Brigadier demands reactor check from Hardiman
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Yates directs Benton, and the Brigadier asks about Hardiman's location before hurrying to find him.
The Brigadier confronts Sir George Hardiman, who questions the presence of the TARDIS in his laboratory, prompting the Brigadier to urgently request a check of the main reactor.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Righteously urgent, with a simmering undercurrent of suspicion toward Hardiman’s allegiance and the lab’s security.
The Brigadier bursts into the Light Acceleration Laboratory with military precision, his voice sharp and commanding as he interrupts Hardiman’s work. He dismisses the TARDIS as 'the Doctor’s equipment' with a brusque wave of his hand, then pivots immediately to demand a reactor inspection, his urgency cutting through Hardiman’s scientific objections. His posture is rigid, his tone brooking no argument, as he asserts UNIT’s authority over the facility’s operations.
- • Ensure the main reactor is secure and operational to prevent Axon sabotage or energy drain.
- • Reassert UNIT’s control over the Nuton Complex, countering Hardiman’s scientific autonomy.
- • Hardiman’s focus on the TARDIS is a distraction from the real threat: the Axons’ manipulation of Earth’s energy infrastructure.
- • The reactor is a critical weak point that the Axons could exploit, and immediate inspection is non-negotiable.
Conflicted—frustrated by the interruption but resigned to the necessity of the Brigadier’s demands, with a hint of professional wounded pride.
Hardiman, mid-sentence about the TARDIS, is abruptly cut off by the Brigadier’s demand for a reactor inspection. His confusion is palpable—his scientific mind grappling with the sudden shift from lab protocol to military urgency. He begins to question the TARDIS’s presence but is overridden by the Brigadier’s insistence, leaving him momentarily flustered before compliance sets in. His body language suggests reluctance, his voice trailing off as he’s forced to prioritize the reactor over his research.
- • Understand why the TARDIS is in his lab and what it implies about the Doctor’s involvement.
- • Comply with the Brigadier’s request to inspect the reactor, despite his scientific priorities.
- • The TARDIS’s presence is an anomaly that deserves scientific scrutiny, not military dismissal.
- • The reactor inspection is a distraction from his critical Axonite research, but UNIT’s authority cannot be ignored.
Neutral and professional, with no visible emotional reaction—fully in 'mission mode.'
Benton acknowledges Yates’ order with a simple 'Right, sir,' and prepares to assist the Brigadier. His role here is supportive but peripheral—he doesn’t speak further, but his readiness to act underscores UNIT’s collective response. His compliance is automatic, reflecting his long-standing deferral to Yates and the Brigadier’s chain of command.
- • Support Yates and the Brigadier in locating Hardiman and facilitating the reactor inspection.
- • Ensure UNIT’s operational cohesion during the crisis.
- • The Brigadier’s urgency indicates a serious threat, and Benton’s role is to enable the response.
- • Hardiman’s scientific concerns are irrelevant to the immediate military objective.
Focused and alert, with no visible hesitation—fully aligned with the Brigadier’s priorities.
Yates moves with efficient urgency, relaying Hardiman’s location to the Brigadier and acknowledging Benton’s readiness. His dialogue is clipped and professional, reflecting his role as the Brigadier’s right hand. He doesn’t engage in the TARDIS debate, instead focusing on the operational task at hand—locating Hardiman and facilitating the Brigadier’s demands. His presence reinforces UNIT’s coordinated response to the crisis.
- • Ensure the Brigadier’s orders are executed without delay.
- • Maintain situational awareness to assist in the reactor inspection.
- • The Brigadier’s assessment of the situation is correct and requires immediate action.
- • Hardiman’s scientific objections are secondary to UNIT’s operational needs.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The main reactor is the focal point of the Brigadier’s urgent demand, symbolizing the Axons’ potential target for draining Earth’s energy. Though not physically present in this exchange, its mention shifts the scene’s tension from the TARDIS to the lab’s critical infrastructure. The reactor’s implied vulnerability—coupled with the Brigadier’s insistence on inspecting it—hints at the Axons’ ability to manipulate or sabotage it, raising the stakes for the entire facility. Its absence in the dialogue makes its threat more ominous, as the characters’ reactions suggest a looming catastrophe.
The TARDIS, dismissed as 'an obsolete police box' by Hardiman, becomes a point of friction between scientific curiosity and military pragmatism. The Brigadier’s offhand explanation—'that’s part of the Doctor’s equipment'—underscores its alien nature while downplaying its significance in the immediate crisis. Its presence in the lab, however, looms as an unexplained variable, hinting at the Doctor’s unseen influence over the situation. The object’s symbolic weight as a time machine contrasts sharply with its physical mundanity, creating a narrative tension between what is seen and what is implied.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The control box acts as Hardiman’s temporary sanctuary—a compact, enclosed space where he can oversee the lab’s operations. Its isolation makes it a symbol of scientific autonomy, but the Brigadier’s intrusion shatters this illusion. The control box’s dials and switches, usually tools of precision, become irrelevant as the Brigadier’s demand for a reactor inspection takes precedence. The space’s confined nature amplifies the tension, trapping Hardiman between his scientific duties and UNIT’s military demands.
The Light Acceleration Laboratory serves as the battleground for clashing priorities: scientific inquiry vs. military urgency. Its sterile, high-tech environment—filled with humming machinery and flickering readouts—contrasts with the human drama unfolding. The Brigadier’s interruption of Hardiman’s work disrupts the lab’s usual order, turning it into a site of tension where institutional authority (UNIT) overrides scientific autonomy. The lab’s role as a hub for Axonite research makes it a microcosm of the larger conflict, where Earth’s fate hinges on the balance of power between its defenders.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
UNIT’s involvement in this event is embodied through the Brigadier’s authoritative interruption, Yates’ operational support, and Benton’s readiness to assist. The organization’s military urgency overrides Hardiman’s scientific priorities, demonstrating UNIT’s role as Earth’s first line of defense against alien threats. The Brigadier’s demand for a reactor inspection reflects UNIT’s proactive stance—anticipating and mitigating risks before they escalate. This moment highlights UNIT’s institutional muscle, where protocol and hierarchy take precedence over civilian scientific concerns.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
No narrative connections mapped yet
This event is currently isolated in the narrative graph
Key Dialogue
"HARDIMAN: May I ask why your men have brought an obsolete police box into my research laboratory?"
"BRIGADIER: I've no idea. Oh, that's part of the Doctor's equipment."
"BRIGADIER: Sir George, I must ask you to check the main reactor. I'm sorry, this is really rather urgent."