Takis halts Davros with grey Daleks
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Takis reveals he brought the grey Daleks to arrest Davros for crimes against the Daleks. The grey Daleks take Davros prisoner, who vows to return.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Composed and smug, but flickering with irritation when challenged; victorious in his own perverse morality.
Davros wheels himself around the laboratory, his physical frailty belying the razor-edged intellect driving his defenses. He answers the Doctor’s jabs with cold, calculated boasts, invoking his role as 'the Great Healer' while justifying cannibalistic industrialization as charitable innovation.
- • Convince the Doctor—and indirectly others—of the legitimacy and necessity of his synthetic protein empire.
- • Maintain psychological dominance within the laboratory, neutralizing dissent before it can grow.
- • The ends of galactic order justify any means, including converting the dead into food for the living.
- • His own genius entitles him to absolute power over life and death.
- • Only his vision can end natural famine and disorder.
Feigned amusement masking deep revulsion and strategic urgency to expose Davros’ crimes.
The Doctor strides into the laboratory, his presence immediately provoking Davros. Adopting a tone of wry sarcasm and probing interrogation, he dissects Davros’ claims of benevolence with escalating incredulity. His body language remains controlled, even as he moves subtly to confer with Orcini.
- • Force Davros to confront the moral horror of his schemes, stripping away his facade of charity.
- • Protect Peri and gather intelligence on the Dalek resurrection project to undermine Davros’ power.
- • No crime, no matter how grand the pretence, should go unchallenged.
- • Diplomacy and truth remain the most potent weapons against tyranny.
Calmly determined, driven by a personal oath to destroy Davros, with little regard for collateral consequences.
Orcini silently signals the Doctor using a flick knife and a bomb box on the table, then takes hold of the explosive device and nods in coordinated readiness. Despite his physical impairment, his movements are precise and purposeful, embodying a deadly synergy with the Doctor’s plan.
- • Ensure the assassination attempt on Davros proceeds undetected and effectively.
- • Maintain fidelity to his assassin’s code during the confrontation.
- • Davros’ crimes demand violent redress beyond legal or moral systems.
- • The use of proper ceremonial tools honors both duty and personal honor.
- • Loyalty is situational and conditional on moral alignment.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
Orcini draws his flick knife not to use directly, but to signal a hidden bomb—a silent tool of assassination—on the laboratory table. The flick knife functions symbolically, signaling intent and coordination, while the visible blade becomes a token of ritualistic violence exchanged between conspirators.
The deflated dummy Davros head serves as a silent prop in the Doctor’s psychological campaign. By examining it, the Doctor underscores the grotesque artificiality of Davros’ claims, contrasting the life-sized mockery with the monstrous reality of the preserved head in its jar.
The assassination implant bomb box sits unobtrusively on Davros’ table, its unremarkable appearance masking the device meant to end his rule. Orcini and the Doctor share a furtive acknowledgment of its presence, establishing a shadow duel where weaponized truth is as dangerous as physical force.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
Davros’ Laboratory functions as a theater of ideological battle, where surgical precision meets genocidal biotechnology. The cold metallic hum of failed life-support and antiseptic stench form the backdrop for a confrontation between compassion and cynicism, as the Doctor exposes the true cost of Davros’ 'healing'.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
Orcini’s allegiance to the Grand Order of Oberon manifests through ritualistic behavior and adherence to an assassin’s code, even in exile. His use of ceremonial symbolism—the flick knife, nods, and symbolic gestures—echoes the Order’s principles, transposing chivalric honor into lethal pragmatism.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Natasha’s emotional description of her father’s body being turned into a Dalek—a personal and traumatic revelation—calls back to the Doctor’s horrified realization that Davros uses the dead for synthetic protein. This echoes the theme of familial violation by technological tyranny."
Doctor grasps Davros engineered Dalek horror"Natasha’s emotional description of her father’s body being turned into a Dalek—a personal and traumatic revelation—calls back to the Doctor’s horrified realization that Davros uses the dead for synthetic protein. This echoes the theme of familial violation by technological tyranny."
Doctor tests cell shackles in rebellion"Bostock’s critical action of shooting Davros’ hand and Orcini’s kick dislodging his travel unit enable the grey Daleks to subdue Davros and take him into custody. This tactical defeat allows justice to be served upon Davros by his own kind."
Allies forced into deadly conflict with Davros"The Doctor's immediate emergence from beneath the monument (his statue) and obsession with discovering who erected it creates a direct causality leading to his confrontation with Davros in Act 3. This obsession is not merely curiosity—it allows him to track Davros through Tranquil Repose, ultimately bringing him to Davros' laboratory."
