon with a gun doesn’t make a very good first impression.
Jonathan Ford: What if
something out there is still alive?
Scott Keller: Than we’re
the luckiest sailors in history.
Jonathan Ford: What if
they attack us?
Scott Keller: Every
uniform thinks alike.
Jonathan Ford: Well you
wear one.
Scott Keller: Yeah, for
exploration, not for conquest.
Jonathan Ford: Captain, I
have to raise the possibility.
Scott Keller: Listen,
think it through, Commander. If these extraterrestrials applied the same
technology it took for them to get here to war, we’re toast no matter what we
do.
Nathan Bridger: Gentlemen,
we prepare for the worst, hope for the best, right?
Scott Keller: Hey, I’ll
make a deal with you. You don’t shoot anything until I’ve had a chance to say
hello.
Computer: All sea crab
departures must have code four authorization.
- seaQuest DSV, hallway -
Kristin Westphalen:
O’Neill, painkiller for the headaches. Come on, not even a needle.
Tim O’Neill: I don’t need
it, I’m leaving on the launch.
Kristin Westphalen: You’re
not trying for the expedition? Tim?
Tim O’Neill: Dr.
Westphalen, can I ask you a question?
Kristin Westphalen: Sure.
Tim O’Neill: Do you
believe in God?
Kristin Westphalen:
Sometimes.
Tim O’Neill: Well, if
we’re created in God’s image, than who created intelligent life on other
planets?
Kristin Westphalen: God.
Tim O’Neill: I was always
taught to believe that we were the whole deal. That life topped out with man.
Now it’s like ... it’s like my beliefs are unraveling.
Kristin Westphalen: No
they’re not Tim. Come on, you believe in family, friends, strong morality, yes?
Yes, well nothing out there invalidates those.
Tim O’Neill: When I was
growing up, I always felt like a traitor as a kid in church because I secretly
hoped we weren’t alone.
Kristin Westphalen: Well
don’t feel guilty for getting your wish. But you have to make your own
decision.
Tim O’Neill: I’ve never
run from anything in my life.
- seaQuest DSV, bridge -
Miguel Ortiz: Applying
Earth’s aerodynamic principles, I’m taking a wild guess that this is how the
alien craft would look like with the rock cut away. How the hell did they move
a ship that big through space?
Scott Keller: That’s just
one of a thousand questions I want answers to.
Miguel Ortiz: She’s over a
mile long. How did they get it up to light speed?
Nathan Bridger: Wrong
concept. Even if it went a million times light speed, most galaxies would be
out of reach.
Scott Keller: We’ve
theorized curved-space loops and interdimensional wormholes. Bottom line, Nathan, I want to see their
technology. I want to see inside that cockpit.
- seaQuest DSV, Hydrosystem Docking Area, launch -
Ben Krieg: Could you
imagine if I got to go over there?
Katie Hitchcock: You gotta
promise not to hug 'em. It may not be part of their culture.
Ben Krieg: I’ve spent my
whole life believing in nothing but the unbelievable. I mean, what do they look
like? Did they crash here by accident? Where are they from? Are there others
coming? I have to know.
Katie Hitchcock: Would you
mind if I submitted your name to the Captain?
- seaQuest DSV, bridge -
Nathan Bridger: All right
people, here we go. Lieutenant?
Tim O’Neill: Lucas and I
have isolated the alien signal. It’s an overlapping pulse on a high microwave
frequency, but it’s going to take a lot of math to decipher it.
Nathan Bridger: Ortiz,
Hitchcock, this is where you come in. I want you to go in and bend and twist
that signal. See if there’s any rhyme or reason for it. Doctor?
Kristin Westphalen: Let’s
not forget what we’re dealing with. We don’t want to bring back some exotic
virus. We’ve got enough of our own, I think. The first sign of pain, headache
medicine is available at stations all round the boat.
