Squire’s fatal discovery in the barn
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Squire discovers a scaly claw in the hay barn and calls out to Doris to call the police, describing the creature as a "freak.
While Squire is distracted, the Silurian attacks and kills him with its claw; Doris arrives and screams upon witnessing the aftermath.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Confused → Horrified → Traumatized. Her initial confusion at the Squire’s urgency gives way to sheer terror as she witnesses his death, and her scream is not just one of fear but of realization—the threat is real, and it is deadly.
Doris responds to the Squire’s panicked calls but arrives too late to save him. Her scream upon witnessing his death marks the first human reaction to the Silurian’s violence, and her traumatized state becomes pivotal in alerting UNIT to the creature’s presence. Though physically unharmed, her shock and horror underscore the immediate, visceral impact of the Silurian threat on ordinary civilians, forcing the narrative into a state of escalated urgency.
- • Respond to the Squire’s call for help, ensuring his safety (though she fails).
- • Serve as a witness to the Silurian’s attack, providing critical information to UNIT and the Doctor.
- • The Squire’s warnings are exaggerated until she sees the evidence (his death).
- • The police (or some authority) can handle the threat, though her trauma suggests otherwise.
Aggressive and focused, driven by the need to eliminate threats to its survival. There is no hesitation—only the cold efficiency of a creature acting on primal instinct.
The Silurian remains hidden in the shadows of the barn, its heavy breathing the only warning before it ambushes the Squire. It strikes with lethal precision, using its claw to fell the farmer in a single motion, then retreats into the hay as Doris arrives. Its presence is predatory and methodical, transforming the barn from a place of safety into a killing ground. The creature’s actions are driven by survival instinct, but its efficiency suggests a calculated response to human intrusion.
- • Eliminate the human threat (Squire) to protect its hiding place and ensure its survival.
- • Avoid detection by Doris, who arrives too late to intervene, ensuring the Silurian’s continued secrecy.
- • Humans are a direct threat to its existence and must be neutralized.
- • The barn is a critical refuge, and any intrusion must be met with immediate and decisive force.
Panicked → Terrified → Frustrated. His initial fear turns to desperation as he realizes the pitchfork is useless, and his dying words are laced with bitterness at Doris’s hesitation, revealing a man who expected action but found only helplessness.
The Squire investigates disturbances in his barn and uncovers a Silurian claw buried in the hay, immediately panicking and calling for Doris to summon the police. His fear escalates as he hears the creature’s heavy breathing, and he turns to face it with a pitchfork—only to be ambushed and killed in a single, brutal strike. His dying words, directed at Doris, reveal his frustration at her hesitation, underscoring the futility of human resistance against the Silurian’s strength. His death marks the first direct human casualty in the conflict, forcing the narrative into a state of crisis.
- • Protect his property and family from the unknown threat in the barn.
- • Alert authorities (via Doris) to the danger, ensuring a coordinated human response.
- • The threat in the barn is something that can be handled by human means (e.g., pitchfork, police).
- • Doris is his most reliable ally in a crisis, and her hesitation is inexplicable in the face of danger.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The Silurian claw is uncovered by the Squire as he rummages through the hay, its presence sparking his raw panic. He yells for Doris to call the police, but before she can act, the Silurian—wounded and hiding in the shadows—lunges and drives its claw into him with killing force. The claw is both a clue (revealing the Silurian’s presence) and a weapon (the instrument of the Squire’s death). Its sharp, reptilian nature underscores the alien threat, and the blood splattered across the straw after the attack serves as grim evidence of the violence that has unfolded.
The bales of hay in the barn serve as both a hiding place for the wounded Silurian and an obscuring medium that muffles its movements. The Squire disturbs the hay while investigating, uncovering the Silurian claw—a discovery that triggers his panic. The hay also conceals the Silurian’s ambush, allowing it to strike with lethal efficiency. After the attack, the hay is splattered with the Squire’s blood, transforming the barn’s rustic interior into a scene of violence. The hay’s golden stacks, once symbolic of rural tranquility, now represent the unseen dangers lurking beneath the surface.
The Squire grabs the pitchfork from the barn shadows in a desperate attempt to defend himself against the Silurian. He thrusts it at the creature, but the tines bend uselessly against its armored hide, symbolizing the futility of human weapons against the ancient reptilian race. The pitchfork is discarded near the Squire’s body, its bent tines a silent testament to the Squire’s failed resistance. Later, the Doctor examines it, linking its bent form to the claw marks on the Squire’s body and shifting suspicion from murder to retaliation by an unknown force.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The barn, once a place of rural tranquility and farm labor, becomes the site of the first human-Silurian confrontation. Its dim interior, stuffed with bales of hay, provides the perfect hiding place for the wounded Silurian, whose heavy breathing goes unnoticed until it is too late. The wooden beams and dust-moted air create an atmosphere of deceptive safety, masking the predatory threat lurking within. The Squire’s investigation disturbs this fragile peace, and his death transforms the barn into a battleground where the fragility of human defenses is laid bare. The hay, once a symbol of abundance, is now stained with blood, and the barn’s rustic charm is forever tainted by violence.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
The Police are invoked but not yet engaged in this event. The Squire’s desperate call to Doris—‘Get on to the police. Tell them there’s something in my barn!’—highlights the human instinct to rely on institutional authority in a crisis. However, the Police’s absence at this moment underscores their inability to respond effectively to the Silurian threat, foreshadowing the need for UNIT’s intervention. The organization’s failure to prevent the Squire’s death sets the stage for a larger narrative arc where human law enforcement is overwhelmed by forces beyond its understanding.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Dr Quinn not being available directly results in Squire being killed in the confusion."
Quinn’s forced alliance with Silurians"Dr Quinn not being available directly results in Squire being killed in the confusion."
Quinn’s reluctant Silurian bargainThemes This Exemplifies
Thematic resonance and meaning
Part of Larger Arcs
Key Dialogue
"SQUIRE: Doris! Doris!"
"SQUIRE: Some sort of freak! I saw it move in the hay!"
"SQUIRE: Well, get on with it, woman!"