Fabula
S4E39 · The Evil of the Daleks Part 3

Doctor forced into Dalek collaboration

In Maxtible’s laboratory, the Doctor is cornered by the Daleks, who exploit his vulnerability by seizing the TARDIS and threatening its destruction. They demand he inject the 'human factor' into dormant Dalek life forces, using Jamie as an unwitting test subject. The Doctor resists initially, questioning the Daleks' motives and the necessity of Jamie’s involvement, but Waterfield warns him of the consequences of defiance. When the Daleks reveal dormant Dalek casings—stripped of their metal shells—he realizes the stakes: compliance means creating super-Daleks, while refusal risks the TARDIS and Jamie’s life. After a tense standoff, the Doctor reluctantly agrees, but only after the Daleks insist Jamie remain unaware of the experiment. The Doctor’s surrender marks a pivotal moment, as he is forced to deceive Jamie and manipulate him into attempting a false rescue mission for Victoria, all while knowing the true purpose is to test the 'human factor' on the Daleks. This collaboration reshapes the power dynamics, forcing the Doctor to navigate the moral and tactical consequences of working with his oldest enemies.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

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The Doctor reluctantly agrees to cooperate with the Daleks, realizing he has no choice but to assist in their experiments. Failure to comply risks the destruction of his TARDIS and the creation of a super-Dalek race.

defiant to resigned

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

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Unaware but fated—his emotional state is projected through the Doctor’s conflict and the Daleks’ calculations. He would likely feel betrayed, angry, and hurt if he knew the truth, but in this moment, he is an unwitting participant in a game he does not understand. His loyalty is both his greatest strength and his greatest weakness.

Jamie is not physically present during this event, but his role as the unwitting test subject looms large over the confrontation. The Daleks and Maxtible discuss him in clinical terms—his emotions, his loyalty, his potential as a subject for the 'human factor' extraction. The Doctor’s agreement to deceive Jamie hangs in the air like a sword, his fate sealed by the Doctor’s reluctant compliance. Jamie’s absence makes his presence all the more palpable; he is the invisible heart of this transaction, the human cost of the Daleks’ ambition.

Goals in this moment
  • To rescue Victoria (as he will be deceived into attempting)
  • To prove his bravery and loyalty to the Doctor (unaware of the true stakes)
  • To trust the Doctor implicitly (a trust that will be exploited)
Active beliefs
  • The Doctor would never betray him—his loyalty is absolute
  • Victoria’s safety is paramount, and he will do whatever it takes to save her
  • The Daleks are a threat, but the Doctor will protect him from harm
Character traits
Unwitting pawn in the Daleks’ scheme Loyal to the Doctor (though unaware of the betrayal) Potential source of the 'human factor' (emotions, bravery, initiative) Vulnerable to manipulation (due to his trust in the Doctor)
Follow Jamie McCrimmon's journey

Cold, calculating, and triumphant. There is no empathy, no hesitation—only the grim certainty of their superiority. Their emotional state is one of dominance, their words laced with the confidence of a predator toying with its prey. They are not angry or frustrated; they are in control, and they know it.

The Dalek Collective is the driving force behind this event, their presence looming over the laboratory like a storm cloud. They speak through a single Dalek in the mirrored room, their voice a chilling chorus of authority and menace. They dangle the TARDIS over the Doctor’s head, demand compliance, and reveal the dormant Dalek life forces as both a threat and a promise. Their power is absolute, their goals unyielding, and their methods ruthless. They do not negotiate; they dictate, and their dictates are backed by the unspoken threat of extermination.

Goals in this moment
  • To extract the 'human factor' from Jamie and inject it into the dormant Dalek life forces
  • To create a race of super-Daleks capable of conquering humanity
  • To force the Doctor into compliance, breaking his defiance and making him a tool of their ambition
Active beliefs
  • Humanity’s emotions and loyalty are the key to their evolutionary stagnation—and the solution to the Daleks’ failures
  • The Doctor can be broken, and his companions can be exploited
  • Superiority is not just a goal but a destiny, and they will stop at nothing to achieve it
Character traits
Authoritative and unyielding Manipulative (using leverage like the TARDIS and Victoria) Ruthless (willing to destroy the TARDIS or create super-Daleks without hesitation) Strategic (targeting Jamie’s emotions as the key to their evolution) Collective (acting as a unified, hive-minded entity)
Follow Theodore Maxtible's journey

A storm of righteous indignation and helpless fury, masked by a facade of cold calculation. His emotional state oscillates between defiance ('I will make up my own mind!') and despair ('I have no choice, do I'), culminating in a resigned compliance that betrays his deep internal conflict—he is a man forced to betray his principles to save what he loves.

