Forrester admits Farrow’s report cover-up

In the laboratory, Smithers demonstrates DN6’s lethal effects on a fly, celebrating its potential as a locust-killing insecticide. Forrester, initially dismissive, reveals Farrow’s suppressed report—stored in his briefcase—while casually admitting plans to alter it. Smithers, visibly uncomfortable, protests his ignorance, but Forrester’s blunt confession (and the act of sealing the sink drain) underscores the conspiracy’s depth. The exchange escalates the stakes: the Doctor’s group, now trapped, must act before the report’s falsification is complete, exposing the murderous cover-up and their own peril in the micro-world. The scene pivots from scientific triumph to moral complicity, with Smithers’ feigned innocence highlighting his complicity in Farrow’s death and the insecticide’s true danger.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

3

Smithers observes the instant death of a fly exposed to DN6, prompting him to extol the insecticide's potential for eradicating pests like locusts.

observation to enthusiasm

Forrester confirms the effectiveness of DN6 and steers the conversation towards the late Farrow's suppressed report on the insecticide's side effects, highlighting a conspiracy.

agreement to tension

Forrester reveals that Farrow's incriminating report is in his briefcase and will be altered before submission, implicating him further, while Smithers disavows any knowledge of the cover-up.

conspiratorial to denial

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

6

Feigned detachment masking deep anxiety—Smithers’ surface calm is a facade. His internal turmoil is evident in his reluctance to engage and his immediate, almost reflexive action of plugging the drain, which symbolizes his surrender to Forrester’s control.

Smithers stands in the laboratory, his initial triumph over DN6’s efficiency shattered by Forrester’s blunt admission of murder. He physically plugs the sink drain—a small but telling action—while verbally protesting his ignorance. His body language (avoiding eye contact, fidgeting) betrays his internal conflict: he is complicit but unwilling. Smithers’ dialogue (‘I don’t want to know about that’) reveals his desire to dissociate from the crime, yet his actions (sealing the drain) ensure his involvement. The laboratory’s clinical lighting casts stark shadows, emphasizing the moral gray area he now inhabits.

Goals in this moment
  • Distance himself from Forrester’s crimes while maintaining his career and alliance, a goal he achieves through performative ignorance.
  • Avoid direct confrontation with Forrester, instead using passive compliance (e.g., plugging the drain) to signal his loyalty without explicit endorsement.
Active beliefs
  • Forrester’s power is absolute, and resisting him would be professionally and personally catastrophic.
  • His own complicity is justified if it means advancing the DN6 project, which he believes will solve global food crises—even at a moral cost.
Character traits
Conflict-avoidant Morally conflicted Physically compliant under pressure
Follow Ian Chesterton's journey

Cold satisfaction—Forrester is in his element, orchestrating control with precision. His admission of murder is not a confession but a statement of fact, reflecting his belief in his own invincibility. The act of sealing the drain is a microcosm of his approach: containment through physical and institutional means.

Forrester dominates the laboratory with his cold, calculating presence. He admits to Farrow’s murder with chilling nonchalance, framing it as a necessary action (‘He was a fool. Thought he could get away with it’). His physical action—watching Smithers plug the drain—is one of quiet control, ensuring the suppression of both evidence (the report) and witnesses (the Doctor’s group). Forrester’s dialogue is sparse but loaded, using phrases like ‘over a barrel’ to assert his dominance. The laboratory’s sterile environment contrasts with the moral rot he embodies, his suit a dark stain against the white tiles.

Goals in this moment
  • Ensure Farrow’s report is altered or destroyed to secure DN6’s approval, eliminating all obstacles to its production.
  • Silence any witnesses (including the Doctor’s group) to his crimes, using both physical means (sealing the drain) and institutional power (controlling the Ministry).
Active beliefs
  • Moral objections are weaknesses to be exploited or eliminated, not engaged with.
  • Power is maintained through control—of people, information, and environments—and any threat to that control must be neutralized.
Character traits
Ruthlessly pragmatic Manipulative Emotionally detached
Follow Forrester's journey

Posthumous defiance—Farrow’s absence is a silent rebuke to Forrester’s corruption. His report, even in its suppressed state, represents the truth that Forrester cannot fully erase, a legacy that haunts the laboratory.

Farrow is not physically present in this event but is central to its subtext as the murdered whistleblower. His absence looms large, his fate a warning to Smithers and a catalyst for the Doctor’s group’s urgency. Farrow’s report, mentioned in Forrester’s dialogue, is the incriminating evidence that Forrester seeks to suppress. The laboratory, once a space of scientific collaboration, now feels like a crime scene—Farrow’s ghost haunting the sterile surfaces. His death is the unspoken tension beneath Smithers’ discomfort and Forrester’s control.

