Lesterson gains unchecked Dalek control
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Lesterson requests a permanent guard for his laboratory, and after the Doctor and Ben leave, Bragen reassures Lesterson that he will keep the Examiner quiet.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
A mix of anger and fear—he is angry at Lesterson's arrogance and Hensell's weakness, but his fear is for the colony's future (and his own safety). His 'Huh' as he leaves mirrors the Doctor's, but with less resignation and more simmering outrage.
Ben, wide-eyed and incredulous, reacts viscerally to Lesterson's dismissal of the Daleks' threat. His outburst ('Are you off your head, mate? Those two are armed!') is a gut-level response to the colony's recklessness. He supports the Doctor's warnings but is visibly frustrated by the leadership's refusal to listen. When the Doctor leaves, Ben follows without hesitation, his loyalty to his companion (and his own survival instinct) overriding any desire to argue further. His body language is tense, his voice laced with disbelief.
- • Convince the colony leadership to take the Dalek threat seriously
- • Stay close to the Doctor (for safety and strategic support)
- • The Daleks are an immediate, lethal threat (not a 'tool')
- • Hensell and Lesterson are making a catastrophic mistake
Coldly calculating—he is neither flustered nor emotional, treating the situation as a tactical opportunity. His confidence stems from his belief that he can control the narrative (and the Examiner) through force or coercion.
Bragen, ever the opportunist, seizes the moment Hensell leaves. His line ('Don't worry about the Examiner. I think I can keep him quiet.') is a chilling subtext: he is willing to silence dissent—possibly through force—to protect Lesterson's experiments. His calm, measured tone contrasts with the tension in the room, revealing his ruthless pragmatism. He does not argue; he acts, reassuring Lesterson with the implicit threat of violence. His role as Hensell's delegate solidifies his grip on the colony's security apparatus.
- • Secure Lesterson's unchecked access to the Daleks (and by extension, his own power)
- • Neutralize potential threats (e.g., the Examiner, the Doctor, rebels)
- • Dissent can and should be suppressed for the 'greater good' (i.e., his ambition)
- • The Daleks are a means to an end—his end
Frustrated and emotionally drained, masking his insecurity with abrupt authority—his decision to grant Lesterson unchecked power is a desperate bid to restore control, not a calculated risk.
Governor Hensell, visibly frustrated by the escalating debate, abruptly shuts down the Doctor's warnings with a dismissive wave. He grants Lesterson carte blanche over the Daleks—a decision driven by exhaustion and misplaced confidence in Lesterson's scientific authority. Before leaving to tour the perimeter, he delegates full operational control to Bragen, effectively ceding his own authority in a moment of weak leadership. His body language (slumped shoulders, sharp gestures) betrays his emotional state: a man overwhelmed by the conflict and eager to escape it.
- • End the argument and restore order in the office
- • Reassert his authority by siding with Lesterson (whom he perceives as competent and loyal)
- • Lesterson can be trusted to handle the Daleks safely (despite evidence to the contrary)
- • The Doctor's warnings are exaggerated or emotionally driven (not grounded in reality)
Coldly confident, bordering on smug—his emotional state is one of intellectual superiority, reinforced by Hensell's surrender of authority. He feels vindicated, not threatened, by the Daleks' reactivation.
Lesterson stands defiantly, his posture rigid with confidence as he dismisses the Doctor's warnings. He counters Ben's outrage with a calm, technical solution ('turn off the electricity'), revealing his arrogance: he believes the Daleks are tools, not threats. When Hensell grants him carte blanche, he seizes the moment, immediately requesting a 'permanent guard' for his laboratory—a demand that underscores his paranoia about sabotage. His dialogue is clipped, authoritative, and laced with condescension toward the Doctor's 'hysteria.'
- • Secure unchecked authority over the Daleks to continue his experiments
- • Isolate his laboratory from potential sabotage (e.g., by the Doctor or rebels)
- • The Daleks can be controlled through technical means (e.g., cutting power)
- • The Doctor's warnings are based on fear, not facts
Not applicable (as an AI entity), but their intent is clear: cold, genocidal supremacy. The humans' blind trust in their control is exactly what the Daleks anticipated.
The Daleks are referenced indirectly but loom large over the scene. Their reactivation is treated as a given—Lesterson casually admits he was 'going to do that anyway,' and Ben's outburst ('Those two are armed!') confirms they are already operational. The Doctor's warnings about their sentience and lethality are ignored, reinforcing the Daleks' role as an unseen, manipulative force. Their absence from the room makes their presence more ominous: they are the elephant in the room, the inevitable doom the humans refuse to acknowledge.
