Fabula
S5E28 · The Web of Fear Part 6

Chorleys Desperate Confession and Arnolds Skepticism

Chorley emerges from hiding in the tunnel alcove to urgently confide in Arnold about his harrowing escape attempts amid Yeti swarms, deadly fungus fog, locked stations, and a glimpse of the Professor, a girl, and a machine with more Yeti. Visibly panicked and admitting fear, Chorley seeks reassurance. Arnold offers patronizing comfort but pivots to pointed skepticism, questioning how Chorley survived without Yeti detection, subtly accusing him of enemy collusion. This tense exchange amplifies paranoia, exposes Arnold's duplicitous nature as the Great Intelligence's host, and sets up fractured alliances amid the invasion.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

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Chorley, having been separated from the troops, encounters Arnold and desperately recounts his experiences of being accosted by Yeti and the deadly fungus, hoping for assistance.

fear to hope ['alcove']

Arnold expresses skepticism regarding Chorley's survival amidst the chaos, which casts doubt on Chorley's claims and hints at a darker motive behind his presence.

hope to suspicion

Arnold reveals his suspicion that Chorley may have been working with the Yeti by inviting him to come along, creating a moment of tension and foreshadowing a potential betrayal.

suspicion to threat

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

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Coldly detached, operating with the Great Intelligence’s voice in his ear. His surface calm belies a predatory focus—he’s not just interrogating Chorley; he’s testing the journalist’s loyalty (or lack thereof) to the Intelligence’s cause. There’s a thrill in his control, a satisfaction in watching Chorley squirm under the weight of implied guilt.

Arnold moves through the tunnel with the measured authority of a man in control, his demeanor shifting from feigned concern to predatory skepticism as Chorley unravels. His initial patronizing tone (‘We are in a state, aren’t we, sir’) masks a calculated probe into Chorley’s survival, which he frames as mere curiosity. The subtext is unmistakable: Arnold’s questions about the Yeti not attacking Chorley are laced with implication, his voice dripping with false sympathy. When Chorley bristles, Arnold doesn’t back down—he doubles down, insisting Chorley ‘come along’ in a tone that brooks no refusal, revealing the steel beneath his military facade.

Goals in this moment
  • To determine if Chorley is a liability or an asset to the Great Intelligence’s plans
  • To assert dominance over Chorley, ensuring his compliance (or elimination) through psychological pressure
Active beliefs
  • That Chorley’s survival is either a fluke or evidence of collusion with the enemy (i.e., the Doctor or Travers)
  • That fear and accusation are the most effective tools for controlling those weaker than himself
Character traits
Manipulative and psychologically astute Feigns concern to disguise hostility Uses authority as a weapon Calculating and patient in his accusations Exerts control through verbal coercion
Follow Arnold's journey

A fragile, exposed terror—surface fear of the Yeti and fungus, but deeper shame at his perceived cowardice, which Arnold exploits with surgical precision. His emotional state oscillates between relief at finding Arnold and betrayal as the sergeant’s questions twist into accusations.

Chorley bursts from the tunnel alcove in a disheveled, sweat-soaked state, his voice cracking with raw panic as he grabs Arnold’s arm. His physical collapse—slumped posture, wild-eyed gaze, and erratic gestures—mirrors the chaos of his narrative: a litany of near-death encounters with Yeti, fungus, and locked stations. His admission of fear (‘I'm frightened’) is a rare moment of vulnerability, but it quickly curdles into defensiveness when Arnold’s questions turn accusatory. Chorley’s desperation peaks as he’s left grasping for reassurance, only to be met with Arnold’s cold, calculating insinuations.

Goals in this moment
  • To secure Arnold’s protection and guidance back to HQ, restoring a sense of safety
  • To justify his survival to Arnold, fearing judgment for his perceived failure or cowardice
Active beliefs
  • That Arnold represents the last vestige of military authority and thus safety in this chaos
  • That his survival is suspicious to others, making him a target for scorn or worse
Character traits
Panicked and emotionally unraveling Defensive when challenged Desperate for validation and safety Physically and mentally exhausted Impulsive in speech and action
Follow Harold Chorley's journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

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Chorley's Hiding Alcove (Tunnel Recess)

The tunnel alcove serves as Chorley’s hiding place—a cramped, claustrophobic recess off the main tunnel wall where he crouches in terror, listening to the distant growls of Yeti and the hiss of fungus fog. Its narrow confines amplify his isolation, and his emergence from it is a physical metaphor for his desperation: he’s been reduced to a cornered animal, clawing for any scrap of human connection. The alcove’s role is purely functional here, but its symbolic weight is undeniable—it’s a liminal space between safety and exposure, a microcosm of Chorley’s psychological state.

Before: Occupied by Chorley, who is huddled inside, hidden …
After: Empty, as Chorley is coerced by Arnold to …
Before: Occupied by Chorley, who is huddled inside, hidden from the tunnel’s dangers but trapped in his own fear.
After: Empty, as Chorley is coerced by Arnold to leave and ‘come along,’ his refuge now abandoned.

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

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Barricaded Subterranean Tunnel (Captain Knight’s Yeti Standoff Site)

The barricaded subterranean tunnel is a pressure cooker of tension, its narrow stone walls pulsing with the threat of Yeti patrols and the creeping dread of fungus fog. The stale, fungal-tinged air chokes the space, while the distant echoes of gunfire and collapsing debris create a disorienting soundscape. This location is both a battleground and a psychological crucible—Chorley’s frantic confession of his ordeal (‘I was always retreating’) mirrors the tunnel’s own oppressive geometry, where every shadow could hide a Yeti and every locked station is a dead end. The tunnel’s role here is to amplify the characters’ desperation, turning their physical confinement into a metaphor for their collapsing trust in one another.

Atmosphere Claustrophobic and suffocating, with a palpable sense of impending doom. The air is thick with …
Function A battleground where survival is precarious, and a psychological arena where distrust and accusation thrive. …
Symbolism Represents the erosion of human connection under pressure. The tunnel’s twists and turns mirror the …
Access Heavily restricted due to Yeti patrols, fungus fog, and locked stations. Movement is dangerous and …
Flickering emergency lighting casting long, shifting shadows The acrid scent of fungus fog mingling with gunpowder and sweat Distant growls of Yeti and the occasional sound of collapsing debris Narrow, stone-lined walls that amplify sound and create a sense of entrapment

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

What led here 1

"Arnold's determination to retaliate against Evans showcases his commitment to his mission, however duplicitous. When Chorley finds him later, it fits the character's earlier displayed willingness to use others to achieve objectives."

Evans Deserts Arnold in Tunnel
S5E28 · The Web of Fear Part …

Themes This Exemplifies

Thematic resonance and meaning

Key Dialogue

"CHORLEY: "Tried to get out over the surface, but there are Yeti everywhere. And there's this fungus and fog, all around, you see, and it's hopeless!""
"ARNOLD: "How you managed to exist all this time. Why didn't the Yetis get you?""
"CHORLEY: "Look, Sergeant, what are you suggesting? You're not suggesting that I""