Narrative Web

Bennett reasserts control after Duggan’s breakdown

In the Wheel Operations Room, Bennett publicly disciplines Duggan for insubordination and paranoia, confining him to quarters and stripping him of operational duties. The scene underscores Bennett’s struggle to maintain authority amid escalating chaos—his brusque efficiency masks deeper unease as he reassigns Leo’s responsibilities to Tanya and orders the laser defense system repaired. Meanwhile, Duggan’s self-loathing and insistence that a 'creature' killed Rudkin reveal his psychological unraveling, while Ryan’s dismissive skepticism and Lernov’s quiet sympathy highlight the crew’s fractured trust. Bennett’s abrupt approval of Laleham and Vallance’s mission signals a forced return to normalcy, but the lingering tension (corroded metal, Rudkin’s death, Duggan’s obsession) suggests the station’s stability is an illusion. The dialogue—Bennett’s clipped commands, Duggan’s despair, Ryan’s deflection—exposes the crew’s collective denial as the Cybermen threat looms unseen. The event serves as a turning point: Bennett’s leadership is tested, Duggan’s reliability is questioned, and the station’s operational cohesion is revealed as fragile, setting up the inevitable collapse of order as the Cybermen’s plan advances.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

2

Bennett reprimands Duggan for his actions, restricting him to quarters and ordering a report, then assigns some of Leo's operations to Tanya.

authority to compliance

Bennett authorizes Casali to allow the travel party, Laleham and Vallance, to embark, signaling a return to normal operations.

order to action

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

9

Authoritative on the surface, but internally unraveling; his need to project control masks his growing fear that the station—and his leadership—are failing.

Bennett wields authority like a blunt instrument, stripping Duggan of duties and reassigning Leo to laser repairs with brusque efficiency. His approval of Laleham and Vallance’s mission and his private summons to Gemma (‘I want a word with you’) reveal his desperation to restore order. His ‘normal working conditions’ edict is a hollow attempt to paper over the cracks, but his unease seeps through—especially in his clipped, commanding tone. He’s the station’s anchor, but his grip is slipping.

Goals in this moment
  • To reassert his authority over the crew and restore operational normalcy, despite the mounting evidence of sabotage and threat.
  • To contain the fallout from Duggan’s claims and the corroded metal discovery before panic spreads.
Active beliefs
  • Duggan’s paranoia is a liability that must be suppressed to maintain order.
  • The corroded metal and Rudkin’s death are isolated incidents, not signs of a larger conspiracy (though his private meeting with Gemma suggests otherwise).
Character traits
Authoritative but uneasy Desperate to maintain control Brusque to the point of cruelty Strategic (but reactive) Isolating himself (e.g., private meeting with Gemma)
Follow Bill Duggan's journey

Sympathetic but frustrated; his concern for Duggan is genuine, but Ryan’s deflection and the crew’s denial leave him isolated in his suspicions.

Lernov stands near Duggan, offering quiet sympathy as Duggan spirals into self-loathing. He presses Ryan about the corroded metal, revealing his instinctive distrust of the station’s official narrative. His humor with Ryan (‘I’d hate it if you didn’t have a sense of humour’) masks his unease, but his focus on Duggan’s well-being and the corroded metal shows his role as the crew’s moral compass—even as he’s sidelined by Ryan’s dismissal and Bennett’s authority.

Goals in this moment
  • To comfort Duggan and validate his experiences, countering the crew’s dismissal of his claims.
  • To uncover the truth about the corroded metal and Rudkin’s death, despite Gemma and Ryan’s attempts to suppress it.
Active beliefs
  • Duggan’s account of a ‘creature’ is plausible, and the corroded metal is evidence of sabotage or an external threat.
  • The station’s leadership (Bennett, Gemma, Ryan) is either incompetent or actively hiding critical information.
Character traits
Empathetic Instinct-driven Resilient under pressure Skeptical of institutional cover-ups Uses humor as a coping mechanism
Follow Lernov's journey

Defensive and overburdened; his skepticism is a shield against the chaos, but his admission about the corroded metal betrays his guilt and the strain of maintaining the illusion of control.

Ryan deflects Duggan’s paranoia with cold logic (‘Your power house is in a heck of a mess. There wasn’t a sign of anything’), reinforcing the crew’s denial. He admits to Lernov that Gemma ordered him to hide the corroded metal until she briefed Bennett, revealing his complicity in the cover-up. His joke about ‘spare time’ with Lernov is a thin veneer over his exhaustion and the station’s crumbling cohesion. His role as deputy—overworked, loyal, but complicit—highlights the systemic failure of the Wheel’s command structure.