Nathan Bridger: The
boarding party will consist of the following. Chief Crocker will assist
Commander Keller and provide security.
Manilow Crocker:
(surprised) Me?
Nathan Bridger: Lieutenant
O’Neill will continue to track down the source of the signal and stand by to be
interpreter if necessary.
Tim O’Neill: Aye, sir.
Nathan Bridger: Filling
out the rest of the team and photographing the expedition will be ...
Lieutenant Krieg. For the rest of you who volunteered, thank you very much. All
right people, that’s it. Let’s get back to work.
Ben Krieg: Uh, sir, besides
turning the camera on and off, what do I bring to the party?
Nathan Bridger:
Enthusiasm, Lieutenant. Enthusiasm.
Ben Krieg: Yes, sir.
Lucas Wolenczak: I’d like
to go.
Nathan Bridger: Oh, I bet
you would.
Lucas Wolenczak: On the
other hand, I’m pretty grateful just to be here.
Nathan Bridger: Uh huh.
We’ll watch it here, together. Ta dump bump.
- launch -
Ben Krieg: (into radio)
Captain, we’re approaching the alien ship. (to Crocker, next to him) You OK,
Chief?
Manilow Crocker: Give me a
break, will ya.
Ben Krieg: (over shoulder)
Commander, we’re gonna try for a flush fit on that smooth section below the
fin.
Scott Keller: Clear.
(walks into docking column) Air seal’s positive. Hit the second seal. (kneels by hull of alien ship) Welcome to
Earth. (to O’Neill) Scan the hull for Doctor Westphalen.
Tim O’Neill: Aye, sir.
- seaQuest DSV, bridge -
Ben Krieg: (on screen) SeaQuest,
you reading visual?
Katie Hitchcock: Loud and
clear, Ben.
Ben Krieg: (on screen)
Great.
Tim O’Neill: (on screen)
These little sparkles look like sand.
Scott Keller: (on screen)
They’re silicon, Lieutenant. One of the most prevalent substances in the
universe.
Ben Krieg: (on screen)
Talk about your common ground.
Tim O’Neill: (on screen)
Contaminant reading ... zero. Looks clear, Commander.
Scott Keller: (on screen)
What do you think, Nathan?
Nathan Bridger: It’s your
call, Scott.
Scott Keller: Let’s open
her up, Chief.
- launch -
Ben Krieg: (Crocker begins
cutting a whole in the alien ship) Alien encounter program, official record. One
million years imprisoned in rock makes finding life improbable, yet the
existence of this ship is spectacular proof that we are not alone.
- seaQuest DSV, bridge -
Kristin Westphalen: This
is a section of the ship’s skin. They found a way to organize silicon. Imagine
being able to grow crystals into any shape you want them.
Nathan Bridger: Do you
have any guesses about these haphazard ones?
Katie Hitchcock: It could
be heat shields, like the ones we use on our spacecraft.
Kristin Westphalen: Hmmm.
- launch, by hole in alien ship -
Manilow Crocker: Almost
got it. We’re all through, Commander.
Scott Keller: Let’s take
an atmosphere reading. Heavy silicon compounds, large concentrations of xenon
and argon.
Tim O’Neill: Traces
carbon, helium; parts per million asbestos.
Scott Keller: Not
breathable, but it’s not gonna corrode our suits either.
- seaQuest DSV, bridge -
Nathan Bridger: You still
wanna go inside?
Scott Keller: (on screen)
Try an’ stop me.
- alien ship -
Scott Keller: (enters
alien ship) Aren’t I supposed to say somethin’ for all mankind here? Somethin’, somethin’ important.
Nathan Bridger: (on seaQuest)
What comes to mind?
Scott Keller: This is big,
dark, and I am very happy to be here.
Nathan Bridger: (on seaQuest)
It’s not very poetic, but it’ll do fine.
Scott Keller: Chief,
somebody has to stay here and attach a permanent hatch here. You’re carrying a weapon, I’d prefer you
stayed on the launch.
