Harris assumes crisis command in Control Hall
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Harris, having apparently taken charge, directs Price to alert security posts and orders the emergency air vents to remain closed, suggesting Robson is incapacitated and the situation is dire.
Van Lutyens observes that Harris is taking over, and Harris confirms Robson is still officially in charge but then directs Price to contact Board Headquarters to speak with Megan Jones, suggesting a power shift and escalation to higher authorities.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Tense calm masking internal conflict—his professional demeanor barely conceals the weight of usurping Robson’s role, especially as Van Lutyens’ pressure forces him to escalate.
Harris stands at the center of the Control Hall, his posture rigid but his voice measured as he issues directives to Price. His orders—alerting security about Robson’s potential illness and sealing the emergency air vents—are delivered with a mix of authority and hesitation. When Van Lutyens challenges his assumption of command, Harris deflects briefly ('Robson is still officially in charge'), but his subsequent call to Board Headquarters signals his reluctant acceptance of leadership. His hands may be steady, but his internal conflict is palpable: loyalty to Robson wars with the urgency of the crisis.
- • Secure the refinery by locating Robson and containing the threat (vents, seaweed, gas).
- • Maintain corporate protocol while navigating the power vacuum left by Robson’s absence.
- • Robson’s leadership, though flawed, is the 'rightful' chain of command—even if he’s incapacitated.
- • The crisis demands decisive action, but overstepping risks corporate repercussions (e.g., Megan Jones’ scrutiny).
Urgent frustration—his calm exterior belies a simmering irritation at Harris’s hesitation, which he sees as a delay that could cost lives. He’s the voice of reason in a room where protocol is paralyzing.
Van Lutyens looms at the periphery of the Control Hall, his gaze sharp as he watches Harris hesitate. His intervention—'You're taking over then?'—is a direct challenge, exposing Harris’s reluctance. When Harris defers to Robson’s 'official' authority, Van Lutyens counters with urgency: 'I've already informed my authorities at the Hague. You must do the same with your Director in London.' His tone is insistent, bordering on accusatory, as he pushes Harris to escalate the response. Van Lutyens’ body language suggests impatience; he’s a man used to being ignored until crises demand action.
- • Force Harris to take full command and contact London, bypassing Robson’s failure.
- • Ensure the refinery’s response aligns with regulatory standards (Hague’s involvement as leverage).
- • Harris is capable but needs prodding to act—loyalty to Robson is misplaced in a crisis.
- • Corporate oversight (London/Board HQ) is necessary to counter Robson’s negligence.
Irrelevant in this moment—his absence is a void Harris must fill, but his 'official' status creates tension. The subtext suggests Robson’s pride or stubbornness led to this crisis.
Robson is absent from the Control Hall but looms large as the 'official' authority Harris defers to. His potential illness (mentioned by Harris) and the unspoken failure of his leadership hang over the scene. The orders Harris gives—sealing vents, alerting security—are implicitly critiques of Robson’s prior inaction. Van Lutyens’ reference to 'my authorities at the Hague' contrasts with Robson’s corporate blind spots, reinforcing his irrelevance in this moment.
- • None (absent/incapacitated), but his prior actions (or inactions) drove the need for this power shift.
- • Implicitly: Maintain corporate control (which Harris now undermines by acting).
- • The refinery’s systems can handle crises without external intervention (proven wrong).
- • Deference to hierarchy is more important than adaptive leadership.
Neutral professionalism—his demeanor suggests he’s seen this before: leadership vacuums, last-minute orders, the tension of a crisis. He’s the steady hand that doesn’t question, only executes.
Price stands at his console in the Control Hall, a paragon of compliance. He receives Harris’s orders with quiet efficiency: 'Very good, sir' to the vent closure, 'Yes, sir' to the Board HQ contact. His role is purely functional—relaying commands, confirming actions—but his presence is the backbone of the response. There’s no hesitation in his voice, no judgment of Harris’s reluctant authority. He is the mechanism that makes Harris’s directives real.
- • Ensure Harris’s orders are carried out without delay (vents closed, security alerted, London contacted).
- • Maintain operational continuity amid the power shift.
- • His job is to follow orders, not question them—even if they come from a reluctant leader.
- • The refinery’s systems are only as strong as the people managing them (hence his compliance).
Megan Jones is not physically present in the Control Hall, but her authority is invoked when Harris orders Price to …
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The emergency air vents become the tangible symbol of Harris’s shifting authority. His order to 'keep their emergency air vents closed' is both a practical measure (containing the seaweed/gas threat) and a metaphor for the refinery’s suffocating crisis. Price’s confirmation ('Yes, sir') turns the vents from passive safety features into active tools of control. Their closure is a physical manifestation of Harris’s reluctant command—sealing off not just air, but the facility’s vulnerabilities. The vents’ state (closed) reflects the tension: containment vs. asphyxiation, order vs. panic.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The Control Hall is the nerve center of the crisis, a claustrophobic arena where power shifts play out in real time. Its humming machinery and flashing alarms create a sensory overload that mirrors the characters’ stress. Harris’s orders echo off the consoles, Van Lutyens’ challenges cut through the noise, and Price’s confirmations ground the chaos. The hall’s layout—consoles lining the walls, leaders clustered—forces intimacy; there’s no escaping the tension. It’s a place of institutional authority, but also of fragility: one wrong order, and the refinery (and lives) could unravel.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
The Dutch Authorities at the Hague are invoked by Van Lutyens as leverage to pressure Harris. His line—'I've already informed my authorities at the Hague'—positions the Hague as a regulatory counterweight to London’s corporate oversight. The Hague’s involvement suggests external scrutiny of the refinery’s crisis, implying that Van Lutyens has already escalated the situation beyond Robson’s control. This creates a power triangle: Harris (local), Board HQ (corporate), and the Hague (regulatory). Van Lutyens uses the Hague as a tool to force Harris’s hand, exposing the fragility of Robson’s leadership.
The Board Headquarters is the distant but looming authority that Harris invokes by ordering Price to contact Megan Jones. Its involvement is procedural but critical: Harris’s call is both a report of the crisis and a test of his leadership. The Board represents corporate oversight, the 'higher power' that will ultimately judge whether Harris’s actions were justified or insubordinate. Van Lutyens’ mention of 'your Director in London' frames the Board as the counterbalance to the Hague’s regulatory pressure, creating a tug-of-war over how the crisis should be handled.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Van Lutyens urging Harris to take control results in Harris giving orders in the Control Hall, indicating he has assumed leadership."
Robson’s Collapse and Leadership Transfer"Van Lutyens urging Harris to take control results in Harris giving orders in the Control Hall, indicating he has assumed leadership."
Robson’s collapse and evacuation debate"Van Lutyens urging Harris to take control results in Harris giving orders in the Control Hall, indicating he has assumed leadership."
Robson’s Collapse and Leadership Crisis"Van Lutyens urges Harris to take control, and Harris subsequently directs Price to alert security posts, showing he is taking control."
Harris forced to abandon containment planThemes This Exemplifies
Thematic resonance and meaning
Part of Larger Arcs
Key Dialogue
"HARRIS: Price. PRICE: Yes, sir. HARRIS: I want you to alert the security posts. Mister Robson may be ill. I'd like to know his whereabouts."
"VAN LUTYENS: You're taking over then? HARRIS: Robson is still officially in charge."
"VAN LUTYENS: I've already informed my authorities at the Hague. You must do the same with your Director in London. HARRIS: Yes. Price? PRICE: Yes, sir. HARRIS: Get me Board Headquarters. I want to speak to Megan Jones."