Goals in this moment
  • To uphold Bennett and Gemma’s authority by dismissing Duggan’s claims and suppressing evidence of the corroded metal.
  • To maintain operational efficiency, even as the station’s stability unravels.
Active beliefs
  • Duggan’s ‘creature’ story is a hallucination or exaggeration, and the corroded metal is an unrelated technical issue.
  • His duty to Gemma and Bennett outweighs his personal suspicions or moral objections.
Character traits
Skeptical to the point of dismissal Complicit in institutional secrecy Overworked and defensive Uses humor to deflect tension Loyal to Gemma and Bennett, despite misgivings
Follow Ryan's journey

Despairing and fractured; his grief for Rudkin and guilt over not speaking up sooner have broken his spirit, but his insistence on the ‘creature’ shows a sliver of defiance—even as he’s dismissed as delusional.

Duggan is publicly humiliated by Bennett, his credibility shattered. He clings to his insistence that a ‘creature’ killed Rudkin, but his despair (‘I’m a fool’, ‘Rudkin’s dead’) reveals his psychological unraveling. His exit—defeated, muttering—symbolizes the death of trust in the station’s leadership and the erosion of his own self-worth. His role as the ‘canary in the coal mine’ is ignored, leaving the crew blind to the Cybermen’s threat.

Goals in this moment
  • To make someone—anyone—believe his account of Rudkin’s death, despite the crew’s denial.
  • To escape the guilt and self-blame consuming him, even if it means confronting the unimaginable.
Active beliefs
  • The ‘creature’ (Cybermat) is real, and Rudkin’s death was no accident.
  • The station’s leadership is either incompetent or complicit in covering up the threat.
Character traits
Paranoid (justified, as it turns out) Self-loathing and guilt-ridden Defiant in the face of dismissal Traumatized by Rudkin’s death Isolated and disbelieved
Follow Jarvis Bennett's journey
Supporting 5

Controlled and purposeful; her private meeting with Bennett suggests she’s managing the crisis with cold precision, but her role in suppressing the corroded metal evidence hints at deeper unease.

Gemma is summoned by Bennett for a private briefing, her role as the station’s moral and medical authority subtly reinforced. Though she doesn’t speak in this segment, her off-screen influence is palpable—Ryan’s admission that she ordered him to hide the corroded metal until she spoke to Bennett reveals her as a key player in the cover-up. Her absence from the room underscores the institutional power dynamics at play: she operates behind the scenes, shaping the narrative while others scramble to keep up.

Goals in this moment
  • To contain the fallout from the corroded metal discovery and Duggan’s claims before they destabilize the station.
  • To align with Bennett’s leadership, even if it means bending the truth.
Active beliefs
  • The truth about the corroded metal and Rudkin’s death must be controlled to prevent panic.
  • Bennett’s leadership is the best chance the station has to survive, despite its flaws.
Character traits
Strategic and calculating Operates behind the scenes Prioritizes institutional stability over transparency Moral authority with a pragmatic edge
Follow Gemma Corwyn's journey

Professionally neutral; their mission is a distraction from the station’s unraveling, but their compliance underscores the crew’s denial.

Laleham and Vallance are confirmed ready for departure, their mission approved by Bennett. Their brief, procedural exchange with Casali (‘Entering departure hatch for oxygen rating now’) contrasts sharply with the emotional turmoil in the room. They represent the station’s attempt to maintain routine, even as the crew’s cohesion frays. Their departure is a symbolic escape from the station’s collapsing order—though they, too, are blind to the Cybermen’s threat.

Goals in this moment
  • To complete their mission as ordered, adhering to protocol.
  • To operate outside the station’s immediate chaos, even temporarily.
Active beliefs
  • Their technical expertise is the station’s best hope.
  • Emotional or supernatural claims (like Duggan’s) are irrelevant to their duties.
Character traits
Duty-bound Procedurally focused Detached from the station’s internal conflicts Reliable in crises
Follow Laleham's journey

Focused and urgent; his priority is the task at hand, but the subtext (the station’s vulnerability) lingers.

Leo is given a direct order by Bennett to repair the laser defense system ‘as soon as possible.’ His role is functional and reactive—no dialogue, no hesitation—reflecting the station’s reliance on technical competence amid crisis. His immediate compliance underscores the crew’s desperation to restore defenses, even as the laser’s offline status leaves them vulnerable.

