Terrall stops Maxtible’s murder attempt
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Maxtible, frustrated by Waterfield's growing conscience, attempts to kill him, but Terrall intervenes, asserting that Waterfield must not die yet.
Terrall orders Maxtible back to the laboratory to dispose of the body, emphasizing Terrall's growing dominance and control over Maxtible.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Cold, commanding, and utterly devoid of empathy—his actions are driven by the Daleks’ directives, but his own fractured psyche adds a layer of unpredictable brutality.
Terrall, a fractured figure under the Daleks’ psychological torment, emerges from the shadows as the brutal enforcer of their will. His intervention is swift and violent—disarming Maxtible with a single, dominant action and asserting his control over the situation. His commands are absolute, leaving no room for defiance, and his focus on ensuring Waterfield’s survival reveals the Daleks’ calculated need for him alive, at least for now.
- • Enforce the Daleks’ will by ensuring Maxtible obeys and Waterfield remains alive for their purposes.
- • Maintain order within the group, using violence and intimidation to suppress any hint of rebellion or moral conflict.
- • The Daleks’ objectives must be prioritized above all else, and any human moralizing or defiance is a threat to be crushed.
- • His own instability is secondary to his role as an enforcer—his loyalty to the Daleks is absolute, even if it means betraying his own humanity.
A fragile, desperate defiance masking deep guilt and exhaustion—his survival feels like a temporary reprieve rather than a victory, as the weight of his complicity and the Daleks’ influence loom over him.
Waterfield, wracked with guilt over the deaths of Kennedy and Toby—and the moral cost of their collaboration with the Daleks—confronts Maxtible with raw defiance. His insistence on staying to dispose of Toby’s body, despite Maxtible’s orders, reveals his determination to atone, even as his emotional state unravels. When Maxtible turns the pistol on him, Waterfield’s survival is ensured not by his own agency but by Terrall’s intervention, leaving him in a precarious position—alive, but still trapped in the Daleks’ web of control.
- • Force Maxtible to acknowledge their shared guilt and the moral cost of their actions, even if it risks his own safety.
- • Ensure Toby’s body is treated with dignity, symbolically atoning for their role in his death and the broader horror of their collaboration.
- • Their silence and complicity have made them as guilty as the Daleks themselves, and he can no longer justify standing by.
- • Maxtible’s obsession with transmutation and power has blinded him to the true cost of their alliance, and someone must hold him accountable.
A volatile mix of exasperation, fear, and humiliated rage—his authority crumbling under the weight of his own complicity and Terrall’s brutal dominance.
Maxtible, his patience frayed by Waterfield’s moralizing and the weight of their shared guilt, escalates from verbal sparring to physical threat. After dismissing Waterfield’s concerns about noises and ordering him to leave, he retrieves his pistol and aims it at Waterfield’s back—a moment of raw desperation revealing his fear of exposure and loss of control. His defiance crumbles when Terrall intervenes, violently disarming him and asserting dominance, leaving Maxtible humiliated and submissive, forced to obey Terrall’s commands.
- • Silence Waterfield to prevent his moralizing from unraveling their fragile alliance and exposing their collaboration with the Daleks.
- • Reassert control over the situation, both over Waterfield and the unstable dynamics of their group, to maintain his position of influence.
- • Waterfield’s guilt and defiance are a direct threat to their survival, as his potential confession could doom them all in the eyes of the Daleks.
- • He is not solely responsible for the Daleks’ presence or the deaths that have occurred, but his pride and obsession with transmutation blind him to his own complicity.
N/A (Toby is deceased, but his presence evokes guilt, fear, and desperation in the living.)
Toby’s corpse, a silent but potent symbol of the human cost of the Daleks’ experiments and the collaborators’ complicity, serves as the catalyst for the confrontation between Waterfield and Maxtible. His death is not just a tragic event but a physical reminder of the moral decay consuming them all. The body’s presence in the stables forces the men to confront the reality of their actions, even as they argue over its disposal.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
Maxtible’s pistol, retrieved from his coat, becomes the physical manifestation of his desperation and the breaking point in his relationship with Waterfield. Initially a tool of authority, it is wielded in a moment of raw panic as Maxtible aims it at Waterfield’s back—a failed attempt to silence his moralizing and reassert control. The pistol’s role is swiftly usurped by Terrall, who disarms Maxtible with brutal efficiency, symbolizing the Daleks’ ultimate dominance over their human pawns. The weapon’s arc from threat to irrelevance underscores the fragility of Maxtible’s power and the inescapable hierarchy imposed by the Daleks.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The stables, once a place of temporary refuge and private conversation, transform into a claustrophobic battleground for the unraveling alliance between Waterfield and Maxtible. The dim lighting, the scent of hay and animals, and the heavy beams overhead create an oppressive atmosphere, amplifying the tension and moral weight of their confrontation. Toby’s corpse, placed in a stall, serves as a grim centerpiece, forcing the men to confront the physical and moral consequences of their actions. The stables’ isolation ensures no witnesses to their betrayals, but it also traps them in their guilt and fear, making escape—both literal and moral—impossible.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
The Daleks’ influence permeates this event, even in their absence, as their psychological and physical control over the human collaborators is enforced through Terrall. Their organizational goals—extracting the 'human factor' and ensuring the survival of key assets like Waterfield—dictate the actions of Terrall, who intervenes to prevent Maxtible’s murderous impulse. The Daleks’ power dynamics are absolute: they do not negotiate, and their will is carried out through violent means. This event highlights their ability to manipulate human relationships, turning allies into enemies and enforcing obedience through fear and brute force.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Waterfield's declaration of confession leads to Maxtible's attempt to murder him, which is then intervened in by Terrall."
Waterfield defies Dalek authorityThemes This Exemplifies
Thematic resonance and meaning
Key Dialogue
"WATERFIELD: What was that? Did you hear it?"
"MAXTIBLE: Control your nerves."
"WATERFIELD: But there was a noise."
"MAXTIBLE: Waterfield, go back to the house."
"WATERFIELD: No, we have a task to perform."
"MAXTIBLE: Waterfield, I am sick to death of you."
"WATERFIELD: What?"
"MAXTIBLE: I take you into my house, you and your daughter, provide for you. Small thanks do I get for it. I did not bring these terrible creatures here deliberately, you know that. Am I to blame for everything?"
"WATERFIELD: No, no."
"MAXTIBLE: It is your daughter they have kidnapped. One moment you beg me to do everything I can to rescue her, next moment you blame me."
"WATERFIELD: Yes, I don't mean it like that. It's the price. First Kennedy, now this fellow. How many people must die so that my daughter can live?"
"MAXTIBLE: We are not the murderers."
"WATERFIELD: No, just the silent partners. But we're equally to blame because we stand by and do nothing."
"MAXTIBLE: Go back to the house, Waterfield. I understand you are under a stress. You try and get some sleep."
"WATERFIELD: Sleep? I've not had one good night's rest since this started."
"TERRALL: Well, you go back to your room. Near the end now. You have done enough."
"MAXTIBLE: What are you doing?"
"TERRALL: Waterfield does not die yet."
"MAXTIBLE: He says he will confess everything."
"TERRALL: Go back to the laboratory. I will dispose of the body. You will obey. You will obey!"