Waterfield defies Dalek authority
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Waterfield questions the presence of a dead intruder as a Dalek emerges, confirming the intruder was destroyed, escalating Waterfield's concern and highlighting the Daleks' deadly efficiency.
Waterfield insists the Doctor must be informed, but the Dalek forbids it, leading to a heated exchange where Waterfield defies the Dalek's authority and Maxtible attempts to appease their powerful allies.
The Dalek orders Waterfield to hide the intruder's body, prompting Waterfield's refusal and Maxtible's urging for compliance, revealing the extent of the Daleks' control and Waterfield's growing moral conflict.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Cold, calculating, and utterly devoid of empathy
The Dalek Command Collective is represented by a single Dalek in this scene, acting as the voice of absolute authority. It issues direct, uncompromising orders to Waterfield and Maxtible, demanding the concealment of Toby’s corpse to erase evidence of their violence. The Dalek’s presence is domineering and mechanical, enforcing obedience through threats and reinforcing the Daleks’ unyielding control over human collaborators. Its dialogue is terse and authoritative, leaving no room for negotiation or moral consideration.
- • To maintain secrecy and control over the Daleks’ actions by eliminating evidence of Toby’s death
- • To assert dominance over Waterfield and Maxtible, reinforcing their subservience
- • That human morality and guilt are weaknesses to be exploited or erased
- • That absolute obedience is the only acceptable response to Dalek commands
A volatile mix of guilt, defiance, and desperate determination. His surface emotions are anger and resolve, but beneath them lies deep remorse for his past actions and fear for his daughter’s safety.
Edward Waterfield is the emotional and narrative center of this event. He discovers Toby’s corpse and, in a moment of moral clarity, refuses to comply with the Daleks’ demand to conceal it. His defiance is fueled by guilt over his collaboration with the Daleks and his desperate desire to rescue his daughter, Victoria. Waterfield physically struggles to drag the corpse, symbolizing the weight of his complicity and the difficulty of his moral reckoning. His dialogue reveals a man at a breaking point, torn between fear and resolve, ultimately choosing to stand against the Daleks’ authority.
- • To refuse the Daleks’ order and assert his moral agency
- • To rescue Victoria from Dalek captivity, regardless of the personal cost
- • That his collaboration with the Daleks has made him complicit in their crimes
- • That the only path to redemption is to defy the Daleks and confess his role
Anxious and increasingly frantic. His surface demeanor is pleading and coercive, but his underlying emotion is fear—fear of the Daleks’ retribution and fear of losing control over the situation.
Theodore Maxtible is the pragmatic counterpoint to Waterfield’s defiance. He pleads with Waterfield to comply with the Daleks’ demands, justifying collaboration as a necessary evil to achieve their goals. Maxtible’s desperation is evident as he retrieves a pistol from his workbench, threatening Waterfield to force compliance. His actions reveal a man driven by fear of the Daleks and a self-serving desire to maintain their favor, even as he manipulates Waterfield with appeals to their shared goal of rescuing Victoria.
- • To force Waterfield to comply with the Daleks’ demands to avoid their wrath
- • To maintain his own position of influence and survival, even at the cost of moral compromise
- • That collaboration with the Daleks is the only way to achieve his goals (e.g., transmutation, survival)
- • That Waterfield’s defiance will provoke the Daleks and endanger everyone, including Victoria
N/A (deceased, but his presence evokes guilt and urgency in others)
Toby’s corpse serves as the catalyst for Waterfield’s moral crisis. Though lifeless, his presence is a stark reminder of the Daleks’ violence and the cost of collaboration. The corpse is initially described as that of a ‘common thief,’ but its discovery forces Waterfield to confront the reality of the Daleks’ brutality. The act of wrapping Toby’s body in a sheet and struggling to drag it becomes a physical and symbolic burden for Waterfield, representing the weight of his guilt and the difficulty of his defiance.
- • To serve as a tangible reminder of the Daleks’ violence (implied)
- • To force Waterfield to confront his complicity (implied)
- • N/A (deceased, but his death represents the consequences of defying or collaborating with the Daleks)
Anxious yet resolute (as inferred through Waterfield’s dialogue about her captivity)
Victoria Waterfield is referenced indirectly as the driving force behind Waterfield’s defiance. Though physically absent, her captivity is the emotional and moral anchor for Waterfield’s actions. Her presence looms over the scene, symbolizing the stakes of Waterfield’s rebellion and the cost of his collaboration with the Daleks. The mention of her name by Maxtible—‘Don’t you want to see your daughter again?’—serves as both a manipulative tactic and a reminder of Waterfield’s ultimate goal.
