Ian and Barbara uncover the insecticide threat
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Ian and Barbara examine their surroundings, identifying test tubes and wheat coated in a sticky substance, deducing they are in a laboratory potentially experimenting with insecticides.
Ian, examining a book of litmus paper, realizes the lab's purpose might explain the dead insects they've seen, raising the stakes and making their situation more dangerous, as Barbara recalls comments from the Doctor along similar lines.
Ian warns Barbara against touching anything, suspecting the coated seeds are samples treated with a new, potentially lethal insecticide; despite Barbara's attempt to offer an alternative explanation, he dismisses it, highlighting the distinctive smell.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Distressed but composed—her fear is real, but she channels it into action, relying on Ian’s guidance and the Doctor’s prior warnings to stay grounded.
Barbara stands beside Ian, her fingers hovering near the giant wheat seeds but never touching them as Ian warns her away. Her posture is tense, her expression shifting from curiosity to distress as Ian deduces the substance’s lethal nature. She clutches Ian’s handkerchief, a physical symbol of her growing unease, and her voice wavers slightly as she questions the insecticide’s purpose. When Ian mentions the dead insects, her face pales, and she recalls the Doctor’s warning with a shudder. Her distress is palpable, but she doesn’t panic—instead, she leans into Ian’s protective lead, her trust in him evident even as fear tightens her throat. She suggests finding the others and returning to the TARDIS, a fleeting hope that contrasts with the grim reality of their situation.
- • To understand the nature of the sticky substance and its implications for their survival.
- • To find a way to reunite with the Doctor and Susan, seeking safety in their collective strength.
- • The lab is a place of experimentation with deadly consequences, and they must avoid all contact with unknown substances.
- • Ian’s scientific knowledge and protective instincts are their best chance of survival in this moment.
Controlled urgency with underlying tension—his scientific mind races to solve the problem, but his protective instincts create a palpable sense of danger.
Ian crouches beside the pile of giant wheat seeds, his fingers brushing the sticky toffee-like coating as he examines it with the litmus papers. His posture is tense, his movements deliberate as he pieces together the lab’s purpose. He speaks with a mix of scientific authority and protective urgency, his voice dropping to a low, warning tone when he realizes the substance is an insecticide. His hands hover near the seeds but never touch them directly, a physical manifestation of his caution. When Barbara questions the substance’s nature, he dismisses her hopeful suggestion of preserving oil with a firm 'I doubt it,' his tone leaving no room for debate. His focus shifts rapidly from survival planning (e.g., the paperclip ladder) to ensuring Barbara’s safety, his protective instincts overriding his usual pragmatism.
- • To confirm the nature of the sticky substance and its threat level using the litmus papers and his scientific knowledge.
- • To ensure Barbara does not touch the insecticide, prioritizing her safety over immediate escape plans.
- • The lab is conducting dangerous experiments with lethal chemicals, and the insecticide could kill them as easily as it did the insects.
- • Barbara’s safety is his responsibility, and he must shield her from both physical and psychological harm in this environment.
The Doctor is not physically present in this event but is invoked by Barbara as a cautionary figure. His earlier …
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The laboratory litmus papers are crucial to Ian’s deduction of the insecticide’s nature. He picks them up, uses them to test the sticky coating, and observes the reaction that confirms its chemical identity. The litmus papers serve as a bridge between Ian’s scientific training and the immediate threat, their presence turning an abstract danger into a tangible, measurable risk. Barbara watches as Ian handles them, her distress growing as the evidence mounts. The papers are a small but vital tool in unraveling the lab’s secrets, their reaction a silent alarm that shifts the companions’ focus from escape to survival.
The paperclips inside the briefcase are the subject of Ian’s escape plan, proposed as a way to create a ladder for descending the bench. Though not directly interacted with in this event, their mention elevates the stakes of accessing the briefcase. The paperclips represent a fragile hope—if they can be reached, they offer a path to safety. Their potential use is cut short by the insecticide’s discovery, but the idea lingers as a counterpoint to the lab’s lethality. The paperclips are a tangible reminder that survival depends on both ingenuity and luck, two things in short supply for the shrunken companions.
Forrester’s briefcase is mentioned as a potential resource for paperclips, which Ian proposes using to create a ladder for escape. Though not directly interacted with in this specific event, its presence looms as a symbol of human-scale tools repurposed for survival. The briefcase represents the contrast between the companions’ microscopic size and the macroscopic world around them—its contents (paperclips, office supplies) are tantalizingly close yet nearly impossible to access without risk. Ian’s idea to use the paperclips shifts the focus from the immediate threat of the insecticide to a desperate plan for escape, highlighting the group’s resourcefulness amid peril.