The Doctor stands defiantly in Maxtible’s laboratory, his back against the wall—both literally and metaphorically—as the Daleks dangle the TARDIS over him like a guillotine. He initially resists their demands with sharp wit ('Then we're quits, aren't we?'), but his posture stiffens as the Daleks unveil the packing cases containing dormant, shell-less Dalek life forces. His voice wavers between indignation ('I will make up my own mind!') and resignation ('Very well, I agree') as Waterfield’s warnings and the Daleks’ threats erode his resistance. By the end, he agrees to deceive Jamie, his hands clenched in silent frustration, his moral compass spinning out of control.

Goals in this moment
  • To protect the TARDIS (his means of time travel and escape) from Dalek destruction
  • To shield Jamie from harm, even if it means deceiving him into participating in the experiment
  • To delay or subvert the Daleks' plan without outright confrontation (buying time for a better solution)
Active beliefs
  • The Daleks cannot be trusted, but their threats are very real—compliance is the only way to survive this standoff
  • Jamie’s emotions and loyalty make him the perfect (and tragic) test subject for the Daleks’ experiment, but exploiting him is a moral line the Doctor never wanted to cross
  • Waterfield and Maxtible are pawns in the Daleks’ game, but their complicity makes them complicit in this horror
Character traits
Defiant yet pragmatic Morally conflicted Strategic deceiver (when cornered) Protective of companions (even at personal cost) Quick-witted under pressure
Follow The Second …'s journey
Supporting 3

A detached, almost eager neutrality. He is neither horrified nor triumphant—merely engaged in the intellectual challenge of the experiment. His emotional state is that of a man fully invested in the scientific method, where ethics are secondary to discovery. There is no guilt, no hesitation—only the calm certainty of a scientist following a protocol.

Theodore Maxtible enters the laboratory with the clinical detachment of a scientist observing an experiment. He lifts the lid of a packing case to reveal the dormant Dalek life force, his expression one of detached curiosity rather than horror. He explains the Daleks’ demands with the precision of a lecturer, his voice steady and uninflected, as if discussing a routine procedure rather than the extraction of human emotions for alien hybridization. He does not flinch at the moral implications; his focus is purely on the mechanics of the task at hand—what Jamie must do, how the test will proceed.

Goals in this moment
  • To facilitate the Daleks’ experiment by providing the necessary conditions and instructions
  • To ensure the 'human factor' is successfully extracted from Jamie for injection into the Dalek life forces
  • To maintain his alliance with the Daleks, as it serves his scientific ambitions
Active beliefs
  • The ends justify the means—if the experiment succeeds, it will advance scientific understanding
  • The Doctor and Jamie are merely subjects in a larger experiment, their personal stakes irrelevant
  • The Daleks’ goals align with his own curiosity, making cooperation a natural choice
Character traits
Clinical and detached Cooperative with the Daleks Enthusiastic about the scientific process Lacking empathy for the human cost Authoritative in his domain
Follow Dalek Strategic …'s journey

A man drowning in guilt and fear, his emotions a tangled knot of love for his daughter and self-loathing for his role in the Daleks’ scheme. His voice is strained, his posture tense—he is a prisoner of circumstance, speaking not out of conviction but out of terror for what will happen if he doesn’t.

Edward Waterfield hovers at the periphery of the confrontation, his voice tight with anxiety as he warns the Doctor against provoking the Daleks. He is a man caught between loyalty to his daughter and the horror of what he’s enabling. His hands tremble slightly as he speaks, and his eyes dart between the Doctor, the Daleks, and the packing cases—each glance a silent acknowledgment of the monstrosity he’s helping to unleash. He does not argue with the Daleks; he merely reinforces their threats, his compliance a mix of fear and paternal desperation.

Goals in this moment
  • To ensure the Doctor complies with the Daleks to avoid retaliation against Victoria
  • To minimize his own culpability while still achieving the Daleks’ goals (a fragile moral tightrope)
  • To survive this nightmare with his daughter intact, even if it means betraying the Doctor and Jamie
Active beliefs
  • The Daleks will follow through on their threats—resistance is futile and dangerous
  • The Doctor is his only hope of saving Victoria, but he cannot be allowed to jeopardize that hope
  • Maxtible and the Daleks are in control, and his only power lies in persuasion (or the lack thereof)
Character traits
Anxious and urgent Complicit but reluctant Paternal (driven by Victoria’s safety) Diplomatic (avoiding direct conflict) Morally compromised
Follow Edward Waterfield's journey

Fearful and isolated—though not present, her emotional state is implied through the actions of others. She is likely terrified, lonely, and desperate for rescue, unaware that her plight is being weaponized by the Daleks. Her absence makes her presence all the more poignant; she is the reason Waterfield complies, the reason Jamie will be deceived, and the reason the Doctor is forced into this impossible bargain.

