Fabula
S6E3 · The Dominators Part 3

Toba enforces Dulcian labor under Rago’s control

Toba, a Dominator enforcer, directs the captured Dulcians (Belen, Teel, and Kando) to forced labor at a drilling site under Quark supervision, reinforcing the Dominators’ oppressive regime. Rago’s orders strip Toba of autonomy, demanding direct reports on any escape attempts, which exposes Toba’s subordinate role and escalates the Dominators’ control over the Dulcians. The exchange underscores the Dominators’ strategic exploitation of Dulcian labor while highlighting Toba’s frustration at being constrained by Rago’s directives. This moment deepens the narrative tension by illustrating the Dulcians’ vulnerability and the Dominators’ calculated brutality, setting up future resistance efforts by Zoe and others.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

2

Toba directs the captured Dulcians, Belen, Teel, and Kando, taken away by a Quark, to a drilling site for slave labor. He receives orders from Rago to monitor their work performance and report any escape attempts.

command to acceptance

Rago warns Toba against taking personal action if any Dulcians escape, emphasizing the importance of reporting directly to him. Toba acknowledges the command.

warning to resignation

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

5
Belen
primary

Emotional shutdown, with a hollow acceptance of her role as a labor unit.

Belen walks alongside Kando and Teel, her movements mechanical and her expression blank. Like Kando, she offers no resistance, her Dulcian conditioning rendering her incapable of defiance. The Quark’s command to 'Move' is obeyed without hesitation, her body language suggesting a complete surrender to the Dominators’ will. Belen’s silence is a testament to the Dulcians’ collective trauma, where even the thought of rebellion has been erased by fear and cultural doctrine.

Goals in this moment
  • To endure the forced labor without drawing attention to herself.
  • To avoid any action that might provoke the Dominators’ wrath.
Active beliefs
  • That resistance is impossible and morally wrong under Dulcian law.
  • That survival depends on absolute obedience to the Dominators.
Character traits
Mechanically compliant Emotionally detached Culturally conditioned to submission Physically drained
Follow Belen's journey

Numb resignation, tinged with a quiet despair at the loss of agency and the betrayal of Dulcian pacifism.

Kando is led away by the Quark, her posture slumped in resigned acceptance of her fate. She does not resist or speak, her silence speaking volumes about the Dulcians’ cultural aversion to violence and their helplessness under Dominator control. Her compliance is not born of strength but of a pacified spirit, broken by the inevitability of forced labor. The Quark’s mechanical command—'Move'—further underscores her objectification, reducing her to a unit in the Dominators’ machinery of exploitation.

Goals in this moment
  • To survive the ordeal without provoking further punishment.
  • To maintain her cultural identity amid oppression, even in silence.
Active beliefs
  • That resistance is futile and morally reprehensible under Dulcian law.
  • That compliance, no matter how demeaning, is the only path to preservation.
Character traits
Passively compliant Emotionally subdued Culturally conditioned to avoid resistance Physically and mentally exhausted
Follow Kando's journey

Calculating and detached, with a subtle undercurrent of disdain for Toba’s lack of restraint.

Rago dominates the interaction from a position of unquestioned authority, his voice steady and unyielding as he dictates the terms of the Dulcians’ exploitation. He corrects Toba’s impulse to act independently with a sharp reprimand, reinforcing the Dominators’ protocol of strategic control over impulsive violence. His focus on 'work potential and stamina' reveals his reductionist view of the Dulcians—as data points to be analyzed, not sentient beings. Rago’s demeanor is that of a cold bureaucrat of oppression, where efficiency outweighs empathy.

Goals in this moment
  • To ensure the Dulcians are assessed and exploited as labor resources without waste.
  • To reinforce the Dominators’ chain of command by suppressing Toba’s impulsivity.
Active beliefs
  • That sentient beings are only valuable as functional labor units.
  • That strict hierarchy and protocol prevent inefficiency in conquest.
Character traits
Strategically pragmatic Unyielding in authority Reductionist in his view of sentient life Disciplined in enforcing protocol
Follow Rago's journey
Teel
primary

Simmering resentment beneath a facade of compliance, with a spark of nascent rebellion.