Manilow Crocker: Yes, sir.
That’s a good idea, Commander.
Scott Keller: (to O’Neill)
Give me a radar map of what this place looks like.
Tim O’Neill: Aye, sir.
- seaQuest DSV, bridge -
Nathan Bridger: It looks
like a network of pipes and conduit connecting the systems.
Katie Hitchcock: The
compartments all funnel back like an oil tanker or a cargo ship.
Jonathan Ford: Yeah, but
what kind of cargo?
Kristin Westphalen: Maybe
they came here to collect zoo specimens, dinosaurs.
Lucas Wolenczak: Maybe
they didn’t come here to collect anything. Maybe they brought life.
Jonathan Ford: The doors
to those compartments are much too small for much of anything to fit through.
Nathan Bridger: Except
liquid.
Kristin Westphalen: This
could be ninety-nine percent fuel tank and one percent cockpit. Maybe whoever
shot this off didn’t expect it to come back.
Nathan Bridger: One way
ticket to a new world. Crashing into the ocean wasn’t what they had in mind.
Jonathan Ford: Think of
the courage it took to ride this rocket away from home the last time.
Scott Keller: (on screen)
Nathan, we’re gonna detour into one of the side compartments.
Nathan Bridger: Keep in
touch, guys.
- alien ship -
Scott Keller: (to Bridger)
Right. (to group) Let’s move out.
Ben Krieg: Asimov,
Bradbury, Clarke, a lifetime of these guys and I’m still not sure if I’m ready
for this.
Scott Keller: Stay close,
visual contact, in single file. I want continual readouts, and don’t touch
anything you don’t have to.
Ben Krieg: (entering a
large room) This is unbelievable.
Tim O’Neill: What is this
place?
Scott Keller: For the
first time in my career, Lieutenant, I don’t have a clue.
Ben Krieg: If you made
this up they wouldn’t believe it.
- seaQuest DSV, hallway -
Kristin Westphalen: That
substance that Keller has could be fuel residue. My people will have it on the
screen by the time we get to sea deck. Pensive?
Nathan Bridger:
Reflective.
Kristin Westphalen:
Captain reflective, scientist reflective, or explorer reflective?
Nathan Bridger: Little boy
reflective. (they board the Mag-lev and sit down) It's just our nature not to
want to be alone in the universe.
Kristin Westphalen:
(smiles) Do you think oceanography will be important after today?
Nathan Bridger: Or
geology?
Kristin Westphalen: Funny
how everything can change in an instant isn't it.
Nathan Bridger: You know
who's not phased one iota by any of this?
Kristin Westphalen: Lucas.
Nathan Bridger: His
generation grew up expecting this. It's not a revelation, it's a confirmation.
Kristin Westphalen: Maybe
we can learn from that. Roll with it, dude.
Nathan Bridger: Yeah.
- alien ship -
Scott Keller: Lieutenant,
which way’s the source of the signal?
Tim O’Neill: Last I had
it, uh, that way.
Ben Krieg: What’s the
matter?
Tim O’Neill: Remember when
you were a kid and your church would have those haunted house fundraisers at
Halloween?
Ben Krieg: Yeah, I loved
those things.
Tim O’Neill: Scared me to
death.
- seaQuest DSV, bridge -
Miguel Ortiz: Sir, I’m
picking up a strange vibration from the alien craft.
Nathan Bridger: Scott,
abort the mission.
Scott Keller: (on alien
ship) What do you mean abort the mission?
Nathan Bridger: Scott,
now.
Scott Keller: (on alien
ship) But we’re making progress without any obstacles.
Miguel Ortiz: Commander,
the alien molecules are vibrating, doubling in intensity every fifth of a
second. The crystalline structure that makes up the ship is becoming unstable.
Scott Keller: (on screen)
You’re talking implosion.
Nathan Bridger: Very
possible.