Victoria Waterfield is referenced but not physically present in this event. Her captivity is the leverage the Daleks use to coerce Waterfield, and her rescue is the false mission the Doctor will send Jamie on. She is the silent victim whose plight drives the entire confrontation—her safety is the carrot dangled in front of Waterfield, and her rescue is the lie the Doctor must sell to Jamie. Her absence is a constant reminder of the human stakes in this game, the innocent life hanging in the balance.

Goals in this moment
  • To survive her captivity and await rescue
  • To maintain her humanity in the face of the Daleks’ dehumanizing schemes
  • To be reunited with her father (unaware of his complicity)
Active beliefs
  • Her father will save her (though he is as trapped as she is)
  • The Doctor and Jamie are her best hope for escape
  • The Daleks are monsters, but she must endure until help comes
Character traits
Innocent victim of the Daleks’ schemes Symbol of humanity’s vulnerability Unwitting catalyst for the Doctor’s dilemma Representative of the 'human factor' the Daleks seek to exploit
Follow Victoria Waterfield's journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

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Maxtible's Workbench

Maxtible’s workbench is the stage for this confrontation, a cluttered but precise setting where science and morality collide. The packing cases rest beside it, their contents a grim reminder of the laboratory’s true purpose. The Doctor’s eyes dart to the workbench as he questions the cases, and Maxtible’s clinical explanations are delivered from this vantage point. It is not just a piece of furniture; it is the epicenter of the Daleks’ experiment, the place where theory becomes practice. The workbench’s presence underscores the cold, clinical nature of the Daleks’ ambitions—this is not a battle of fists but of minds, and the workbench is the battleground.

Before: Cluttered with experimental tools, its surface a testament …
After: Now the site of the Daleks’ revelation, the …
Before: Cluttered with experimental tools, its surface a testament to Maxtible’s scientific pursuits. The packing cases are placed beside it, their contents unknown until the confrontation begins.
After: Now the site of the Daleks’ revelation, the workbench is forever tied to the moment the Doctor’s resistance crumbles. The opened packing case sits beside it, a silent witness to the Doctor’s agreement. The tools on its surface may yet be used to extract the 'human factor' from Jamie, turning the workbench from a passive prop into an active participant in the Daleks’ scheme.
Packing Cases of Dormant Dalek Life Forces (Shell-less Dalek Mutants)

The Dalek life force without its metal casing is the heart of this event—a grotesque, fleshy symbol of the Daleks’ vulnerability and their desperate need for evolution. Maxtible unveils it with clinical detachment, but its exposure is a gut punch to the Doctor, who sees not just a specimen but the potential for a nightmare: a Dalek with human emotions, loyalty, and initiative. This life force is the reason for the confrontation, the prize the Daleks seek, and the weapon they wield against the Doctor. Its dormant state makes it a tragic figure, a victim of its own kind’s ambition, but its potential to become a super-Dalek turns it into a ticking time bomb. The Doctor’s agreement to cooperate is sealed in the moment he looks upon it.

Before: Dormant and sealed within the packing case, its …
After: Exposed and vulnerable, its fleshy form now a …
Before: Dormant and sealed within the packing case, its true nature hidden until Maxtible removes the lid. It is a passive threat, a promise of what could be.
After: Exposed and vulnerable, its fleshy form now a visual centerpiece of the laboratory. It remains dormant but is now a tangible reminder of the Doctor’s surrender and the Daleks’ power. Its fate is tied to Jamie’s unwitting participation in the experiment—if the extraction succeeds, it will become the first of a new, hybrid Dalek race.

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

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Maxtible's Laboratory

Maxtible’s laboratory is a pressure cooker of tension, its dimly lit confines amplifying the stakes of the confrontation. The workbenches, packing cases, and humming machinery create a claustrophobic atmosphere, where every word and gesture is charged with meaning. The mirrored room, from which the Dalek speaks, adds a layer of unease—reflections of the characters’ faces are distorted, as if the very space is complicit in the Daleks’ deception. The laboratory is not just a setting; it is a character in its own right, its sterile environment a stark contrast to the moral horror unfolding within it. The air is thick with the scent of metal and something faintly organic (the dormant Dalek life forces), and the hum of machinery underscores the inevitability of the Daleks’ demands.