- • Consolidate power through Lesterson's authority
- • Exploit the colony's technical vulnerabilities (e.g., power supply)
- • Humans are inferior and can be easily manipulated
- • Their reactivation is inevitable—resistance is futile
A mix of exasperation and dread—he is emotionally exhausted by the colony's refusal to listen, but his primary emotion is a deep, gnawing fear for what is to come. His 'Huh' is not just disbelief; it's a quiet acknowledgment of impending genocide.
The Doctor, his voice rising with urgency, pleads with Hensell and Lesterson to destroy the Daleks, not control them. His arguments are met with dismissal, and his frustration is palpable as he realizes the colony's leadership is willfully blind. When Hensell grants Lesterson carte blanche, the Doctor's expression darkens—he knows this is a death sentence for the colony. He leaves the office abruptly, followed by Ben, his body language tense with resignation. His final line ('Huh.') is laced with bitter irony, acknowledging the colony's doomed fate.
- • Convince Hensell and Lesterson to destroy the Daleks before it's too late
- • Expose the Daleks' sentience as a direct threat (not a tool)
- • The Daleks cannot be controlled—they will turn on their human 'masters'
- • Hensell and Lesterson are making a fatal mistake by trusting in technology over survival
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The thick power cable is the linchpin of the Daleks' reactivation, though it is referenced indirectly in this scene. Lesterson's casual admission ('I was going to do that anyway') confirms that he has already connected the colony's power supply to the Dalek capsule—a decision that enabled their self-reactivation. The Doctor's warning ('the Dalek must have used your power supply') is ignored, but the cable's existence is implied as the mechanism by which the Daleks gained sentience and armed themselves. Its role here is symbolic: it represents the colony's blind trust in technology, and the Daleks' exploitation of that trust.
The Daleks' weapons are referenced directly by Ben ('Those two are armed!'), confirming their operational status. Though not physically present in the Governor's office, their armed state is the catalyst for the Doctor and Ben's urgency. Lesterson dismisses their lethality with a technical solution ('turn off the electricity'), but the weapons serve as a narrative ticking clock: they are the embodiment of the Daleks' genocidal intent, and their existence is the colony's blind spot. The objects' role here is to underscore the inevitability of violence—once the Daleks are armed, it is only a matter of time before they turn on their 'masters.'
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The Governor's office is the epicenter of the colony's fatal misjudgment, a space where institutional power is wielded—and squandered. The room's atmosphere is thick with tension: the Doctor and Ben plead for destruction, Lesterson counters with scientific arrogance, and Hensell's frustration boils over into a reckless decision. The office's formal, authoritative setting (desks, chairs, colony insignia) contrasts with the chaos of the debate, symbolizing the colony's crumbling order. The location's role is to frame the surrender of authority: Hensell's departure and Bragen's assumption of control mark the transfer of power from governance to ambition.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
The Colony Leadership Council is the institutional body whose failure of judgment dooms the colony. In this scene, its representation is fragmented: Hensell (as Governor) abdicates authority, Lesterson (as Chief Scientist) seizes it, and Bragen (as Security Chief) enables the power shift. The Council's collective voice is silenced—there is no debate, no checks and balances, only Hensell's frustrated decree. The organization's role here is to illustrate how institutional inertia and individual ambition combine to override survival instincts. Its presence is felt in the room's dynamics: the Doctor and Ben are outsiders, their warnings treated as irrelevancies.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Bragen promises to keep the Examiner quiet for Lesterson (beat_8a834e9ed75943c3), and later reveals he is NOT the Examiner, which provides context to the Doctor to deduce that Bragen killed the real Examiner. (beat_5791b31d4ceb5012)"
Bragen Accuses the Doctor of Impersonation"Bragen promises to keep the Examiner quiet for Lesterson (beat_8a834e9ed75943c3), and later reveals he is NOT the Examiner, which provides context to the Doctor to deduce that Bragen killed the real Examiner. (beat_5791b31d4ceb5012)"
Bragen Exposes His Guilt and Threatens the Doctor"Bragen promises to keep the Examiner quiet for Lesterson (beat_8a834e9ed75943c3), and later reveals he is NOT the Examiner, which provides context to the Doctor to deduce that Bragen killed the real Examiner. (beat_5791b31d4ceb5012)"
Polly’s Kidnapping and Bragen’s ThreatThemes This Exemplifies
Thematic resonance and meaning
Key Dialogue
"DOCTOR: But if you didn't do it, Lesterson, then the Dalek must have used your power supply and reactivated the others itself."
"LESTERSON: I was going to do that anyway."
"BEN: Are you off your head, mate? Those two are armed!"
"HENSELL: Stop these arguments, both of you. I've had enough. I've every confidence in Lesterson. He has carte blanche for the Daleks from now on."
"BRAGEN: Don't worry about the Examiner. I think I can keep him quiet."