Doctor Accuses Maxtible and Waterfield

The Doctor awakens disoriented in 1866, his memory fragmented after being gassed and transported by Maxtible and Waterfield. Mollie, a maid, tends to him with a restorative drink, revealing the year and location—June 2, 1866, in Maxtible’s house near Canterbury. The Doctor’s confusion quickly curdles into suspicion as Maxtible enters, admitting responsibility for their condition. When Waterfield joins, the Doctor lashes out, accusing them of kidnapping, murder (referencing Kennedy’s death), and temporal theft. Maxtible deflects blame, invoking a 'higher power'—the Daleks—while Waterfield pleads for cooperation, revealing his daughter Victoria is being held hostage. The Doctor, though wary, agrees to listen, setting up the revelation of the Daleks’ experiment and the stakes for Jamie’s life. The scene establishes the Doctor’s combative stance, the Daleks’ unseen threat, and the moral leverage Waterfield’s desperation provides.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

2

The Doctor wakes up in Maxtible's house, disoriented and suffering from memory loss. Mollie, the maid, attends to him, offering a restorative and inadvertently reveals he's been transported to 1866.

confusion to clarity

Maxtible arrives, preventing Mollie from answering more questions and clarifying the Doctor's location and the date: June 2nd, 1866. The Doctor confronts Maxtible and Waterfield, accusing them of kidnapping him and Jamie and murdering a man.

confusion to accusation

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

7

Desperate, fearful, and pleading. His emotional state is a mix of raw fear for Victoria’s safety and guilt over his complicity in the Daleks’ schemes.

Waterfield enters with Maxtible, his demeanor desperate and pleading. He reveals that the Daleks have taken his daughter Victoria, using her captivity as leverage to coerce the Doctor’s cooperation. His gaze lingers on the portrait of his late wife, a silent testament to his emotional turmoil. Physically, he is tense, his voice trembling with fear and urgency, but he maintains a fragile composure as he begs the Doctor to comply.

Goals in this moment
  • Secure the Doctor’s cooperation to save Victoria
  • Avoid direct confrontation with the Daleks, prioritizing his daughter’s life over moral resistance
  • Maintain a facade of control, despite his internal turmoil
Active beliefs
  • The Daleks are an unstoppable force, and resistance is futile without the Doctor’s help
  • Victoria’s life is more important than his own moral integrity
  • The Doctor is the only one who can outwit the Daleks and save his daughter
Character traits
Desperate and emotionally vulnerable Willing to collaborate with the Daleks to save his daughter Manipulative (using Victoria’s captivity as leverage) Haunted by grief (his late wife’s portrait serves as a painful reminder)
Follow Edward Waterfield's journey

Calm, authoritative, and slightly apologetic. His emotional state is controlled, but his deflection hints at internal conflict or fear of the Daleks.

Maxtible takes control of the conversation, admitting responsibility for the Doctor’s condition with a mix of authority and apology. He deflects blame for Kennedy’s death, invoking the Daleks as a 'higher power' to justify his actions. His demeanor is calm and measured, but his deflection suggests underlying guilt or fear. He directs Mollie to leave and prepares to explain the situation further, positioning himself as a reluctant participant in the Daleks’ schemes.

Goals in this moment
  • Gain the Doctor’s cooperation by invoking the Daleks’ threat
  • Minimize his own culpability in the situation
  • Prepare to reveal the Daleks’ experiment and the stakes for Jamie’s life
Active beliefs
  • The Daleks are an unstoppable force, and resistance is futile without the Doctor’s help
  • The Doctor’s scientific expertise is the key to countering the Daleks’ experiments
  • Victoria’s safety is a necessary bargaining chip to secure the Doctor’s compliance
Character traits
Authoritative and composed Deflective (avoids direct accountability for Kennedy’s death) Strategic (uses the Daleks as an excuse to justify his actions) Slightly apologetic (acknowledges his role in the Doctor’s condition)
Follow Theodore Maxtible's journey

Confused → Suspicious → Accusatory → Wary. His emotional arc mirrors his cognitive shift from disorientation to strategic assessment, with underlying anger at the Daleks’ manipulation.

