The Doctor shifts from water to telephone
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
The Doctor proposes accessing water from the sink, but then reveals an intention to head towards a telephone in the hopes of contacting the outside world for assistance.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Anxious and physically compromised, her frustration at the group’s initial inaction is palpable, but she suppresses panic to focus on solutions.
Barbara participates in decoding the formula but grows increasingly agitated as she realizes the insecticide’s deadly potential. Her admission of dizziness—dismissed as hunger—hints at her poisoning, adding urgency to the group’s dilemma. She challenges the group’s inaction, her emotional state revealing both her resilience and vulnerability. The Doctor’s pivot to the telephone leaves her physically weakened but determined to push forward.
- • Find a way to counteract the insecticide’s effects, especially for potential victims.
- • Push the group to act decisively before her condition worsens.
- • A cure is necessary to address the human cost of the insecticide, not just stopping its production.
- • Her symptoms are a warning of the insecticide’s immediate danger, requiring swift action.
Determined but slightly frustrated by the Doctor’s abrupt change in plans, masking his concern for Barbara’s condition with focused action.
Ian actively analyzes the insecticide formula alongside the Doctor, identifying key components like phosphoric acid and mineral nitrate. He advocates for a pragmatic approach—stopping production rather than seeking a cure—and volunteers to fetch water from the sink before the Doctor redirects the group toward the telephone. His physical presence is central, grounding the group’s scientific discussion in actionable steps, though his urgency is tempered by the Doctor’s sudden strategic shift.
- • Stop the production of DN6 to prevent widespread contamination.
- • Secure safe water for the group, especially Barbara, to mitigate immediate health risks.
- • Preventing the insecticide’s spread is more critical than finding a cure for those already exposed.
- • The group’s survival depends on immediate, practical solutions rather than theoretical fixes.
Focused and calculating, with a hint of grandfatherly concern for Barbara’s health, but driven by the need for a bold solution.
The Doctor leads the analysis of the formula, mapping its components with scientific precision. He reveals the insecticide’s 'everlasting' nature and its capacity to kill humans, but his strategic mind abruptly shifts from fetching water to targeting a telephone—a high-risk move to call for help. His adaptability under pressure becomes the group’s lifeline, though it forces them into a precarious gambit with Barbara’s condition hanging in the balance.
- • Decipher the insecticide’s formula to understand its threat and counter it effectively.
- • Secure external help via the telephone to rescue the group and stop the insecticide’s production.
- • The insecticide’s 'everlasting' property makes it an existential threat requiring immediate, unconventional action.
- • Calling for help is the only viable path to salvation, despite the risks of exposure.
Worried about Barbara but maintaining composure, her focus on the formula and group dynamics reflects her role as a stabilizer.
Susan assists in analyzing the formula, calling out components to the Doctor and supporting Ian’s pragmatic approach to stopping production. She expresses concern for Barbara’s health, her supportive role reinforcing the group’s cohesion. Though not as physically active as Ian, her analytical contributions and empathy are vital to the group’s collective effort.
- • Help decode the formula to understand the insecticide’s dangers.
- • Ensure Barbara’s condition is addressed while supporting the group’s strategic decisions.
- • The group’s survival depends on both scientific understanding and immediate action.
- • Barbara’s symptoms are a critical indicator of the insecticide’s urgency, requiring compassionate attention.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The giant notepad, containing the DN6 insecticide formula, is the group’s primary clue and threat. They huddle beneath it, decoding its components (phosphoric acid, organic esters, mineral nitrate) to understand the poison’s 'everlasting' nature and its capacity to seep into soil, water, and human skin. Barbara’s dizziness serves as a visceral reminder of the formula’s danger, while the Doctor’s mapping of its structure reveals the scale of the crisis. The notepad is both a puzzle to solve and a ticking time bomb, its contents driving the group’s urgency and strategic shifts.
The telephone, spotted by the Doctor across the laboratory, becomes the focal point of the group’s strategic pivot. Its presence offers a potential lifeline to call for external help, but its distance and the group’s miniaturized scale make it a high-risk target. The Doctor’s decision to abandon the safer plan of fetching water in favor of reaching the telephone underscores the desperation of their situation, with Barbara’s worsening condition driving the urgency. The telephone represents both hope and peril—a gamble that could save them or expose their presence.
The laboratory sink is initially proposed as a source of safe water to address the group’s dehydration and Barbara’s dizziness. Ian volunteers to fetch water from its tap, but the Doctor’s strategic pivot to the telephone renders this plan obsolete. The sink symbolizes the group’s immediate survival needs, contrasting with the Doctor’s high-risk gambit for long-term rescue. Its potential as a lifeline is overshadowed by the urgency of calling for help, highlighting the tension between short-term relief and existential stakes.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The laboratory bench serves as the group’s primary workspace and refuge, its vast surface dotted with scientific equipment and the towering notepad. It is both a stage for their analysis of the insecticide formula and a symbol of their precarious scale—every object around them is a potential hazard or tool. The bench’s cluttered yet functional atmosphere reflects the urgency of their mission, as they huddle beneath the notepad, mapping its components and grappling with Barbara’s worsening condition. The bench’s role shifts from a site of investigation to a launching point for the Doctor’s strategic gambit toward the telephone.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"After discovering the insecticide's properties, the group realizes it can poison food, water, and skin contact. Barbara begins feeling ill. This is direct escalation of risk."
The Doctor deciphers the poison's deadly design"After discovering the insecticide's properties, the group realizes it can poison food, water, and skin contact. Barbara begins feeling ill. This is direct escalation of risk."
The insecticide’s lethal potential revealed"Forrester successfully manipulates someone into authorizing the use of the insecticide. This directly leads to the Doctor's discovery of the insecticide's life-threatening everlasting property."
Forrester secures DN6 approval through deception"After discovering the insecticide's properties, the group realizes it can poison food, water, and skin contact. Barbara begins feeling ill. This is direct escalation of risk."
The Doctor deciphers the poison's deadly design"After discovering the insecticide's properties, the group realizes it can poison food, water, and skin contact. Barbara begins feeling ill. This is direct escalation of risk."
The insecticide’s lethal potential revealed"Barbara begins to feel ill. This foreshadows and directly leads to her contamination and collapse from touching insecticide."
Failed Call and Barbara’s Collapse"Barbara begins to feel ill. This foreshadows and directly leads to her contamination and collapse from touching insecticide."
Doctor diagnoses Barbara’s poisoningKey Dialogue
"DOCTOR: We can go back to the sink, of course. The water in the tap is quite safe."
"IAN: Well, no need for all of us to go. I'll go and fetch some."
"DOCTOR: Ah, but I want to go into that direction. You see, there's something over there that might be the solution to all this business. A telephone, my dear."