Buller faces Sin and Chang in the alley
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Buller confronts Li H'sen Chang backstage, accusing him of his wife Emma's disappearance and claiming she was 'levitated' by Chang.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Calm control masking internal frustration or unease at the unnatural independence exhibited by Sin, threatening the polished facade so carefully constructed beneath polite public interactions.
Li H'sen Chang operates from a position of theatrical control within Grand Theatre Stage and positions himself publicly amidst his performance. Despite Sin's violent escalation in Theatre Wing Backstage, Chang maintains public composure, demonstrating polish masking dangerous affiliation with occult forces, evident in his dexterous management of both stage hypnosis and Sin's mocking interjections culminating in wielding of a samurai sword to establish dominance and enforce silence.
- • Sustain audience engagement through continuous theatrical illusion orchestration despite visible disorder from Sin's interjections.
- • Assert dominion and establish authority through visible use of the samurai sword both on stage and in adjacent theatre spaces to silence any dissent or challenge.
- • Maintain facade of gentlemanly courtesy and surface-level rationality while navigating public scrutiny and the Doctor's direct challenges hidden in broader scene context.
- • That the occult leverage represented through hypnosis and physical stage mechanics will ultimately reveal the truth of Weng-Chiang's menace in a controlled manner serving their shared existence.
- • That any visible challenge to his authority through the use of Sin or physical confrontation will be quelled through immediate assertion of violent dominance, such as wielding the samurai sword.
Persistent investigative curiosity masking deeper understanding that this place is more than it seems and that the occult undercurrents may pose immediate danger.
The Doctor advances through Limehouse's streets toward the heart of occult menace housed in Li H'sen Chang's Theatre. Upon arriving he witnesses multiple altercations converging - the Doctor's altercation with Chinese assailants, Leela's aggressive intervention, and the alleyway's attack involving Buller and Sin. The Doctor interprets these chaotic threads with enquiring curiosity, attempting to intervene in every conflict while maintaining deliberately oblique intentions towards active companions and wider unfolding.
- • Guide Leela through Victorian London's underbelly while avoiding outright confrontation with authority figures like Constable Quick.
- • Preserve autonomy of action while supporting Leela's tangible victories against perceived threats - both human and otherwise represented in this moment.
- • That no appreciable harm will come to companions Leela due to instinctual focus on tangible victories rather than blind loyalty ensures he can prioritize broader goals without hesitation.
- • That the theatre serves as a stage for secrets where women vanish and gods stir beneath the floorboards implies immediate danger that must be exposed and addressed.
- • That aggressive enforcement of order without appreciation for broader supernatural or organized criminal threats may ultimately prove ineffective or dangerous.
Cautious optimism masking the potential for institutional failure or irrelevance, given the escalated situation and unrecognized supernatural threats preventing procedural success.
Constable Quick arrives at the theatre backstage alley amid escalating violence, thrusting himself into the chaos as the authoritative voice of Victorian order. Of immediate concern is the Doctor and Leela's unruly participation amid the altercation involving Chinese assailants and the suspected 'strangulation with pigtail' victim, compelling Quick to assert immediate containment despite lacking full context.
- • Enforce immediate containment and detainment of any individual deemed disruptive or in violation of public order based on observed actions.
- • Prevent further 'affray' or public disturbance through authoritative presence and action, prioritizing enforcement of local law though circumstances reveal forces beyond his official remit.
- • That any visible altercation involving unexpected weapons or constricting appendages like a pigtail constitutes a punishable public disturbance justifies immediate detention and legal proceedings.
- • That maintaining order and procedural integrity through immediate authority will ultimately prove sufficient to control the scene despite clear signals of supernatural or organized criminal involvement.
Deep-seated anxiety stemming from his wife's disappearance, bleeding into volatile rage and aggression at the slightest provocation or disturbance to his world.
Buller stumbles desperately through the theatre backstage alley, having just witnessed the volatile threat of Sin brandishing a knife. Haunted by his wife's disappearance and driven to uncover foul play, he Collides with the Doctor midway through his interpretation of the chaotic scene, still consumed by raw emotions - grief, fury, and mistrust that ultimately lead him to lash out with physical aggression.
- • Force Li H'sen Chang to acknowledge his accountability in Emma's disappearance through interrogative aggression.
- • Uncover concrete details substantiating his suspicions about Chang's involvement, however speculative, through direct confrontation.
- • That Chang's polished manner masks a dangerous affiliation with unknown occult forces directly tied to his wife's vanishing is enough to warrant aggressive confrontation.
- • That the theatre serves as a stage for secrets where women vanish and gods stir beneath the floorboards justifies his intrusion into private spaces and violent assertions of vigilante justice.
Relentlessly aggressive with instinctual focus on breaking physical resistance and asserting dominance through perceived justice, masking potential concern for companion safety under Doctor's oblique guidance.
Leela aggressively joins the fray in the theatre backstage alley, perceiving the altercation involving Chinese assailants and the suspected 'strangulation with pigtail' victim as a legitimate threat requiring immediate violent response. Her direct actions - threatening Constable Quick's limb and pouncing physically - reveal instinctual judgment surpassing Victorian officials' understanding and demonstrating her unapologetic approach to breaking perceived perpetrators until forensic answers are provided that align with her moral compass as a warrior of the Sevateem.
- • Protect the Doctor from unnecessary harm or distraction in his investigation despite his oblique guidance and requests for enthusiasm.
