Doctor and Duggan break the cellar wall
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
The Doctor, Romana, and Duggan discuss the Count's motives for stealing the Mona Lisa, speculating on the use of advanced technology and the potential buyers.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Frustrated and restless, rapidly escalating from argument to direct physical intervention
Duggan radiates impatience and frustration as he listens to the Doctor's abstract theories. He quickly shifts from verbal argumentation to physical action, building momentum for a direct assault on the wall with his shoulder. His frustration is palpable, demonstrating a raw impulsiveness that contrasts sharply with the Doctor's methodical demeanor.
- • Break free from the confined cellar space immediately
- • Gather actionable intelligence on the Count's operations without delay
- • Words won't resolve the situation quickly enough
- • Only direct, aggressive action produces tangible results
Mildly amused but focused, tolerating Duggan's outburst with wry detachment
The Doctor is methodically chipping away at the mortar, his rational approach to solving the temporal experiment visibly grinding forward. Despite Duggan's frustration, he continues his calibrated work, displaying cool under pressure and analytical precision, even as the conversation about chicken breeding momentarily distracts him.
- • Uncover the true nature of the Count's temporal equipment
- • Convince Duggan of the urgency without undermining his confidence
- • Direct physical force often complicates temporal investigations
- • Time should be handled with precision rather than urgency when possible
Calmly analytical, reassessing the situation through new lens provided by Duggan's outburst
Romana observes the interaction with sharp-eyed detachment, occasionally posing questions that tease out the logic behind the Doctor's deductions. She tracks the dialogue with quiet engagement, seemingly more intrigued by the temporal implications than Duggan's impulsive response, yet remains attentively analytical.
- • Understand the Count's temporal experiments
- • Assess Duggan's disruptive actions in the context of their shared goal
- • Logical deduction is more reliable than impulsive action
- • The Count's equipment must have a rational explanation beyond surface appearance
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The topic of the Mona Lisa emerges in dialogue as Duggan questions the feasibility of stealing it to finance absurd ventures like 'breeding chickens.' Romana and the Doctor use it as a reference point to discuss the Count's real motives, highlighting the disconnect between surface appearance and hidden reality.
The crumbling mortar around the bricks is what the Doctor had been carefully chipping away in a measured attempt to create an opening. Duggan's impatient use of brute force demolishes this fragile structure, rendering the Doctor's method obsolete and revealing the hidden passage beneath.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The cellar serves as a claustrophobic prison for the trio, its low ceiling and cramped confines amplifying Duggan's frustration. The dim, single-lamp lighting accentuates the urgency of their predicament while the confined space makes physical escape the most pressing priority.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Duggan’s earlier brute-force attempt to break through a wall in the cellar (though slightly earlier in the timeline), particularly through beat_323fcfe086804508, enforces his method and leads to the final breach revealing the secret room (beat_f1abbc7a229f1589). His physical approach complements Romana’s spatial deduction."
Doctor exposes Kerensky’s fatal flaw in time theory"Duggan’s earlier brute-force attempt to break through a wall in the cellar (though slightly earlier in the timeline), particularly through beat_323fcfe086804508, enforces his method and leads to the final breach revealing the secret room (beat_f1abbc7a229f1589). His physical approach complements Romana’s spatial deduction."
Duggan ends Kerensky’s experiment with a blow"Duggan’s earlier brute-force attempt to break through a wall in the cellar (though slightly earlier in the timeline), particularly through beat_323fcfe086804508, enforces his method and leads to the final breach revealing the secret room (beat_f1abbc7a229f1589). His physical approach complements Romana’s spatial deduction."
Romana uncovers hidden chamber behind wall"Duggan's earlier skepticism of the Doctor’s methods (beat_b906fe7d69144d5a) and emphasis on stopping the theft directly continues into Act 3 as he impulsively attacks Count Scarlioni (beat_b1860678235b32b4), then later participates in the mission to the Louvre. His consistency in wanting to 'thump someone' and act decisively drives key turning points."
Doctor uncovers Scarlioni's fake Mona Lisa vault"Duggan's earlier skepticism of the Doctor’s methods (beat_b906fe7d69144d5a) and emphasis on stopping the theft directly continues into Act 3 as he impulsively attacks Count Scarlioni (beat_b1860678235b32b4), then later participates in the mission to the Louvre. His consistency in wanting to 'thump someone' and act decisively drives key turning points."
Duggan halts interrogation with violence"Duggan's earlier skepticism of the Doctor’s methods (beat_b906fe7d69144d5a) and emphasis on stopping the theft directly continues into Act 3 as he impulsively attacks Count Scarlioni (beat_b1860678235b32b4), then later participates in the mission to the Louvre. His consistency in wanting to 'thump someone' and act decisively drives key turning points."
Doctor reveals art heist scheme