Brigadier returns with devastating news
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
The group grows impatient, awaiting news from the search party. Dawson voices her desire to attack, while Masters urges against internal conflict, highlighting the tension and disagreement among those present.
The Brigadier returns and reveals that he and his men were trapped by a disappearing rock wall in the caves, but he lost men, raising suspicion and concern. He reports the Doctor went into the caves ahead of him perplexing everyone.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Grim, exhausted, and emotionally raw, masking his grief with professionalism but unable to hide his frustration with the team’s divisions.
The Brigadier returns to the conference room visibly exhausted, his uniform disheveled and his demeanor grim. He delivers a stark report of the caves’ dangers, including the vanishing rock wall that trapped and killed his men. His emotional plea—'I lost a lot of men in those caves, Doctor Lawrence.'—reveals his grief and frustration, momentarily silencing Lawrence’s skepticism. His confusion about the Doctor’s whereabouts ('Whatever for?') underscores the team’s fractured trust and the urgency of the situation.
- • To convey the severity of the Silurian threat and the loss of his men to the team, forcing them to take action.
- • To locate the Doctor and understand his motives, as his absence is both a concern and a potential key to resolving the crisis.
- • That the Silurians are a credible and immediate threat, requiring military and diplomatic coordination.
- • That the Doctor’s methods, though often unorthodox, are necessary to resolve the crisis (hence his confusion and concern about the Doctor’s absence).
Aggressive and impatient, masking her fear of the Silurian threat with a call for decisive action. She is the voice of immediate retaliation, but her approach alienates her colleagues.
Dawson is the most hawkish voice in the room, demanding immediate military action against the Silurians. Her impatience—'How much longer are we going to wait?'—and her suggestion to 'attack in force' reflect her fear of the Silurian threat and her distrust of diplomatic or cautious approaches. She is frustrated with the team’s inaction and the Brigadier’s report, which she sees as weak or insufficient. Her aggression stems from a desire to protect the facility and its personnel, but her approach deepens the room’s divisions.
- • To push for a military response to the Silurian threat, eliminating it through force rather than negotiation.
- • To protect the facility and its personnel, viewing the Silurians as an existential danger that requires swift action.
- • That the Silurians are an immediate and irreversible threat that can only be countered with military force.
- • That diplomacy or caution will only result in more deaths, as evidenced by the Brigadier’s report.
Concerned but composed, masking his frustration with the team’s divisions behind a facade of calm authority. He is the institutional voice, seeking to control the narrative and the response.
Masters acts as a mediator in the room, attempting to calm the bickering between Dawson, Lawrence, and Liz Shaw. His questions about the Doctor’s whereabouts and the search party’s status reflect his bureaucratic concern for protocol and control. He is neither fully supportive of military action nor entirely dismissive of the threat, instead advocating for a measured response. His role is to maintain order and gather information, but his delays and probing questions frustrate the team’s urgency.
- • To mediate the room’s conflicts and maintain order, ensuring a coordinated response to the crisis.
- • To gather accurate information about the Doctor’s whereabouts and the Silurian threat, balancing urgency with bureaucratic caution.
- • That the crisis requires a structured, institutional response rather than hasty or emotional decisions.
- • That the Doctor’s absence is a concern but not necessarily a sign of betrayal, though his actions warrant scrutiny.
Relieved at the Brigadier’s return but increasingly frustrated with the room’s divisions and Lawrence’s dismissiveness. She is the moral compass, pushing for unity and action.
Liz Shaw greets the Brigadier with relief, her concern for his safety evident in her insistence that he sit down. She defends the Doctor and the Brigadier against Lawrence’s dismissive attitude, challenging the room’s skepticism with her scientific rigor. Her emotional state is a mix of relief at the Brigadier’s return and frustration with the team’s infighting, which she sees as counterproductive to addressing the crisis.
- • To defend the Doctor and the Brigadier against criticism, reinforcing their credibility and the urgency of the situation.
- • To push the team toward a unified response, whether military or diplomatic, to counter the Silurian threat.
- • That the Silurian threat is real and requires immediate action, not skepticism or delay.
- • That the Doctor’s methods, though unconventional, are essential to resolving the crisis peacefully.
Frustrated and dismissive, masking his anxiety about the facility’s disruptions with sarcasm. He is the voice of institutional inertia, resistant to change or external threats.