Goals in this moment
  • His goal in life was to expose DN6’s dangers, a goal now inherited by the Doctor’s group, who must ensure his report reaches the Ministry.
  • To serve as a moral counterweight to Forrester’s ruthlessness, his principles challenging the group to act despite their shrunken state.
Active beliefs
  • Scientific progress must not come at the cost of ecological destruction or human life.
  • Truth is a public good, and silencing it is an act of tyranny that must be resisted.
Character traits
Principled Courageous in the face of power Sacrificial
Follow Smithers's journey
Supporting 3

Righteous indignation—furious at Forreter’s casual admission of murder, but channeling her anger into a plan to expose the truth. Her frustration at their helplessness is tempered by her belief in justice and the need to act.

Barbara Wright is not physically present in this event but is implied to be trapped in the laboratory sink with the Doctor and Ian. Her absence from the dialogue reflects her role as an observer and strategist, likely piecing together the implications of Forrester’s words. Barbara’s inferred reaction would be one of moral outrage at the murder and cover-up, coupled with a teacher’s instinct to protect her students (the Doctor and Susan). She would analyze Smithers’ complicity as a weakness to exploit, noting his discomfort as a potential leverage point.

Goals in this moment
  • Find a way to signal for help or sabotage Forrester’s plans from within the sink, using their knowledge of the laboratory’s layout.
  • Convince Smithers to turn against Forrester by appealing to his conscience, leveraging his visible discomfort.
Active beliefs
  • Smithers’ reluctance to engage with Forrester’s crimes indicates a fracture in their alliance that can be exploited.
  • Forrester’s power relies on silence and control, and breaking that silence—even from their shrunken state—is key to stopping him.
Character traits
Moral clarity in crises Observant of power dynamics Protective of the group’s unity
Follow Barbara Wright's journey
Susan Foreman
secondary

Determined fear—afraid of Forrester’s ruthlessness but refusing to succumb to helplessness. Her emotional state is a mix of grief for Farrow and anger at the injustice, driving her to find a way to fight back.

Susan Foreman is not physically present in this event but is implied to be trapped in the laboratory sink. Her absence highlights her role as the group’s emotional core, likely reacting with a mix of fear and determination. Susan’s inferred reaction would be one of quiet resolve: listening intently to Forrester’s words, her empathy for Farrow’s fate fueling her courage. She would look to the Doctor for guidance but also take initiative, perhaps suggesting they use the sink’s acoustics to eavesdrop or plan an escape.

Goals in this moment
  • Use the sink’s environment to their advantage, such as amplifying sounds or using reflections to communicate with the outside world.
  • Support the Doctor and companions in devising a plan to escape and expose Forrester’s crimes.
Active beliefs
  • Forrester’s actions are not just about DN6 but about silencing anyone who stands in his way, making him a threat to everyone, not just the group.
  • Their shrunken state is temporary, and they must use their intelligence and resourcefulness to outmaneuver Forrester’s physical power.
Character traits
Empathetic and protective Quick to adapt in crises Loyal to the group
Follow Susan Foreman's journey

Cold calculation—processing Forrester’s words as data points in a larger conspiracy, while internally raging at the helplessness of their shrunken state. His frustration is tempered by the need to outmaneuver Forrester’s physical and institutional power.

The Doctor is not physically present in this event but is implied to be trapped in the laboratory sink with his companions. His absence from the dialogue underscores the group’s isolation and the giants’ unaware dominance over their micro-world. The Doctor’s inferred reaction would be one of rapid deduction: analyzing Forrester’s confession as evidence of a murderous cover-up, and the sealed drain as a tactical move to contain witnesses. His scientific mind would immediately grasp the implications of DN6’s ecological devastation, while his strategic instincts would focus on countering Forrester’s control.

