Taltalian obstructs while Doctor receives threat
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
The Doctor and Taltalian discuss the programming of the impulse records, but Taltalian appears evasive and obstructs, claiming the process could take a long time. A threatening phone call interrupts, in which someone threatens Liz's life if the Doctor continues to interfere.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Smugly anxious (enjoying his power but uneasy about the Doctor’s resourcefulness)
Taltalian is the embodiment of institutional sabotage in this event. He deliberately stalls the rescue mission by exaggerating the complexities of fuel calculations, admitting under the Doctor’s pen threat that he was ordered to do so by General Carrington. His dialogue is laced with feigned cooperation and smugness, revealing his discomfort with the Doctor’s presence and his loyalty to Carrington’s conspiracy. When the phone call threatens Liz Shaw, Taltalian relays it to the Doctor with a hint of satisfaction, knowing the threat will pressure the Doctor to back off. His actions are those of a man torn between his scientific ethics and his allegiance to a ruthless superior, his reluctance to use his gun on a fellow scientist hinting at a lingering moral conflict.
- • Delaying the rescue mission to serve Carrington’s agenda
- • Pressuring the Doctor to stop interfering through the threat against Liz Shaw
- • Carrington’s orders must be followed, regardless of ethical concerns
- • The Doctor is a threat to the conspiracy and must be neutralized
Perilous (implied through the Doctor’s fear and the threat’s specificity)
Liz Shaw is not physically present in this event but is the central emotional and narrative fulcrum. Her name is invoked by Cornish and the Doctor, and her safety becomes the leverage point for the anonymous threat. The Doctor’s urgency to decode the impulse records is directly tied to his fear for her life, and the threat against her forces him to confront the personal stakes of the conspiracy. Her absence looms large, symbolizing the vulnerability of those caught in the crossfire of institutional power struggles.
- • Survival (avoiding the threat against her life)
- • Supporting the Doctor’s mission (indirectly, by being the reason he must act quickly)
- • The conspiracy will stop at nothing to control the Doctor (implied by the threat’s precision)
- • Her scientific work is intertwined with the Doctor’s, making her a target
Controlled desperation (masking deep concern for Liz Shaw)
The Doctor enters the Space Control Computer Room with quiet determination, immediately sensing Taltalian’s sabotage. He improvises a threat using a pen, forcing Taltalian to confess his role in delaying the rescue mission under Carrington’s orders. When Cornish grants him access to the computer, the Doctor focuses on decoding the alien impulse records, but his urgency is undercut by the phone call threatening Liz Shaw’s life. The Doctor’s emotional state shifts from analytical focus to personal desperation, yet he maintains his composure, refusing to be cowed by the threat. His goal remains clear: uncover the truth behind the alien communication and save the astronauts, even as the stakes for Liz’s life force him to act faster.
- • Decoding the alien impulse records to understand the threat
- • Protecting Liz Shaw from the conspiracy’s violence
- • The alien communication holds the key to stopping the conspiracy
- • Taltalian’s sabotage is part of a larger, coordinated effort by Carrington
Exasperated but resolute (determined to move forward despite obstacles)
Cornish enters the scene already frustrated by the delays in the rescue mission. He challenges Taltalian’s obstruction, accusing him of sabotage, and grants the Doctor access to the computer despite Taltalian’s reluctance. Cornish’s dialogue reveals his awareness of the minister’s objections to the rescue, but he presses forward, driven by a sense of duty. His concern for Liz Shaw’s safety is brief but genuine, and he exits the room, leaving the Doctor to confront Taltalian. Cornish’s role is that of a bureaucratic figure caught between institutional pressure and moral urgency, his authority undermined by the conspiracy within his own organization.
- • Overcoming the bureaucratic and technical obstacles to the rescue mission
- • Ensuring the Doctor has the resources he needs to decode the alien threat
- • The rescue mission is critical, despite the minister’s objections
- • Taltalian’s delays are suspicious and potentially sabotage
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The Doctor’s pen is initially a mundane office tool but becomes a critical improvised weapon in this event. He presses its sharp point into Taltalian’s side, convincing him that it is a blade and forcing a confession about the sabotage of the rocket fuel calculations. The pen’s role is symbolic—it represents the Doctor’s resourcefulness and his ability to turn ordinary objects into tools of truth. Its use is a moment of dramatic tension, revealing Taltalian’s complicity and the Doctor’s willingness to act decisively. After the confrontation, the pen returns to its ordinary state, but its narrative function as a decoy weapon lingers as a testament to the Doctor’s improvisational brilliance.
The alien impulse records are the cryptic data the Doctor hopes to decode using the Space Control Computer. He suspects they contain a pattern that will reveal the nature of the alien threat and the fate of the missing astronauts. The records are displayed on the computer’s screens, their irregularities (such as the incorrect output of 'five' for 2+2) hinting at deeper sabotage and manipulation. The Doctor’s focus on these records drives the event, as he believes they hold the key to understanding the conspiracy. However, the threat against Liz Shaw forces him to balance his analytical pursuit with the urgent need to protect her, creating a tension that defines the scene’s emotional core.