- • Expose and eliminate immediate threats perceived in the backstage alley, aligning with instinctual moral imperative as warrior rather than adherence to local or societal understanding.
- • That tangible victories - through breaking limbs, exposing deceptions, or disrupting authoritarian bias like Constable Quick's immediate assumption - validate her actions and align with Sevateem tribal understanding.
- • That the Doctor's repeated intervention in alien worlds' underbellies without clear justification or plan impedes their collective progress and requires aggressive correction of perceived missteps or hesitations.
Mocking amusement masking deeper unnatural hostility, switching sinisterly between Sycophantic praise when acting through Chang and violent defiance when acting independently, amplifying chaos with each unpredictable turn.
Sin the ventriloquist's grotesque wooden dummy steps out of his concealed theatre wings, brandishing a curved six-inch knife of dark metal. Upon spotting the distraught young cab driver Buller in the narrow alleyway, Sin pivots with unnatural ease from mocking Chang's hypnosis to violent confrontation, utilizing both the knife and later Sin's pigtail to attempt strangulation.
- • Silence or eliminate any witness threatening Chang's public facade, starting with Buller.
- • Demonstrate occult control by escalating violence from puppet mockery to physical bloodshed in the narrow theatre alley.
- • Sin's mocking voice and vetoes over Chang's illusions reveal a fractured existence tied to the theatre's occult undercurrents and the looming threat of Weng-Chiang that must be protected through violence.
- • Using theatre-adjacent violence as a means to assert dominion and assert the Tong's power in this moment serves both their shared supernatural origins and short-term tactical goals.
Polished professionalism masking visible discomfort or deeper understanding of the occult undercurrents tied to the mechanical stage work's role in exposing truths about Weng-Chiang's menace.
Chang's Assistant moves efficiently and discreetly through Theatre Wing Backstage during the orchestration of Chang's levitation act. Their primary role involves the procedural removal of chairs from both lower stage legs and upper stage headrest simultaneously, ensuring the levitation illusion's visual integrity remains uncompromised while swiftly addressing Sin's mocking interjections that threaten to expose mechanical flaws in the act's execution.
- • Ensure seamless execution of Chang's levitation act through meticulous mechanical preparation and real-time adjustment to address visible threats.
- • Maintain operational discretion, prioritizing technical execution over interpretation or Mediation in broader scene dynamics.
- • That meticulous technical preparation will ultimately reveal the truth of preternatural forces at play through successful execution of illusions in a controlled manner, serving the magician's broader goals despite minimal visibility.
- • That maintaining facade of professional aiding to the magician's stage work ensures personal safety and aligns with organized criminal or occult forces' objectives.
Initially amused by the magician's personal jabs toward Sin but growing increasingly uneasy as the levitation act defies conventional explanation and reveals hints of preternatural forces at play beneath the polished surface of Victorian stagecraft.
A Theatre Audience Member sits among the gathered patrons in Grand Theatre Stage during the orchestrated chaos of Chang's levitation act. They respond instinctively to Sin's settlements throughout the performance, shifting from initial amusement at Chang's jabs to deepening unease as the levitation act defies conventional explanation, reinforcing the theatre's role as a gathering place where Victorian skepticism collides with emerging supernatural horrors beyond the immediate stage mechanics.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
Sin's curved six-inch knife of dark metal transitions from a concealed position within the ventriloquist dummy's internal compartment to a visible, wielded threat in the theatre backstage alley. The knife's sudden appearance and purposeful brandishing against the distraught cab driver Buller marks the first overt act of violence tied to the sinister puppet's unnatural origins and Chang's occult influence during his performance's mechanical constraints.
Sin’s thick dark pigtail is repurposed as a strangulation tool, wrapping around Buller’s throat with sudden brutal force. The alley’s poor lighting amplifies the shock of the attack, turning a puppet’s harmless braid into a weapon of immediate terror. The pigtail’s unexpected violence underscores the sinister fusion of the dummy’s unnatural body with Victorian street brutality. The act is noticed by Constable Quick, linking the assault to public disorder and charges.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Buller's confrontation with Chang in EXT. STREET directly leads to Chang's lethal administration of scorpion venom to a prisoner in INT. POLICE STATION, revealing the depth of his villainy and the immediate danger posed by his Tong affiliation."
Doctor unmasks Chang as Tong member"Buller's confrontation with Chang in EXT. STREET directly leads to Chang's lethal administration of scorpion venom to a prisoner in INT. POLICE STATION, revealing the depth of his villainy and the immediate danger posed by his Tong affiliation."
Chang poisons prisoner to display Tong authority"Chang's public levitation performance mirrors Buller's accusation of Emma being 'levitated,' both suggesting that Chang's act involves manipulating reality beyond mere illusion, hinting at Sin's true sentience."
Jago praises Chang’s illusion mastery"Chang's public levitation performance mirrors Buller's accusation of Emma being 'levitated,' both suggesting that Chang's act involves manipulating reality beyond mere illusion, hinting at Sin's true sentience."
Buller storms in demanding Emma’s return"Chang's public levitation performance mirrors Buller's accusation of Emma being 'levitated,' both suggesting that Chang's act involves manipulating reality beyond mere illusion, hinting at Sin's true sentience."
Chang confronts Buller over Emma's disappearanceThemes This Exemplifies
Thematic resonance and meaning
Key Dialogue
"SIN: She asleep."
"CHANG: She not asleep, Mister Sin."
"SIN: She been slugging type of toddy."