Goals in this moment
  • Devise a way to communicate with or alert the outside world about Forrester’s crimes, despite their microscopic scale.
  • Reverse-engineer the effects of the shrinking ray to restore their size and confront Forrester directly.
Active beliefs
  • Forrester’s murder of Farrow is part of a pattern of silencing dissent to protect DN6’s approval, indicating a broader conspiracy within the Ministry.
  • The sealed drain is not just a physical barrier but a symbol of Forrester’s desire to erase all evidence—including the Doctor’s group—of his crimes.
Character traits
Quick to deduce hidden motives Strategic in high-stakes situations Protective of his companions
Follow The First …'s journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

4
DN6 Insecticide

DN6 insecticide is the catalyst and symbol of the event’s moral conflict. Smithers uses it to demonstrate its lethal efficiency on a fly, celebrating its potential as a locust-killing solution. However, Forrester’s admission that Farrow’s report—detailing DN6’s broader ecological devastation—was suppressed, transforms the insecticide from a scientific triumph into a weapon of institutional corruption. The fly’s instant death becomes a metaphor for the silencing of dissent: just as the insecticide kills without discrimination, Forrester’s actions (and Smithers’ complicity) seek to erase truth without remorse. DN6’s presence in the laboratory is a tangible reminder of the stakes: its approval would bring global relief from locusts but at the cost of collapsing ecosystems.

Before: DN6 is actively demonstrated by Smithers, sprayed onto …
After: DN6 remains a looming threat, its approval now …
Before: DN6 is actively demonstrated by Smithers, sprayed onto a wheat seed, where it kills a fly instantly. It is the focal point of the laboratory’s experiments, its potency celebrated as a solution to agricultural crises.
After: DN6 remains a looming threat, its approval now tied to Farrow’s murder and the cover-up. The insecticide’s demonstration has shifted from a scientific achievement to a symbol of the moral compromise required to advance it. The fly’s corpse, a casualty of the test, mirrors Farrow’s fate: both are collateral damage in the pursuit of progress.
Farrow’s DN6 Evidence Briefcase

Farrow’s briefcase is the physical container of the suppressed truth, a silent but potent symbol of resistance. Forrester references it casually (‘It’s in his briefcase’), revealing its contents—the unaltered report detailing DN6’s lethal side effects—as the key to unraveling his conspiracy. The briefcase’s presence in the laboratory is a ticking time bomb: as long as it holds the original report, Forrester’s control is incomplete. Smithers’ discomfort at the mention of the briefcase highlights its symbolic power: it represents Farrow’s defiance and the fragility of Forrester’s cover-up. The briefcase’s fate (whether altered, destroyed, or recovered) will determine the outcome of the conspiracy, making it a narrative linchpin.

Before: The briefcase is intact, containing Farrow’s original, unaltered …
After: The briefcase’s status is uncertain but threatened. Forrester’s …
Before: The briefcase is intact, containing Farrow’s original, unaltered report. It sits in the laboratory, a physical manifestation of the truth Forrester seeks to bury.
After: The briefcase’s status is uncertain but threatened. Forrester’s plan to ‘alter’ its contents signals his intent to erase the truth, while the Doctor’s group’s implied presence in the sink suggests a race to recover it before it is destroyed. The briefcase’s symbolic weight remains, now a battleground for the conflict between suppression and exposure.
Giant Insecticide-Coated Wheat Seeds

The dead fly serves as a visceral, silent witness to the event’s moral stakes. Its instant death at the moment it contacts the DN6-coated seed is a microcosm of the larger conflict: a small, insignificant life snuffed out by a force it cannot comprehend. The fly’s corpse becomes a metaphor for Farrow’s fate—another casualty of a system that prioritizes control over ethics. Smithers’ initial awe at the fly’s death (‘Look at this. That fly died instantly’) contrasts sharply with the horrifying realization that this efficiency extends to human lives, as Forrester’s admission of murder makes clear. The fly’s body, ignored in the aftermath, underscores the dehumanizing effect of DN6’s approval: lives, whether insect or human, are expendable in the pursuit of progress.

Before: The fly is alive, landing unknowingly on the …
After: The fly is lifeless, its body a discarded …
Before: The fly is alive, landing unknowingly on the DN6-coated seed, its presence a demonstration subject for Smithers’ test.
After: The fly is lifeless, its body a discarded remnant of the experiment. Its death is treated as incidental, a side effect of DN6’s efficacy, foreshadowing the disregard for life that Forrester’s actions embody.
Laboratory Sink

The sink plughole is a small but critical object in this event, functioning as both a literal and symbolic barrier. Smithers’ act of plugging it—‘and he puts the plug firmly in the plughole’—is a deliberate, physical action that mirrors Forrester’s broader strategy of containment. The plughole’s sealing cuts off the Doctor’s group’s only escape route from the sink, trapping them in a microcosm of Forrester’s control. Symbolically, the plughole represents the suppression of truth: just as water cannot flow out, the report’s contents cannot escape, and the Doctor’s group cannot intervene. The act of plugging it is performative, a gesture of compliance by Smithers that underscores his complicity in Forrester’s crimes. The plughole’s obstruction is a micro-aggression, a reminder of the giants’ power over the shrunken companions.

