Trapped by the Yeti
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Travers and Ralpachan discover their path back to the monastery is blocked by the Yeti, trapping them on the mountainside. Amidst their predicament, Ralpachan spots the monks evacuating below and questions whether the Doctor remains behind.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Resigned but resolute—his frustration is tempered by unwavering faith in the Doctor’s plan, though the Yeti’s presence gnaws at his composure.
Travers stands firm at the gatehouse, his back against the wall—literally and metaphorically—as he refuses to abandon the Doctor. His dialogue is terse, his posture resigned but determined, contrasting with Ralpachan’s urgency. He fixates on the Doctor’s potential presence in the monastery, using it as justification to endure the standoff, even as the Yeti looms and the monks flee.
- • Wait for the Doctor to reappear and take charge
- • Protect the Doctor from the Yeti threat (even if it means endangering himself)
- • The Doctor’s leadership is essential to survival
- • Abandoning allies is morally unacceptable
N/A (mechanical, but its presence radiates threat).
The Yeti serves as a silent, menacing barrier, its bulk blocking the monastery gates and trapping Travers and Ralpachan. Its presence is purely functional—an obstacle enforcing the characters’ impasse—but its looming form amplifies the tension, making the gatehouse feel like a cage. The Yeti’s mechanical nature underscores the Great Intelligence’s control, turning the standoff into a battle of wills between the characters and an unseen puppeteer.
- • Block Travers and Ralpachan’s escape
- • Enforce the Great Intelligence’s control over the monastery
- • N/A (acts on programmed directives).
Frustrated and anxious—his survival instincts are at odds with Travers’s stubbornness, and the Yeti’s presence amplifies his sense of helplessness.
Ralpachan is visibly agitated, his gestures sharp as he points to the monks’ torches below, urging Travers to flee. His voice carries a mix of desperation and frustration, underscored by the Yeti’s imposing silhouette. He frames the monks’ escape as a viable option, but Travers’s refusal to budge forces him into a tense, circular debate, revealing his survival instincts clashing with Travers’s loyalty.
- • Convince Travers to join the fleeing monks for safety
- • Avoid confrontation with the Yeti at all costs
- • The Doctor’s absence makes waiting a death sentence
- • Monastic survival is paramount, even if it means leaving others behind
Absent but idealized—Travers’s faith in him is unwavering, while Ralpachan’s frustration with his absence is palpable.
The Doctor is absent but central to the conflict, invoked by Travers as the reason to remain trapped. His potential presence in the monastery drives Travers's refusal to flee, framing him as an unseen but pivotal figure in the standoff. The Yeti's blockade and Ralpachan's urgency highlight the Doctor's absence as a critical vulnerability.
- • Protect Travers and the monastery (implied by Travers’s loyalty)
- • Disrupt the Great Intelligence’s control (broader narrative goal)
- • The Doctor is the key to resolving the crisis
- • Loyalty to allies is non-negotiable
Fear-driven and desperate (implied by their hasty evacuation).
The monks are referenced indirectly through Ralpachan’s observation of their torches below. Their collective flight symbolizes the monastery’s collapse, framing the gatehouse standoff as a microcosm of the broader chaos. While not physically present, their absence looms large, representing the cost of Travers’s loyalty and Ralpachan’s survivalist instincts.
- • Escape the Yeti threat
- • Preserve monastic survival at all costs
- • The monastery is no longer safe
- • Individual survival outweighs loyalty in this crisis
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The fleeing monks’ torches serve as a visual cue and symbolic divide in the standoff. Ralpachan points to them as evidence of a viable escape route, while Travers’s focus on the Doctor renders them irrelevant to his priorities. The torches’ flickering light below the gatehouse underscores the contrast between survival and loyalty, their movement a tangible reminder of the monks’ abandonment of the monastery—and, by extension, Travers’s refusal to do the same.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The monastery interior is invoked as a potential haven—Travers clings to the hope that the Doctor is inside, while Ralpachan dismisses it as a death trap. Its shadowed corridors and ancient stone passages, though unseen, cast a long shadow over the gatehouse standoff. The interior’s allure (safety, the Doctor’s presence) clashes with its reality (Yeti-infested, controlled by the Great Intelligence), making it a contested space in the characters’ minds.
The monastery gatehouse becomes a pressure cooker of tension, its narrow confines amplifying the standoff between Travers and Ralpachan. The heavy gates, once a threshold, now serve as an inescapable barrier, with the Yeti’s bulk reinforcing their imprisonment. The gatehouse’s elevated position allows Ralpachan to spot the monks’ torches below, but this vantage only deepens the divide—Travers sees the Doctor’s potential presence inside, while Ralpachan sees a path to survival outside.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
The Monks of Detsen Monastery are represented indirectly through Ralpachan’s observation of their torches and his urge to join them. Their collective flight symbolizes the organization’s collapse under the Great Intelligence’s influence, with their evacuation exposing the monastery’s vulnerability. Ralpachan’s loyalty to his brothers contrasts with Travers’s loyalty to the Doctor, highlighting the monks’ fractured unity—some resist (like Khrisong), while others flee (like those with torches).
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"The spreading light on the mountainside makes Travers's path blocked by the Yeti, trapping them on the mountainside."
Light blocks path to pyramidKey Dialogue
"RALPACHAN: What shall we do?"
"TRAVERS: Looks as though we're well and truly cooked."
"RALPACHAN: Look. There below us, torches. The monks must have left."
"TRAVERS: Yes, but has the Doctor?"
"RALPACHAN: How can we tell? We are trapped."
"TRAVERS: I don't know."
"RALPACHAN: We cannot enter the monastery."
"TRAVERS: Looks as though we'll just have to sit tight."
"RALPACHAN: Can we not try and join my brothers?"
"TRAVERS: No. The Doctor may still be in there. I'm sure he is."