Goals in this moment
  • To repair the laser defense system to protect the station from external threats.
  • To execute Bennett’s orders without question, despite the mounting chaos.
Active beliefs
  • The laser’s repair is critical to the station’s survival.
  • His technical expertise is the crew’s best hope amid the crisis.
Character traits
Duty-bound Technically competent Reactive under pressure Loyal to the chain of command
Follow Leo's journey

Professionally detached; his focus on procedure is a bulwark against the chaos, but his role in sending Laleham and Vallance out underscores the station’s fragile normalcy.

Casali relays Bennett’s approval to Laleham and Vallance, coordinating the departure hatch procedures with clinical precision. His role as the station’s logistical backbone is on full display—confirming oxygen ratings, operating air pass doors, and ensuring emergency stand-bys are in place. His efficiency contrasts with the emotional turmoil around him, highlighting the station’s duality: bureaucratic routine masking impending doom.

Goals in this moment
  • To ensure the safe departure of Laleham and Vallance, adhering to protocol.
  • To maintain operational continuity despite the station’s unraveling.
Active beliefs
  • Procedural adherence is the key to survival.
  • Emotional distractions (like Duggan’s claims) are irrelevant to his duties.
Character traits
Precise and methodical Unflappable under pressure Logistical expert Detached from emotional subtext
Follow Rudkin's journey

Neutral and focused; her reassignment is a practical solution to a logistical problem, but the subtext (the station’s instability) looms.

Tanya is reassigned by Bennett to take over some of Leo’s operations, a quiet but critical shift in the station’s labor division. Her lack of dialogue or visible reaction suggests she’s a reliable cog in the machine, adapting to the crisis without fanfare. Her role reflects the station’s reliance on interchangeable expertise amid upheaval.

Goals in this moment
  • To seamlessly integrate into Leo’s operations, ensuring no disruption to the station’s defenses.
  • To support Bennett’s efforts to restore normalcy.
Active beliefs
  • Her technical skills are essential to the station’s survival.
  • Questions or doubts are a luxury the crew cannot afford.
Character traits
Adaptable Reliable under pressure Low-profile but competent Follows orders without question
Follow Tanya's journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

6
Air Pass Doors

The air pass doors are a mundane but critical part of the station’s infrastructure, symbolizing its rigid protocols. Casali’s recitation of their operation (‘We will operate air pass doors and emergency stand-bys’) during Laleham and Vallance’s departure is a stark contrast to the emotional chaos in the room. The doors represent the station’s attempt to maintain order, even as that order is crumbling. Their activation is a procedural escape hatch—literally and metaphorically—for those lucky enough to leave.

Before: Functional and secured, ready for authorized departures.
After: Operational, having facilitated Laleham and Vallance’s exit, but …
Before: Functional and secured, ready for authorized departures.
After: Operational, having facilitated Laleham and Vallance’s exit, but the subtext (the station’s vulnerability) remains.
Duggan's Written Report on Rudkin's Death

Duggan’s written report on Rudkin’s death is a ticking time bomb. Bennett demands it by morning, but Duggan’s despair (‘I’m a fool’) and the crew’s dismissal of his claims suggest the report will either be ignored or used to further discredit him. The object serves as a narrative fulcrum: it could expose the truth (the Cybermat’s existence) or become another layer of institutional denial. Its pending completion hangs over the scene, a symbol of the station’s refusal to confront reality.

Before: Unwritten, but demanded by Bennett as a condition …
After: Still unwritten, but Duggan’s emotional state suggests it …
Before: Unwritten, but demanded by Bennett as a condition of Duggan’s restricted status.
After: Still unwritten, but Duggan’s emotional state suggests it may either be a damning indictment of the crew’s failures or a self-incriminating confession of his ‘paranoia.’
Oxygen Rating Readout

The oxygen rating readout is a small but vital detail in the departure procedure, confirming the safety of Laleham and Vallance’s mission. Vallance’s verification of the ‘green indicators’ is a fleeting moment of normalcy amid the chaos, but it also underscores the station’s reliance on technical checks to mask deeper failures. The object’s steady glow is a false reassurance, contrasting with the crew’s unraveling trust and Duggan’s despair.