Doctor uncovers statue plot and flees gardens"Bostock’s critical action of shooting Davros’ hand and Orcini’s kick dislodging his travel unit enable the grey Daleks to subdue Davros and take him into custody. This tactical defeat allows justice to be served upon Davros by his own kind."
Bostock severs Davros' hand under fire"The Doctor's immediate emergence from beneath the monument (his statue) and obsession with discovering who erected it creates a direct causality leading to his confrontation with Davros in Act 3. This obsession is not merely curiosity—it allows him to track Davros through Tranquil Repose, ultimately bringing him to Davros' laboratory."
Peri and the Doctor seek help in the gardens"Natasha’s revelation of Davros' bodysnatching and genetic conversion of the dead into Daleks is textually echoed and expanded upon when the Doctor confronts Davros directly in Act 3, confronting him with the horror of turning the dead into synthetic protein and soldiers."
Doctor tests cell shackles in rebellion"Natasha’s revelation of Davros' bodysnatching and genetic conversion of the dead into Daleks is textually echoed and expanded upon when the Doctor confronts Davros directly in Act 3, confronting him with the horror of turning the dead into synthetic protein and soldiers."
Doctor grasps Davros engineered Dalek horror"Bostock’s critical action of shooting Davros’ hand and Orcini’s kick dislodging his travel unit enable the grey Daleks to subdue Davros and take him into custody. This tactical defeat allows justice to be served upon Davros by his own kind."
Davros reveals his genocidal rebirth plan"The Doctor’s imprisonment by Takis and Lilt brands him as a fugitive in Davros’ domain. This status follows him into Act 3, where he must still operate undercover, use aliases (e.g., self-burial ruse), and ultimately confront Davros with the knowledge gained during his captivity."
Doctor and companions ensnared by Daleks"Tasambeker’s early mention that a statue of the Doctor would require the ‘Great Healer’s permission’ foreshadows Davros’ controlling presence in Tranquil Repose. Later, when the Doctor discovers Davros’ identity as the Great Healer, the earlier line gains sinister irony and thematic weight."
Doctor questions statue origins"The Doctor’s plan to destroy the hibernating Daleks and his introduction of the weed plant as an alternative protein source leads directly to the group’s escape plan. Orcini’s final decision to detonate his bomb—believing it will be honorable—is framed as a direct response to the viability of the Doctor’s peaceful solution."
Orcini's suicide bomb detonates against Davros"The grey Daleks taking Davros prisoner allows the Doctor to confirm that Orcini’s sacrifice was meaningful—it successfully destroyed Davros’ new Daleks, fulfilling his bargain with Kara and stopping Davros’ immediate threat."
Doctor rallies allies after escape"The Doctor’s plan to destroy the hibernating Daleks and his introduction of the weed plant as an alternative protein source leads directly to the group’s escape plan. Orcini’s final decision to detonate his bomb—believing it will be honorable—is framed as a direct response to the viability of the Doctor’s peaceful solution."
Doctor blinds Dalek to disrupt Davros' machine"The Doctor’s plan to destroy the hibernating Daleks and his introduction of the weed plant as an alternative protein source leads directly to the group’s escape plan. Orcini’s final decision to detonate his bomb—believing it will be honorable—is framed as a direct response to the viability of the Doctor’s peaceful solution."
Doctor develops plan to destroy Daleks"The grey Daleks taking Davros prisoner allows the Doctor to confirm that Orcini’s sacrifice was meaningful—it successfully destroyed Davros’ new Daleks, fulfilling his bargain with Kara and stopping Davros’ immediate threat."
Catacombs collapse as Daleks fall"The grey Daleks taking Davros prisoner allows the Doctor to confirm that Orcini’s sacrifice was meaningful—it successfully destroyed Davros’ new Daleks, fulfilling his bargain with Kara and stopping Davros’ immediate threat."
Orcini detonates himself to stop Daleks"Davros’ revelation of his plan to use the dead for synthetic protein (Act 3) parallels his earlier offer of immortality to Tasambeker—both involve the commodification of life and death. The Doctor’s reaction of horror articulates the moral abomination underlying Davros’ entire scheme."
Bostock severs Davros' hand under fire"Davros’ revelation of his plan to use the dead for synthetic protein (Act 3) parallels his earlier offer of immortality to Tasambeker—both involve the commodification of life and death. The Doctor’s reaction of horror articulates the moral abomination underlying Davros’ entire scheme."
Allies forced into deadly conflict with Davros"Davros’ revelation of his plan to use the dead for synthetic protein (Act 3) parallels his earlier offer of immortality to Tasambeker—both involve the commodification of life and death. The Doctor’s reaction of horror articulates the moral abomination underlying Davros’ entire scheme."
Davros reveals his genocidal rebirth plan