The sticky, toffee-like insecticide coating on the giant wheat seeds is the catalyst for this event’s discovery. Ian sniffs its sharp chemical odor and uses the litmus papers to confirm its lethal nature, his deduction sending a wave of dread through Barbara. The substance’s deceptive appearance—sweet-smelling and viscous like toffee—contrasts sharply with its deadly purpose, symbolizing the lab’s hidden dangers. It forces the companions to abandon their escape plans (e.g., the paperclip ladder) and focus on survival, as even a brief contact could be fatal. The coating’s presence turns the laboratory bench from a potential refuge into a minefield, heightening the tension of their predicament.
Ian’s handkerchief is requested by Barbara to handle the sticky insecticide coating, though it is not used in this specific event. Its mention serves as a practical reminder of their tiny size and the care required to avoid contamination. The handkerchief symbolizes their attempts to adapt human-scale tools to their microscopic predicament, a futile but necessary gesture. Its potential use underscores the desperation of their situation—even a simple handkerchief becomes a critical resource in a world where everything is scaled against them.
The dead insects scattered on the laboratory bench serve as silent witnesses to the insecticide’s lethality. Ian spots them first, their tiny corpses confirming the substance’s deadly potency. Barbara watches tensely as this discovery sharpens their fear, pushing Ian to abandon escape plans in favor of immediate caution. The insects are a grim preview of what could happen to the companions if they make a misstep. Their presence turns the bench from a potential refuge into a graveyard, the air thick with the implication that death is only a misplaced step away.
The laboratory test tubes line the bench, their glass surfaces gleaming under the lab’s sterile lighting. Though not directly interacted with in this event, they reinforce the lab’s experimental purpose and the scale of the danger. Ian notes their presence as part of the broader context, linking them to the dead insects and the insecticide-coated seeds. The test tubes symbolize the lab’s methodical, scientific approach to death—each one a potential vessel for more lethal substances. Their presence looms as a reminder that the lab is not just a place of study but a factory of destruction, where even the air could be poisoned.
The thick cotton string is dismissed by Barbara as impractical for descent due to its massive girth relative to their tiny size. Its mention serves as a contrast to the paperclips, highlighting the absurdity of their situation. The string’s uselessness underscores the scale of their problem—even the thinnest human-scale object is too large for them to manipulate. The exchange about the string is a brief but poignant moment of frustration, a reminder that their survival depends on finding solutions in a world that has been scaled against them. Its dismissal shifts their focus back to the immediate threat of the insecticide.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The laboratory bench is the claustrophobic stage for this event, its vast flat surface dwarfing Ian and Barbara as they navigate its hazards. The bench is not just a location but an active threat—its height makes escape nearly impossible, and its cluttered surface (giant test tubes, insecticide-coated seeds, dead insects) turns every step into a gamble. The bench’s scale amplifies the companions’ vulnerability, forcing them to treat mundane objects as life-or-death obstacles. The air is thick with the sharp chemical odor of the insecticide, and the bench’s sterile, institutional atmosphere contrasts with the primal fear gripping Ian and Barbara. It is a place of both discovery and danger, where science and survival collide.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
The DN6 Insecticide Laboratory is the unseen antagonist of this event, its experimental purpose revealed through the giant wheat seeds and the insecticide coating. The lab’s work is not just agricultural but actively lethal, designed to kill insects—and now, by extension, the shrunken companions. Ian and Barbara’s discovery of the insecticide confirms the lab’s role in a deadly conspiracy, one that operates under the guise of scientific progress. The lab’s presence is felt in every object on the bench: the test tubes, the litmus papers, the dead insects. It is a place where life is measured in samples and deaths are data points, and the companions’ tiny forms are now unwitting subjects in its experiments.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Discovering the laboratory's purpose leads to Ian's warning about touching anything, solidifying the acute danger of the immediate environment."
Paperclip Ladder Plan Takes Shape"Discovering the laboratory's purpose leads to Ian's warning about touching anything, solidifying the acute danger of the immediate environment."
Paperclip Ladder Plan Takes Shape"Ian's concern about the insecticide's lethality is confirmed when Barbara faints at the sight of a fly dying almost immediately upon contact with the seeds."
Barbara collapses after witnessing insecticide deathThemes This Exemplifies
Thematic resonance and meaning
Key Dialogue
"IAN: Whatever killed those insects could easily kill us."
"BARBARA: The Doctor said something like that. I'd forgotten."
"IAN: Don't touch anything, eh?"
"BARBARA: I think we should find the others and get back to the ship."