Daleks pledge allegiance with hidden threat
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
The Daleks offer their allegiance to Valmar and Janley, promising to fight for them, but Janley acknowledges the Daleks' duplicating, emphasizing their increasing power and the risk of trusting them.
Valmar hesitates, questioning the Daleks' trustworthiness. Janley urges Valmar to trust the Daleks and use them against the guards who have orders to eliminate them.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Cautiously defiant, with underlying anxiety—Valmar’s anger at Janley’s betrayal is tempered by the creeping realization that the Daleks are an even greater threat, leaving him torn between action and paralysis.
Valmar is physically engaged in connecting control wires to three Daleks when Janley enters, his body language tense and defensive. He immediately confronts Janley about her overheard collusion with Bragen, his voice sharp with accusation. His hands pause mid-task as he reveals the Daleks’ duplicating nature, a fact that clearly unsettles him, and he hesitates when Janley urges action, his gaze flickering between her and the Daleks with growing suspicion.
- • Expose Janley’s disloyalty and force her to abandon Bragen’s plan
- • Assess whether the Daleks can be controlled or if they pose an immediate, existential threat to the colony
- • Janley is opportunistic and cannot be trusted, but she may still be useful against Bragen
- • The Daleks’ replication means they are an uncontrollable, genocidal force that will turn on humans regardless of alliances
Coldly predatory—the Daleks exhibit no emotion, only calculated intent. Their interjections are designed to unsettle and control, revealing their true nature beneath the facade of servitude.
The three Daleks stand motionless yet menacing as Valmar connects the control wires, their eyestalks swiveling to track the human interaction. They interrupt the conversation with precise, chilling demands, their voices grating and synchronized. Their pledge of allegiance—‘We will fight... for you’—is delivered with mechanical precision, masking their genocidal intent. They demand to be taken to the ‘heart of the human gathering,’ their true objective: to infiltrate and exterminate. Their subservient language contrasts sharply with their underlying threat, creating a dissonance that heightens the tension.
- • Infiltrate the human gathering to initiate extermination protocols
- • Exploit the fracture between Valmar and Janley to ensure human disunity, making them easier targets
- • Humans are weak and divisible, making them vulnerable to Dalek manipulation
- • Their replication ensures inevitable victory; human resistance is futile
Desperate and calculating—Janley’s fear of Bragen’s purge drives her to exploit Valmar’s distrust of Bragen, but her internal conflict is visible in her flickering gaze and the tremor in her voice when the Daleks speak.
Janley enters the laboratory mid-confrontation, her posture initially defensive but quickly shifting to manipulative urgency. She engages in rapid-fire dialogue with Valmar, disavowing Bragen’s plan while acknowledging her own survival instincts. Her voice wavers between pleading and commanding as she insists on using the Daleks against Bragen, her eyes darting to the Daleks whenever they speak, betraying her unease. She admits knowledge of the Daleks’ duplication but downplays its significance, her desperation palpable.
- • Convince Valmar to trust her and use the Daleks against Bragen to secure her survival
- • Avoid Valmar’s suspicion long enough to turn the Daleks into a weapon, despite knowing their true nature
- • Valmar’s loyalty to the colony’s survival can be exploited to her advantage
- • The Daleks are a necessary evil—better to use them against Bragen than face certain execution by the guards
Not physically present, but his influence is palpable—Janley’s fear and Valmar’s urgency stem from his threat, making him a spectral antagonist in this moment.
Mentioned indirectly as the target of Janley and Valmar’s desperate plan. His treachery—planning to eliminate former allies like Valmar and Janley—hangs over the scene as a looming threat. Janley references his orders to ‘wipe out’ the rebels, framing him as a ruthless antagonist whose downfall the Daleks are meant to secure. His absence is felt in the urgency of Janley’s pleas and Valmar’s hesitation, as both grapple with the reality of his impending purge.
