Doctors miscalculation strands companions
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Tegan and Adric examine the surroundings, with Tegan humorously suggesting that they could file a claim on the land. Adric explains that they are three hundred years early.
The Doctor activates the Tardis scanner, which shows a woodland walk. The Doctor and Adric discuss their location, realizing they are not in the correct time period.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Humiliated by dashed expectations and unable to contain rising anger
Tegan pivots from quiet farewell to open rage, leveling bitter sarcasm about the impossible arrival time and the Doctor’s cryptic excuses, culminating in her abrupt exit that ripples through the corridor.
- • Force recognition of her betrayed trust in the journey
- • Immediately distance herself from the source of pain
- • Precision and reliability should define the TARDIS experience
- • Anger is an effective tool to challenge carelessness
Mild frustration masked by habitual detachment
The Doctor acknowledges a three-hundred-year temporal error but deflects blame onto a faulty solenoid while casually examining a broken control handle that has detached in his hand, betraying the ship’s mechanical fragility.
- • Complete the navigational adjustment to restore the intended destination
- • Minimize visible distress in front of companions
- • Expertise ensures eventual resolution of technical problems
- • Emotional outbursts are best met with rational deflection
Apprehensive about the growing divide
Adric interjects with factual confirmation of the temporal displacement, urging the Doctor to address Tegan’s feelings before things worsen, reflecting a youthful blend of logic and nascent concern for the team’s cohesion.
- • Clarify the objective facts of the situation
- • Encourage meaningful dialogue to heal the breach
- • Sharing clear information can resolve misunderstandings
- • Proactive communication prevents lasting rifts
Quiet concern allied with practiced composure
Nyssa quietly observes the escalating tension between the Doctor and Tegan, offering gentle comfort about Tegan's deeper distress rather than confronting the core failure, anchoring emotional reflection amid the confrontation.
- • Soften emotional blow for Tegan
- • Prevent outright rupture between companions
- • Understanding feelings prevents long-term fracture
- • A calm tone can de-escalate even dire mistakes
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The Manual Flight Override Protocol is implicitly referenced when the Doctor casually mentions the broken solenoid and failing lateral balance cones, highlighting that their planned return route is compromised by unresolved system faults.
The handheld scanner displays an unmistakable image of a woodland path instead of Heathrow’s terminal, silently exposing the navigational failure before any verbal revelation, intensifying the mounting disbelief and tension.
Tegan wrenches the TARDIS door open with sudden force, the brass fixture groaning under the strain and swinging wide to reveal the alien woodland beyond, completing her flight from the ship’s failures.
The console’s lateral balance cone handle fractures and detaches in the Doctor’s grip, shattering any illusion of reliable control and crystallizing the practical failure that stranded them centuries from the intended arrival point.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
Earth, though not physically present, looms as a temporal specter—its 1981 arrival point now unattainable, its familiar airport replaced by centuries-old woodland, underscoring the Doctor’s navigational miscalculation and the crew’s displacement from their intended destiny.
The central corridor serves as both the stage for sudden confrontation and an echo chamber that magnifies every spoken word, its polished brass railings catching erratic light as companions become antagonists in a moment of fracture.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"The Doctor's admonishment of Adric for interfering with TSS controls (Act 2) is directly responsible for their temporal misplacement, leading to their arrival in 17th-century England. This chain of cause and effect drives the entire alien encounter plot."
Doctor scolds Adric over reckless controls misuse"The Doctor's admonishment of Adric for interfering with TSS controls (Act 2) is directly responsible for their temporal misplacement, leading to their arrival in 17th-century England. This chain of cause and effect drives the entire alien encounter plot."
Nyssa confirms Tegan's readiness before TARDIS ingress"Nyssa's check on Tegan's readiness for departure (Girl's Bedroom) mirrors the emotional farewell exchange between Tegan and Nyssa (TARDIS Corridor), both capturing Nyssa's empathetic concern for her companion's emotional state."
Doctor scolds Adric over reckless controls misuse"Nyssa's check on Tegan's readiness for departure (Girl's Bedroom) mirrors the emotional farewell exchange between Tegan and Nyssa (TARDIS Corridor), both capturing Nyssa's empathetic concern for her companion's emotional state."
Nyssa confirms Tegan's readiness before TARDIS ingress"Tegan's criticism of the Doctor's reliability in the TARDIS Corridor (Act 2) continues into their arrival in the Woodland, where she voices disappointment and frustration, showing her consistent skepticism about the Doctor's control over their travels."
Doctor identifies temporal anomaly in 17th-century England"The Doctor's claim that they will arrive back at the airport on time (TARDIS Corridor) parallels Tegan's questioning whether they are on Earth (Outside TARDIS). Both scenes reflect the theme of misplaced trust in technology and the unpredictability of travel."
Doctor identifies temporal anomaly in 17th-century EnglandKey Dialogue
"TEGAN: That's great. Perhaps I can go out, file a claim on the land. When they get round to inventing the aircraft, I'll make a fortune."
"ADRIC: Well, actually, they haven't built the airport yet. We're about three hundred years early."
"DOCTOR: Er, reliable."
"TEGAN: Call yourself a Time Lord? A broken clock keeps better time than you do. At least it's accurate twice a day, which is more than you ever are."