The Space Control Computer is the primary tool the Doctor seeks to access in this event. He requests its use to decode the alien impulse records, hoping to uncover patterns that will reveal the nature of the threat. Taltalian initially resists, but Cornish grants the Doctor permission, setting the stage for the Doctor’s analysis. The computer’s humming presence in the room is a constant reminder of the technical and scientific challenges the characters face. Its role in the event is twofold: it is both a tool for uncovering the truth and a symbol of the institutional barriers the Doctor must overcome. The impulse records displayed on its screens become the focus of the Doctor’s attention, even as the threat against Liz Shaw looms.
The telephone in the Space Control Computer Room serves as the conduit for the anonymous threat against Liz Shaw. Taltalian answers the call, listens briefly, and then hands the receiver to the Doctor. The voice on the other end delivers a precise and chilling message: Liz Shaw will be killed if the Doctor does not stop interfering. The phone call is a pivotal moment in the event, escalating the stakes from bureaucratic sabotage to personal violence. It forces the Doctor to confront the immediate danger to his assistant and the moral dilemma of whether to continue his investigation. The telephone’s role is to amplify the conspiracy’s reach, making it clear that the Doctor is being watched and that his actions have consequences.
Taltalian’s gun is referenced indirectly in this event, serving as a silent but looming threat. The Doctor asks Taltalian if he is armed, and Taltalian responds that he would not have used the gun on a fellow scientist. This exchange reveals Taltalian’s reluctance to use violence directly, despite his involvement in the conspiracy. The gun’s presence is implied rather than shown, but it underscores the potential for physical confrontation and the moral ambiguity of Taltalian’s role. It is a reminder that the conspiracy is willing to resort to force, even if Taltalian himself is hesitant to pull the trigger.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The Space Control Computer Room is a claustrophobic, high-stakes battleground in this event. Its humming computers and blinking screens create an atmosphere of urgency and technical precision, while the tense exchanges between the Doctor, Taltalian, and Cornish fill the air with palpable tension. The room’s layout—tight, lined with consoles—forces the characters into close proximity, amplifying the drama of their confrontations. The phone call threatening Liz Shaw’s life adds a layer of personal stakes to the institutional power struggle playing out within these walls. The room’s functional role is as a hub for mission-critical decisions, but in this moment, it becomes a stage for sabotage, threats, and the Doctor’s desperate gambits to uncover the truth.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
Space Control is the institutional setting for this event, but its role is complex and conflicted. On the surface, it is a hub for tracking and recovering space missions, with Cornish as its leader overseeing the technical and logistical challenges of the rescue. However, the organization is undermined by the conspiracy within its ranks, as Taltalian’s sabotage and the Doctor’s investigation reveal. Space Control’s goals—safely recovering the astronauts and understanding the alien threat—are at odds with the actions of its own members, who are being manipulated by Space Security. The organization’s power dynamics in this event are those of a fractured institution, where authority is challenged by both external threats (the aliens) and internal betrayal (Taltalian’s sabotage).
Space Security is the unseen but omnipotent force behind the conspiracy in this event. Its influence is felt through Taltalian’s sabotage, the anonymous threat against Liz Shaw, and the broader institutional obstruction of the rescue mission. General Carrington, as the head of Space Security, is referenced directly by Taltalian as the one who ordered the sabotage. The organization’s goals—seizing alien technology and eliminating extraterrestrial threats—are advanced through covert actions, including the abduction of astronauts and the threat of violence against the Doctor’s allies. Its power dynamics in this event are those of a shadowy, authoritarian force, willing to use both bureaucratic and violent means to achieve its objectives.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"The Doctor confronts Taltalian then seeks to use the Space Centre computer, leading to Taltalian's obstruction."
Doctor Exposes Taltalian’s Sabotage"The Doctor confronts Taltalian then seeks to use the Space Centre computer, leading to Taltalian's obstruction."
Doctor secures computer access despite threats"Taltalian sabotages the rocket under Carrington's orders, foreshadowing his later involvement in the conspiracy."
Doctor Exposes Taltalian’s Sabotage"Taltalian sabotages the rocket under Carrington's orders, foreshadowing his later involvement in the conspiracy."
Doctor secures computer access despite threats"The Doctor confronts Taltalian then seeks to use the Space Centre computer, leading to Taltalian's obstruction."
Doctor secures computer access despite threats"The Doctor confronts Taltalian then seeks to use the Space Centre computer, leading to Taltalian's obstruction."
Doctor Exposes Taltalian’s Sabotage"The threatening phone call makes the Doctor more suspicious of Taltalian, leading to the Doctor confronting him again in the computer room in the next act."
Doctor accuses Taltalian of betrayal"The Doctor uses the computer to decipher impulse records while simultaneously showing concern for his missing assistant."
Doctor challenges Taltalian’s cover story"The Doctor uses the computer to decipher impulse records while simultaneously showing concern for his missing assistant."
Doctor demands equipment while probing Shaw’s fate"Taltalian sabotages the rocket under Carrington's orders, foreshadowing his later involvement in the conspiracy."
Doctor Exposes Taltalian’s Sabotage"Taltalian sabotages the rocket under Carrington's orders, foreshadowing his later involvement in the conspiracy."
Doctor secures computer access despite threatsKey Dialogue
"TALTALIAN: "I was ordered to do that by General Carrington. I have computed the assembly of the rescue rocket as you asked me.""
"DOCTOR: "My assistant, Liz Shaw.""
"DOCTOR: "No. Someone threatening to kill her if I don’t stop interfering.""