Teel is herded alongside Belen and Kando, her steps slow but unresisting. Unlike her companions, her eyes flicker with a barely suppressed tension, hinting at an internal conflict—her Dulcian conditioning warring with a growing awareness of the injustice she faces. She does not speak, but her body language suggests a quiet defiance, a flicker of the resistance that will later manifest in her alliance with Zoe and Cully. The Quark’s command to 'Move' is obeyed, but her compliance is not as absolute as the others’, foreshadowing her eventual break from pacifism.

Goals in this moment
  • To survive the immediate ordeal while assessing opportunities for resistance.
  • To maintain her Dulcian identity without fully surrendering to oppression.
Active beliefs
  • That pacifism may not be the only path to survival, though she hasn’t yet acted on this.
  • That the Dominators’ exploitation is unjust, but she lacks the means to challenge it—yet.
Character traits
Quietly defiant Internally conflicted Culturally conditioned but questioning Physically present but mentally resistant
Follow Teel's journey

Resentfully compliant, with a simmering desire for autonomy masked by rigid professionalism.

Toba stands in the Dominators' saucer, issuing orders to the Quark with a mix of authority and restrained frustration. His posture is rigid, his voice clipped, as he directs the Dulcians to forced labor. When Rago interrupts to assert control, Toba’s brief hesitation before compliance reveals his internal conflict—eagerness to enforce brutality clashing with the need to defer to his superior. His final 'Command accepted' is delivered with a tight-lipped precision, masking his irritation at being reined in.

Goals in this moment
  • To assert control over the Dulcians as laborers, aligning with Dominator objectives.
  • To regain personal agency in enforcing orders, despite Rago’s restrictions.
Active beliefs
  • That brute force is the most effective tool for subjugation.
  • That Rago’s strategic approach is unnecessarily restrictive, though he must obey.
Character traits
Authoritative but constrained Eager to enforce dominance Frustrated by hierarchical limits Disciplined in compliance
Follow Toba's journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

1
Dominators' Drilling Site Outside the Museum

The Dominators' drilling site is invoked as the destination for Belen, Teel, and Kando’s forced labor, symbolizing their reduction to expendable resources. Though not physically present in this scene, its mention looms as a harbinger of their impending suffering—a place where their stamina and work potential will be clinically assessed and exploited. The site represents the Dominators’ ultimate goal: the extraction of Dulkis’ resources through the backs of its pacified population, a grim metaphor for the dehumanization of labor under oppression.

Before: Operational and active, with Quarks supervising existing Dulcian …
After: Now slated to receive Belen, Teel, and Kando …
Before: Operational and active, with Quarks supervising existing Dulcian laborers under harsh conditions.
After: Now slated to receive Belen, Teel, and Kando as additional labor units, with their physical and mental limits to be recorded for analysis.

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

1
Dominators' Saucer Control Room

The Dominators’ saucer interior serves as the sterile, oppressive command center where the Dulcians’ fate is sealed. Its cold, clinical lighting and rigid architecture reflect the Dominators’ reductionist worldview, where sentient life is measured in terms of utility. The location functions as a stage for the Dominators’ hierarchical power dynamics, with Rago and Toba embodying the regime’s duality—strategic pragmatism and brute enforcement. The saucer’s atmosphere is one of controlled tension, where every word and gesture reinforces the Dominators’ authority and the Dulcians’ subjugation.

Atmosphere Oppressively clinical, with a palpable tension between the Dominators’ authority and the Dulcians’ silent despair. …
Function Command hub for the Dominators’ operations, where orders are issued, labor is assigned, and resistance …
Symbolism Represents the Dominators’ institutional power and the Dulcians’ loss of agency, a microcosm of their …
Access Restricted to Dominator personnel and captives under escort. The Dulcians are permitted only as prisoners …
Sterile, fluorescent lighting casting a harsh glow over the interaction. The hum of machinery and the occasional beep of Quark systems, underscoring the mechanical nature of the Dominators’ regime. The cold, metallic surfaces reflecting the Dominators’ indifference to the Dulcians’ suffering.

