Narrative Web

Doctor exploits Keller Machine against Master

In the Process Theatre, the Doctor’s frustration with Jo’s perceived naivety about the Master’s threat abruptly shifts into a tactical epiphany. Jo, trying to rationalize surrendering the TARDIS dematerialization circuit to stop the missile, inadvertently highlights the overlooked asset: the Keller Machine itself. The Doctor seizes on this, realizing the Machine’s destructive potential can be weaponized against the Master’s plan. He proposes a high-risk gambit—using Barnham’s unique immunity to the Machine’s evil impulses as a living shield to lure and neutralize it, thereby dismantling the Master’s nerve gas threat in one stroke. This moment marks the narrative’s pivot from reactive containment to proactive, morally fraught aggression, formalizing Jo’s role as the Doctor’s operative in executing the plan. The exchange reveals the Doctor’s strategic brilliance but also his willingness to exploit dangerous tools, foreshadowing the ethical costs of his counteroffensive.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

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The Doctor explains his plan to use Barnham and the Keller Machine to destroy the Master while enlisting Jo's help.

clarity to determination

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

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Detached but subtly uneasy: Barnham’s lack of visible reaction suggests he doesn’t fully grasp the stakes, but his body language (if implied) might betray a flicker of confusion or fear. His emotional state is a void—a side effect of the Keller Process—making him the perfect instrument for the Doctor’s plan. There’s an underlying pathos: he is both the solution and the sacrifice, his immunity ensuring the plan’s success while dooming him to danger.

Barnham is physically present but emotionally absent in this exchange, his childlike demeanor rendering him a passive participant in the Doctor’s planning. Though not speaking, his existence as a 'living shield' is central to the Doctor’s gambit—his immunity to the Keller Machine’s evil impulses makes him the key to weaponizing it. The Doctor directs his plan toward Barnham ('With a little help from you, old chap'), framing him as a tool rather than a person. Barnham’s lack of agency in this moment is tragic: he is complicit by default, his processed mind unable to resist or comprehend the danger he’s being sent into.

Goals in this moment
  • Obey the Doctor’s instructions **without question** (a conditioned response)
  • Serve as a **shield** for the Keller Machine (unaware of the risks)
  • Maintain his **role as a 'cured' asset** for UNIT/Doctor
Active beliefs
  • The Doctor and Jo **know what’s best** for him
  • His **immunity** is his **only purpose** (a belief reinforced by the Keller Process)
  • He is **safe as long as he follows orders** (a dangerous assumption)
Character traits
Unwitting **pawn in the Doctor’s strategy** Emotionally **detached** (due to Keller Process) Physically **compliant** but **psychologically vulnerable** Symbolic of the **costs of dehumanization** (a product of the Keller Machine’s 'cure') Loyal to the Doctor **by conditioning**, not choice
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Confused and slightly chastened: Jo’s facial expressions (implied by her dialogue) suggest frustration at being dismissed, but her eagerness to please the Doctor overrides her instinctive hesitation. There’s a flicker of fear—not for herself, but for Barnham’s safety—though she doesn’t voice it. Her emotional state is reactive, shaped by the Doctor’s dominant energy and the urgency of the moment.

Jo stands physically subdued in the Doctor’s presence, her posture slightly hunched as she absorbs his sharp rebuke. She stammers slightly when repeating her remark about the Keller Machine, unaware of its tactical significance—her confused tone ('I don’t understand') underscores her role as the unwitting catalyst for the Doctor’s plan. Though verbally passive, her presence is pivotal: her offhand comment becomes the spark for the Doctor’s epiphany, and her loyalty ensures she’ll follow his lead despite her misgivings. She doesn’t challenge him, but her bewildered expression hints at unspoken doubt about the plan’s morality.

