Sarah presses McRanald on Tullock Moor
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Sarah questions Angus McRanald about his alleged vision of disaster for the oil company through a monitor, and McRanald responds evasively.
McRanald elaborates on the superstition surrounding Tullock Moor, describing it as a strange and dangerous place, especially at night.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Frustratedly pressing for truth while masking underlying urgency about the looming disaster
Sarah Jane Smith interrogates Angus McRanald via a monitor, her tone direct and skeptical as she challenges his cryptic warnings about Tullock Moor and the oil rig disasters, seeking concrete answers to local rumors.
- • Uncover the veracity of McRanald’s visions about disaster for the oil company
- • Extract concrete information about the threats to the local area
- • Local rumors and warnings should be treated with seriousness until proven false
- • Superstitious claims often mask real, tangible dangers
Guardedly deflecting but internally uneasy about revealing too much about the moor’s true dangers
Angus McRanald responds to Sarah’s interrogation with evasive folklore about Tullock Moor, deflecting direct answers with ominous warnings framed as local superstition, while his vocal tone carries a mix of earnestness and veiled menace.
- • Avoid admitting the full extent of his knowledge about the moor’s secrets
- • Warn Sarah indirectly about the perils without breaking his own code of secrecy
- • The moor’s truths are too dangerous to share openly, even with outsiders who may need to know
- • Superstition is a tool to protect both himself and the moor from modern exploiters
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The Zygon command ship serves as the setting where Sarah confronts McRanald via a monitor, its monitor casting eerie green light that underscores the alien presence mediating their tense exchange and the obscured visibility of the moor’s dangers.
Tullock Moor is invoked as a locus of danger and mystery through McRanald’s warnings, its inhospitable nature and folkloric reputation framed as reasons for Sarah’s pursuit of answers about the oil rig disasters.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"The Zygon observation of the Doctor via monitor transmission (beat_9d06efa196f6d288) directly causes Broton to order the Doctor’s destruction (beat_372a9b7fd8985518), establishing global surveillance and instantaneous hostile response as core Zygon tactics."
Broton orders the Doctor's destruction"McRanald’s evocation of Tullock Moor as a 'dangerous place, especially at night' (beat_12b46feefef86c7d) parallels Sarah’s rational dismissal of 'evil spirits' as the cause of rig destruction (beat_c0ca8381e5dc367c), illustrating the tension between superstition and modernity that underpins the episode’s tone."
McRanald warns of Tullock Moor horrors"McRanald’s evocation of Tullock Moor as a 'dangerous place, especially at night' (beat_12b46feefef86c7d) parallels Sarah’s rational dismissal of 'evil spirits' as the cause of rig destruction (beat_c0ca8381e5dc367c), illustrating the tension between superstition and modernity that underpins the episode’s tone."
Sarah rejects local superstition with science