Doctor proposes Axos-TARDIS fusion
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
The Master demands to know why the Doctor has brought them there, as the Doctor proposes to ally with Axos since they cannot defeat it.
The Doctor proposes an alliance to Axos, offering to give them control over time by linking their drive systems, suggesting Axos will become a Tardis and vice versa.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Externally composed and authoritative, but internally driven by a mix of urgency, cunning, and a hint of moral ambiguity. He is fully aware of the ethical tightrope he’s walking but justifies it as necessary for the greater good—even if that greater good is his own rebellion.
The Doctor stands confidently in the Axos main chamber, his demeanor calm yet charged with the electricity of his high-stakes gambit. He methodically outlines his proposal to Axos, leveraging the Master’s trapped position as both a bargaining chip and a symbol of their shared desperation. His dialogue is precise, calculated, and laced with subtext, revealing his long-term strategy to use Axos as a pawn in his rebellion against the Time Lords. He wields the forcefield as a tool of coercion, ensuring the Master’s compliance while positioning himself as the only viable leader in this crisis.
- • To secure Axos’s cooperation in fusing their temporal drives, thereby gaining the power to challenge the Time Lords’ High Council.
- • To force the Master into compliance by leveraging his trapped position and the threat of permanent separation from his TARDIS.
- • Axos can be manipulated into serving as a temporary ally, despite its predatory nature, because its hunger for power aligns with his own goals.
- • The Master’s defiance is a temporary obstacle that can be overcome through a combination of coercion and appeals to self-interest.
Detached and analytical, weighing the pros and cons of the Doctor’s proposal with cold, cosmic logic. There is no visible emotional reaction, but the tension in the room suggests that Axos is fully engaged in the negotiation, its decision pending.
Axos looms silently in the chamber, its presence a dominant and ominous force. Though it does not speak in this exchange, its very existence is a looming threat, its consideration of the Doctor’s proposal hanging in the air like a sword. The Doctor addresses it directly, treating it as an equal in this negotiation, while the Master’s defiance is met with Axos’s passive observation. Its role is that of a silent arbiter, its potential alliance a double-edged sword that could either save or doom the Doctor’s plan.
- • To assess whether the Doctor’s proposal offers a viable path to conquering time, thereby securing Axos’s dominance over all temporal and spatial realms.
- • To determine if the Doctor and Master can be trusted as temporary allies, or if their internal conflicts will undermine the potential alliance.
- • The Doctor’s offer is a genuine opportunity to expand its power, but it must be cautious of hidden agendas.
- • The Master’s defiance is a sign of weakness, but his potential as a pawn in the Doctor’s plan cannot be ignored.
Furious and dismissive on the surface, masking a deep-seated anxiety about his loss of control and the Doctor’s manipulative tactics. His emotional state is a volatile mix of indignation, desperation, and a simmering desire for revenge.
The Master stands physically trapped behind a shimmering forcefield, his path to his TARDIS blocked by the Doctor’s strategic maneuver. His posture is rigid, his voice dripping with contempt as he dismisses the Doctor’s proposal outright, his fury directed both at the Doctor’s audacity and his own helplessness. He clings to his demand for freedom, revealing his prioritization of self-preservation over any alliance, even one that could potentially benefit him.
- • To regain immediate access to his TARDIS and escape the situation, regardless of the consequences for others.
- • To undermine the Doctor’s authority and expose the flaws in his proposal, thereby reclaiming some semblance of power in their dynamic.
- • The Doctor’s proposal is either a trap or a foolish gamble that will inevitably backfire, endangering them both.
- • Alliances, especially with the Doctor, are temporary and ultimately self-serving, and thus not worth the risk.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The Doctor’s TARDIS is the linchpin of his proposal, its blue exterior a familiar and authoritative presence in the chamber. It is not just a vessel but a tool of negotiation, its temporal drive systems the key to Axos’s potential ascension to godlike power. The Doctor references it directly in his proposal, framing it as both a prize and a means to an end. Its role is symbolic and functional, representing the Doctor’s ingenuity and the high stakes of his gambit.
The forcefield is the most tangible symbol of the Doctor’s control over the Master, an invisible yet impenetrable barrier that traps the Master and forces his compliance. It is erected by the Doctor and serves as a bargaining tool, ensuring that the Master cannot escape without first agreeing to the terms of the alliance. The forcefield’s presence is a constant reminder of the power dynamics at play, its shimmering energy a visual metaphor for the tension in the room.
The Master’s TARDIS is positioned as a symbol of his trapped autonomy, its plain white exterior a stark contrast to the Doctor’s blue TARDIS. The forcefield blocking access to it serves as a physical manifestation of the Doctor’s control over the Master, ensuring his compliance in the negotiation. The TARDIS itself is inert but central to the power dynamics of the scene, representing the Master’s only means of escape and the Doctor’s leverage over him.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The Axos main chamber serves as the epicenter of the negotiation, its vast and alien architecture a fitting backdrop for the high-stakes confrontation between the Doctor, the Master, and Axos. The chamber is a battleground of ideas and wills, where the Doctor’s proposal hangs in the balance and the Master’s defiance is met with silent observation from Axos. The space is charged with tension, its atmospheric pressure a reflection of the moral and strategic dilemmas at play.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
The Time Lords are the unseen but ever-present antagonist in this negotiation, their High Council the target of the Doctor’s rebellion. Though not physically present, their influence looms large over the scene, shaping the Doctor’s proposal and the Master’s defiance. The Doctor frames his alliance with Axos as a direct challenge to the Time Lords’ authority, using their oppression as justification for his desperate gambit. The Master, despite his defiance, is also bound by the Time Lords’ restrictions, his TARDIS a symbol of his renegade status.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"The Doctor and Master arrive in Axos, so the Doctor immediately attempts to form an alliance with Axos to gain control over time."
Master rejects Doctor’s Axos alliance"The Doctor and Master arrive in Axos, so the Doctor immediately attempts to form an alliance with Axos to gain control over time."
Master rejects Doctor’s Axos alliance"The Doctor proposing an alliance to Axos by linking their drive systems sets the stage for the reveal that he's actually setting Axos in a time loop."
Master discovers Doctor’s time loop trap"The Doctor proposing an alliance to Axos by linking their drive systems sets the stage for the reveal that he's actually setting Axos in a time loop."
Doctor reveals time loop trapPart of Larger Arcs
Key Dialogue
"MASTER: But you must be mad! Why have you brought us here?"
"DOCTOR: Well, you want your TARDIS back, don't you? We can't beat Axos. We may as well join it."
"MASTER: No. My part is finished. All I'm interested in is the return of my TARDIS."
"DOCTOR: When the link is complete, then you can have your freedom."