Before: Functional and displaying safe oxygen levels, confirming the …
After: Unchanged, but its significance is overshadowed by the …
Before: Functional and displaying safe oxygen levels, confirming the travel party’s readiness.
After: Unchanged, but its significance is overshadowed by the station’s collapsing cohesion.
Power Room (Including X-ray Laser Weapon System)

The Wheel’s X-ray laser weapon system is the station’s last line of defense, but its offline status (due to sabotage or the Perseus meteorites) leaves the crew vulnerable. Bennett’s order to Leo to ‘repair it as soon as possible’ highlights its critical role, but the subtext—Duggan’s claims of a ‘creature,’ the corroded metal, Rudkin’s death—suggests the laser’s failure is part of a larger, unseen plan. The object’s absence (it’s not physically present in the Operations Room) looms like a specter, symbolizing the station’s exposed state.

Before: Offline and non-functional, its sabotage (or damage from …
After: Still offline, but Leo is now tasked with …
Before: Offline and non-functional, its sabotage (or damage from meteorites) rendering it useless against the incoming Hercules storm or Cybermen threat.
After: Still offline, but Leo is now tasked with urgent repairs, raising the stakes for the station’s survival.
Power Room Corroded Metal Fragment

The corroded metal in the Power Room is the physical evidence of sabotage (Cybermat activity), but Ryan admits to Lernov that Gemma ordered him to keep quiet about it until she spoke to Bennett. This cover-up is a microcosm of the station’s institutional rot: critical information is suppressed to maintain the illusion of control. The object’s absence from the Operations Room (it’s referenced, not shown) underscores the crew’s willful blindness, even as Lernov’s questions and Duggan’s claims hint at the truth.

Before: Discovered by Ryan in the Power Room, but …
After: Still hidden, but Lernov’s awareness of it plants …
Before: Discovered by Ryan in the Power Room, but hidden per Gemma’s orders.
After: Still hidden, but Lernov’s awareness of it plants a seed of doubt in the crew’s collective denial.
Wheel Operations Room Mission Departure Hatch

The departure hatch is the physical and symbolic threshold between the station’s confined chaos and the unknown. Bennett’s approval (‘Give it’) sends Laleham and Vallance through, but the hatch’s activation is a hollow victory: it represents the crew’s desperate attempt to cling to routine, even as the station’s fate hangs in the balance. The hatch’s hissing cycle and stark lighting create a sensory contrast to the emotional turmoil inside, highlighting the crew’s denial.

Before: Sealed, with Laleham and Vallance standing by for …
After: Open and operational, having facilitated the travel party’s …
Before: Sealed, with Laleham and Vallance standing by for approval.
After: Open and operational, having facilitated the travel party’s departure, but the subtext (the station’s exposure) remains.

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

1
Space Wheel (including operations room)

The Wheel Operations Room is the nerve center of the station, but in this event, it becomes a pressure cooker of institutional failure. Bennett’s dressing-down of Duggan, the reassignment of duties, and the approval of Laleham and Vallance’s mission all unfold here, exposing the crew’s fractured trust and denial. The room’s wall monitors, consoles, and comms panels—usually symbols of control—now pulse with urgency and unspoken dread. The space is both a battleground for authority (Bennett vs. Duggan) and a sanctuary for procedural escape (Casali’s departure coordination).

Atmosphere Tension-filled with whispered conversations, clipped commands, and simmering resentment. The hum of machinery and distant …
Function Command center and public forum for disciplinary actions, operational reassignments, and mission approvals.
Symbolism Represents the station’s crumbling institutional authority and the crew’s collective denial of the Cybermen threat.
Access Restricted to senior staff and essential personnel; Duggan’s confinement to quarters reinforces the hierarchy’s control.
Wall monitors displaying threat alerts (Hercules storm, Silver Carrier, Voyager 8 status). Consoles with flickering lights and urgent comms traffic. The departure hatch’s stark lighting and hissing cycle as Laleham and Vallance embark. Duggan’s isolated figure as he leaves the room, shoulders slumped.

Organizations Involved

Institutional presence and influence

3
Wheel Security Division

Space Wheel Security is embodied in Bennett’s authoritarian commands, the reassignment of Leo and Tanya, and the station’s rigid protocols (air pass doors, emergency stand-bys). The organization’s role here is to enforce control amid chaos, but its actions—suppressing Duggan’s claims, hiding the corroded metal, and approving missions despite the laser’s offline status—reveal its systemic failures. Security is not just about physical threats; it’s about maintaining the illusion of order, even as the station’s defenses (literal and institutional) crumble.

