Harris and Van Lutyens uncover Robson’s collapse
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Harris insists he saw moving seaweed in the quarters, prompting Van Lutyens to believe him because of a similar event involving Victoria in the oxygen store; they note the seaweed disappeared after achieving an unknown 'purpose'.
Harris and Van Lutyens express concern over Robson's mental state after he rushed out of the room, with Van Lutyens suggesting Harris alert security to prevent Robson from harming himself.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Conflicted (caught between institutional duty and personal loyalty, with underlying fear)
Harris stands at the center of this revelation, his voice trembling as he describes witnessing the sentient seaweed in Robson’s quarters—only for it to vanish through the ventilator grille. His physical presence is tense, his gestures sharp as he points to the grille, seeking validation from Van Lutyens. The dialogue reveals his growing alarm, shifting from defensive ('You don’t believe me') to urgent ('He may do himself some harm') as the implications sink in. His loyalty to Robson clashes with his duty to the crew, creating internal conflict.
- • To confirm the seaweed’s existence (seeking Van Lutyens’ validation)
- • To protect Robson (initially) and the crew (ultimately, by alerting security)
- • The seaweed is a real, sentient threat (contrasting with Robson’s denial)
- • Robson’s mental state is deteriorating (fears he may harm himself)
Unstable (paranoia and fear driving erratic behavior)
Robson is absent from the scene but looms large as the subject of Harris and Van Lutyens’ urgent discussion. His erratic behavior—rushing out of his quarters 'as though he were out of his mind'—is framed as a direct consequence of the seaweed’s infiltration and his own denialism. The dialogue paints him as a man unraveling under pressure, his authority crumbling as the crisis escalates. His potential self-harm is treated as an imminent threat, reflecting the seaweed’s psychological toll on the crew.
- • To maintain control (despite evidence to the contrary)
- • To avoid confronting the seaweed’s threat (denial as a coping mechanism)
- • The seaweed is a fabrication or sabotage (rejects its sentience)
- • His authority is absolute (resists input from subordinates like Van Lutyens)
Controlled urgency (calm exterior masking deep concern)
Van Lutyens dominates the scene with his analytical precision, methodically connecting Harris’s account to Victoria’s earlier encounter in the oxygen store. His dialogue is measured but urgent, framing the seaweed’s movements as deliberate and purposeful. He critiques Robson’s negligence and pushes Harris to act, his tone shifting from clinical observation ('It must have come out of the ventilator grille') to alarm ('You’d better alert security'). His posture is likely rigid, his focus unwavering as he treats the crisis like a technical puzzle—one with dire human consequences.
- • To establish the seaweed’s pattern of behavior (linking Harris’s and Victoria’s incidents)
- • To compel Harris to take action (alerting security about Robson)
- • The seaweed is an intelligent, adaptive threat (not a random phenomenon)
- • Robson’s denialism is endangering the crew (his inaction is criticized)
Anxious (by implication—her earlier terror is recalled, framing the current danger)
Victoria is referenced indirectly by Harris as 'that girl' who was locked in the oxygen store during an earlier seaweed incident. Her experience serves as a critical precedent, validating Harris’s account and reinforcing the seaweed’s pattern of infiltration. Though absent from the scene, her ordeal looms as a cautionary example, deepening the urgency of the moment.
- • To serve as a warning (her past encounter validates the seaweed’s threat)
- • To reinforce the pattern of the seaweed’s movements (her experience is cited as evidence)
- • The seaweed acts with deliberate intent (implied by the parallel to her incident)
- • The refinery’s systems are vulnerable to infiltration (her ordeal proves this)
Neutral (professional detachment, though tension is implied)
Security is referenced indirectly as the group Harris is urged to alert about Robson’s potential self-harm. Their role is implicit but critical: they represent the refinery’s institutional response to crises, whether through physical intervention (e.g., restraining Robson) or procedural protocols (e.g., lockdowns). Their involvement is framed as a last resort, underscoring the severity of the situation and the crew’s desperation as the seaweed’s threat grows.
- • To contain threats (physical or psychological, like Robson’s instability)
- • To enforce order (maintaining refinery security amid chaos)
- • The seaweed is a legitimate danger (acting on Harris’s alert)
- • Robson’s behavior is a risk to the facility (prioritizing his restraint)
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The ventilator grille in Robson’s quarters is the critical entry and exit point for the seaweed, serving as both a physical pathway and a symbolic breach of the refinery’s defenses. Harris points to it as evidence of the seaweed’s infiltration, while Van Lutyens connects it to Victoria’s earlier ordeal, establishing a pattern of movement through the ventilation system. The grille’s narrow slats become a metaphor for the crew’s vulnerability—something small and seemingly innocuous (like seaweed tendrils) can slip through unnoticed, wreaking havoc. Its presence turns a mundane fixture into a harbinger of doom.
The sentient seaweed tendrils are the unseen antagonist of this scene, their presence inferred through Harris’s witness account and Van Lutyens’ analysis. Described as 'moving' and 'alive,' they slither into Robson’s quarters via the ventilator grille, only to vanish—mirroring their earlier attack on Victoria in the oxygen store. Their deliberate, purposeful behavior is framed as a calculated threat, exploiting the refinery’s ventilation system to infiltrate and destabilize. The seaweed’s absence in the present moment makes it all the more sinister, its influence lingering like a ghost in the dialogue.
The ventilation system linking Robson’s quarters to the oxygen storeroom is revealed as the seaweed’s hidden highway, enabling its deliberate creep through the refinery’s infrastructure. Van Lutyens traces the creature’s path through the ducts, highlighting how it moves unchecked between isolated locations—first the oxygen store (where Victoria was trapped), now Robson’s quarters. The system’s narrow passages symbolize the seaweed’s adaptability, allowing it to exploit the refinery’s mechanical vulnerabilities. Its role as a connective tissue between crises turns an ordinary utility into a narrative artery of dread.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The oxygen storeroom is invoked as a critical precedent, its earlier seaweed attack on Victoria serving as a blueprint for the current crisis in Robson’s quarters. Though not physically present in this scene, its memory looms large, with Harris and Van Lutyens explicitly linking the two incidents. The storeroom’s broken seals and tampered ventilator—where Victoria was locked in—mirror the vulnerabilities now exposed in Robson’s quarters. Its role as a past battleground reinforces the seaweed’s strategic pattern, turning a seemingly mundane storage space into a harbinger of the refinery’s broader fragility. The location’s absence makes its narrative weight all the more potent.
Robson’s quarters serve as a microcosm of the refinery’s unraveling authority, its cramped metal walls amplifying the tension between Harris and Van Lutyens. The space, meant to be a private sanctuary for Robson, becomes a stage for his mental collapse, with the seaweed’s intrusion symbolizing the erosion of his control. The ventilator grille—now a portal for the unknown—dominates the scene, turning a mundane fixture into a focal point of fear. The room’s isolation mirrors Robson’s psychological state, while the distant hum of machinery underscores the refinery’s fragility. Here, institutional power fractures under the weight of the seaweed’s threat.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
No narrative connections mapped yet
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Key Dialogue
"HARRIS: "Yes, it's in here. Look. Well, it was in here. I saw it.""
"VAN LUTYENS: "Oh yes, I believe you, Mister Harris. It must have come out of the ventilator grille, like it did in the oxygen store.""
"VAN LUTYENS: "Least of all Robson.""
"VAN LUTYENS: "You'd better alert security. He may do himself some harm.""