Madeleine’s plea to Dervish fails
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Madeleine confronts Dervish, questioning his involvement with Caven and appealing to his sense of morality and professional integrity. She attempts to persuade him to help her stop Caven's criminal activities, highlighting the danger they both face.
Dervish refuses to help Madeleine, expressing his fear of Caven and the potential consequences. Madeleine reveals Caven's plan to murder the prisoners, appealing to Dervish to prevent the deaths of innocent people, but Dervish remains uncooperative and leaves.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
A man teetering on the edge of panic—his surface calm cracks under Madeleine’s moral pressure, revealing a deep well of self-loathing and terror. His emotional state is a mix of guilt, resignation, and the desperate need to escape the conversation (and his own complicity).
Dervish enters the scene already complicit, his body language tense as he dispatches Madeleine to the freighter dock with instructions for transporting the thermic capacitators. His demeanor shifts from detached professionalism to visible discomfort as Madeleine presses him about his involvement with Caven. He deflects her moral appeals with increasing agitation, his fear of Caven manifesting in physical retreat—first verbally ('I don’t want to talk about it'), then physically (fleeing the conversation). His refusal to act marks the scene’s turning point, pushing Madeleine toward her desperate transmission.
- • Avoid direct confrontation with Madeleine to preserve his tenuous safety under Caven’s rule.
- • Complete his assigned tasks (transporting the thermic capacitators) to maintain the illusion of loyalty to Caven.
- • Caven’s retribution is inevitable and unstoppable.
- • His own past mistake is irredeemable, binding him to Caven’s will.
A volatile mix of righteous indignation and creeping despair—her initial defiance curdles into panic as Dervish’s refusal forces her into a high-stakes gamble with the Space Corps, her voice cracking with the weight of lives at stake.
Madeleine enters the scene already agitated, her frustration with the situation palpable as she immediately challenges Dervish about Caven’s whereabouts. She escalates from probing questions about Dervish’s complicity to a desperate, moral appeal for him to join her in stopping Caven’s massacre. When Dervish refuses, her emotional state fractures—first pleading, then accusatory—culminating in a frantic, off-script transmission to the Space Corps, her voice trembling with urgency. Physically, she moves from a confrontational stance to a position of isolation at the video communicator, her body language shifting from defiance to desperation.
- • Convince Dervish to betray Caven and help stop the massacre of prisoners.
- • Transmit a distress call to the Space Corps to intervene before Caven’s plan succeeds.
- • Dervish’s intelligence and professional pride can be leveraged to override his fear of Caven.
- • The Space Corps is the only external force capable of stopping Caven’s violence, despite the risks of exposure.
Not directly observable, but inferred as coldly calculating—his absence is a tactical choice, allowing his subordinates’ fear to do the work of enforcement for him.
Caven is physically absent from the scene but looms as an omnipresent threat, his influence manifesting through Dervish’s paralyzing fear and Madeleine’s references to his violence. His presence is evoked through Dervish’s warnings ('he’d kill us both') and the mention of guards seeking him out, reinforcing his role as the unseen architect of the crew’s complicity. The thermic capacitators and the old freighter dock—tools of his sabotage—are indirect extensions of his control, tying the scene to his broader scheme.
- • Maintain absolute control over the crew through intimidation and blackmail.
- • Ensure the sabotage of the Liz proceeds without interference, eliminating prisoners as planned.
- • Fear is a more reliable motivator than loyalty or morality.
- • Madeleine and Dervish are too fractured to unite against him, given their individual vulnerabilities.
Not directly observable, but inferred as determined and focused—her capture and the group’s peril are the unspoken drivers of Madeleine’s actions.
Zoe is not physically present in this scene, but her analytical mind and resourcefulness are implied in Madeleine’s urgency to act. The scene’s technical details (thermic capacitators, tractors, video communicators) reflect the kind of precision Zoe would appreciate, and Madeleine’s frantic transmission mirrors the logical, coordinated thinking Zoe embodies. Her absence heightens the stakes—without her or the Doctor’s intervention, Madeleine is left to improvise alone.
- • Survive the immediate threat (implied through Madeleine’s efforts).
- • Expose Caven’s plan to the Space Corps (aligned with Madeleine’s transmission).
- • Information and coordination are key to overcoming obstacles.
- • Allies can be found in unexpected places (e.g., Madeleine).
Not directly observable, but inferred as alert and responsive—Madeleine’s transmission is designed to provoke immediate action, suggesting Hermack is the kind of leader who would prioritize such a distress call.
