Janley warns of Examiner interference
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Janley warns that revealing the news about Resno could provide the Examiner with reason to stop the project. With the accident covered up, Lesterson and Janley prepare to unveil the Dalek, oblivious to the danger it poses.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Controlled urgency—she’s not panicked, but the weight of the secret and the Examiner’s potential intervention create a low-grade tension beneath her composed exterior. She’s the only one in the room who seems to fully grasp the dual-edged nature of their work: both a triumph and a ticking time bomb.
Janley is the voice of pragmatic caution in the lab, her dialogue sharp and direct. She confirms the Dalek’s readiness but immediately pivots to Resno’s accident, framing it as a liability that could derail everything. Her insistence on secrecy isn’t just about protecting Lesterson—it’s about safeguarding the project itself, which she clearly believes in. She stands as a counterbalance to Lesterson’s enthusiasm, her tone measured but urgent, like a captain steadying a ship in rough waters.
- • Ensure the Dalek experiment proceeds without interference from the Examiner or colonial leadership.
- • Maintain the secrecy of Resno’s accident to avoid project shutdown, while also protecting Resno from repercussions.
- • The Examiner’s intervention would be catastrophic, not just for the project but for the colony’s scientific autonomy.
- • Lesterson’s ambition is necessary for progress, but it requires careful management to avoid disaster.
Euphoric anticipation tinged with defensive impatience—his scientific triumph is so close he can taste it, but the mention of Resno’s accident briefly grounds him in the reality of the risks he’s ignoring.
Lesterson stands near the Dalek, his posture animated with scientific fervor, fingers twitching as if already anticipating the next phase of the experiment. His dialogue is a whirlwind of excitement and distraction—praising Janley’s work one moment, then abruptly shifting to Resno’s accident the next. His agreement to secrecy is perfunctory, a mere obstacle to be acknowledged before returning to his grand vision. The Dalek’s presence looms behind him, a silent partner in his ambition.
- • Unveil the Dalek’s reanimation as a scientific breakthrough to secure his legacy and the project’s future.
- • Avoid bureaucratic interference (e.g., the Examiner’s shutdown) to maintain control over the experiment.
- • The potential benefits of Dalek technology outweigh any immediate dangers, making secrecy justified.
- • Janley’s caution is necessary but temporary—once the Dalek is proven harmless (or controlled), the project will be vindicated.
Not applicable (off-screen), but inferred as detached authority—his power is felt as an abstract force, not a personal emotion.
Though physically absent from the scene, the Examiner’s presence is a specter hanging over Lesterson and Janley’s exchange. Janley invokes him as the ultimate threat—a bureaucratic bogeyman who could dismantle their work with a single report. His role here is purely as a looming obstacle, a symbol of the colony’s fragile autonomy and the Earth government’s distant but ever-present authority. The mere mention of his name shifts the dynamic, forcing Lesterson to acknowledge the fragility of his position.
- • Enforce Earth’s protocols and regulations to prevent unauthorized or dangerous experiments (e.g., reviving Daleks).
- • Maintain colonial stability by shutting down projects that threaten the colony’s safety or Earth’s interests.
- • Scientific ambition must be tempered by risk assessment and oversight to prevent catastrophic failures.
- • The colony’s leaders (e.g., Lesterson) are potentially reckless and require external checks.
Not applicable (off-screen), but inferred as fearful and resentful—his accident would likely leave him distrustful of Lesterson and the project, even if he’s physically recovering.
Resno is referenced only in passing, his absence a silent reproach. Janley’s update—‘He’s had medical attention. He’s going to be all right’—paints him as a casualty of the experiment, a warning of what could happen if the Dalek is not handled with extreme care. His near-fatal accident is the elephant in the room, the unspoken cost of Lesterson’s ambition. Though not physically present, his injury looms over the scene, a reminder of the human stakes in their scientific gamble.
- • Avoid further harm (implied by his absence and the secrecy surrounding his accident).
- • Potentially warn others about the Dalek’s dangers (if he were present or if the secret were exposed).
- • The Dalek is not as harmless as Lesterson claims—it’s a threat that could kill again.
- • The Examiner’s intervention, while disruptive, might be necessary to stop the experiment before it’s too late.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The Dalek is the silent, ominous centerpiece of the scene, its dormant form a physical manifestation of the experiment’s dual promise and peril. Lesterson’s dialogue—‘Who knows what this Dalek may do?’—hints at its unpredictable potential, while Janley’s caution about Resno’s accident underscores the very real danger it poses. Though inert in this moment, the Dalek’s presence is a catalyst for the tension between ambition and secrecy. It is both the object of their scientific pride and the source of their greatest risk, a paradox that neither fully acknowledges.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
Lesterson’s laboratory is a pressure cooker of scientific ambition and institutional paranoia, its cluttered benches and scattered tools a testament to the frantic, secretive nature of their work. The space is intimate yet charged, the Dalek’s capsule dominating the room like a monolith. The lab’s isolation—both physical and bureaucratic—allows Lesterson and Janley to operate outside the Governor’s or Examiner’s oversight, but it also traps them in a cycle of secrecy and risk. The hum of experiment gear and the occasional twitch of the Dalek’s arm create an atmosphere of controlled chaos, where progress and peril are inseparable.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"The Dalek's incapacitation of Resno is followed by Lesterson inquiring about Resno’s condition, and Janley assuring secrecy furthering the cover-up."
Dalek attacks Resno in lab"The Dalek's incapacitation of Resno is followed by Lesterson inquiring about Resno’s condition, and Janley assuring secrecy furthering the cover-up."
Dalek attacks Resno in lab"The Dalek's incapacitation of Resno is followed by Lesterson inquiring about Resno’s condition, and Janley assuring secrecy furthering the cover-up."
Janley conceals Resno’s incapacitationPart of Larger Arcs
Key Dialogue
"JANLEY: No one must find out about this accident. It might give the Examiner just the excuse they want, and he could stop the whole project."
"LESTERSON: Oh yes. Yes, yes, yes, you're right."
"JANLEY: Well. Ready? LESTERSON: Yes. Let's go and surprise them."