Shared Guilt and Uncertain Victory
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Jo expresses guilt over Barnham's death, the Doctor acknowledges their shared responsibility and offers coffee.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Initially triumphant and relieved, but rapidly shifting to tense and alert as the Master’s survival is confirmed. His emotional state reflects the fragility of UNIT’s victories and his own reliance on the Doctor’s expertise to navigate unseen threats.
The Brigadier stands rigidly in the Prison Governor’s Office, his posture exuding the confidence of a man who believes the mission is finally over. He expresses relief at the presumed destruction of the Keller Machine and the Master, his tone optimistic and authoritative. However, his optimism is short-lived: the Doctor’s skepticism about the Master’s fate and the subsequent phone call shatter his composure, leaving him tense and alert. He interacts with the Doctor and Jo with his usual military pragmatism, but his demeanor shifts from triumph to wariness as the Master’s voice intrudes, confirming the threat is far from over.
- • To confirm the permanent neutralization of the Keller Machine and the Master
- • To ensure the Doctor retains the dematerialization circuit to prevent the Master’s escape
- • That the mission’s success is measurable by the destruction of physical threats (e.g., the Keller Machine)
- • That the Doctor’s scientific insight is critical to UNIT’s ability to counter the Master’s schemes
Overwhelmed by guilt and remorse, with a sense of emotional isolation. Her apology to the Doctor is an attempt to share the burden of their failure, but his deflection leaves her feeling unheard and alone in her grief.
Jo stands near the Doctor, her body language tense and her voice trembling as she voices her guilt over leaving Barnham at the prison. She apologizes to the Doctor, her remorse palpable, but her emotional outburst is met with deflection. Unlike her usual role as the Doctor’s supportive companion, she is here the catalyst for his own acknowledgment of failure. Her presence in the scene is a reminder of the human cost of their actions, and her untouched coffee symbolizes the unresolved tension between them. She is physically close to the Doctor but emotionally isolated, her guilt setting her apart from the others’ premature celebrations.
- • To express her guilt over Barnham’s death and seek the Doctor’s acknowledgment of their shared responsibility
- • To reconnect with the Doctor emotionally, despite his deflection
- • That leaving Barnham behind was a moral failure that cannot be undone
- • That the Doctor, as her mentor and friend, should share in her guilt and provide emotional support
Gloating and exhilarated, with a sense of superiority over the Doctor and UNIT. His emotional state is one of control, as he orchestrates the reveal of his survival to maximize psychological impact.
The Master’s voice, heard over the telephone, cuts through the room like a blade. His tone is triumphant and mocking, a stark contrast to the somber mood of the scene. Though physically absent, his presence is overwhelming, as he confirms his survival and implies he has recovered the dematerialization circuit. His words shatter the fragile sense of victory, forcing the Doctor, the Brigadier, and Jo to confront the reality that their problems are far from over. The Master’s voice is the ultimate disruptor, a reminder that evil is not so easily destroyed.
- • To undermine the Doctor’s confidence and shatter UNIT’s sense of victory
- • To confirm his survival and taunt the Doctor with the recovery of the dematerialization circuit
- • That the Doctor’s failures make him vulnerable to psychological manipulation
- • That his own cunning and adaptability will always outmaneuver his enemies
Defensive and tense, masking deep guilt and anxiety beneath a facade of rational detachment. His emotional state oscillates between frustration (with Jo’s blame) and dread (over the Master’s survival and his own loss of the circuit).
The Doctor stands in the Prison Governor’s Office, his usual confidence momentarily fractured as he grapples with Jo’s guilt over Barnham’s death. He deflects her apology with a defensive retort—'Well, how do you think I feel?'—before attempting to restore normalcy by offering coffee, a gesture that feels hollow in the wake of their shared failure. His distraction over the lost dematerialization circuit reveals his deeper anxiety: the Master’s survival is not just a tactical concern but a personal one, as evidenced by his tense exchange with the Brigadier and his visceral reaction to the Master’s phone call. Physically, he is disheveled, his pockets patted down in a rare display of vulnerability.
- • To reassure Jo and deflect blame for Barnham’s death, preserving their working dynamic
- • To locate the lost dematerialization circuit and prevent the Master from escaping Earth
- • That emotional vulnerability will undermine their mission, so it must be suppressed
- • That the Master’s survival is inevitable, given his cunning and the Doctor’s own mistakes
N/A (posthumous presence). His absence evokes a sense of loss, regret, and unresolved guilt in the living characters, particularly Jo and the Doctor.
Barnham is mentioned posthumously, his death serving as the emotional catalyst for Jo’s guilt and the Doctor’s deflection. Though physically absent, his presence looms large in the scene, a silent witness to the consequences of the characters’ actions. The untouched coffee on the tray symbolizes the hollow comfort of routine in the face of his sacrifice, while the Doctor and Jo’s exchange about leaving him behind underscores the irreversible nature of their failure. Barnham’s absence is a void that cannot be filled, a reminder of the human cost of their mission.
Calm and composed, with no visible emotional reaction to the events unfolding. His state reflects the stoicism expected of a UNIT soldier, though his presence underscores the tension between personal and institutional responses to the crisis.
Benton stands near the telephone, his role in this event primarily functional: he answers the call and relays it to the Doctor. His demeanor is professional and detached, reflecting his military training. He does not engage in the emotional exchanges between Jo, the Doctor, and the Brigadier, but his presence as a UNIT representative grounds the scene in its institutional reality. His brief interaction with the Master’s voice—identifying the caller—serves as a stark reminder of the external threat looming over their fragile moment of respite.
