Fabula
S17E6 · City of Death Part 2

Doctor uncovers Scarlioni's fake Mona Lisa vault

The Doctor investigates a hidden wall of wooden doors in the secret room and discovers six identical Mona Lisa paintings behind them. Examining each closely, he confirms their authenticity through brushwork and pigment analysis, contradicting Duggan’s immediate assumption that they must be forgeries. Romana pieces together the Count’s scheme: selling seven stolen originals to seven wealthy collectors who believe each is the one snatched from the Louvre. The Doctor’s interrogation of Scarlioni reveals the mastermind’s calm defiance even as Duggan’s violent interruption escalates the confrontation, forcing a reckoning between the team’s methods—Duggan’s brute force versus the Doctor’s precision observation—and exposing the full scale of Scarlioni’s audacious art fraud.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

2

The Doctor investigates a series of wooden doors on the wall, revealing multiple versions of the Mona Lisa, each confirmed by the Doctor to be genuine.

curiosity to confusion ['secret room']

The group discusses the significance of the multiple Mona Lisas and the Count's plan to steal a seventh one, revealing the Scarlionis' intention to sell each buyer a 'stolen' version.

confusion to understanding

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

4

Frustrated and aggressive, reacting to perceived inefficiency with violence.

Duggan impatiently urges the Doctor to hurry, insists the paintings are fakes, and abruptly escalates the conflict by throwing a lamp at Scarlioni and seizing his gun, embodying his preference for force over dialogue.

Goals in this moment
  • Stop Scarlioni’s criminal operation through direct action.
  • Find a quicker resolution to the crisis.
Active beliefs
  • Violent confrontation is more effective than intellectual analysis.
  • Suspects are to be incapacitated rather than questioned.
Character traits
impatient impulsive action-oriented blunt
Follow Bill Duggan's journey

Composed and focused despite escalating confrontation, masking irritation at Duggan’s impulsive violence.

The Doctor methodically opens each hidden door to reveal a Mona Lisa painting, then examines and confirms their authenticity through brushwork and pigment analysis while engaging Scarlioni in a verbal sparring match that exposes the Count's audacious plan.

Goals in this moment
  • Verify the authenticity of the discovered paintings.
  • Extract information from Scarlioni about the origin of the paintings.
Active beliefs
  • Artifacts like paintings carry temporal fingerprints that can reveal their history.
  • Direct interrogation, rather than force, is the most effective way to uncover truth.
Character traits
methodical observant analytical verbally precise composed under pressure
Follow The Fourth …'s journey

Masking insecurity beneath calm defiance, maintaining control over the narrative.

Scarlioni remains eerily calm during interrogation, deflecting the Doctor’s questions with dismissive brevity and revealing the full scale of his audacious scheme without betraying the slightest anxiety.

Goals in this moment
  • Protect the details of his art fraud operation.
  • Assert his dominance through verbal sparring.
Active beliefs
  • Secrecy is essential to maintaining control over his scheme.
  • Verbal agility can deflect suspicion and prolong his advantage.
Character traits
composed defiant authoritative calculating
Follow Scaroth's journey
Supporting 1

Curious and engaged, contributing insights that advance the group's understanding of Scarlioni’s plan.

Romana observes the Doctor’s investigation with curiosity and provides a crucial deduction linking the six paintings to Scarlioni’s scheme, highlighting his plan to sell each as the stolen Mona Lisa.

Goals in this moment
  • Assist the Doctor in identifying the nature of the hidden paintings.
  • Understand the broader implications of Scarlioni's scheme.
Active beliefs
  • Logical deduction is necessary when direct evidence is insufficient.
  • Art history and temporal mechanics are interconnected.
Character traits
perceptive analytical quick-witted observant
Follow Romana's journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

4
Portrait of La Giaconda (Mona Lisa)

The Mona Lisa paintings serve as both clues and objectives, with the Doctor verifying each as authentic originals while Romana deduces Scarlioni’s plan to sell seven versions as the stolen Louvre painting.

Before: Hidden and unknown to authorities, presumed missing from …
After: Revealed and exposed, each painting confirmed as an …
Before: Hidden and unknown to authorities, presumed missing from the Louvre.
After: Revealed and exposed, each painting confirmed as an original and central to the fraud scheme.
Smuggler's Pistol

Duggan takes the concealed handgun from Scarlioni after striking him, wielding it as a tool of direct control while exposing the Count’s vulnerability.

Before: Concealed beneath Scarlioni’s coat, held as a tool …
After: Temporarily removed from Scarlioni’s possession, in Duggan’s hands …
Before: Concealed beneath Scarlioni’s coat, held as a tool of intimidation.
After: Temporarily removed from Scarlioni’s possession, in Duggan’s hands as his preferred instrument of disruption.
Brass Lamp

Duggan seizes the brass lamp from the Doctor and hurls it at Scarlioni before striking him, transforming the ornamental object into a weapon of disruption and distraction.

