Jago wakes in terror at the phantom
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Jago wakes up and expresses distress, mentioning a ghost and asking for forgiveness from Casey.
The Doctor attempts to calm Jago down, explaining that what he saw was a hologram, and offers him a drink to feel better.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Externally composed and confident, masking a subtle undercurrent of controlled urgency to stabilize Jago’s panic and maintain narrative momentum.
The Doctor stands over Jago with calm, measured authority, using clipped reassurance to ground the panicked theatre owner in rational explanation. His dialogue is precise and assured, pivoting from interrogation to educational exposition without pause.
- • Stabilize Jago’s panic by rationalizing the supernatural sighting as technology
- • Demonstrate the plausibility of futuristic technology to a Victorian-era observer
- • Believes all phenomena can be rationally explained with science
- • Trusts in the restorative properties of his Victorian-era stimulant
Overwhelmed by primal fear, clinging to the idea of the supernatural as the only explanation for his experience though internally desperate for rational relief.
Jago lurches from sleep into terror, his body trembling as he gasps out confessions of a ghostly encounter and begs Casey’s forgiveness. His initial irrational state gives way to a frantic grasp for the supernatural, betraying his deep-seated superstitions about the theatre’s cellar.
- • Seek validation and absolution for his terrifying vision
- • Cling to supernatural explanations that justify his dread of the cellar
- • Perceives the cellar as intrinsically unnatural and evil
- • Assumes intangible horrors like ghosts are more plausible than advanced science
Although pled to by Jago, Casey remains absent from the scene, referenced only in the context of the ghostly encounter. …
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The Doctor wields his cane not as a walking aid but as a tactical tool, extracting the small flask containing the restorative draught without ceremony. Its polished wooden surface and silver tip highlight the Doctor’s dual role as both gentleman and man of science.
The flask is extracted with practiced ease and presented to Jago as a cure for his terror. Its shimmering contents under gaslight signify the blend of Victorian mystique and alien science the Doctor carries within his arsenal.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The main theatre looms beyond the backstage wing, its distant light flickering like an ominous signal. Its vast auditorium frames the aftermath of Jago’s terror, where Chinese shadows and Victorian gaslamps entangle in a moment charged with unseen menace.
The backstage wing serves as a cramped, shadowed cocoon where hysteria and rationality collide. Its gaslit corridors absorb sound and amplify whispers, framing Jago’s panic within the theatre’s theatricality—where fantasy and reality blur nightly.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"The Doctor's attempt to calm Jago after his distress over the ghostly apparition (beat_9b6b83ddbc463bde) echoes his later effort to cheer up Jago after being attacked by Weng-Chiang (beat_4ca69a0a1a46985d). Both moments highlight the Doctor's role as a stabilizing presence and Jago's role as an unwitting but loyal ally."
Doctor corners phantom behind scenes"The Doctor's attempt to calm Jago after his distress over the ghostly apparition (beat_9b6b83ddbc463bde) echoes his later effort to cheer up Jago after being attacked by Weng-Chiang (beat_4ca69a0a1a46985d). Both moments highlight the Doctor's role as a stabilizing presence and Jago's role as an unwitting but loyal ally."
Doctor comforts shaken Jago after attack