Goals in this moment
  • Understand the Doctor’s **strategic shift** to avoid further reprimand
  • Support the Doctor’s plan **without fully grasping its risks**
  • Protect Barnham **indirectly** by ensuring the plan succeeds quickly
Active beliefs
  • The Doctor’s **intelligence is infallible**—his plan must be the right one
  • Her role is to **assist, not question** (even when uneasy)
  • The Keller Machine is **dangerous but controllable** (a belief the Doctor now exploits)
Character traits
Unwitting catalyst for key insights Loyal but **naïve** in strategic matters Verbally passive but **physically present** as a moral counterweight Quick to **absorb and relay** information (even unintentionally) Subtly **questioning** but **non-confrontational**
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Frustrated → Strategically euphoric: Surface irritation at Jo’s 'naivety' masks a deeper anxiety about the Master’s escalation, but her remark triggers a cognitive shift—his eyes light up with manic energy, betraying a thrill at the solution’s audacity. Beneath the confident exterior, there’s a calculated coldness: he’s willing to risk Barnham’s life for the mission, a moral compromise that hints at his desperation to stop the Master.

The Doctor pivots abruptly from exasperated frustration to tactical clarity, his body language shifting from agitated pacing to leaning in with intense focus as Jo’s remark sparks his epiphany. He interrupts Jo mid-sentence, homing in on her offhand comment about the Keller Machine, and rapidly articulates a high-stakes plan—using Barnham as a shield to weaponize the Machine against the Master. His tone oscillates between sarcastic dismissal ('stop stating the obvious') and urgent inspiration, revealing his genius for improvisation under pressure. Physically, he dominates the space, his presence commanding as he orchestrates the gambit with Jo and Barnham as unwitting pawns in his scheme.

Goals in this moment
  • Neutralize the Master’s nerve gas missile **before it launches**
  • Repurpose the Keller Machine as a **weapon** to eliminate two threats at once
  • Minimize UNIT’s losses while **maximizing leverage** over the Master
Active beliefs
  • The Master **cannot be trusted**—surrendering the circuit would doom Earth
  • Barnham’s immunity makes him **expendable but necessary** for the plan
  • Jo’s 'naivety' is **useful**—her offhand remark **unlocked the solution**
Character traits
Improvisational genius Strategic ruthlessness Sarcastic wit under pressure Charismatic command Moral flexibility in crises Paternalistic toward allies (but exploitative when necessary)
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Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

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Experimental Thunderbolt Nerve Gas Missile

The Experimental Thunderbolt Nerve Gas Missile is the catalyst for the Doctor’s desperation in this moment, though it is only referenced indirectly through Jo’s dialogue ('The Master's got the missile'). Its presence looms as the imminent doom hanging over London, forcing the Doctor into a corner. The missile embodies the Master’s power—a ticking clock that accelerates the Doctor’s moral compromise. By weaponizing the Keller Machine, the Doctor inverts the Master’s own chaos against him, turning the missile’s threat into the reason for the gambit. The object’s absence from the scene makes it more menacing: it is the unseen sword of Damocles, driving every decision.

Before: Stolen by the Master, currently en route to …
After: Unchanged physically, but its symbolic weight shifts: the …
Before: Stolen by the Master, currently en route to Stanham Airfield for launch. Its possession by the Master gives him leverage over UNIT and the Doctor, ensuring their desperation. The missile is armed and operational, with the Master ready to deploy it unless the Doctor surrenders the TARDIS circuit.
After: Unchanged physically, but its symbolic weight shifts: the Doctor’s plan directs the Keller Machine toward it, turning the missile from a guaranteed doom into a target for destruction. The object’s fate is now tied to Barnham’s immunity—if the plan succeeds, the missile (and the Master) will be neutralized in one stroke.
Keller Machine

The Keller Machine is the pivotal object in this event, transformed from a liability to a weapon by the Doctor’s epiphany. Jo’s offhand remark ('all we’ve got is this wretched machine') triggers its repurposing, as the Doctor realizes its destructive potential can be harnessed. The Machine’s grotesque, brain-like form and psychic assault capabilities make it the perfect instrument of vengeance against the Master. The Doctor’s plan exploits its core function—feeding on evil impulses—to turn it against its creator’s ally. Barnham’s immunity becomes the key to controlling it, allowing the Doctor to lure the Machine to the Master’s location where it will devour his evil intentions, neutralizing both threats. The object’s role shifts from menace to savior, reflecting the moral ambiguity of the Doctor’s strategy.