Jonathan Ford: Can you
tell when it started?
Miguel Ortiz: Well,
judging from our acoustical data, I’d say the moment we cut into her hull.
Jonathan Ford: A
self-destruct mechanism?
Nathan Bridger: Maybe,
suppose they didn’t want their technology to fall into the wrong hands. Woah,
you better update the General. He’ll think of this as some kind of a secret
weapon. Move it, Scott.
Scott Keller: (on screen)
I’m coming back here, Nathan. I’m gonna see their cockpit. (to his group) Let’s go, let’s retrace our
path outta here.
Nathan Bridger: (to
Westphalen) As soon as your med team OK’s them aboard, we’re outta here.
- alien ship -
Scott Keller: Which way
from here? Give me a readout.
Tim O’Neill: Uh,
vectoring...
Ben Krieg: This way.
Tim O’Neill: No, Ben,
you’re all turned around.
Ben Krieg: Maybe
everything is. (all turn to see an alien)
- seaQuest DSV, bridge -
Nathan Bridger: (screen
goes fuzzy) What the hell happened?
Jonathan Ford: Commander
Keller?
Katie Hitchcock: There’s
no incoming signal.
Miguel Ortiz: I’m not
showing anything.
Nathan Bridger: Get ‘em
back on line.
- alien ship -
Scott Keller: Lieutenant,
put the camera down.
Ben Krieg: Why? I’m
getting some great stuff here.
Scott Keller: Put it down.
He thinks you’ve got a weapon.
Ben Krieg: Oh.
Scott Keller: Hello. On
behalf of all our people, I welcome you.
Tim O’Neill: (repeats
Keller’s greeting in Spanish, Chinese, and Swahili)
- seaQuest DSV, bridge -
Frank Thomas: (on screen)
You are not authorized to risk more lives for your own scientific curiosity. I
want you to destroy whatever’s over there while there’s still a chance.
Nathan Bridger: I can’t do
that.
Frank Thomas: (on screen)
That is a direct order, Captain.
Nathan Bridger: It’s one I
can’t follow.
Frank Thomas: (on screen)
Than you’re relieved of command.
Nathan Bridger: Fine. I’ll
wait for your arrival. (screen goes blank and Ford gives him a congratulatory high
five) Get me Crocker.
- launch by alien ship -
Nathan Bridger: (on
speaker) Have you heard anything more from Commander Keller, Chief?
Manilow Crocker: Nothing,
Cap. I haven’t heard a word.
Nathan Bridger: (on
speaker) Well we’ve lost contact. I think you better go in and get them Chief.
Manilow Crocker: Aye, sir.
Well, join the Navy, see the world, and then some. (enters alien ship) Cap, seaQuest,
anybody still read me? (notices alien) Wha–put that thing down. I don’t want to
have to fire. (disappears)
- alien ship -
Scott Keller: (opens map
of stars) I assume that you know where we are. Earth, the outer edge of the
Orion arm, thirty thousand light-years from the center of the Milky Way galaxy.
(alien points to planet) Coma Berenices, that’s your constellation.
Ben Krieg: Something’s
happening here.
Scott Keller: Did we do
something wrong? (alien walks away)
Ben Krieg: Don’t do this,
guys.
Scott Keller: Oh God.
- seaQuest DSV, bridge -
Nathan Bridger: Any
report, Commander?
Jonathan Ford: No contact
with the boarding party, our sensors aren’t penetrating.
Katie Hitchcock: Captain,
the launch is returning.
Jonathan Ford: Thank God.
Katie Hitchcock: SeaQuest
to launch MR-5. (static over loudspeaker)
Nathan Bridger: (into
speaker) Medical and security to launch bay.
- seaQuest DSV, launch bay -
Computer: Shuttle MR-5 has
arrived, docking bay three. Shuttle MR-3 has arrived, docking bay three.
William Shan: Open the
hatch.
