Brigadier evacuates Styles as Daleks advance
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
The Brigadier orders Captain Yates to evacuate Sir Reginald and the delegates from the area under attack. Sir Reginald initially refuses to leave.
Sir Reginald agrees to leave under protest, and Yates escorts him out. The delegates begin to evacuate, with the Russians and Americans leaving first.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Outraged indignity warring with primal fear—clinging to protocol as the world collapses around his ceremonial role.
Styles resists evacuation despite the Brigadier's orders, clinging to his papers and diplomatic formality. His facade of control fractures under fire and authoritative demand, ending in reluctant compliance.
- • Preserve his papers and documents, symbols of his diplomatic identity and work.
- • Resist perceived military overreach to maintain personal authority.
- • Diplomatic process and documentation must be protected at all costs.
- • Military personnel lack the nuance to understand civilian necessity.
Controlled intensity masking underlying urgency—prioritizing mission success over diplomatic pride or personal safety.
The Brigadier asserts military command over Styles, overriding diplomatic protocol as Daleks breach the terrace and breach the house. He issues direct orders to Yates while silencing Styles’ protests with abrupt finality.
- • Enforce evacuation of Styles and delegates to prevent capture or death by Dalek forces.
- • Maintain UNIT operational authority despite Styles' insubordination.
- • Military command takes precedence during existential threats, even over civilian authority.
- • The survival of the peace conference and its documents justifies overriding diplomatic niceties.
Professional calm under pressure, focused on protecting civilian lives while adhering to chain of command.
Captain Yates executes the Brigadier’s evacuation order with precision, guiding Styles and the delegates toward the front exit as mortar fire shakes the hallway. He keeps movement swift and orderly despite mounting chaos.
- • Safely evacuate Sir Reginald Styles and all delegates to the waiting vehicles.
- • Follow Brigadier’s orders without deviation to ensure mission success.
- • Discipline and execution of orders are vital in preventing loss of life.
- • The Brigadier’s judgment in crisis is inherently trustworthy.
Frustrated urgency, fighting a losing battle against superior firepower in service of a greater strategic goal.
John Benton attempts to hold back the Dalek advance per Yates’ order, directing troops to keep the enemy at bay as the evacuation progresses. His actions occur off-stage in the text but are active in response to the immediate threat.
- • Delay Dalek breakthrough long enough for the evacuation to complete.
- • Protect UNIT personnel and civilian lives under chaotic battlefield conditions.
- • Strategic delay is better than no delay—even a few minutes can mean survival.
- • Following orders and protecting civilians must take precedence over individual safety.
Purposeful determination, aware that the documents represent humanity’s fragile hope for peace amid destruction.
Jo Grant moves through the hallway as part of the evacuation support, focusing on retrieving and safeguarding the peace conference documents. Her presence underscores the criticality of the documents to the mission’s success.
- • Ensure the diplomatic documents are secured and reach safety with the delegates.
- • Support UNIT operations by maintaining access to critical mission data.
- • The peace conference documents are essential to preventing future war.
- • Every role matters—even logistical support can change the outcome of a temporal crisis.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
Dalek mortars rain through the hallway, pulverizing plaster and masonry as UNIT personnel take cover. The weapons target escape routes and reinforce the Dalek strategy: isolate, delay, and destroy resistance before the final push.
A fleet of diplomatic evacuation cars accelerates away from Auderly House as Yates shepherds the delegates forward. Their departure marks a narrow operational victory—successful extraction just before Dalek breach. Gravel sprays as engines roar, headlights cutting through chaotic evening.
The bound portfolio of peace accords is carried by Jo Grant during the evacuation, becoming a central objective for the team. Its preservation is treated as vital—its loss would erase weeks of negotiation and threaten the legitimacy of the peace summit.
Styles clutches his diplomatic portfolio as mortar fire shakes the hallway, refusing to abandon it even under direct orders. The Aide confirms the documents are present, reinforcing their role as non-negotiable artifacts of negotiation—both physically and symbolically critical to the peace process.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The study hosts the final confrontation between protocol and survival, where Styles clings to his papers even as mortar shells shake the paneling. Jo’s arrival with the accords accelerates the crisis, forcing Styles to choose between pride and physical safety.
The grand hallway becomes the primary conduit of evacuation and destruction—a high-ceilinged artery where mortars shake plaster from the walls and orders crack through radio static. It amplifies every shout and shellburst, turning a ceremonial passage into a bottleneck of crumbling decorum and clattering boots.
The Front Drive becomes the escape zone—diplomatic sedans line up under darting headlights as delegates sprint between vehicles clutching documents. Mortimer shells kick up gravel, forcing frantic movement, turning a formal driveway into a desperate flight path.
The Front Exit Hallway serves as the final corridor of escape, its wide oak doors framed by shattered wainscoting and fleeing delegates. Delegates stumble toward the cars with documents clutched to their chests, their dignity eroded by urgency as the Brigadier’s voice cuts through panic.
The French windows form the weak point of defense—a graceful barrier overlooking the terrace, now shattered by Dalek incursion. The breach occurs as the evacuation nears completion, serving as visual proof of humanity’s narrow window of survival.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
The Dalek Enforcement Division conducts a systematic assault on Auderly House, using mortar fire to isolate defenders and soften resistance before breaching the structure. Their advance through the terrace and French windows creates the immediate crisis forcing evacuation compliance.
UNIT functions as the military command backbone during the evacuation, coordinating troop movements, enforcing evacuation orders, and protecting civilians against Dalek assault. Its presence justifies the Brigadier’s authority and provides the physical means to extract Styles and the delegates to safety.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
No narrative connections mapped yet
This event is currently isolated in the narrative graph
Themes This Exemplifies
Thematic resonance and meaning