Mailer takes Doctor and Jo hostage
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Mailer storms into the cell, gun drawn, and the Doctor attempts to negotiate, but Mailer quickly silences him.
Mailer reveals his plan to use the Doctor and Jo as hostages, threatening to kill them if UNIT doesn't allow him to escape.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Anxious but composed, masking deep concern for the Doctor’s safety and the futility of Mailer’s threats.
Jo remains physically still but emotionally alert, her quiet warning (‘They won’t listen’) cutting through Mailer’s bluster. She acts as a passive but observant participant, her anxiety palpable as she recognizes the futility of Mailer’s hostage gambit. Her presence underscores the Doctor’s protective instincts and the high stakes of the confrontation.
- • To subtly warn Mailer of the hopelessness of his plan, hoping to defuse the situation.
- • To stay close to the Doctor, ensuring she can support him if an opportunity arises.
- • UNIT will not negotiate with hostage-takers, especially in a high-stakes scenario like this.
- • Mailer’s desperation makes him unpredictable and dangerous, but his threats are ultimately empty.
Frantic and unhinged, with a surface layer of bluster masking deep anxiety and the fear of losing control. His emotional state is volatile, teetering between aggression and panic.
Mailer bursts into the cell in a state of unhinged desperation, his gun raised and his demands laced with the Master’s influence. His bluster masks a deep-seated fear of failure, his threats escalating as the Doctor’s sarcasm provokes him. He physically forces the Doctor and Jo to move at gunpoint, his aggression revealing his fractured psyche and the Master’s corrupting grip. His gambit is a last-ditch effort to secure his escape, but his desperation makes him reckless and unpredictable.
- • To use the Doctor and Jo as leverage to force UNIT to stand down and allow his escape.
- • To assert dominance in the cell, compensating for his perceived loss of control over the situation.
- • The Doctor holds the key to controlling the Keller machine, and thus his cooperation is essential for his survival.
- • UNIT will negotiate if he demonstrates enough resolve, even though Jo’s warning suggests otherwise.
Calmly defiant, with underlying urgency and protectiveness toward Jo. His sarcasm masks a keen awareness of the danger and the need to outmaneuver Mailer.
The Doctor meets Mailer’s aggression with sharp, defiant sarcasm (‘Ah, come to give yourself up?’), refusing to be cowed by the gun or the threat. His composed demeanor belies the gravity of the situation, using wit to provoke Mailer’s instability while subtly assessing the odds of escape or intervention. His primary focus shifts from the Keller machine to the immediate hostage crisis, his defiance a calculated risk to buy time or expose Mailer’s weaknesses.
- • To provoke Mailer into revealing his true intentions or making a mistake, using sarcasm as a tool to unsettle him.
- • To protect Jo and ensure she remains unharmed, even as he is forced to comply with Mailer’s demands temporarily.
- • Mailer is a pawn of the Master, acting out of desperation rather than true malice, which makes him vulnerable to psychological pressure.
- • UNIT’s assault is imminent, and his best chance of survival lies in stalling or creating an opening for intervention.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
Mailer’s handgun is the focal point of the confrontation, its cold metal presence amplifying the tension in the cell. He brandishes it aggressively, pressing it toward the Doctor and Jo to enforce his demands, using it as both a physical threat and a symbol of his fragile authority. The gun’s role is purely functional—it compels compliance and forces movement—but its psychological impact is profound, heightening the stakes and the sense of imminent danger.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The Doctor’s prison cell serves as a claustrophobic battleground for Mailer’s desperate hostage gambit. Its tight confines amplify the tension, with the heavy door framing Mailer’s dramatic entrance and the distant riot shouts piercing the stone walls, underscoring the chaos unfolding outside. The cell’s stark, oppressive atmosphere—marked by the draughts board on the floor and the cold, unyielding surfaces—contrasts sharply with the high-stakes confrontation, making every movement and word feel amplified.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
UNIT looms as the unseen but ever-present antagonist in Mailer’s desperate gambit. Though not physically present in the cell, their impending assault is the driving force behind Mailer’s threats, as he seeks to leverage the Doctor and Jo to force UNIT’s hand. The organization’s power dynamics are inverted here—Mailer, a low-level inmate, attempts to dictate terms to a global military force, revealing the absurdity and desperation of his position. Jo’s warning (‘They won’t listen’) underscores UNIT’s unwavering resolve, making Mailer’s hostage tactic a futile last stand.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Jo and The Doctor hearing of the fighting (beat_154768a8c045eb5f) leads into the Doctor predicting Mailer will soon come for them (beat_f226860c0ba012db) and this leads to Mailer coming anyway."
Doctor and Jo hear fighting inside prison"The Brigadier intending to find the Doctor (beat_0d55efc074d480bb) contrasts with Mailer taking The Doctor hostage (beat_f226860c0ba012db) showing two characters who are in opposition with each other."
Brigadier shifts focus to Doctor rescuePart of Larger Arcs
Key Dialogue
"DOCTOR: Ah, come to give yourself up?"
"MAILER: Now shut up and listen. You want to stay alive you'll do exactly as I say."
"MAILER: You're going to help me get out of here. You're going to walk out of here and tell those friends of yours that either I get out or I'm going to chop you down. All right?"
"JO: They won't listen."