The Doctor awakens disoriented and groggy from the gas, his confusion rapidly giving way to sharp suspicion as he interrogates Mollie, Maxtible, and Waterfield. He accuses them of kidnapping, temporal theft, and murder (referencing Kennedy), his voice rising with indignant fury. However, Waterfield’s revelation about Victoria’s hostage situation tempers his defiance, prompting him to agree to listen—though his wary demeanor suggests reluctant cooperation rather than trust. Physically, he is draped in a blanket, his posture shifting from slumped recovery to upright confrontation as the scene progresses.

Goals in this moment
  • Uncover the truth behind his abduction and the Daleks’ involvement
  • Protect Jamie and Victoria from harm, even if it means temporary compliance with Maxtible and Waterfield
  • Assess the immediate threat level posed by the Daleks and their 'higher power'
  • Gather information to formulate a counter-strategy
Active beliefs
  • The Daleks are the ultimate antagonists, and their experiments must be stopped at all costs
  • Waterfield and Maxtible are either willing accomplices or victims of coercion, but their motives are suspect
  • Victoria’s life is a bargaining chip, and her safety is non-negotiable
  • Time travel and temporal manipulation are being weaponized, requiring urgent intervention
Character traits
Quick-witted and perceptive Morally outraged by coercion and violence Strategic in assessing threats (Daleks) and leverage (Victoria’s captivity) Protective of companions (Jamie) and innocents (Victoria) Adaptable—shifts from defiance to cautious cooperation
Follow The Second …'s journey
Supporting 2

Unconscious, but his implied state of vulnerability heightens the Doctor’s resolve to act cautiously.

Jamie is mentioned but remains unconscious under a blanket, his presence implied as the 'young gentleman' transported with the Doctor. His continued sleep underscores the Doctor’s protective instincts and the urgency of the situation—his safety is a motivating factor for the Doctor’s cooperation.

Goals in this moment
  • None (unconscious, goals inferred through the Doctor’s protective actions)
Active beliefs
  • None (unconscious, but his trust in the Doctor is implied)
Character traits
Vulnerable (unconscious, reliant on the Doctor’s protection) Symbol of the Doctor’s companionship and responsibility
Follow Jamie McCrimmon's journey

Polite and helpful, with no indication of suspicion or awareness of the Daleks’ involvement.

Mollie enters with a tray bearing a restorative drink, tending to the Doctor with polite efficiency. She provides the date (June 2, 1866) and confirms Maxtible as the house’s owner, her role purely functional. She exits at Maxtible’s direction, her presence serving as a neutral bridge between the Doctor’s disorientation and the impending confrontation with Maxtible and Waterfield.

Goals in this moment
  • Tend to the Doctor’s recovery with the restorative drink
  • Provide basic information (date, location) to orient the Doctor
  • Follow Maxtible’s instructions without question
Active beliefs
  • The Doctor and Jamie are guests (or perhaps inebriated) who require assistance
  • Maxtible and Waterfield are in charge, and their authority should not be questioned
Character traits
Polite and dutiful Observant (notices the Doctor’s confusion and provides necessary information) Unaware of the larger conspiracy (treats the situation as mundane)
Follow Mollie Dawson's journey
Victoria Waterfield

Victoria is not physically present but is referenced as Waterfield’s daughter, held hostage by the Daleks. Her absence is a …

Kennedy

Kennedy is not physically present in this event but is referenced by the Doctor as a murdered victim, his death …

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

5
Blankets Covering the Doctor and Jamie

The blankets draped over the Doctor and Jamie serve a dual purpose: they provide physical comfort to the unconscious pair, but they also symbolize the Doctor’s protective instincts and the vulnerability of his companions. The Doctor’s emergence from beneath the blanket mirrors his awakening to the danger at hand, while Jamie’s continued slumber under the blanket highlights the Doctor’s responsibility to shield him from harm. The blankets are a tactile reminder of the contrast between the Victorian sitting room’s warmth and the cold, mechanical threat of the Daleks.

