Waterfield questions the Doctor’s honesty
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Waterfield questions the Doctor about whether he warned Jamie about the Daleks.
The Doctor assures Waterfield that Jamie will cooperate while secretly being overheard by Jamie, who grows worried about the conversation's implications.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Anxious and skeptical, with a simmering undercurrent of moral guilt. His urgency masks a deeper fear that the Doctor’s lies could jeopardize Victoria’s safety or his own fragile alliance with the Daleks.
Edward Waterfield confronts the Doctor with anxious urgency, pressing him for confirmation about whether Jamie was warned of the Daleks' presence. His tone is skeptical and tense, reflecting his desperation to ensure cooperation while grappling with the moral weight of his own complicity in the Daleks' schemes. He paces or leans in, his body language betraying his internal conflict—caught between his fear for Victoria and his growing distrust of the Doctor's reassurances.
- • To confirm whether Jamie was warned about the Daleks, ensuring his cooperation with the Daleks' plans.
- • To alleviate his own anxiety by securing the Doctor’s reassurance, even if it requires pressing him aggressively.
- • The Doctor may be lying to protect his own interests or those of Jamie, potentially endangering Victoria.
- • Cooperation with the Daleks is the only way to secure Victoria’s release, but the Doctor’s evasiveness suggests a hidden agenda.
Worried and deeply distrustful, with a growing sense of betrayal. The Doctor’s lies confirm his fears that the Doctor is prioritizing his own agenda over Jamie’s safety, pushing Jamie toward independent action—even if it means defying the Doctor’s authority.
Jamie, hidden from view but within earshot, overhears the Doctor’s exchange with Waterfield. His expression darkens as he realizes the Doctor may have lied about warning him of the Daleks’ presence. This moment deepens his distrust, fueling his resolve to act independently—perhaps even to rescue Victoria on his own. His physical presence is implied but not seen; his reaction is internalized, a quiet seething that will later manifest in defiance.
- • To process the Doctor’s deception and decide whether to confront him or act independently to rescue Victoria.
- • To gather more information about the Daleks’ plans, now that he suspects the Doctor is withholding critical details.
- • The Doctor cannot be trusted to prioritize Jamie’s or Victoria’s safety over his own objectives.
- • If the Doctor is lying about the Daleks, he may also be lying about other critical matters, necessitating Jamie’s own investigation.
Calculated and evasive, masking deep moral conflict. His surface-level dismissiveness belies an internal struggle—he knows his lies are eroding trust, but he prioritizes the greater goal of protecting the TARDIS and his companions, even at the cost of Jamie’s faith in him.
The Doctor deflects Waterfield’s questions with dismissive reassurances, insisting Jamie will cooperate while secretly aware of his moral compromise. His body language is evasive—perhaps turning away slightly or waving a hand as if swatting away a trivial concern. His dialogue is laced with feigned confidence, using phrases like 'fiddlesticks' and 'bosh' to downplay the gravity of the situation. Unbeknownst to him, Jamie overhears the exchange, deepening the rift between them.
- • To reassure Waterfield and maintain the illusion of cooperation, ensuring the Daleks do not escalate their threats.
- • To deflect attention from his own moral compromises, avoiding a direct confrontation that could unravel his plans.
- • Waterfield’s anxiety is a liability, and the truth would only escalate tensions, so evasion is necessary.
- • Jamie’s cooperation is critical to the plan, but the Doctor believes he can still control the narrative—even if it means lying.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
Maxtible’s sitting room serves as a tense meeting point where the Doctor’s lies and Waterfield’s anxieties collide. The space, with its French windows opening to an outdoor area strewn with mud and straw, reflects the chaotic and unstable nature of the situation. The room’s domestic setting contrasts sharply with the high-stakes manipulation unfolding within it, amplifying the sense of unease. The mud and straw on the floor symbolize the intrusion of external forces—both literal (the Daleks’ influence) and metaphorical (the moral compromise seeping into human interactions).
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
The Daleks’ influence looms over the scene, though they are not physically present. Their manipulation of Waterfield and the Doctor is evident in Waterfield’s anxious pressing for reassurance and the Doctor’s evasive responses. The Daleks’ goal—to extract the 'human factor' from Jamie—drives the tension, as Waterfield acts as their unwitting enforcer, ensuring cooperation. The Doctor’s lies, in turn, reflect his own moral compromise under the Daleks’ coercion, highlighting their ability to exploit human weaknesses and fracture alliances.
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
Themes This Exemplifies
Thematic resonance and meaning
Part of Larger Arcs
Key Dialogue
"WATERFIELD: You warned him, told him about the Daleks?"
"DOCTOR: Yes, of course I did!"
"WATERFIELD: But you were expressly told..."
"DOCTOR: Oh, fiddlesticks! Bosh! Jamie will cooperate. You may be certain of that."
"WATERFIELD: Are you sure?"
"DOCTOR: Yes, perfectly sure. Jamie will do everything he is asked to do."