Norton murders a Primitive in front of Holden
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Holden completes a temporary repair on the power supply and asks Norton to put away the tools. As Holden turns to check a circuit relay, Norton attacks a Primitive who is off-screen then moves aggressively toward Holden with a spear.
Holden, caught off guard by Norton's attack on the primitive(s), questions Norton's sanity and actions. He yells "No!" as Norton approaches him.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Holden’s emotional state is one of visceral shock and betrayal. His 'No!' is a cry of moral outrage, but it’s also the sound of a man watching his world collapse. There’s fear, yes, but it’s secondary to his grief for the Primitive and his dawning understanding that Norton—and by extension, the IMC’s influence—has won. The room’s dim lights cast long shadows, mirroring the darkness now consuming his hope.
Holden is mid-sentence when Norton’s violence interrupts him, his focus on the circuit relay shifting to sheer horror as he witnesses the attack. His protest ('No!') is instinctive, a plea to stop the unthinkable. Physically, he is frozen in shock, his tools forgotten, his body language tense and defensive. The spear now pointed at him forces a confrontation he never saw coming, his earlier trust in Norton shattered in an instant. His horror isn’t just for the Primitive’s death—it’s for the realization that the colony’s last shred of unity has been torn apart.
- • Stop Norton’s violence and protect the Primitive (too late).
- • Reassert the colony’s shared humanity and the possibility of cooperation, even as it crumbles.
- • Violence only begets more violence, and the colony cannot survive if it turns on itself.
- • The Primitives are not the enemy—the real threat is the fear and division sown by the IMC.
Rage-fueled and detached, Norton operates in a state of hyper-alert paranoia, where violence is the only language he trusts. His actions suggest a man who has surrendered to fear, using brutality as both shield and sword. There’s no remorse—only the cold certainty that the Primitive (and by extension, Holden) is a threat to be eliminated.
Norton storms into the power supply room, wrench in hand, and immediately attacks an unseen Primitive with lethal force. The act is swift and brutal, betraying no hesitation—only cold, calculated violence. He then snatches a spear from the fallen Primitive and turns it toward Holden, his body language radiating threat. His movements are aggressive, his grip tight, and his silence more chilling than any shout. The wrench, now discarded, lies bloodied on the floor, while the spear becomes an extension of his paranoia, pointed directly at Holden’s chest.
- • Eliminate perceived threats (Primitives and Holden) to assert control over the colony’s survival narrative.
- • Demonstrate dominance to intimidate others into submission, ensuring his own survival in a world he sees as hostile.
- • The Primitives are inherently dangerous and cannot be trusted, even under a truce.
- • Holden’s sympathy for the Primitives makes him a traitor to the human colony’s cause.
The Primitive’s emotional state is unknowable in the moment of death, but their prior actions (assisting Holden) suggest a sense of cautious optimism or at least cooperation. Their death is abrupt, robbing them of any agency in the face of Norton’s violence.
The Primitive is attacked and killed by Norton with a wrench, their presence in the power supply room implied but unseen until the moment of violence. The attack is sudden and fatal, leaving no time for reaction or defense. The Primitive’s death is silent, their body likely collapsing against the machinery or tools scattered around the room. Their role in the scene is passive but pivotal—their murder catalyzes Norton’s escalation and Holden’s horror, serving as a grim reminder of the colony’s collapsing moral order.
- • Assist Holden in maintaining the colony’s power supply (implied by their presence in the room).
- • Uphold the truce between Primitives and colonists, however fragile.
- • The colonists, despite tensions, can be reasoned with or worked alongside.
- • Their technical skills are valued and necessary for the colony’s survival.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The circuit relay, mentioned by Holden just before the violence erupts, serves as a poignant symbol of the colony’s failing infrastructure—and by extension, its failing humanity. Holden’s intention to inspect it represents his last attempt to maintain order and functionality in the colony, a task now rendered obsolete by Norton’s actions. The relay itself is likely a tangled mess of wires and corroded components, a metaphor for the colony’s deteriorating systems. Its neglect in the face of the murder highlights the colony’s priorities: survival has devolved from cooperation and maintenance into raw, paranoid violence. The relay’s unchecked state mirrors the colony’s moral and structural collapse.
Norton’s power supply room wrench is the catalyst for the violence in this scene. Initially carried casually into the room, it becomes a blunt instrument of death when Norton swings it at the unseen Primitive. The wrench’s metal head, likely stained with grease and grime from maintenance work, is now smeared with blood—a grotesque juxtaposition of the colony’s practical needs and its moral decay. Its role is purely functional in the murder, but its presence after the fact (discarded on the floor) serves as a silent accusation, a physical reminder of the brutality that has taken place. The wrench’s transformation from tool to weapon underscores the colony’s unraveling: even the most mundane objects are repurposed for destruction.
The Primitive’s spear is initially an inanimate object, lying unused in the power supply room—perhaps leaned against a workbench or propped near the junction box. When Norton seizes it after killing the Primitive, it transforms from a tool of tribal craftsmanship into an instrument of his paranoia. The spear’s rough, wooden shaft and sharpened point reflect the raw, untamed nature of the Primitives, but in Norton’s hands, it becomes a symbol of the colony’s descent into savagery. Its arc from passive object to weapon mirrors the colony’s own transformation: what was once a sign of cooperation (the Primitive assisting Holden) is now a tool of violence.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The power supply room is a claustrophobic, dimly lit space, its walls lined with outdated nuclear generator parts and tangled relay circuits. The air hums with the strained energy of failing machinery, a sound that now competes with the gasps and shouts of the violence unfolding. The room’s cramped quarters amplify the tension, turning the space into a pressure cooker of paranoia and desperation. Tools lie scattered across workbenches, their usual purpose as maintenance aids now rendered irrelevant by the brutality taking place. The junction box, where Holden intended to inspect the circuit relay, becomes a grim stage for the murder, its flickering lights casting long, accusatory shadows. The room’s atmosphere is one of decay—both physical and moral—where the colony’s last vestiges of order are being torn apart.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
The Interplanetary Mining Corporation (IMC) is the unseen but omnipotent force behind Norton’s violence. While the IMC itself does not physically manifest in this scene, its influence is palpable in Norton’s actions. The corporation’s culture of fear, division, and ruthless self-preservation has seeped into the colony, poisoning relationships and justifying brutality. Norton’s paranoia and violence are not his alone—they are the IMC’s doing, a byproduct of its policy of pitting groups against each other to secure resources. The murder of the Primitive and the threat to Holden are not isolated acts but symptoms of the IMC’s broader strategy: create chaos, eliminate opposition, and claim the planet’s duralinium at any cost. The power supply room, a microcosm of the colony’s struggles, becomes a stage for the IMC’s indirect but devastating control.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
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Key Dialogue
"HOLDEN: What the? Are you crazy? What do you think you're doing? No!"