Before: Draped over the Doctor and Jamie as they …
After: The Doctor sheds his blanket as he sits …
Before: Draped over the Doctor and Jamie as they lie unconscious in the armchairs, providing warmth and a sense of security.
After: The Doctor sheds his blanket as he sits up, while Jamie remains covered, his unconscious state emphasizing his dependence on the Doctor’s protection.
Maxtible's Sitting Room Recovery Chairs

The armchairs in Maxtible’s sitting room function as both a practical setting for the Doctor’s recovery and a symbolic stage for the confrontation with Maxtible and Waterfield. The Doctor’s transition from slumped, groggy disorientation to upright, accusatory posture in the chair mirrors his shifting emotional state—from confusion to defiance. The chairs also frame the power dynamics in the room: the Doctor, though physically vulnerable, uses the chair as a platform to challenge Maxtible and Waterfield, while they stand or sit nearby, their authority undermined by his questions. The chairs’ Victorian decor contrasts with the modern, alien threat of the Daleks, reinforcing the anachronistic horror of the situation.

Before: Occupied by the unconscious Doctor and Jamie, their …
After: The Doctor sits upright in his chair, engaged …
Before: Occupied by the unconscious Doctor and Jamie, their bodies slumped in recovery.
After: The Doctor sits upright in his chair, engaged in a tense verbal exchange, while Jamie remains unconscious in his.
Mollie's Restorative Drink for the Doctor

Mollie’s restorative drink is a functional and narrative device that revives the Doctor from his gas-induced stupor, allowing the confrontation with Maxtible and Waterfield to unfold. The drink symbolizes the transition from disorientation to clarity, both physically and thematically—it ‘does him a power of good,’ enabling him to engage with the unfolding crisis. Its consumption marks the shift from passive recovery to active confrontation, as the Doctor’s questions and accusations follow shortly after drinking it.

Before: Poured into a glass on Mollie’s tray, untouched …
After: Consumed by the Doctor, its effects evident in …
Before: Poured into a glass on Mollie’s tray, untouched and ready for administration.
After: Consumed by the Doctor, its effects evident in his renewed alertness and combative demeanor.
Mollie's Restorative Serving Tray

The tray serves as a practical prop for Mollie to deliver the restorative drink to the Doctor, but it also underscores the domestic normalcy of the setting—a stark contrast to the sinister Dalek conspiracy unfolding. Its presence reinforces the Victorian household’s facade of order, even as the Doctor’s accusations and the mention of Kennedy’s murder disrupt the illusion. The tray is a silent witness to the tension between mundane routine and existential threat.

Before: Carried into the sitting room by Mollie, laden …
After: Left in the sitting room after Mollie exits, …
Before: Carried into the sitting room by Mollie, laden with the restorative drink and possibly other items (implied by its size).
After: Left in the sitting room after Mollie exits, its purpose fulfilled but its symbolic role as a bridge between normalcy and chaos lingering.
Portrait of Waterfield’s Late Wife

The portrait of Waterfield’s late wife looms over the fireplace, serving as a silent but potent emotional anchor in the scene. It is the focal point of Waterfield’s gaze and the Doctor’s question, ‘Is that your daughter?’—a moment that reveals the depth of Waterfield’s grief and the Daleks’ cruel leverage. The portrait symbolizes the cyclical nature of trauma: Waterfield’s late wife, his living daughter Victoria (held hostage), and the Doctor’s own role as a protector of the vulnerable. Its presence heightens the stakes, as the Doctor realizes that Victoria’s resemblance to her mother makes her captivity all the more personal and painful for Waterfield.

Before: Hanging above the fireplace, unchanged but serving as …
After: Not physically altered, but its symbolic weight is …
Before: Hanging above the fireplace, unchanged but serving as a backdrop to the tension in the room.
After: Not physically altered, but its symbolic weight is amplified by Waterfield’s revelation and the Doctor’s realization of the emotional leverage at play.

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

2
Canterbury

Canterbury, though not physically entered in this scene, is referenced by Maxtible as the nearest town to his isolated house. Its mention serves to orient the Doctor to the time and place (June 2, 1866, near Canterbury) and to contrast the rural, historical setting with the anachronistic threat of the Daleks. The town’s existence outside the house reinforces the idea that the Daleks’ influence is contained within Maxtible’s domain, at least for now—a temporary bubble of normalcy before the horror spills over.

