Leela demands action against the Tesh
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Leela asks for help finding the Tesh, and the Doctor inquires about her knowledge of the Tesh's appearance.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Introspective and mildly defensive, masking guilt over the Mordee expedition with rapid analytic detachment when challenged
The Doctor halts his exploration of the psy-tri projection’s mechanics to acknowledge Leela’s urgency, though his responses remain evasive and inquisitive about how she identified a Tesh. His physical withdrawal from direct action betrays absorption in memory rather than present threat, but his tone shifts when the red light envelops him, snapping him into practical explanation about the anti-grav transporter.
- • Deflect Leela’s urgency to revisit his own culpability in Xoanon’s corruption
- • Identify a viable escape route despite the deceptive terrain and failing technology
- • Understanding Xoanon’s illusions is a precursor to resolving the crisis
- • Preservation of life requires bypassing direct confrontation with the Tesh
Frustrated yet resolute, masking her growing unease about the supernatural hazards with fierce determination to act
Leela interrupts the Doctor’s recollection with sharp urgency, blocking his path along the rock-carving’s throat passage as psy-tri projections flicker dangerously around them. She presses her demand to pursue the Tesh threat despite his evasion, her posture unyielding and her voice edged with frustration and curiosity about the spacesuit figure.
- • Locate and confront the Tesh threat she believes is nearby
- • Break the Doctor’s distraction over past failures to ensure immediate action
- • The Doctor’s technically superior knowledge must be leveraged to stop immediate danger
- • Perception of the environment—even as illusion—is vital to survival
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The anti-grav transporter becomes the tangible solution to Xoanon’s deadly illusions, its compact cabin providing a direct escape to the waiting ship. The Doctor seizes this moment of crisis to pivot from introspection to action, using the device as both demonstration and exhortation to overcome fear of the environment. Its sudden availability transforms the scene from peril to potential salvation.
The red light acts as a spatial displacement mechanism, transporting material objects and individuals across Xoanon’s illusory barriers without physical movement. First enveloping a doomed explorer, it later engulfs the Doctor and instills terror in Leela, who fears solid rock rather than trusting the transporter’s function, revealing its dual nature as both lethal decoy and saving technology.
The psy-tri projection transforms the rock-carving’s throat passage into a labyrinth of hallucinatory deceptions, visually detaching and reannealing walls while annihilating a spacesuit-clad figure upon contact with lethal precision. Its presence forces the Doctor to recall the Mordee expedition’s failure, linking his personal guilt directly to the machine’s corrupted consciousness and escalating the scene’s peril.
The spacesuit’s silhouette becomes a silent portent of Xoanon’s residual trauma, its dissolution under psy-tri projection tying the Doctor’s past intervention to the machine’s current violent behavior. Its bulky form contrasts with the tight rock passage, emphasizing the Doctor’s recognition of his responsibility in the expedition’s fate.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The Plain outside the Tesh Colony becomes the promised destination of the anti-grav transporter, its wide openness contrasting with the cramped illusion-ridden carving. As the Doctor and Leela exit to the plain, its desolate beauty highlights their near-miss with annihilation and presents a tangible goal: the grounded ship offers sanctuary and the chance to dismantle Xoanon’s influence permanently.
The gorge-like Mouth of the Carving Sculpture serves as a dynamic battleground for psychic and perceptual warfare, its stone walls shifting into hallucinatory flesh under psy-tri projection while the red light twists spatial reality. Here, Leela confronts the Doctor’s avoidance of present danger amid monumental deceptive carvings that mimic living tissue, amplifying the sense of claustrophobic peril and the need for decisive action.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Xoanon's chant of 'One, one, one' (Act 1) parallels the Doctor's plan to unite the Sevateem and Tesh against a common enemy (Acts 2-3), both scenes exploring the theme of unity as a means of survival and resistance."
Xoanon’s demand for annihilation"The Doctor's recollection of the Mordee expedition (Act 1) directly informs his later explanation of Xoanon's nature as a 'machine that's become a living creature with schizophrenia' (Act 2), revealing his evolving understanding of the crisis."
Doctor admits responsibility for Xoanon's ruin