Doctor abandons Peri and Lang in dungeon
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Lang becomes ensnared in gastropod slime, immobilizing him. The Doctor abandons Peri and Lang, declaring his intention to leave them to fend for themselves.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Deep self-loathing masquerading as resigned defeat, paralyzing his instinct to help despite moments of reluctant engagement
The Doctor initially resists Lang's demands with theatrical self-absorption, then reluctantly pilots the TARDIS to a dim tunnel near the palace, whereupon he retreats from responsibility by declaring his unreliability and dismissing Lang despite Peri's protests. His posture becomes smaller, voice mired in defeat.
- • To surrender all responsibility by proving his incapability
- • To evade Peri's urgings to protect both companions
- • To maintain control over the TARDIS's usage
- • He is fundamentally unworthy of trust or dependence
- • Resistance is futile, so compliance is a form of control
Frustrated and distrustful, masking desperation beneath rigid professionalism and visible hostility toward perceived weakness
Lang enters the scene demanding direction and transport, physically intimidating the Doctor to secure cooperation. After the TARDIS's relocation, he immediately presses onward, dismissing the Doctor's subsequent offer of help due to perceived unreliability. His focus remains single-minded on rescuing the twins.
- • To locate the twins before Azmael's schemes succeed
- • To ensure the Doctor's compliance or eliminate reliance on him
- • Only through direct action can the mission succeed
- • The Doctor's instability makes him a liability
Frustrated pleading masking rising fear for both Lang and the Doctor
Peri repeatedly challenges the Doctor's inaction, using Lang's need for transport as leverage to force the TARDIS into motion after the Doctor refuses to accompany Lang. She remains physically present but ultimately powerless to stop his retreat into the TARDIS's dark corridors.
- • To ensure the Doctor acts despite his self-absorption
- • To prevent Lang from facing Azmael alone
- • Compassion and action are the only viable responses to crisis
- • The Doctor's retreat endangers everyone
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The TARDIS's console responds to the Doctor's erratic commands, materializing in a dim tunnel near the palace after he is pressured by Lang and Peri. The ship's departure from the throne room and arrival in darkness underscores the Doctor's flight from responsibility, while his reluctant control over the craft highlights his lingering command.
Lang wields the pistol as a physical threat during negotiation, pressing it against the Doctor to enforce compliance in using the TARDIS. The weapon's presence intensifies the confrontation, symbolizing institutional authority and lethal force used to secure the mission's immediate needs.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The TARDIS console room pulses with the Doctor's erratic energy, its unstable systems mirroring his internal turmoil. The confined space becomes a chamber of accusation and deflection, where Peri's pleading clashes with the Doctor's self-immolating rhetoric, and Lang's demands resound like gunshots in muted corridors.
Though not physically present in this event, the throne room stands as the symbolic destination the TARDIS bypassed, contrasting with the grim tunnel. It embodies Azmael's oppressive power and institutional brutality, making its avoidance by the Doctor a retreat from confrontation and responsibility.
The seedy TARDIS tunnel materializes as a liminal space between locations, dimly lit and claustrophobic, isolating the Doctor and Lang from the grandeur of the palace. Its narrow passage forces physical proximity yet emotional distance, amplifying the Doctor's retreat into self-pity and Lang's frustrated urgency to act.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Lang’s entrapment in gastropod slime immobilizes him, creating the immediate situation that catalyzes the Doctor’s fit of self-pity and abandonment."
Doctor doubts the rescue path"The Doctor overhearing the twins refuse to help Azmael triggers his impulsive confrontation, leading directly to the physical assault on Azmael in the lab."
Doctor lunges at Azmael in rage"The Doctor’s abandonment of Peri and Lang after Lang is trapped in gastropod slime directly leads to him storming off and leaving them in the passageway, compounding the emotional and physical peril they face."
Doctor storms off after Peri’s diagnosis"The Doctor’s initial fit of self-pity and accusation of Peri ('manic depressive paranoid personality') is echoed in their later argument, where Peri labels him with the same diagnosis, crystallizing his emotional collapse and her loss of trust."
Doctor storms off after Peri’s diagnosis