Atmosphere Not directly observed, but implied as a bustling 19th-century market town, contrasting with the house’s …
Function Geographical reference point, grounding the Doctor in time and space while highlighting the isolation of …
Symbolism Symbolizes the ‘normal world’ outside the Daleks’ immediate sphere of influence, a world that remains …
Access None (open to the public, but irrelevant to the immediate conflict).
Nearby town, mentioned as a point of reference for the Doctor Historical setting (1866), evoking 19th-century England’s ordered bustle Contrast with the house’s hidden temporal experiments and Dalek threat
Maxtible's House

Maxtible’s sitting room is the primary setting for this event, a space where the tension between Victorian decorum and the lurking Dalek threat reaches a boiling point. The room’s open French windows allow birdsong to filter in, creating a false sense of pastoral tranquility that contrasts sharply with the Doctor’s accusations and the revelation of Victoria’s captivity. The fireplace, with its portrait of Waterfield’s late wife, serves as a visual and emotional focal point, while the armchairs and blankets underscore the vulnerability of the Doctor and Jamie. The room’s polished surfaces and formal furnishings are a facade, masking the coercion and desperation unfolding within its walls.

Atmosphere Tension-filled with whispered conversations and accusatory outbursts, the room’s Victorian elegance clashes with the underlying …
Function Meeting point for confrontation and revelation, where the Doctor’s disorientation gives way to accusations and …
Symbolism Represents the illusion of safety and order in the face of existential threat. The room’s …
Access Restricted to Maxtible, Waterfield, the Doctor, Jamie, and Mollie (as a servant). The Daleks’ influence …
Birdsong filtering through open French windows, creating a false sense of tranquility Portrait of Waterfield’s late wife above the fireplace, serving as an emotional anchor Armchairs with blankets, where the Doctor and Jamie recover (or remain unconscious) Polished Victorian furnishings, contrasting with the modern horror of the Daleks Fireplace as a symbolic center, around which the confrontation unfolds

Organizations Involved

Institutional presence and influence

1
Daleks

The Daleks are the unseen but omnipotent force driving this event, their influence manifesting through Maxtible and Waterfield’s coercion and the Doctor’s reluctant cooperation. Their threat is invoked indirectly—Maxtible refers to them as a ‘higher power’ and Waterfield reveals that they have taken Victoria hostage. The Daleks’ presence looms over the scene, dictating the actions of the human characters and shaping the Doctor’s moral dilemma: resist and risk Victoria’s life, or comply and become complicit in their experiments. The organization’s power dynamics are absolute, with Maxtible and Waterfield acting as reluctant intermediaries.

Representation Through the actions and pleas of Maxtible and Waterfield, who serve as unwilling spokesmen for …
Power Dynamics Exercising total authority over the human characters, who are either coerced (Waterfield, Maxtible) or manipulated …
Impact The Daleks’ involvement warps the moral and physical landscape of the house, turning it into …
Internal Dynamics None (the Daleks operate as a monolithic, unified force with no internal dissent or hierarchy …
Isolate the ‘human factor’ from Jamie to grant Daleks invincibility Use Victoria’s captivity as leverage to secure the Doctor’s cooperation Maintain control over Maxtible and Waterfield through threats and coercion Threats of violence (e.g., Kennedy’s murder, Victoria’s captivity) Coercion of human pawns (Maxtible and Waterfield) Temporal manipulation (gassing, transmat abductions, time travel) Psychological pressure (exploiting emotional vulnerabilities, such as Waterfield’s love for Victoria)

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

What led here 7

"The Doctor finds half the photograph on Kennedy, causing Waterfield to admit that the Daleks have Victoria (beat_6650b4276c2dd6b8)."

Kennedy’s death exposes Dalek interference
S4E38 · The Evil of the Daleks …

"The Doctor finds half the photograph on Kennedy, causing Waterfield to admit that the Daleks have Victoria (beat_6650b4276c2dd6b8)."

Doctor Discovers Kennedy’s Tortured Death
S4E38 · The Evil of the Daleks …

"The Doctor finds half the photograph on Kennedy, causing Waterfield to admit that the Daleks have Victoria (beat_6650b4276c2dd6b8)."

The Doctor discovers Waterfield’s hidden room
S4E38 · The Evil of the Daleks …

"The Doctor and Jamie are gassed and transported to 1866 (beat_1155034e55d4bbb8), leading directly to the Doctor waking up in Maxtible's house in 1866 disoriented (beat_fd85bc4b531b35ff)."

