Doctor publicly humiliates Stahlman
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Stahlman dismisses the deaths of three men as unrelated to his project, refusing to take responsibility and rejecting the Doctor's authority in the establishment which angers Gold and the Brigadier.
The Doctor enters to question the lack of attention given to the computer's warnings, sparking an argument with Gold, who defends his own calculations as more reliable.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Deeply concerned and frustrated, struggling to maintain control over a situation that is spiraling due to Stahlman's arrogance and the Doctor's confrontational approach.
The Brigadier attempts to mediate the escalating confrontation between Stahlman, Gold, and the Doctor, seeking decisions on the mounting deaths and project safety. His tone is authoritative but increasingly frustrated as Stahlman deflects responsibility and the Doctor's provocative entrance derails the discussion. He remains centered in the room, physically and verbally, but his efforts to restore order are undermined by the clashing egos around him.
- • Restore order and obtain clear decisions on how to address the mounting deaths and project safety.
- • Prevent the confrontation from escalating further, while ensuring that the dangers are not ignored or dismissed.
- • The deaths are directly tied to the project's operations and require immediate attention and accountability.
- • Stahlman's refusal to take responsibility is both unprofessional and dangerous, but the Doctor's provocative approach risks making the situation worse.
Frustrated and conflicted, torn between his duty to uphold safety protocols and his reluctance to directly challenge Stahlman's authority, which he knows could escalate tensions further.
Gold enters the scene already frustrated, defending the Doctor's calculations and criticizing Stahlman's dismissiveness. He challenges Stahlman's refusal to take responsibility for the deaths, highlighting the Doctor's efficiency and the unreliability of Stahlman's stance. His demeanor is conflicted—angry at Stahlman's arrogance but reluctant to fully challenge his authority, leaving him in a tense mediating role between the Brigadier, Stahlman, and the Doctor.
- • Defend the Doctor's expertise and calculations to highlight the dangers Stahlman is ignoring.
- • Press Stahlman to take responsibility for the deaths and acknowledge the project's risks, while avoiding a direct confrontation that could destabilize the project.
- • The Doctor's calculations are more reliable and efficient than Stahlman's dismissive attitude, and ignoring them is a direct threat to the project's safety.
- • Stahlman's refusal to acknowledge the deaths and warnings is both unethical and dangerous, but challenging him directly could lead to further resistance or retaliation.
Defensively arrogant, masking deep insecurity about his competence and authority, which erupts into fury when challenged by the Doctor.
Stahlman begins the event by dismissing the mounting deaths as a 'personnel problem,' refusing any responsibility and deflecting blame to the medical or security sections. He escalates the conflict by mocking the Doctor's authority and insisting his own work is superior, even when Gold points out the Doctor's efficiency. His demeanor is arrogant and dismissive, but his composure cracks when the Doctor publicly insults him, leaving him visibly infuriated and retreating abruptly when summoned by Petra.
- • Maintain control over the project and deflect responsibility for the deaths to preserve his authority and the project's timeline.
- • Undermine the Doctor's credibility and assert his own superiority to reassert dominance in the room.
- • The deaths are unrelated to the technical operations and thus not his responsibility, allowing him to focus solely on the project's success.
- • The Doctor's calculations, though efficient, are irrelevant compared to his own expertise and the project's priorities.
Righteously indignant with a hint of exasperation, masking deeper concern for the project's safety and the lives at stake.
The Doctor enters the Brigadier's office mid-confrontation, immediately seizing control of the dialogue with a provocative question about the computer's warnings. He mocks Gold's calculations and the computer's reliability, then escalates the conflict by publicly humiliating Stahlman with the insult 'nitwit.' His physical presence is commanding, his tone sharp and confrontational, and his actions are deliberately disruptive, aiming to expose the arrogance and incompetence he perceives in Stahlman.
- • Expose Stahlman's arrogance and incompetence to force a reckoning with the project's dangers.
- • Assert his authority and expertise despite Stahlman's dismissal of him, using humiliation as a tool to disrupt the status quo.
