Leela leaps onto the cab in pursuit
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Leela disobeys the Doctor's instruction to stay inside and jumps onto the hansom cab carrying Chang and Mister Sin as it drives away.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Relentlessly aggressive, driven by terror of failure and the need to fulfill Weng-Chiang’s demands despite his failing body
Chang hides in the privet hedge before firing wildly at the Doctor, then drains the revolver and carries a helpless Mister Sin down the front steps. He swiftly bundles Sin into a waiting hansom cab and orders it away, his movements sharp and desperate to escape capture.
- • flee capture by the Doctor and others
- • deliver Mister Sin to safety for continued domination
- • he must keep moving or die under Weng-Chiang’s wrath
- • every second counts in escaping the Doctor’s relentless pursuit
Determined and focused, willing to risk everything to stop Chang and unearth Weng-Chiang’s scheme
Leela watches from the ground the instant a hansom cab pulls up outside Litefoot’s house. Without pause she runs and leaps onto the moving vehicle’s rear platform, gripping tightly as it lurches forward. The Doctor’s commands to stay ring out too late, drowned by the clatter of hooves and wheels.
- • intercept Chang and Mister Sin before they escape
- • press a direct advantage over Weng-Chiang’s forces
- • direct confrontation is necessary to expose the truth
- • the Doctor’s caution may hinder them from stopping evil
Frustrated but still protective, scrambling to regain control over a situation slipping from his grasp
The Doctor races round the house and forces entry through a narrow window, then bursts out the front door only to find Leela already gone. He shouts commands and runs after the speeding cab as it carries her away, his urgency conflicting with his earlier instruction for her to remain.
- • regain authority over Leela and the mission
- • prevent her from reckless pursuit that could expose Weng-Chiang’s network
- • his companions should obey his directives for their safety
- • youthful impulsiveness must be tempered for effective action
Devoid of human feeling—only the eerie persistence of a broken instrument serving its master’s will
The stave-damaged automaton totters out of the house borne by Chang, its throat impaled by Leela’s knife yet still continuing its creepy advance. It is hauled limp to the cab where it is bundled inside, its unnatural stillness contrasting with its previous mechanical motion.
- • continue serving Li H’sen Chang and Weng-Chiang despite damage
- • fulfill its role as enforcer for the escape
- • obedience is its sole function, regardless of damage
- • it must persist until its master commands otherwise
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The hansom cab serves as Chang’s getaway vehicle, arriving suddenly outside Litefoot’s house just as Sin is pulled from the home. Chang bundles the limp automaton into the cab before climbing in himself, then orders the driver to flee as Leela leaps onto its rear platform.
Litefoot’s revolver is seized by Chang in the entrance hall and fired wildly twice at the Doctor outside. The gun’s shots punctuate the chaos of pursuit but ultimately miss, then the chamber empties as Chang abandons the weapon to carry the wounded Sin.
Leela’s blade slams into Mister Sin’s mechanical throat moments earlier, leaving the automaton impaired but still obeying Chang. The knife’s purpose transitions from weapon to evidence of Leela’s bold aggression as the wounded Sin is carried out to the waiting cab.
The wooden barrel serves earlier as a climbing aid for the Doctor to reach the house’s small open window. In this event it is mentioned in retrospect as the means by which he actually entered, emphasizing the urgency and improvisation that marked their infiltration.
The privet hedge provides Chang with concealment as he waits for the Doctor’s approach, using its dense foliage to mask his identity and intentions before firing the revolver. It becomes both shield and point of ambush during the tense standoff outside the house.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The entrance hall functions as Chang’s vantage point during the ambush, where he seizes the revolver from the umbrella stand and monitors the Doctor’s approach. Hidden behind the privet hedge, the hall’s interior links directly to the outside ambush, making it the pivot between indoor safety and outdoor pursuit.
Litefoot’s house grounds the scene’s opening chaos—Leela’s escape via window, the Doctor’s rear entry, and Chang’s ambush from concealment. Its modest brick facade becomes a contested threshold during the pursuit, where both Doctor and Leela struggle to assert control over events unfolding in and around it.
The window becomes a literal breach in the house’s defenses, through which Leela escapes and the Doctor later enters. It transforms from escape route to entry point under urgency, framing a moment when containment turns to pursuit and the house no longer protects but exposes its occupants.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Leela’s aggressive defense against Mister Sin (throwing a knife into his throat) establishes her physical prowess and impulsive decisiveness, which carries into her later independent pursuit of Chang and confrontation with Weng-Chiang."
Leela escapes Mister Sin and eludes Chang’s ambush"Leela’s aggressive defense against Mister Sin (throwing a knife into his throat) establishes her physical prowess and impulsive decisiveness, which carries into her later independent pursuit of Chang and confrontation with Weng-Chiang."
Doctor orders Leela to stay imprisoned indoors"Leela’s aggressive defense against Mister Sin (throwing a knife into his throat) establishes her physical prowess and impulsive decisiveness, which carries into her later independent pursuit of Chang and confrontation with Weng-Chiang."
Leela escapes Mister Sin and eludes Chang’s ambush"Leela’s aggressive defense against Mister Sin (throwing a knife into his throat) establishes her physical prowess and impulsive decisiveness, which carries into her later independent pursuit of Chang and confrontation with Weng-Chiang."
Doctor orders Leela to stay imprisoned indoors"Leela’s defiance of the Doctor’s instructions (‘stay put’) matches the Working Woman’s eventual defiance of Chang’s control—not by choice, but by awakening. Both reflect autonomy versus coercion in the face of tyranny."
Chang ensnares Teresa and Leela pursuesThemes This Exemplifies
Thematic resonance and meaning
Part of Larger Arcs
Key Dialogue
"DOCTOR: Stay here."
"DOCTOR: Leela! Leela, no! Don't! Leela."