Barbara’s abduction and Vicki’s disappearance
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
After Dracula's sudden disappearance, Vicki expresses relief; Barbara expresses her growing unease about the strange occurrences in the house, but then notes Vicki has disappeared.
Barbara calls out for Vicki, only to be attacked by a White Woman on the landing and dragged away screaming.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Fearful and disoriented, masking a deep sense of responsibility for Vicki’s safety.
Barbara recites John Donne’s Meditation 17, triggering her hair to turn white—a visible sign of her supernatural vulnerability. She questions the reality around her, attempting to open a door where Vicki has vanished, only to be violently abducted by the White Woman. Her emotional state oscillates between fear, confusion, and desperation as she screams for Vicki, her voice echoing through the haunted house.
- • To understand the supernatural forces at play in the house.
- • To find and protect Vicki from harm.
- • The house is no longer safe, and its horrors are real.
- • Vicki’s disappearance is connected to the supernatural events unfolding.
Initially curious, then unsettled and possibly frightened by the supernatural occurrences.
Vicki initially jokes about Barbara’s recitation but quickly confirms the supernatural transformation of Barbara’s hair. She vanishes through a door without warning, leaving Barbara stranded and vulnerable. Her disappearance is sudden and unexplained, heightening the tension and forcing Barbara into a desperate search.
- • To explore the house’s mysteries, even if it means taking risks.
- • To avoid the supernatural threats, though her actions suggest otherwise.
- • The house’s horrors are real but not immediately life-threatening.
- • Barbara’s transformation is a sign of deeper danger.
Purely aggressive, driven by the house’s supernatural forces.
The White Woman materializes on the landing, her screams piercing the silence as she violently drags Barbara away. Her presence is purely hostile, embodying the house’s supernatural defenses and marking the escalation from illusion to active threat. Barbara’s screams for Vicki go unanswered as the White Woman disappears with her.
- • To capture and remove Barbara from the scene, heightening the group’s desperation.
- • To embody the house’s supernatural threats, making escape seem impossible.
- • The house’s horrors are real and must be enforced.
- • Barbara is a target due to her vulnerability.
Detached and enigmatic, observing the chaos without direct involvement.
Count Dracula materializes briefly, introducing himself with theatrical certainty before vanishing behind a door. His presence is fleeting but unsettling, adding to the house’s supernatural atmosphere. He does not interact further, leaving Barbara and Vicki to grapple with the unfolding horrors.
- • To assert his presence as a supernatural entity in the house.
- • To leave the companions unsettled and questioning reality.
- • The house is a domain where supernatural forces hold sway.
- • His role is to disrupt the companions’ sense of safety.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
Barbara’s recitation of John Donne’s Meditation 17 acts as a catalyst for the supernatural transformation of her hair, signaling her vulnerability to the house’s forces. The poem’s themes of mortality and inevitability resonate with the house’s gothic horrors, triggering Count Dracula’s brief appearance and the White Woman’s violent abduction. The object serves as a narrative device to escalate tension and mark the shift from exploration to survival.
The unopenable door serves as a critical barrier, trapping Barbara on one side while Vicki vanishes through it. Barbara’s attempts to open it are futile, symbolizing the house’s inescapable nature and the companions’ growing isolation. The door’s refusal to budge underscores the supernatural forces at play, preventing Barbara from following Vicki and leaving her vulnerable to the White Woman’s attack.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The lower level near the TARDIS transforms into a battleground as the supernatural horrors of the house manifest. The landing becomes the site of the White Woman’s violent abduction of Barbara, while the unopenable door traps her, preventing escape. The space preys on the companions’ fears, fracturing their resolve and marking the transition from exploration to desperate survival.
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
Key Dialogue
"BARBARA: And therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls: it tolls for thee. Vicki, I feel as though my hair's turned white."
"VICKI: It has as a matter of fact."
"BARBARA: What!"
"VICKI: It's all right though, it quite suits you."
"BARBARA: Oh, Vicki!"
"BARBARA: Vicki? Vicki, where are you?"