Before: Active but contained in the Process Theatre, pulsing …
After: Repurposed as a tactical asset: the Doctor’s plan …
Before: Active but contained in the Process Theatre, pulsing ominously after its escape from the control collar. It is dangerous but dormant in Barnham’s presence, its evil impulses repelled by his processed mind. The Doctor and Jo view it as a burden, but the Doctor now sees its untapped potential as a weapon.
After: Repurposed as a tactical asset: the Doctor’s plan activates it as a directed threat, using Barnham to guide it toward the Master. Its status shifts from 'liability' to 'weapon', with its destructive capabilities now aligned with the Doctor’s goals. The Machine’s fate is tied to Barnham’s survival—if he fails, it will turn on them all.
Master's TARDIS Dematerialisation Circuit

The TARDIS Dematerialisation Circuit is the MacGuffin driving the Doctor’s frustration and urgency in this scene. Jo’s suggestion to surrender it to the Master in exchange for the missile ignites the Doctor’s sarcastic rebuke, revealing his strategic mind. The circuit is not physically present in the Process Theatre, but its absence is felt—the Doctor clutches it metaphorically, knowing its loss would doom Earth. His refusal to surrender it forces the tactical pivot toward the Keller Machine, as he rejects negotiation in favor of aggression. The object’s symbolic weight is immense: it represents the Doctor’s last leverage over the Master, and its possession ensures he cannot escape. The circuit’s role in this event is negative—its threat of loss compels the Doctor into moral compromise.

Before: In the Doctor’s possession, secure but vulnerable—the Master …
After: Unchanged in possession, but its strategic value is …
Before: In the Doctor’s possession, secure but vulnerable—the Master desperately wants it back to escape. Its absence from the scene makes it more critical: the Doctor cannot risk losing it, as it is his only bargaining chip against the Master’s escape.
After: Unchanged in possession, but its strategic value is reinforced: the Doctor’s refusal to surrender it solidifies his commitment to the high-risk plan. The circuit remains the ultimate prize—if the Doctor fails, the Master will reclaim it and vanish, leaving Earth defenseless. Its role as a deterrent ensures the Master cannot flee, even as the Doctor gambles everything else.

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

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HM Prison Stangmoor

The Process Theatre serves as the claustrophobic crucible for this tactical epiphany, its sterile, institutional walls amplifying the urgency and moral tension of the moment. The room’s fortified design—originally built to contain the Keller Machine—now traps the Doctor, Jo, and Barnham in a high-stakes negotiation with fate. The humming machinery, scattered debris from earlier explosions, and flickering lights create a sensory backdrop of controlled chaos, mirroring the Doctor’s frantic mind. This is not just a room, but a pressure cooker: the Doctor’s genius is forged here, as he repurposes the Machine’s threat into a weapon. The lack of exits (implied by the explosions and collapsed infrastructure) forces the characters to confront their options, making the space both a refuge and a cage. The atmosphere is electric—every word, every glance, carries weight, as the Doctor orchestrates a plan that will decide Earth’s fate.

Atmosphere Tension-filled with whispered urgency: the air is thick with the scent of ozone and burnt …
Function Strategic war room and moral crossroads: the Process Theatre is where the Doctor’s desperation crystallizes …
Symbolism Represents the intersection of science, morality, and desperation: the Process Theatre is where humanity’s hubris …
Access Restricted to UNIT personnel and the Doctor’s inner circle: the Process Theatre is a high-security …
Flickering fluorescent lighting casting harsh, unnatural shadows The low hum of the Keller Machine, even dormant, vibrating through the floor Scattered debris from exploded power boxes, evidence of the Machine’s earlier escape The sterile, metallic scent of the room, mixed with ozone from recent electrical surges A single, reinforced table at the center, where the Keller Machine was originally housed The absence of windows or natural light, creating a timeless, pressurized atmosphere

Narrative Connections

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Key Dialogue

"JO: But I don't see why you're so upset. If you give him back the circuit and he hands over the missile"
"DOCTOR: You just don't understand, do you, Jo? Once he gets that circuit back he's free to roam through time and space. We'd never catch him."
"JO: Then you'll just have to give in. The Master's got the missile and all we've got is this wretched machine."
"DOCTOR: Jo, will you stop stating the obvious. What did you say?"
"JO: I said all we've got is this machine."
"DOCTOR: Well, that's it. That's the answer. We've got the machine and we've got our friend, Barnham."