Doctor reveals the weed’s parasitic nature
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Jones questions the Doctor's assertion that the seaweed is a telepathic, living organism, to which the Doctor insists it's a matter of mind over matter, explaining how the weed has overcome Mrs. Harris, Chief Robson, and Mister Van Lutyens. Harris asks where the weed gets its intelligence; the Doctor declares it's parasitic, feeding off the human brain.
Price interrupts with contact from the Control rig, where Baxter reports an emergency and being surrounded by 'these things,' before his transmission cuts out with a scream. Price attempts to re-establish contact, but receives no response.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Sheer, unadulterated terror—his mind has already accepted what his body cannot escape: the weed is upon him, and there is no way out.
Baxter’s voice crackles through the monitor, raw and breaking, as he describes the seaweed’s encroachment ('they're all around us!'). His terror is palpable, his words dissolving into screams ('Get us out of here!') before the transmission cuts to static. The Control Hall falls silent for a heartbeat—Baxter’s voice, now gone, lingers like a ghost in the room. His panic is the sound of the weed’s victory: it has reached the Control Rig, and it is coming for the rest of them.
- • Warn the Control Hall of the weed’s immediate threat
- • Beg for rescue before the weed consumes him
- • The Control Hall can still save him if they act now
- • The weed is an unstoppable force—his fate is sealed
A man unraveling—his professional mask shattered by the confirmation that his wife is lost, and the realization that the weed’s spread is now inside the room with him, in Baxter’s screams.
The Doctor’s revelation about the weed’s parasitic nature—'From the human brain. It's parasitic.'—hits Harris like a physical blow. His face pales, his breath shallow, as the Doctor’s words confirm his worst fear: his wife is not missing. She is part of the colony. When Baxter’s transmission cuts in, Harris lunges toward the monitor, his voice cracking with desperation ('Baxter! Baxter!'), his hands gripping the console as if he could pull the man to safety through sheer will. The Control Hall’s sterile lights reflect the sweat beading on his forehead.
- • Save Baxter and the Control Rig crew from the encroaching weed
- • Find his wife before the weed fully consumes her
- • The weed’s intelligence is a personal violation—it has taken his wife, and now it is taking his crew
- • The Control Hall’s protocols are failing; only direct action will save lives
Tense focus masking deep unease—he knows the weed is closing in, but his role is to keep the lines open, no matter the cost.
Price moves with mechanical efficiency, his hands steady on the radio controls as he patches through Baxter’s transmission. His voice is clipped, professional, but his eyes flicker with tension as Baxter’s screams fill the Control Hall. When the signal cuts to static, Price doesn’t hesitate—he immediately rekeys the frequency, his fingers flying over the console, his jaw set. He is the refinery’s nerve center, relaying the horror without flinching, even as his own breath quickens.
- • Maintain communication with the Control Rig to assess the threat
- • Ensure the Control Hall receives real-time updates on the weed’s spread
- • His duty is to relay information, not to panic
- • The weed’s advance is a technical problem to be solved, not a supernatural horror
Mrs. Harris is never physically present in the Control Hall during this event, but her absence is a gaping wound …
Robson is named by the Doctor as another victim of the weed’s parasitic intelligence ('Chief Robson'). His absence from the …
Van Lutyens is named by the Doctor as another victim ('Mister Van Lutyens'), his infection a stark contrast to his …
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The Control Hall, once a sterile hub of bureaucratic efficiency, becomes a pressure cooker of horror as the Doctor’s revelations collide with Baxter’s screams. The hum of machinery and the flicker of monitors now feel oppressive, the air thick with the weight of the weed’s encroaching threat. The Doctor’s urgent voice cuts through the tension, while Harris’ desperation and Jones’ skepticism clash in the confined space. When Baxter’s transmission erupts, the Control Hall’s sterile lights reflect the sweat on the crew’s faces, turning the room into a stage for the unraveling of reason. The location is no longer a command center—it is a battleground between human will and parasitic intelligence.
The Control Rig, though not physically present in the Control Hall, is the epicenter of the weed’s immediate threat. Baxter’s panicked transmission paints a vivid picture of the rig’s overrun state—'they're all around us'—as the seaweed closes in. The location is a graveyard of failed communication, its crew doomed by the weed’s relentless advance. The Control Hall’s crew can only listen in horror as Baxter’s screams fade into static, the rig’s fate a warning of what awaits them if they fail to act. The Control Rig is the weed’s first victory, and its silence is a death knell for the refinery.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Harris tries to convince Jones about the creatures (beat_0e0c8477506f9cb5), which is reflected in the Doctor's later insistence that the seaweed is a telepathic, living organism, explaining how the weed has overcome people (beat_325629de7b5414f5)."
Jones rejects Harris’s emergency plea"Harris tries to convince Jones about the creatures (beat_0e0c8477506f9cb5), which is reflected in the Doctor's later insistence that the seaweed is a telepathic, living organism, explaining how the weed has overcome people (beat_325629de7b5414f5)."
Harris conceals Robson’s disappearanceThemes This Exemplifies
Thematic resonance and meaning
Part of Larger Arcs
Key Dialogue
"JONES: You think this seaweed or whatever it is, is a living organism capable of exercising telepathic control?"
"DOCTOR: Yes. This is a struggle for power, Miss Jones. Matter over mind. I'm convinced all these people—Mrs Harris, Chief Robson, Mister Van Lutyens—have all been overcome in this struggle and goodness knows how many more people."
"HARRIS: But where does the weed get this intelligence from, Doctor?"
"DOCTOR: From the human brain. It's parasitic."
"BAXTER: ([on monitor]) Argh! Get us out of here! Somebody get us out of here!"