Before: Standing unobtrusively on a table, a functional yet …
After: Damaged, with cracked glass shade from being thrown, …
Before: Standing unobtrusively on a table, a functional yet decorative brass lamp.
After: Damaged, with cracked glass shade from being thrown, now a tool of violence.
Concealed Mona Lisa Wooden Panels

The wooden doors conceal six recesses holding identical Mona Lisa paintings, acting as barriers to Scarlioni’s audacious art collection and central to unraveling his fraudulent scheme.

Before: Concealed behind seamless wooden paneling, their existence unknown …
After: Revealed and exposed, their presence no longer hidden …
Before: Concealed behind seamless wooden paneling, their existence unknown to outsiders.
After: Revealed and exposed, their presence no longer hidden but central to the confrontation.

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

1
Relic Room Main Chamber

The claustrophobic secret room becomes the crucible for discovery and confrontation, its dim lighting and stacked wooden doors forcing characters into close quarters as the Doctor’s investigation reveals Scarlioni’s hiding place.

Atmosphere Tense and claustrophobic, thick with the scent of oil paint and varnish that dampens sound …
Function Confinement and revelation, a private space where hidden truths and tensions surface.
Symbolism Represents hidden truths and the duality of art as both beauty and opportunity for deception.
Access Restricted to a small group with knowledge of the Count’s scheme.
Dimly lit by flickering ceiling fixtures creating sharp chiaroscuro shadows Stacked wooden doors designed to match surrounding paneling, concealing the paintings

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

What led here 13

"The discovery of the hidden room with multiple Mona Lisas (beat_f1abbc7a229f1589) directly leads to the Doctor's investigation of the wooden doors uncovering more versions of the painting (beat_05b9bb8fec9965f9). The act of finding one anomaly sparks further exploration and revelation."

Doctor exposes Kerensky’s fatal flaw in time theory
S17E6 · City of Death Part 2

"The discovery of the hidden room with multiple Mona Lisas (beat_f1abbc7a229f1589) directly leads to the Doctor's investigation of the wooden doors uncovering more versions of the painting (beat_05b9bb8fec9965f9). The act of finding one anomaly sparks further exploration and revelation."

Duggan ends Kerensky’s experiment with a blow
S17E6 · City of Death Part 2

"The discovery of the hidden room with multiple Mona Lisas (beat_f1abbc7a229f1589) directly leads to the Doctor's investigation of the wooden doors uncovering more versions of the painting (beat_05b9bb8fec9965f9). The act of finding one anomaly sparks further exploration and revelation."

Romana uncovers hidden chamber behind wall
S17E6 · City of Death Part 2
Causal medium

"Duggan’s interruption of the Doctor’s interrogation of Count Scarlioni by knocking him unconscious (beat_b1860678235b32b4) disrupts the Doctor’s plan but leads directly to the Doctor’s reassignment of roles — sending Romana and Duggan to the Louvre and revealing his temporal mission (beat_e44d41bfb8920f27). This failure of control triggers a necessary strategic pivot."

Doctor reveals art heist scheme
S17E6 · City of Death Part 2
Causal medium

"Duggan’s interruption of the Doctor’s interrogation of Count Scarlioni by knocking him unconscious (beat_b1860678235b32b4) disrupts the Doctor’s plan but leads directly to the Doctor’s reassignment of roles — sending Romana and Duggan to the Louvre and revealing his temporal mission (beat_e44d41bfb8920f27). This failure of control triggers a necessary strategic pivot."

Duggan halts interrogation with violence
S17E6 · City of Death Part 2

"Duggan's earlier skepticism of the Doctor’s methods (beat_b906fe7d69144d5a) and emphasis on stopping the theft directly continues into Act 3 as he impulsively attacks Count Scarlioni (beat_b1860678235b32b4), then later participates in the mission to the Louvre. His consistency in wanting to 'thump someone' and act decisively drives key turning points."

Doctor and Duggan break the cellar wall
S17E6 · City of Death Part 2

"Duggan's earlier skepticism of the Doctor’s methods (beat_b906fe7d69144d5a) and emphasis on stopping the theft directly continues into Act 3 as he impulsively attacks Count Scarlioni (beat_b1860678235b32b4), then later participates in the mission to the Louvre. His consistency in wanting to 'thump someone' and act decisively drives key turning points."

