Vicki witnesses Rome’s normalized brutality
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Locusta greets Vicki, alluding to the Doctor's upcoming performance, then reveals she is preparing a potent poison without knowing its intended victim, highlighting the casual acceptance of deadly intrigue within Nero's court.
Vicki expresses her shock at Locusta's profession and its inherent dangers, but Locusta dismisses these concerns, explaining that as the official poisoner to the court, she is insulated from personal retaliation, reinforcing the normalized culture of murder within Caesar's household.
Vicki questions the acceptance of Locusta's role by Rome's citizens, but Locusta counters that it's practically tradition for Caesar's family to murder each other, while musing about who will be the lucky recipient of her poison, emphasizing the pervasive ambition and treachery within the ruling family.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Amused by Vicki’s horror, but beneath the surface, a hint of defensiveness—her justifications are rehearsed, a shield against moral scrutiny. She is neither remorseful nor fully at ease; her role is a necessary evil in her eyes.
Locusta dominates the scene, her hands steady as she grinds the pestle, her tone detached yet amused by Vicki’s naivety. She justifies her role as the court’s official poisoner with chilling pragmatism—‘I survive by being useful’—and dismisses Vicki’s moral concerns with a shrug. Her workshop, cluttered with vials and drying herbs, becomes a stage for her performance of indifference, where murder is merely ‘an accepted thing’ and ‘almost a tradition.’ Her power lies in her detachment, a survival strategy in a court where loyalty is transactional and revenge is cyclical.
- • To defend her profession and survival strategy in Nero’s court.
- • To subtly assert her indispensability to the court’s power structure.
- • In Nero’s Rome, morality is a luxury; survival requires complicity in the regime’s violence.
- • Her role as poisoner is no different from any other courtier’s—everyone plays a part in the game of power.
Horror mixed with confusion, as her worldview collides with Rome’s normalized brutality. Surface: polite but increasingly uneasy. Internal: growing revulsion and a sense of powerlessness.
Vicki stands in Locusta’s workshop, her wide-eyed curiosity giving way to horror as she watches the poisoner grind herbs into a lethal paste. Her questions—‘And who's that? The victim, I mean?’ and ‘But I mean, you...’—reveal her moral conflict, as she grapples with the casual acceptance of murder in Nero’s court. Her body language (likely tense, hands clenched) and faltering dialogue betray her disillusionment, marking a turning point in her journey from idealistic orphan to a companion forced to confront history’s darkest chapters.
- • To understand how Locusta can justify her role in the court’s murders.
- • To challenge the moral complacency of Nero’s regime, even if her protests are futile.
- • Murder is inherently wrong and should be condemned, not institutionalized.
- • Injustice must be confronted, even in a world where power dictates morality.
Absent but implied concern for Vicki’s moral distress, given his role as her guide and protector in hostile environments.
The Doctor is indirectly referenced by Locusta as 'Maximus Pettulion,' the court musician whose arrival has piqued the court’s interest. Though not physically present in this event, his disguise and role as a Time Lord navigating Nero’s court loom over the scene, as Locusta’s mention of him ties the companions’ presence to the court’s intrigues. His absence here underscores the companions’ growing isolation in a morally corrupt environment.
- • To maintain the companions’ safety while navigating Nero’s court without altering history.
- • To subtly undermine the court’s brutality through deception (e.g., the silent lyre trick) while preserving the timeline.
- • History must unfold as it did, even when its atrocities are disturbing.
- • Companions like Vicki must learn to navigate moral complexities without becoming complicit in historical violence.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
Locusta’s pestle is the physical instrument of her craft, its rhythmic grinding of herbs and minerals into a lethal paste serving as a visceral metaphor for the court’s systemic violence. The tool’s smooth, worn surface—evidence of constant use—highlights the routine nature of murder in Nero’s regime. Vicki’s horror is directed not just at the poison but at the methodical act of its creation, embodied by the pestle’s unrelenting motion. It is both a tool of death and a symbol of the court’s dehumanizing efficiency.
The herbs and ingredients for the poison are the raw materials of Locusta’s trade, their sharp scents filling the workshop and marking the space as a hub of lethal craft. Their variety—drying leaves, powders, and unknown minerals—hints at the complexity of her art, where precision determines the speed and suffering of the victim. Vicki’s revulsion is not just directed at the final poison but at the process of its creation, the careful selection and grinding of these components. They represent the court’s willingness to weaponize nature itself, turning everyday substances into instruments of death.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
Locusta’s workshop is a claustrophobic chamber of shadows and sharp scents, where the air is thick with the weight of systemic murder. The dim lighting casts long shadows over vials, mortars, and simmering pots, creating an atmosphere of secrecy and inevitability. This is not a place of healing but of calculated death, where every surface bears traces of the court’s violence. Vicki’s presence here—hiding beneath the workbench, then standing in horrified fascination—highlights the workshop’s role as a battleground for moral confrontation. It is both a refuge for Locusta (her domain of control) and a prison for Vicki (a space where her ideals are suffocated by Rome’s reality).
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
Nero’s Court is the invisible but omnipresent force shaping this event, its influence manifest in Locusta’s detached professionalism and Vicki’s growing disillusionment. The court’s culture of murder-as-tradition is embodied in Locusta’s workshop, where poison is prepared as casually as a meal. Her dialogue—‘It’s an accepted thing, isn’t it? Almost a tradition’—reveals the court’s normalization of violence, where revenge is cyclical and power is maintained through elimination. Vicki’s horror is a direct reaction to this institutionalized brutality, her questions (‘But I mean, you...’) exposing the court’s moral rot. The organization’s goals are not explicitly stated but are implied in every action: to consolidate power through fear, to eliminate rivals preemptively, and to ensure that even its most gruesome tasks are performed with efficiency and detachment.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Locusta's casual acceptance of murder in beat_b43324e64885ba32 as tradition for Caesar's family parallels Nero's rage and desire for revenge on the Doctor in act 3, highlighting the morally corrupt atmosphere of Rome."
Nero’s Rage and Revenge VowThemes This Exemplifies
Thematic resonance and meaning
Key Dialogue
"LOCUSTA: 'Preparing a very special poison, my child. I can guarantee its effect on the victim.'"
"VICKI: 'But, I mean, you—' / LOCUSTA: 'Oh, I see. You mean revenge against me? Oh no, no. I mean, it's nothing to do with me personally, is it?'"
"LOCUSTA: 'It's an accepted thing, isn't it? Almost a tradition, in fact, that the family of Caesar want to murder each other.'"