Organizations Involved

Institutional presence and influence

2
Dominator Command Structure

The Dominators are embodied in this event through Rago and Toba, who enforce their regime’s exploitative labor policies with clinical efficiency. Rago’s focus on 'work potential and stamina' reflects the organization’s reductionist view of sentient life, while Toba’s eagerness to send the Dulcians to the drilling site underscores their collective brutality. The exchange between Rago and Toba reveals internal tensions—strategic control versus impulsive enforcement—but ultimately reinforces the Dominators’ unified goal: the extraction of Dulkis’ resources through forced labor, regardless of the cost to its people.

Representation Through the direct actions and dialogue of Rago and Toba, who embody the organization’s hierarchical …
Power Dynamics Exercising absolute authority over the Dulcians, with internal hierarchies (Rago over Toba) ensuring operational efficiency. …
Impact The Dominators’ actions in this event solidify their occupation of Dulkis, setting a precedent for …
Internal Dynamics A tension between strategic pragmatism (Rago) and brute enforcement (Toba) emerges, revealing the Dominators’ dual …
To assess and exploit the Dulcians’ physical and mental capacities for labor, treating them as resources rather than individuals. To suppress any potential resistance by reinforcing hierarchical control and dehumanizing the captives through forced compliance. Hierarchical authority, where Rago’s orders are obeyed without question by Toba. Mechanical enforcement via Quarks, which ensure the Dulcians’ compliance through indifferent supervision. Psychological oppression, reducing the Dulcians to passive labor units through cultural conditioning and fear.
Dulcians

The Dulcians are represented in this event through the silent compliance of Belen, Kando, and the nascent defiance of Teel. Their organization’s pacifist ideology is tested as they are reduced to labor units, their cultural values clashing with the Dominators’ brutality. Kando and Belen embody the organization’s conditioned submission, while Teel’s internal conflict foreshadows the fracture in Dulcian unity that will later drive resistance. The event underscores the Dulcians’ vulnerability, as their lack of military capability or will to fight leaves them at the mercy of the Dominators’ exploitation.

Representation Through the physical presence and passive resistance (or compliance) of Belen, Teel, and Kando, who …
Power Dynamics Being systematically disempowered by the Dominators, with no agency to resist or negotiate. Their organization’s …
Impact The Dominators’ actions in this event accelerate the erosion of Dulcian pacifism, as the organization’s …
Internal Dynamics A fracture is emerging within the Dulcians, with Teel’s quiet defiance contrasting sharply with the …
To survive the immediate threat of forced labor without provoking further punishment, adhering to pacifist principles. To maintain cultural identity and unity, even in the face of oppression, though this is increasingly difficult as seen in Teel’s quiet defiance. Cultural conditioning, which has instilled a deep aversion to violence, making resistance seem impossible or immoral. Collective trauma, as the Dulcians’ belief in their planet’s invulnerability is shattered by the Dominators’ invasion. Symbolic resistance, with Teel’s internal conflict hinting at a future break from pacifism, though she has not yet acted.

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

What led here 1

"Rago orders the Dulcians to work on a drilling site to determine their survival rate. This leads to Toba directing the captured Dulcians to the site so they can be slave labor."

Dominators Deem Dulcians Slave Labor
S6E3 · The Dominators Part 3
What this causes 1

"Rago warns Toba against acting personally, furthering Rago's goal to assess the Dulcians and leading to the Quark reporting the Dulcians' fatigue with Zoe being the outlier."

Rago’s psychological assessment of Dulcian prisoners
S6E3 · The Dominators Part 3

Part of Larger Arcs

Key Dialogue

"TOBA: Take them to the others."
"RAGO: Work potential and stamina to be recorded and sent for analysis."
"TOBA: Agreed. If any of them should escape"
"RAGO: Then you will report the fact to me. No personal action. Toba!"
"TOBA: Command accepted."