Duggan smashes through the cellar wall
S17E6 · City of Death Part 2

"The Count’s successful rehearsal of the Mona Lisa theft (beat_1258313dd02460c5) escalates the conflict, prompting the Doctor to assign Romana and Duggan to intercept the real theft at the Louvre (beat_e44d41bfb8920f27) while he pursues a separate temporal mission. The Count’s confidence and skill force a strategic split in the team."

Count rehearses Mona Lisa theft
S17E6 · City of Death Part 2

"The Doctor's intervention in Kerensky's dangerous experiment (beat_0123623aef57e9d3), where temporal physics are manipulated with destructive consequences, parallels the moral and physical risk of stealing the Mona Lisa through temporal deception. Both hinge on tampering with time and result in unintended collapse — just as the chicken becomes a skeleton, so too would the Count's fraudulent scheme unravel without time-aware safeguards."

Doctor exposes Kerensky’s fatal flaw in time theory
S17E6 · City of Death Part 2

"The revelation of six genuine Mona Lisas and the Count’s plan to steal a seventh — selling multiple 'originals' (beat_1adf8d1799018930) parallels the Doctor’s own temporal scheme to counter the theft by going into the past. Both involve manipulation of identity and authenticity: one in art, one in time. The Count creates forgeries through deception; the Doctor uses temporal integrity to prevent fraud."

Duggan halts interrogation with violence
S17E6 · City of Death Part 2

"The revelation of six genuine Mona Lisas and the Count’s plan to steal a seventh — selling multiple 'originals' (beat_1adf8d1799018930) parallels the Doctor’s own temporal scheme to counter the theft by going into the past. Both involve manipulation of identity and authenticity: one in art, one in time. The Count creates forgeries through deception; the Doctor uses temporal integrity to prevent fraud."

Doctor reveals art heist scheme
S17E6 · City of Death Part 2

"The Doctor's intervention in Kerensky's dangerous experiment (beat_0123623aef57e9d3), where temporal physics are manipulated with destructive consequences, parallels the moral and physical risk of stealing the Mona Lisa through temporal deception. Both hinge on tampering with time and result in unintended collapse — just as the chicken becomes a skeleton, so too would the Count's fraudulent scheme unravel without time-aware safeguards."

Romana uncovers hidden chamber behind wall
S17E6 · City of Death Part 2

"The Doctor's intervention in Kerensky's dangerous experiment (beat_0123623aef57e9d3), where temporal physics are manipulated with destructive consequences, parallels the moral and physical risk of stealing the Mona Lisa through temporal deception. Both hinge on tampering with time and result in unintended collapse — just as the chicken becomes a skeleton, so too would the Count's fraudulent scheme unravel without time-aware safeguards."

Duggan ends Kerensky’s experiment with a blow
S17E6 · City of Death Part 2
What this causes 4
Causal medium

"Duggan’s interruption of the Doctor’s interrogation of Count Scarlioni by knocking him unconscious (beat_b1860678235b32b4) disrupts the Doctor’s plan but leads directly to the Doctor’s reassignment of roles — sending Romana and Duggan to the Louvre and revealing his temporal mission (beat_e44d41bfb8920f27). This failure of control triggers a necessary strategic pivot."

Duggan halts interrogation with violence
S17E6 · City of Death Part 2
Causal medium

"Duggan’s interruption of the Doctor’s interrogation of Count Scarlioni by knocking him unconscious (beat_b1860678235b32b4) disrupts the Doctor’s plan but leads directly to the Doctor’s reassignment of roles — sending Romana and Duggan to the Louvre and revealing his temporal mission (beat_e44d41bfb8920f27). This failure of control triggers a necessary strategic pivot."

Doctor reveals art heist scheme
S17E6 · City of Death Part 2

"The revelation of six genuine Mona Lisas and the Count’s plan to steal a seventh — selling multiple 'originals' (beat_1adf8d1799018930) parallels the Doctor’s own temporal scheme to counter the theft by going into the past. Both involve manipulation of identity and authenticity: one in art, one in time. The Count creates forgeries through deception; the Doctor uses temporal integrity to prevent fraud."

Duggan halts interrogation with violence
S17E6 · City of Death Part 2

"The revelation of six genuine Mona Lisas and the Count’s plan to steal a seventh — selling multiple 'originals' (beat_1adf8d1799018930) parallels the Doctor’s own temporal scheme to counter the theft by going into the past. Both involve manipulation of identity and authenticity: one in art, one in time. The Count creates forgeries through deception; the Doctor uses temporal integrity to prevent fraud."

Doctor reveals art heist scheme
S17E6 · City of Death Part 2

Themes This Exemplifies

Thematic resonance and meaning

Key Dialogue

"DOCTOR: The brushwork's Leonardo's."
"DUGGAN: How can you tell?"
"DOCTOR: It's as characteristic as a signature. The pigment, too."