Atmosphere Oppressively tense, with a creeping sense of dread. The laboratory feels like a trap, its …
Function Battleground for moral and tactical negotiation, where the Doctor’s defiance is systematically eroded by the …
Symbolism Represents the dehumanizing intersection of science and tyranny. The laboratory is a place where morality …
Access Restricted to those involved in the Daleks’ scheme—Waterfield, Maxtible, the Doctor, and Jamie (when he …
Dim, flickering lighting that casts long shadows, emphasizing the claustrophobic atmosphere The hum of machinery, a constant reminder of the Daleks’ technological dominance The scent of metal and something faintly organic (the dormant Dalek life forces) The mirrored room, where the Dalek’s voice emanates, creating a sense of being watched from all angles Cluttered workbenches strewn with tools, symbolizing the cold, clinical nature of the experiment

Organizations Involved

Institutional presence and influence

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Daleks

The Dalek Collective is the unseen hand guiding this event, their influence permeating every word and action in the laboratory. Though only one Dalek is physically present (speaking from the mirrored room), its voice carries the weight of the entire race—a chilling chorus of authority and menace. The Daleks’ power dynamics are absolute; they dictate the terms of the confrontation, dangle the TARDIS as leverage, and reveal the dormant life forces as both a threat and a promise. Their organizational goals are clear: extract the 'human factor' from Jamie, inject it into the Dalek life forces, and create a super-Dalek race capable of conquering humanity. The Daleks exert their influence through psychological pressure (threats to the TARDIS and Victoria), scientific coercion (the experiment itself), and sheer overwhelming force (their reputation for extermination). This event is a microcosm of their broader strategy: manipulate, control, and evolve.

Representation Through a single Dalek spokesman in the mirrored room, whose words carry the collective will …
Power Dynamics Exercising absolute authority over all entities in the laboratory. The Daleks hold the TARDIS hostage, …
Impact This event underscores the Daleks’ institutional ruthlessness—they will stop at nothing to achieve their goals, …
Internal Dynamics The Daleks operate as a unified, hive-minded entity, with no internal dissent or debate. Their …
To force the Doctor into compliance by threatening the TARDIS and Jamie’s safety To extract the 'human factor' from Jamie and inject it into the dormant Dalek life forces, creating super-Daleks To demonstrate their dominance by breaking the Doctor’s defiance and making him a tool of their ambition Psychological pressure (threats to the TARDIS, Victoria, and Jamie) Scientific coercion (the experiment itself, framed as inevitable and necessary for Dalek evolution) Leverage (holding the TARDIS hostage, using Waterfield’s daughter as bait) Collective authority (speaking with the voice of the entire Dalek race, making resistance feel futile)

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

What led here 2

"The revelation that Victoria is a prisoner motivates the Doctor to cooperate with the Daleks (beat_eadf7bc5207fd2c5) in order to ensure her safety and prevent the creation of 'super Daleks.'"

Terrall’s Manipulated Betrayal and Jamie’s Capture
S4E39 · The Evil of the Daleks …

"The revelation that Victoria is a prisoner motivates the Doctor to cooperate with the Daleks (beat_eadf7bc5207fd2c5) in order to ensure her safety and prevent the creation of 'super Daleks.'"

Doctor reveals Victoria’s Dalek captivity
S4E39 · The Evil of the Daleks …
What this causes 4

"The Daleks instruct the Doctor to manipulate Jamie into attempting to rescue Victoria (beat_a13ea29ca78317fc), leading Jamie to confront the Doctor and Waterfield in anger, declaring his intent to act independently (beat_6ee655ad8ecf72bf)."

Jamie confronts the Doctor over secrets
S4E39 · The Evil of the Daleks …

"The Daleks instruct the Doctor to manipulate Jamie into attempting to rescue Victoria (beat_a13ea29ca78317fc), leading Jamie to confront the Doctor and Waterfield in anger, declaring his intent to act independently (beat_6ee655ad8ecf72bf)."

Jamie’s Defiance and the Doctor’s Manipulation
S4E39 · The Evil of the Daleks …

"The Daleks instruct the Doctor to manipulate Jamie into attempting to rescue Victoria (beat_a13ea29ca78317fc), leading Jamie to confront the Doctor and Waterfield in anger, declaring his intent to act independently (beat_6ee655ad8ecf72bf)."

Doctor provokes Jamie into reckless rescue
S4E39 · The Evil of the Daleks …

"The Daleks reveal their control and intent to inject the human factor into the Dalek race (beat_33a7310a7f5b5ccf), which increases the pressure, and the Doctor subsequently learns Jamie's thought patterns will be converted (beat_262038378550e7b2), thus escalating the complexity of the experiment."

Doctor agrees to Dalek’s emotional experiment
S4E39 · The Evil of the Daleks …

Themes This Exemplifies

Thematic resonance and meaning

Part of Larger Arcs

Key Dialogue

"DALEK: We do not trust you. DOCTOR: Then we're quits, aren't we?"
"DALEK: You will obey us. DOCTOR: I will make up my own mind! WATERFIELD: Do not antagonise them, Doctor. They will destroy your time machine. DOCTOR: And if I agree, it means the creation of a race of super Daleks. My Tardis. I have no choice, do I. Very well, I agree."
"DOCTOR: What must Jamie do? MAXTIBLE: Attempt to rescue Waterfield's daughter."