Hindle enslaves first Kinda with mirror
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Hindle releases the Kinda from their cage and uses a hexagonal mirror to influence them, leading them to kneel before him. This demonstrates his control over the Kinda and marks a shift in power dynamics.
One Kinda removes his helix necklace and gives it to Hindle, signifying a transfer of loyalty or control. Hindle expresses satisfaction with the Kinda's response.
The Kinda kneel on either side of Hindle after he sits down, solidifying his control over them. This physical arrangement underscores Hindle's dominance.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Catatonic shock, mental dissociation, and involuntary deference to overwhelming human imposition
The two Kinda individuals stand initially inert, their telepathic defenses pierced by the mirror’s glare. One mechanically removes his helix necklace and hands it over, surrendering his spiritual essence. Both then kneel in rigid compliance, their bodies mirroring Hindle’s seated authority—physically embodying the collapse of their communal autonomy.
- • To survive the immediate confrontation without further psychic violation
- • To conform to perceived expectations to minimize inflicted harm
- • Resistance invites greater punishment or psychic penetration
- • Their shared mental structure offers no protection against sustained human scrutiny
Cold mastery masking deep insecurity and hunger for validation
Hindle wields the hexagonal mirror with deliberate precision, directing its reflections at the Kinda prisoners to probe and destabilize their telepathic resistance. His satisfaction is palpable as he receives the helix necklace, a trophy of broken will, and assumes lordly posture by sitting while the Kinda kneel beside him.
- • To assert absolute control over the Kinda captives using any means necessary
- • To reinforce his perceived authority among his human colleagues
- • The Kinda’s mental openness can and must be weaponized to maintain order
- • Submission equals safety and superiority in an alien environment
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The confinement cage contains the two Kinda prisoners whose minds Hindle begins to unravel. Their release initiates the sequence of telepathic assault and ritual surrender. The bars that once confined are now symbolic of feigned containment; the real constraint is the shattered mental autonomy induced by the mirror.
A laboratory chair, previously overturned during Hindle’s earlier tantrum, is righted by one Kinda and positioned for Hindle to sit. Its upright state symbolizes the temporary reinstatement of order and hierarchy—until the moment Hindle chooses dominance over collaboration.
Hindle employs the hexagonal mirror as a psychological weapon, directing its reflective surfaces into the eyes of the Kinda captives to intrude upon and fracture their telepathic cohesion. The mirror’s distortions become a conduit for psychic domination. After receiving the helix necklace, Hindle sets it aside, transferring its symbolic power to his authority.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The Deva Loka Research Laboratory becomes the theater of Hindle’s triumph, its sterile precision overwhelmed by alien psychic invasion. The spacious dome houses the cleared cage, now a void of failed containment, while human technology flickers around the now kneeling Kinda. Emergency lighting exaggerates angular shadows, reflecting the jagged morality of the moment.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"After smashing plant samples and overturning chairs (beat_756ffff8ea0e8709), Hindle’s sudden calm use of a hexagonal mirror to groom himself (beat_756ffff8ea0e8709) directly precedes and motivates him to use it on the Kinda, leading to his psychological domination over them (beat_421dd51920ef4945). The tool of self-image becomes an instrument of control."
Hindle destroys lab in violent tantrum"After smashing plant samples and overturning chairs (beat_756ffff8ea0e8709), Hindle’s sudden calm use of a hexagonal mirror to groom himself (beat_756ffff8ea0e8709) directly precedes and motivates him to use it on the Kinda, leading to his psychological domination over them (beat_421dd51920ef4945). The tool of self-image becomes an instrument of control."
Hindle sees the Kinda in his reflection"Sanders’ decision to leave in the Total Survival Suit and name Hindle in charge (beat_d9a46b475c9df44b) escalates Hindle’s authority. This is immediately followed by Hindle’s use of the hexagonal mirror to control the Kinda (beat_421dd51920ef4945), showing how power vacuums and delegation unleash instability and malevolent control."
Sanders strips Doctor of authority"Sanders’ decision to leave in the Total Survival Suit and name Hindle in charge (beat_d9a46b475c9df44b) escalates Hindle’s authority. This is immediately followed by Hindle’s use of the hexagonal mirror to control the Kinda (beat_421dd51920ef4945), showing how power vacuums and delegation unleash instability and malevolent control."
Adric accuses Sanders of Roberts’ fate"When a Kinda removes his helix necklace and gives it to Hindle (beat_1b0b77648e6b4c26), it symbolizes a transfer of psychological allegiance — mirroring Tegan’s later existential struggle to assert reality over illusion (beat_33e7edb8c59953b7), where 'truth' is not possession of an object but clarity of mind. Both moments involve surrender or loss of essence to a dominant force."
Tegan challenges Dukkha in the black void