Before: The plughole is unobstructed, a potential escape route …
After: The plughole is firmly sealed, blocking the sink’s …
Before: The plughole is unobstructed, a potential escape route for the Doctor’s group from the sink. It is a small, functional part of the laboratory’s infrastructure, its openness symbolic of the truth’s potential to surface.
After: The plughole is firmly sealed, blocking the sink’s drainage and the group’s escape. Its closure is a physical manifestation of Forrester’s desire to contain all threats—both the report and the witnesses—to his conspiracy. The plughole’s new state reflects the laboratory’s transformation from a space of scientific inquiry to one of moral corruption.

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

1
DN6 Research Laboratory

The DN6 laboratory is the sterile, clinical epicenter of the event’s moral conflict, its white tiles and scientific equipment contrasting sharply with the ethical rot at its core. The space, designed for objective research, becomes a stage for Forrester’s manipulation and Smithers’ complicity. The laboratory’s layout—workbenches, sinks, and stored equipment—facilitates both the demonstration of DN6’s efficacy and the suppression of its dangers. The sink, in particular, is a battleground: its drainage system is a literal escape route for the Doctor’s group, while its plug becomes a symbol of Forrester’s control. The laboratory’s clinical order is undermined by the presence of Farrow’s briefcase (a container of truth) and the dead fly (a casualty of progress), turning the space into a microcosm of the larger conflict between science and ethics.

Atmosphere Tension-filled with unspoken moral weight—the laboratory’s clinical sterility is at odds with the moral decay …
Function Battleground for institutional power and moral complicity. The laboratory is where DN6’s efficacy is demonstrated, …
Symbolism Represents the corruption of scientific inquiry by institutional power. The laboratory, a place of objective …
Access Restricted to those involved in the DN6 project—Forrester, Smithers, and (implied) the Doctor’s group, though …
The sterile, fluorescent-lit laboratory with its white tiles and metal workbenches, creating a clinical but oppressive environment. The sink, a towering porcelain fixture that looms over the shrunken Doctor’s group, its drainage system now a critical (and blocked) escape route. The dead fly on the workbench, a silent witness to the moral cost of DN6’s efficiency. Farrow’s briefcase, sitting unassumingly but holding the incriminating report, a physical reminder of the truth Forrester seeks to bury.

Organizations Involved

Institutional presence and influence

1
Ministry

The Ministry is the institutional backdrop against which Forrester’s conspiracy unfolds, its regulatory power both enabling and threatening his actions. Farrow’s report, intended for submission to the Ministry, is the linchpin of the conflict: its suppression by Forrester and alteration by Smithers represent a direct challenge to the Ministry’s role as a gatekeeper of public safety. The organization’s involvement is implicit but critical—Forrester’s admission that the report ‘will have to go to his head of department’ frames the Ministry as both the target of his deception and the potential arbiter of DN6’s fate. The Ministry’s absence from the scene is telling: its bureaucratic processes are being manipulated from within, with Forrester and Smithers acting as proxies to ensure DN6’s approval despite its dangers.

Representation Via institutional protocol being subverted. The Ministry is represented through the report’s intended submission process, …
Power Dynamics Being challenged by external forces (Forrester and Smithers) but unaware of the manipulation. The Ministry’s …
Impact The Ministry’s credibility is at risk if DN6 is approved based on altered or suppressed …
Internal Dynamics The Ministry’s internal processes are being tested by Farrow’s whistleblowing and Forrester’s counter-moves. The event …
To regulate pesticides like DN6 with an emphasis on public safety and ecological balance, as evidenced by Farrow’s report. To maintain transparency and accountability in the approval process, ensuring that all risks are disclosed and considered. Through bureaucratic oversight and the submission of reports like Farrow’s, which are meant to inform regulatory decisions. Via the chain of command, where department heads (like Farrow’s) are expected to act as ethical watchdogs for the Ministry’s interests.

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

What led here 1

"Smithers' observation leads to a conversation about Farrow's report."

Smithers seals the escape route
S2E2 · Dangerous Journey
What this causes 1

"Smithers' observation leads to a conversation about Farrow's report."

Smithers seals the escape route
S2E2 · Dangerous Journey

Themes This Exemplifies

Thematic resonance and meaning

Key Dialogue

"SMITHERS: Look at this. That fly died instantly, the moment it landed on the seed."
"FORRESTER: He had us over a barrel. He'd written the report. Now don't keep on about it. All right, he was a fool. Thought he could get away with it."
"FORRESTER: Yes. It's in his briefcase. It'll have to go to his head of department, but with some slight amendments."