- • Stahlman's refusal to acknowledge the deaths and warnings is a direct threat to the project's safety and the lives of those involved.
- • The computer's data and his own calculations are more reliable than Stahlman's dismissive attitude and Gold's deferential stance.
Anxious and conflicted, torn between her loyalty to Stahlman and the growing awareness of the dangers and tensions in the room.
Petra enters the scene abruptly, interrupting the escalating confrontation to summon Stahlman away. Her presence is brief but urgent, and her intervention acts as a de-escalation point, pulling Stahlman out of the room before further conflict can unfold. Her tone is insistent, and her action suggests she is aware of the gravity of the situation and the need to redirect Stahlman's attention.
- • Interrupt the confrontation to prevent further escalation and redirect Stahlman's focus to more pressing matters.
- • Maintain professional decorum and loyalty to Stahlman while subtly acknowledging the urgency of the situation.
- • Stahlman's authority must be preserved, but the project's safety and the mounting deaths cannot be ignored.
- • Her intervention is necessary to maintain order and prevent a breakdown in communication or authority.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The Central Control Computer Terminal is referenced indirectly as a symbolic tool in the conflict, with the Doctor questioning its reliability and Gold dismissing its warnings as 'over-sensitive.' The terminal serves as a narrative device highlighting the tension between data-driven caution (represented by the Doctor and the computer) and Stahlman's dismissive arrogance. Its role in the scene is to underscore the disregard for critical warnings, which foreshadows the impending disaster.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The Brigadier's office serves as a tense meeting ground where the clashing priorities of the project's stakeholders—scientific arrogance, military authority, and moral urgency—collide. The confined space amplifies the confrontation, with the Doctor's entrance and insult to Stahlman creating a dramatic focal point. The office's formal setting contrasts with the heated emotions, underscoring the institutional power dynamics at play and the personal stakes involved in the project's outcome.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
The Inferno Project is embodied in Stahlman's defiant stance and the broader institutional dynamics at play. His refusal to acknowledge the deaths as his responsibility reflects the project's toxic hierarchy, where technical priorities override ethical concerns. The organization's goals—drilling for crustal energy at any cost—are directly challenged by the Doctor's warnings and the mounting deaths, creating a narrative tension between progress and safety.
The Medical Section is referenced by Stahlman as another organizational scapegoat for the deaths, framing them as 'personnel problems' outside his technical purview. This deflection underscores the project's fragmented accountability, where critical incidents are pushed to other sections to preserve the technical team's focus and authority. The Medical Section's role in this event is symbolic, representing the institutional mechanisms that enable the dismissal of warnings and the prioritization of project goals over human safety.
The Security Section is invoked by Stahlman as a tool to deflect responsibility for the deaths, framing them as 'personnel problems' outside his technical jurisdiction. This organizational maneuver underscores the compartmentalization of risks within the project, where safety concerns are sidelined to preserve operational continuity. The section's role in this event is passive but critical, as it enables Stahlman to avoid accountability and maintain focus on the project's technical goals.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Stahlman dismisses the deaths, then retaliates against the Doctor by cutting off his power, further showcasing his hubris and escalating conflict."
Stahlman defies all warnings to accelerate drilling"Stahlman dismisses the deaths, then retaliates against the Doctor by cutting off his power, further showcasing his hubris and escalating conflict."
Stahlman sabotages the Doctor’s power"Stahlman dismisses the deaths, then retaliates against the Doctor by cutting off his power, further showcasing his hubris and escalating conflict."
Stahlman’s Defiance and Gold’s ApologyKey Dialogue
"STAHLMAN: But surely, Brigadier, this matter comes under the jurisdiction of the medical section, or security? It's a personnel problem. It's got nothing whatsoever to do with the technical side of this operation."
"DOCTOR: That you, sir, are a nitwit!"
"GOLD: His calculations on initial stresses were invaluable to this project. Without them..."
"STAHLMAN: I would have come to the same conclusion."