Representation Through Bennett’s disciplinary actions, the reassignment of personnel, and the enforcement of procedural protocols (e.g., …
Power Dynamics Exercising authority over individuals (e.g., Duggan’s confinement) but operating under constraint (e.g., the laser’s sabotage, …
Impact The organization’s actions deepen the crew’s denial and expose its inability to address the Cybermen …
Internal Dynamics Hierarchical tensions between Bennett (authority), Gemma (strategic control), and the rank-and-file (Duggan’s paranoia, Lernov’s skepticism, …
To suppress Duggan’s claims and the evidence of corroded metal to prevent panic. To restore operational normalcy by reassigning duties and approving missions, despite the mounting threats. Institutional authority (Bennett’s orders), Procedural enforcement (air pass doors, emergency stand-bys), Selective information control (hiding the corroded metal, demanding Duggan’s report).
Travel Party

The Travel Party (Laleham and Vallance) represents the station’s attempt to maintain routine operations despite the crisis. Their departure is a procedural escape, but their mission is also a distraction from the station’s unraveling. The organization’s role here is to provide a false sense of normalcy, even as the crew’s cohesion frays. Their compliance with protocol underscores the crew’s collective denial of the Cybermen threat, as they operate outside the station’s immediate chaos—blind to the danger.

Representation Through their adherence to departure protocols and Casali’s coordination of their embarkation.
Power Dynamics Operating under the station’s authority (Bennett’s approval) but detached from its internal conflicts.
Impact Their departure highlights the station’s fragile normalcy and the crew’s inability to confront the Cybermen …
To complete their mission as ordered, adhering to protocol. To operate outside the station’s immediate chaos, even temporarily. Procedural compliance (oxygen ratings, air pass doors), Logistical coordination (Casali’s oversight).
Wheel Operations Team

The Wheel Operations Team is the collective entity managing the station’s crisis, but this event exposes its deep fractures. Bennett’s authority is challenged by Duggan’s claims, Gemma’s behind-the-scenes maneuvering, and Lernov’s skepticism. Ryan’s complicity in hiding the corroded metal and his dismissal of Duggan’s paranoia reveal the team’s complicity in institutional denial. The organization’s role here is to either restore order or accelerate its collapse, and the event serves as a microcosm of that struggle.

Representation Through the interactions of Bennett (authority), Gemma (strategic control), Duggan (dissident voice), Lernov (moral compass), …
Power Dynamics Hierarchical but strained; Bennett’s authority is challenged by Duggan’s claims and the crew’s growing distrust. …
Impact The organization’s actions deepen the crew’s denial and expose its inability to address the Cybermen …
Internal Dynamics Hierarchical tensions between Bennett (authority), Gemma (strategic control), and the rank-and-file (Duggan’s paranoia, Lernov’s skepticism, …
To suppress Duggan’s claims and the evidence of corroded metal to maintain order. To restore operational normalcy by reassigning duties and approving missions, despite the mounting threats. Institutional authority (Bennett’s orders), Information control (hiding the corroded metal, demanding Duggan’s report), Procedural enforcement (reassigning Leo and Tanya, approving the Travel Party’s mission).

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

What led here 3

"Bennett accuses Jamie of sabotage. Later Duggan expresses guilt of Rudkin's death caused by the cybermats, whose entry was caused by said sabotage."

Jamie sabotages the Power Room
S5E37 · The Wheel In Space Part …

"Ryan suggests the force field and Bennett then reprimands and reassigning some of Leo's operations to Tanya. The loss of faith in the station is echoed."

Meteorite storm escalates crew tensions
S5E37 · The Wheel In Space Part …

"Ryan suggests the force field and Bennett then reprimands and reassigning some of Leo's operations to Tanya. The loss of faith in the station is echoed."

Zoe’s analysis sparks team fracture
S5E37 · The Wheel In Space Part …

Themes This Exemplifies

Thematic resonance and meaning

Key Dialogue

"BENNETT: You're under restriction. I'll have you back to Earth on the next ship that puts in. I want a written report on the whole affair, and I want it in my hands tomorrow morning, first thing. That's all."
"DUGGAN: I didn't dream it, did I? Oh, what's the use of talking. Rudkin's dead. I'd give anything to... Oh, what's the use of talking."
"RYAN: We did search round, Bill. Your power house is in a heck of a mess. There wasn't a sign of anything."