The Box’s Catastrophic Opening
S4E38 · The Evil of the Daleks …

"The Doctor and Jamie are gassed and transported to 1866 (beat_1155034e55d4bbb8), leading directly to the Doctor waking up in Maxtible's house in 1866 disoriented (beat_fd85bc4b531b35ff)."

Waterfield’s Gas Attack Betrayal
S4E38 · The Evil of the Daleks …

"Waterfield has revealed that the Daleks have kidnapped his daughter, Victoria (beat_6650b4276c2dd6b8). Due to that kidnapping circumstance and Waterfield's concern, Waterfield pleads with the Doctor to cooperate (beat_6d44a043f93f3b91)."

Doctor Confronts Maxtible and Waterfield
S4E38 · The Evil of the Daleks …

"Waterfield has revealed that the Daleks have kidnapped his daughter, Victoria (beat_6650b4276c2dd6b8). Due to that kidnapping circumstance and Waterfield's concern, Waterfield pleads with the Doctor to cooperate (beat_6d44a043f93f3b91)."

Waterfield’s Grief Exposes His Vulnerability
S4E38 · The Evil of the Daleks …
What this causes 9

"Maxtible gives an explanation causing Waterfield and Maxtible to describe their experiments with electromagnetism (beat_718b0be013b1aa49), further clarifying the situation for the Doctor and the audience."

Scientists Reveal Their Catastrophic Experiment
S4E38 · The Evil of the Daleks …

"Maxtible gives an explanation causing Waterfield and Maxtible to describe their experiments with electromagnetism (beat_718b0be013b1aa49), further clarifying the situation for the Doctor and the audience."

Waterfield reveals Dalek blackmail and trap
S4E38 · The Evil of the Daleks …

"Maxtible gives an explanation causing Waterfield and Maxtible to describe their experiments with electromagnetism (beat_718b0be013b1aa49), further clarifying the situation for the Doctor and the audience."

Daleks reveal their experiment and blackmail the Doctor
S4E38 · The Evil of the Daleks …

"Maxtible gives an explanation causing Waterfield and Maxtible to describe their experiments with electromagnetism (beat_718b0be013b1aa49), further clarifying the situation for the Doctor and the audience."

Daleks demand Jamie for human factor experiment
S4E38 · The Evil of the Daleks …

"Maxtible gives an explanation causing Waterfield and Maxtible to describe their experiments with electromagnetism (beat_718b0be013b1aa49), further clarifying the situation for the Doctor and the audience."

Daleks Demand the Human Factor
S4E38 · The Evil of the Daleks …

"Waterfield has revealed that the Daleks have kidnapped his daughter, Victoria (beat_6650b4276c2dd6b8). Due to that kidnapping circumstance and Waterfield's concern, Waterfield pleads with the Doctor to cooperate (beat_6d44a043f93f3b91)."

Doctor Confronts Maxtible and Waterfield
S4E38 · The Evil of the Daleks …

"Waterfield has revealed that the Daleks have kidnapped his daughter, Victoria (beat_6650b4276c2dd6b8). Due to that kidnapping circumstance and Waterfield's concern, Waterfield pleads with the Doctor to cooperate (beat_6d44a043f93f3b91)."

Waterfield’s Grief Exposes His Vulnerability
S4E38 · The Evil of the Daleks …

"Waterfield mentions his deceased wife and Victoria's resemblance to her (beat_04c7fe192a9fa0bd), thematically paralleling Jamie's own observation of the same resemblance (beat_ed0535e9404df066)."

Jamie learns Waterfield’s tragic connection
S4E38 · The Evil of the Daleks …

"Waterfield mentions his deceased wife and Victoria's resemblance to her (beat_04c7fe192a9fa0bd), thematically paralleling Jamie's own observation of the same resemblance (beat_ed0535e9404df066)."

Toby ambushes Jamie and Mollie
S4E38 · The Evil of the Daleks …

Themes This Exemplifies

Thematic resonance and meaning

Key Dialogue

"DOCTOR: And just what do you think you're up to? You steal my property, you spirit Jamie and me a hundred years back in time and you murder a man along the way."
"MAXTIBLE: We had nothing to do with the death of that man. You will believe, Doctor. We are all of us the victims of a higher power. A power more evil and more terrible than the human brain can imagine."
"WATERFIELD: They've taken my daughter, Victoria. Doctor, do whatever it is they ask, I beg of you. My daughter's life is in your hands."