Ashe warns of Winton’s attack
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Ashe reveals Winton is planning another attack and announces his intent to appeal to the Adjudicator, before leaving. This highlights the escalating conflict and Ashe's faith in the legal process.
Jo questions why the Doctor doesn't reveal the Master's true identity, but the Doctor explains that Ashe wouldn't understand. The Doctor hints at the Master's hidden agenda and expresses his desire to hear what the Master tells Ashe.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Urgent and exasperated. She’s the voice of reason in the moment, but her reason is rooted in action, not strategy. There’s a hint of betrayal in her tone—why won’t the Doctor trust her with the full truth?—but it’s overshadowed by her need to do something before it’s too late.
Jo stands beside the Doctor, her frustration palpable as she presses him to expose the Master’s true identity. She’s the moral compass in the room, her urgency cutting through the Doctor’s caution. Her dialogue—‘Why don’t you tell them about the Master?’—reveals her belief that transparency and immediate action are the only ways to avert disaster. She’s physically present, possibly gesturing emphatically or stepping closer to the Doctor to underscore her point.
- • To compel the Doctor to reveal the Master’s true identity to Ashe, so the colonists can defend themselves against the Master’s manipulation.
- • To push for immediate action to stop Winton’s planned attack, which she sees as a direct threat to the colony’s survival.
- • Secrecy and strategy are luxuries they can’t afford in this moment—honesty and action are the only ways forward.
- • The Doctor’s rivalry with the Master is clouding his judgment and putting lives at risk.
Frantic and hopeful in equal measure. He’s a man clinging to the shreds of his authority, his voice carrying the weight of a leader who knows his people are on the brink of annihilation. There’s a quiet panic beneath his words, a fear that his appeals will fall on deaf ears—literally, since the Adjudicator is the Master.
Ashe bursts into the radio shack, his voice tight with desperation as he reveals Winton’s planned attack and his intention to appeal to the Adjudicator. His body language is urgent—leaning in, hands possibly gripping the radio transmitter—as he pleads for understanding, unaware that the Adjudicator is already the Master in disguise. His appeal is a last-ditch effort to salvage the colony’s legal standing, but his desperation betrays the colonists’ dwindling options.
- • To secure a legal appeal through the Adjudicator to delay or prevent Winton’s violent strike against the IMC.
- • To rally the Doctor and Jo to his side, even if it means omitting the full truth about the colony’s dire straits.
- • The Adjudicator is a neutral third party who can provide a fair hearing for the colonists’ grievances.
- • The Doctor and Jo, as outsiders, might have influence or solutions he hasn’t considered yet.
Smug and in control, though not physically present. His influence is felt through Ashe’s desperation and the Doctor’s calculated silence. There’s a sense of inevitability in his actions—he’s already several steps ahead, and the colonists’ appeals are playing directly into his hands.
The Master is not physically present in this scene, but his influence looms large. Ashe’s mention of appealing to the Adjudicator—unaware that the Adjudicator is the Master—highlights the Master’s manipulation of the colony’s legal and political structures. The Doctor’s dialogue (‘the Master came to this planet for a purpose’) confirms that the Master’s endgame is already in motion, and his lies are being spread through the Adjudicator’s role. His absence here is a deliberate narrative choice, emphasizing his control over the situation from behind the scenes.
- • To use the Adjudicator’s role to further manipulate the colonists into a position of vulnerability.
- • To ensure the Doctor remains off-balance, unable to act decisively without first hearing the Master’s lies.
- • The Doctor’s moral code will work against him, making him hesitate when action is needed.
- • The colonists’ legal appeals are a farce, and their desperation will make them easier to control.
Winton is mentioned but not physically present in this scene. Ashe’s warning about Winton’s impending violent strike against the IMC …
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The Colony Dome Radio Transmitter serves as the physical and symbolic center of this exchange. Ashe grips it tightly, his fingers likely white-knuckled as he prepares to key the mic and appeal to the Adjudicator. The transmitter is more than a tool—it’s a lifeline, a fragile connection to the outside world and the colony’s last hope for legal recourse. Its static-filled hum underscores the tension in the room, a reminder that communication is tenuous and trust is even more so. The Doctor and Jo stand near it, their dialogue weaving around its presence like a third participant in the conversation.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The Dome Entry Area Radio Shack is a claustrophobic, high-stakes pressure cooker in this moment. Its cramped quarters force the characters into close proximity, amplifying the tension between Ashe’s desperation, Jo’s urgency, and the Doctor’s calculated silence. The dim lighting and the hum of the radio transmitter create an atmosphere of urgency and secrecy, as if the walls themselves are listening. This space is not just a meeting point—it’s a crossroads where diplomacy, violence, and deception collide, and where the fate of the colony hangs in the balance of a few carefully chosen words.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
The Interplanetary Mining Corporation (IMC) looms over this scene like a specter, its influence felt through Ashe’s desperation and the Doctor’s awareness of the Master’s endgame. Though not physically present, the IMC’s corporate power is the catalyst for the colonists’ crisis—their mineral rights claims, their violent suppression of resistance, and their manipulation of the Adjudicator system all set the stage for this moment. The Doctor’s refusal to expose the Master immediately suggests that the IMC’s schemes are intertwined with the Master’s plans, creating a layered threat that the colonists are ill-equipped to handle.
The Colonists are the invisible but ever-present force behind this exchange. Ashe speaks for them, his desperation a reflection of their dwindling hope and the precariousness of their situation. The organization’s survival hinges on the outcome of this moment—will Ashe’s appeal to the Adjudicator (the Master) succeed, or will Winton’s violent strike doom them all? The Doctor and Jo, as outsiders, are drawn into this struggle, their actions (or inaction) directly impacting the colonists’ fate. The radio shack, with its humming transmitter, is a symbol of the colonists’ fragile connection to the outside world and their last chance to avoid annihilation.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
No narrative connections mapped yet
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Key Dialogue
"ASHE: They're planning another attack."
"DOCTOR: Winton again?"
"ASHE: I've got to talk to the Adjudicator. We've got to appeal."
"JO: Why don't you tell them about the Master?"
"DOCTOR: I can't, Jo. He wouldn't understand."
"JO: Well, we've got to do something."
"DOCTOR: Yes, well, the Master came to this planet for a purpose, Jo. I'd like to hear what he has to say when Ashe goes to see him."