Crewman: Yes, sir. (Shan
enters the launch and finds no one)
- seaQuest DSV, bridge -
William Shan: (on speaker)
Shan to bridge.
Nathan Bridger: How are
they, Mr. Shan?
William Shan: (on speaker)
They aren’t sir. There’s no one on the launch.
Nathan Bridger: How could
that be?
Jonathan Ford: The
computer says the launch was not on autopilot, it was driven back.
Katie Hitchcock: Captain,
I’m showing someone inside our reactor.
Jonathan Ford: Engine
room.
Crewman: (on speaker)
Engine room here.
Jonathan Ford: Who’s in
the reactor?
Crewman: (on speaker)
Inside? No one, sir.
Miguel Ortiz: I’ve got the
same thing over here. Someone breached weapons bay for a second. Not really an
image, more like an echo of one.
Katie Hitchcock: I’ve got
him now in propulsion.
Miguel Ortiz: Telemetry
guidance.
Nathan Bridger: Stem to
stern, there’s more than one. Your plans ready? (Ford nods) Let’s do it.
Jonathan Ford: Mr. Shan,
engine room, code four.
Nathan Bridger: What about
the signal?
Miguel Ortiz: I’ve broken
it down into fragments. It’s totally random.
Lucas Wolenczak: I’ve
zeroed in on the wavelength. It registers in an area of Darwin’s brain we never
thought had to do with speech.
Nathan Bridger: Can he
read it?
Lucas Wolenczak: Maybe, I
have to filter it.
Nathan Bridger: Let’s put
you in your room. (to Ford) Put a guard on him. (to Hitchcock) Seal down the
bridge.
- alien ship -
Ben Krieg: These auxiliary
lights aren’t working either.
Scott Keller: Let’s tether
up. Let’s go.
- seaQuest DSV, hallway -
Jonathan Ford: We’ve lost
contact with sixteen crewmembers. We have confirmed sightings.
Kristin Westphalen: What
does it look like?
Jonathan Ford: Like “Oh my
God,” and “No.” That’s all our people have time to say before we lose contact.
Nathan Bridger: Crew
quarters, galley, gym, he’s looking us over.
William Shan: For what?
Nathan Bridger: I haven’t
the foggiest.
Jonathan Ford: Maintenance
and engineering. (they turn around to go)
Nathan Bridger: All right,
let’s set up a checkpoint right here.
Jonathan Ford: Med bay.
William Shan: Nothing can
move that fast.
- seaQuest DSV, med bay -
Kristin Westphalen: (as
everyone enters) Where are all my people?
Jonathan Ford: The report
said it was here. (scream outside in the hall)
- seaQuest DSV, hallway -
Nathan Bridger: (moves
girl out of the way as two seamen run up behind the alien) Don’t shoot. (the
two seamen disappear) We, we won’t hurt you.
Kristin Westphalen:
Nathan, it doesn’t register. My scan shows nothing in front of us.
Nathan Bridger: Why are
you here? (the alien doesn’t respond) We are friendly. (the alien sees Darwin
and walks through the wall to get to him, leaving sand on the wall)
Jonathan Ford: Mr. Shan.
Kristin Westphalen:
Nathan, that’s sand.
Nathan Bridger: (touches
it) It’s hot.
- alien ship -
Tim O’Neill: Uh,
Commander, are you sure this is the right way?
Scott Keller: It’s the
only way, Lieutenant.
Ben Krieg: Reminds me of a
science fiction story I read when I was a kid. These explorers found a downed
space ship, just like we did, and then after they went inside, it took off.
Ship hadn’t crashed at all.
Tim O’Neill: What happened
to the people?
Ben Krieg: They were
dissected, eaten.
Tim O’Neill: They were?
Oh, I get it, har har. Har har de ahhh. (falls down hole)
Ben Krieg: Tim! (they
finally stop his falling)
Scott Keller: (to Krieg)
You OK?