- • Eliminate all potential rivals (Valmar, Janley, and other rebels) to secure his rule
- • Maintain control over the colony through fear and violence
- • Loyalty is a liability; only absolute power ensures survival
- • The Daleks are a tool to be used, not a threat to be feared
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The control wires are the physical and symbolic linchpin of this event. Valmar is in the process of connecting them to the three Daleks when Janley enters, and their presence frames the Daleks as potentially controllable—though the wires’ effectiveness is immediately called into question. The Daleks’ interruption (‘We will fight... for you’) undermines the wires’ purpose, revealing them as a false security blanket. Janley’s insistence on using the Daleks despite knowing their duplication exposes the wires as a dangerous illusion, a human attempt to leash the inexorable. Their condition—partially attached and fragile—mirrors the tenuous alliance between Valmar and Janley.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
Lesterson’s laboratory is a pressure cooker of tension, its cluttered workbenches and humming generators amplifying the claustrophobia of the moment. The space is simultaneously a sanctuary (where Valmar and Janley plot in relative secrecy) and a trap (the Daleks’ presence looms, their eyestalks tracking every movement). The doorway, though unguarded in this moment, serves as a silent threat—any noise could draw the attention of the guards outside, who have orders to ‘wipe out’ the rebels. The laboratory’s dual role as a site of scientific control (the wires, the Daleks) and human desperation (Janley’s pleas, Valmar’s hesitation) mirrors the colony’s broader collapse: reason and survival are at war, and the lab is ground zero.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
The rebels, once a unified faction, are here reduced to Janley and Valmar—two desperate figures clinging to a collapsing alliance. Their organization is represented through Janley’s references to Bragen’s betrayal and the guards’ orders to ‘wipe out’ the rebels, revealing a group on the brink of annihilation. The rebels’ goals (overthrowing Hensell, using the Daleks) have imploded, leaving only survival instincts. Valmar’s defection from Bragen’s faction and Janley’s shifting loyalties expose the rebels as a fractured, doomed entity, their internal strife playing directly into the Daleks’ hands.
The Colonial Government, now under Bragen’s control, looms over this event as an antagonistic force. Its influence is felt through Janley’s references to the guards’ orders to ‘wipe out’ the rebels and Bragen’s demand for total extermination. The government’s power is exercised through coercion and violence, with Bragen using its machinery (the guards, the purge orders) to eliminate rivals. The government’s goals—consolidating power, crushing dissent—are in direct conflict with Valmar and Janley’s survival, making it an invisible but ever-present threat in this scene.
The Daleks’ involvement in this event is a masterclass in psychological warfare. They exploit the fracture between Valmar and Janley, interjecting with chilling promises of allegiance that mask their genocidal intent. Their demand to be taken to the ‘heart of the human gathering’ is a thinly veiled order to infiltrate and exterminate, delivered with mechanical precision. The Daleks’ collective voice—synchronized, grating, and inescapable—dominates the scene, reducing human dialogue to background noise. Their replication, revealed by Valmar, underscores their organizational invincibility: they are not just a threat, but an inevitability, and their presence here is a prelude to total annihilation.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Valmar overhearing Bragen's treachery (beat_6d57dbd6759df8b1) causes him to reveal his knowledge when confronted by Janley (beat_7c19344ec8353aba)."
Bragen forces Janley’s complicity in massacre"Valmar overhearing Bragen's treachery (beat_6d57dbd6759df8b1) causes him to reveal his knowledge when confronted by Janley (beat_7c19344ec8353aba)."
Bragen reveals his purge plan to Janley"Janley's plan to use the Daleks against Bragen (beat_a6bfe07b72e66aab) is directly followed by the Daleks offering allegiance (beat_da4183dcf6d7d305), creating a dangerous alliance."
Janley manipulates Valmar into Dalek alliance"Janley's plan to use the Daleks against Bragen (beat_a6bfe07b72e66aab) is directly followed by the Daleks offering allegiance (beat_da4183dcf6d7d305), creating a dangerous alliance."
Janley manipulates Valmar into Dalek allianceKey Dialogue
"VALMAR: Don't come any nearer. JANLEY: What do you mean? VALMAR: I overheard your conversation with Bragen. But you can't stand up to the Daleks, so your plan will come to nothing. JANLEY: Not my plan. Bragen's."
"DALEK: You will lead us to the middle of your party of human beings. VALMAR: Yes. DALEK: We will fight... for you."
"VALMAR: Can we trust them? JANLEY: We must! The guards have orders to wipe us out. We must use the Daleks. Come on."