Lawrence enters the scene skeptical of the Silurian threat, dismissing the Brigadier’s report as 'fairy stories' and implying the Doctor is fraternizing with the enemy. His sarcastic remark—'He's probably chatting quite happily to his monster friends.'—undermines the Brigadier’s authority and deepens the room’s divisions. His focus remains on his research, viewing the crisis as a distraction from his work.
- • To downplay the Silurian threat and maintain control over the facility’s operations, protecting his research from interference.
- • To undermine the Brigadier’s authority, positioning himself as the voice of reason in the face of what he sees as hysteria.
- • That the Silurian threat is exaggerated or fabricated, and that the facility’s problems are technical, not supernatural.
- • That the Doctor’s absence is a sign of his unreliability or collusion with the 'enemy.'
Hostile and dominant, though not physically present. Their actions (the vanishing rock wall) create fear and urgency in the room, driving the team’s divisions.
The Silurians are referenced indirectly through the Brigadier’s report of the vanishing rock wall and the loss of men. Their presence looms over the room, symbolizing the escalating threat and the team’s vulnerability. Dawson’s demand for military action and Lawrence’s skepticism both stem from the Silurians’ unseen but undeniable influence on the crisis. Their hostility is implied to be both supernatural and strategic, forcing the team to confront the reality of their existence.
- • To reclaim their territory (Earth) by eliminating or driving out the human invaders.
- • To demonstrate their superior technology and control over the environment, intimidating the humans into submission or retreat.
- • That humans are invaders who must be eradicated or subjugated.
- • That their ancient claim to Earth is absolute and non-negotiable.
Absent but inferred as determined (pursuing his own path) and potentially isolated (if Lawrence’s accusation holds weight).
The Doctor is mentioned as missing, presumed to have ventured deeper into the caves ahead of the Brigadier. His absence looms over the room, symbolizing both the team’s vulnerability and the potential for diplomatic resolution. The Brigadier’s confusion about the Doctor’s actions ('Whatever for?') suggests a fracture in their usual alliance, while Lawrence’s sarcastic remark about 'chatting to his monster friends' implies a betrayal of trust.
- • To negotiate with the Silurians and prevent conflict (implied by his absence and Lawrence’s remark).
- • To uncover the truth about the caves and the Silurians’ intentions (suggested by his unexplained absence).
- • That diplomacy can resolve the crisis, even if it means acting alone.
- • That the Silurians are not inherently hostile, but misunderstood (implied by Lawrence’s sarcasm).
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The conference room is a pressure cooker of conflicting ideologies and emotions, where the team’s divisions are laid bare. Its sterile, institutional setting contrasts sharply with the raw emotions on display—the Brigadier’s grief, Dawson’s aggression, Lawrence’s skepticism, and Liz Shaw’s frustration. The room’s confined space amplifies the tension, as characters physically and verbally clash over how to respond to the Silurian threat. It serves as a microcosm of the larger institutional and moral fractures within UNIT and the research facility.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
UNIT is represented through the Brigadier’s authority and the team’s fragmented response to the Silurian threat. The organization’s internal divisions—military (Dawson), scientific (Liz Shaw), and bureaucratic (Masters)—are exposed as the Brigadier’s grim report forces them to confront their inability to act cohesively. UNIT’s power dynamics are strained, with the Brigadier’s grief and the Doctor’s absence creating a leadership vacuum. The organization’s goals of protection and containment are undermined by its inability to unite behind a single strategy.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Even with the return of the Brigadier, the tension between wanting to quarantine the facility and proceed with operations mirrors the Silurian's tension between peace and war."
Doctor forces quarantine amid plague panic"Even with the return of the Brigadier, the tension between wanting to quarantine the facility and proceed with operations mirrors the Silurian's tension between peace and war."
Baker’s infection forces quarantine crisis"Even with the return of the Brigadier, the tension between wanting to quarantine the facility and proceed with operations mirrors the Silurian's tension between peace and war."
Masters’ exit and Lawrence’s infection signsThemes This Exemplifies
Thematic resonance and meaning
Key Dialogue
"DAWSON: How much longer are we going to wait?"
"BRIGADIER: I lost a lot of men in those caves, Doctor Lawrence."
"LAWRENCE: I shouldn’t worry about him, Brigadier. He’s probably chatting quite happily to his monster friends."