- • To be rescued by her father, freeing him from Dalek control
- • To serve as the moral justification for Waterfield’s defiance
- • That her father’s collaboration is a temporary necessity for her survival
- • That the Daleks’ cruelty will ultimately be exposed and defeated
Not directly observable, but inferred as a source of hope for Waterfield
The Doctor is mentioned indirectly by Waterfield, who insists that ‘He must be told’ about Toby’s death. Though absent from the scene, the Doctor’s presence is implied as a potential ally or authority figure who could challenge the Daleks’ control. Waterfield’s reference to the Doctor suggests a belief that the Doctor’s intervention could disrupt the Daleks’ plans and provide a path to Victoria’s rescue. The Doctor’s role here is symbolic, representing hope and external influence.
- • To uncover the truth about the Daleks’ experiments (implied by Waterfield’s desire to inform him)
- • To rescue Victoria and disrupt the Daleks’ plans (implied)
- • That the Doctor possesses the knowledge and resources to challenge the Daleks
- • That the Doctor’s involvement is necessary to expose the Daleks’ cruelty
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The sheet provided by Maxtible is a tool of concealment, representing the Daleks’ demand to erase evidence of their violence. Maxtible thrusts it at Waterfield, urging him to wrap Toby’s corpse and hide the truth. However, Waterfield’s refusal to use it—despite Maxtible’s pleas and threats—transforms the sheet into a symbol of his defiance. Its presence in the scene highlights the moral divide between Maxtible’s pragmatism and Waterfield’s growing resolve. The sheet hangs limply, unused, as Waterfield asserts his agency and rejects the Daleks’ authority.
Maxtible’s workbench pistol is a weapon of coercion, used to threaten Waterfield into compliance. Maxtible retrieves it from a drawer in his workbench, concealing it in his coat before drawing it to pressure Waterfield. The pistol represents Maxtible’s desperation and his willingness to use force to maintain control over the situation. However, its threat is ultimately ineffective, as Waterfield’s resolve holds firm. The pistol’s presence underscores the power dynamics at play—Maxtible’s fear of the Daleks and his attempts to manipulate Waterfield through violence.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
Maxtible’s laboratory is the battleground for this moral and physical conflict. Cluttered with alchemical gear and the detritus of scientific experimentation, the laboratory is a space of both creation and destruction. It is here that Waterfield discovers Toby’s corpse, where the Daleks issue their demands, and where Maxtible’s desperation and manipulation reach their peak. The laboratory’s mirrored room—from which the Dalek emerges—adds a layer of surveillance and intrusion, reinforcing the Daleks’ omnipresent control. The space is oppressive, filled with the tension of unspoken guilt, fear, and defiance.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
The Daleks are the dominant force in this event, represented by a single Dalek acting as the voice of their collective authority. Their involvement is characterized by uncompromising demands, psychological dominance, and the enforcement of obedience. The Dalek’s orders to conceal Toby’s corpse are not merely practical but symbolic of their desire to erase evidence of their violence and maintain control over their human collaborators. Their presence looms over the scene, reinforcing the power imbalance and the moral ambiguity of the humans’ collaboration.
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."
Terrall stops Maxtible’s murder attemptThemes This Exemplifies
Thematic resonance and meaning
Part of Larger Arcs
Key Dialogue
"WATERFIELD: What is he doing here?"
"DALEK: The intruder was destroyed."
"WATERFIELD: Well, what are we to do? Where is the Doctor? He must be told."
"DALEK: No."
"WATERFIELD: Why not?"
"DALEK: Obey me!"
"WATERFIELD: No!"
"MAXTIBLE: Waterfield, what is the matter with you? We are not to blame for everything that has happened."
"WATERFIELD: It'll never come to that."
"MAXTIBLE: And what may that remark mean?"
"WATERFIELD: I have one purpose only, to see my daughter out of the hands of those foul monsters. When that is achieved, I shall confess my part in all that has happened."