General Hermack is not physically present but is the indirect recipient of Madeleine’s desperate transmission. His role in the scene is passive yet pivotal—her plea to him is a Hail Mary pass, a last-ditch effort to disrupt Caven’s plan. The cut-off transmission leaves his response unknown, heightening the tension and uncertainty of whether help will arrive in time. His authority as a Space Corps officer is invoked as the only potential counterbalance to Caven’s violence.
- • Respond to Madeleine’s distress call and intervene in the mining facility.
- • Apprehend Caven and his crew to restore order to the argonite lanes.
- • The Space Corps has a duty to protect civilians and infrastructure from piracy.
- • Urgent distress calls must be treated as top priority.
Not directly observable, but inferred as determined and resourceful—his capture and impending doom are the catalyst for Madeleine’s frantic efforts.
The Doctor is not physically present in this scene, but his absence is felt through the implied stakes—Madeleine’s desperation to save the prisoners (which includes him and his companions) drives her actions. His indirect influence is seen in her moral urgency, which aligns with his own principles of protecting the innocent. The scene’s tension reflects the broader threat he and his companions face, heightening the urgency of Madeleine’s plea.
- • Survive Caven’s trap (implied through Madeleine’s actions).
- • Expose Caven’s conspiracy to the Space Corps (indirectly advanced by Madeleine’s transmission).
- • Injustice must be challenged, even at personal risk.
- • Allies in unexpected places (like Madeleine) can turn the tide.
Caven’s security guard is referenced indirectly through Dervish’s mention of a guard seeking Caven’s location. His presence is felt as …
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The thermic capacitators are mentioned by Dervish as critical components for Caven’s sabotage plan, specifically tied to the Liz’s oxygen pump. Their presence in the dialogue serves as a grim reminder of the technical precision behind Caven’s violence—these are not just tools, but instruments of murder. Madeleine’s awareness of them (even as she pleads with Dervish) highlights the futility of her moral appeals in the face of such calculated brutality. The objects symbolize the intersection of engineering and evil, forcing Madeleine to confront the reality that Caven’s plan is already in motion.
Dervish’s tractor is referenced as the vehicle needed to transport the thermic capacitators to the old freighter dock. While it does not appear on-screen, its mention is a stark reminder of the logistical machinery supporting Caven’s crimes. The tractor’s role is functional—hauling heavy equipment—but its implication is chilling: even mundane tools are co-opted into the pirate’s deadly scheme. Madeleine’s awareness of its purpose (as Dervish describes it) underscores the inescapable complicity of the mining facility’s infrastructure in Caven’s violence.
The video communicator becomes Madeleine’s lifeline in this scene, transforming from a mundane piece of equipment into a symbol of her desperation. After Dervish’s refusal to help, she turns to it as her last resort, her fingers trembling as she transmits a frantic distress call to General Hermack. The device’s static-filled response—cut off mid-transmission—underscores the precarity of her situation, leaving her plea hanging in the air. Its role is both functional (a tool for communication) and narrative (a catalyst for her shift from moral persuasion to direct action).
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The Issigri Mining Office serves as the pressure cooker for this scene, its confined walls amplifying the tension between Madeleine and Dervish. The office is not just a setting but an active participant in the drama—its utilitarian design (consoles, monitors, communication devices) reflects the corporate facade under which Caven’s piracy operates. The space is claustrophobic, with no escape for Madeleine’s moral outrage or Dervish’s guilt. The guards’ presence (even off-screen) looms like a physical barrier, reinforcing the office’s role as a microcosm of Caven’s control. The video communicator, mounted on the wall, becomes a focal point, symbolizing Madeleine’s last hope for intervention.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Madeleine attempts to contact the Space Corps via video communicator (beat_4e0d73de7044be30) and her communication is intercepted while barely getting through to General Hermack (beat_8f199fe618f34507)."
Madeleine’s Warning Transmission Cut ShortThemes This Exemplifies
Thematic resonance and meaning
Key Dialogue
"MADELEINE: Look, Dervish, you're an intelligent man, a qualified astroengineer. How did you get mixed up with a criminal like Caven?"
"DERVISH: I made a mistake once. Just once. Caven found out about it."
"MADELEINE: He's planning to kill those prisoners, Dervish! We can't let him murder four innocent people."
"DERVISH: No! I don't want to talk about it. I know Caven. I know what he's capable of. And believe me, he'd kill us both if he even suspected we were talking like this."