- • To efficiently relay communications and maintain operational order
- • To support the Brigadier and the Doctor by ensuring smooth information flow
- • That his role is to facilitate the mission, not to engage in emotional or moral debates
- • That the Master’s interference is a disruption that must be managed through protocol
Detached and professional, with no visible reaction to the emotional or strategic tensions in the room.
A UNIT soldier enters the Prison Governor’s Office carrying a tray of coffee cups, which he places on the desk. His action is mundane and functional, a brief interruption in the tension of the scene. The tray of coffee serves as a symbolic contrast to the emotional weight of the moment: while the characters grapple with guilt, loss, and the Master’s resurgence, the soldier’s delivery of coffee represents the illusion of normalcy in the face of chaos. His presence is fleeting, but the untouched cups remain as a silent witness to the unresolved conflict.
- • To deliver refreshments as part of standard operational protocol
- • To maintain the functional aspects of UNIT’s command structure
- • That his role is to support the mission through logistical tasks
- • That the emotional or moral dilemmas of the officers are beyond his purview
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The dematerialization circuit is the linchpin of the Master’s escape plan and a source of deep anxiety for the Doctor. During this event, the Doctor realizes he has lost it in his struggle with the Master, a revelation that shatters his composure. The circuit’s absence is not just a tactical setback but a personal failure, as it represents the Doctor’s inability to fully contain the Master’s threat. The Master’s subsequent phone call implies he has recovered the circuit, turning the object into a symbol of the Doctor’s vulnerability and the Master’s cunning. Its status shifts from 'lost' to 'presumed in the Master’s possession,' escalating the stakes of the conflict.
The telephone in the Prison Governor’s Office serves as the conduit for the Master’s voice, which shatters the fragile sense of victory in the room. Benton answers the call, and the Master’s mocking tone cuts through the air, confirming his survival and implying he has recovered the dematerialization circuit. The telephone’s ring is a jarring interruption, symbolizing the inescapable nature of the Master’s threat. Its role in the event is purely functional but narratively devastating, as it forces the characters to confront the reality that their problems are far from over. The object’s involvement is brief but pivotal, serving as the catalyst for the scene’s shift from emotional reckoning to strategic crisis.
The tray of coffee, delivered by a UNIT soldier, sits untouched on the desk in the Prison Governor’s Office. It serves as a mundane yet poignant symbol of the characters’ inability to find comfort amid their emotional and strategic turmoil. The Doctor offers Jo coffee as a gesture of reassurance, but the untouched cups highlight the hollowness of routine in the face of loss and guilt. The tray’s presence contrasts sharply with the weight of Barnham’s death and the Master’s resurgence, underscoring the fragility of normalcy during crises. Its role is purely symbolic, representing the fleeting illusion of control and stability.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The Prison Governor’s Office serves as the emotional and strategic epicenter of this event, a confined space where the characters’ personal failures and institutional vulnerabilities collide. The office, cluttered with maps and radios, is a microcosm of UNIT’s command structure, but its atmosphere is one of tension and unresolved grief. The untouched tray of coffee on the desk symbolizes the illusion of normalcy, while the ringing telephone introduces the Master’s voice as an intrusive, malevolent force. The location’s role is to amplify the characters’ emotional states—Jo’s guilt, the Doctor’s defensiveness, the Brigadier’s shifting optimism—while grounding their conflict in the institutional reality of UNIT. The office’s mood is heavy with regret and foreboding, as the characters grapple with the consequences of their actions.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
UNIT is represented in this event through the Brigadier’s authority, Benton’s functional role, and the institutional trappings of the Prison Governor’s Office. The organization’s involvement is twofold: it provides the structural framework for the characters’ actions (e.g., the Brigadier’s orders, Benton’s relay of communications) while also serving as a backdrop for their personal and emotional conflicts. UNIT’s power dynamics are on full display—its military pragmatism clashes with the Doctor’s moral and emotional concerns, and its institutional protocols (e.g., the coffee tray, the telephone) contrast with the raw humanity of Jo’s guilt and the Doctor’s defensiveness. The organization’s goals in this event are to confirm the neutralization of threats (the Keller Machine, the Master) and to maintain operational control, but its members’ personal struggles undermine these objectives.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Barnham's sacrifice to disrupt the Keller Machine enables the Master to escape (beat_53ab228704531b53). As a result, the Doctor realizes during the following debrief (beat_44fd924a1ae434c7) that he lost the dematerialization circuit during the scuffle, compounding the consequences of that sacrifice."
Barnham’s Sacrifice and the Master’s Escape"Barnham's sacrifice to disrupt the Keller Machine enables the Master to escape (beat_53ab228704531b53). As a result, the Doctor realizes during the following debrief (beat_44fd924a1ae434c7) that he lost the dematerialization circuit during the scuffle, compounding the consequences of that sacrifice."
Doctor confronts Barnham’s death"Barnham's death profoundly affects Jo, who expresses guilt. The weight of Barnham's sacrifice resonates in this conversation."
Barnham’s Sacrifice and the Master’s Escape"Barnham's death profoundly affects Jo, who expresses guilt. The weight of Barnham's sacrifice resonates in this conversation."
Doctor confronts Barnham’s death"The Doctor lost the Dematerialization Circuit during Barnham’s death, resulting in the Master being able to escape in his TARDIS, allowing him to call Dr. from his TARDIS."
Master taunts Doctor from TARDISKey Dialogue
"JO: We took Barnham there to help us."
"DOCTOR: Yes, I know, Jo. I know."
"JO: We should never have left him there."
"DOCTOR: Well, how do you think I feel?"
"DOCTOR: The circuit. I must have lost it in my struggle with him."
"MASTER: ([OC]) Put me on to the Doctor, will you?"