Doctor Probes Terrall’s Magnetic Anomaly
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
The Doctor reveals he suspects Terrall has magnetic properties, using a sword as evidence. Terrall remains guarded and Waterfield interrupts them.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Anxious and conflicted, torn between his conditioned responses and a flicker of resistance or guilt.
Terrall is visibly defensive and evasive throughout the interaction, refusing food and drink and warning the Doctor to 'leave things alone.' His magnetic properties are revealed when the sword clings to him, and he collapses in agony after hearing the Dalek telepathic command 'Obey, obey, obey!' His behavior suggests he is under external control, struggling between compliance and resistance.
- • Avoid revealing his unnatural condition to the Doctor.
- • Comply with the Daleks’ telepathic commands to prevent pain.
- • His condition is a secret that must be protected at all costs.
- • Resistance to the Daleks’ control will result in severe punishment.
Intellectually engaged and slightly amused, but with an underlying tension as he senses the unnatural forces at play.
The Doctor methodically probes Terrall’s unnatural behavior by offering food and drink, which Terrall refuses. He then demonstrates Terrall’s magnetic properties using a sword, revealing his altered state. The Doctor’s cryptic dialogue and relentless questioning hint at his broader understanding of alien manipulation, but he is interrupted by Waterfield before confirming his suspicions. His actions are driven by curiosity and a desire to uncover the truth behind Terrall’s condition.
- • Uncover the reason behind Terrall’s refusal to eat or drink and his magnetic properties.
- • Determine whether Terrall is under external control, hinting at a larger conspiracy.
- • Human behavior often masks deeper, often alien, influences.
- • Scientific observation and experimentation are key to uncovering hidden truths.
Detached and authoritative, enforcing obedience without hesitation or empathy.
The Dalek Voice issues a telepathic command ('Obey, obey, obey!') that triggers Terrall’s collapse in agony, revealing his external control. This voice represents the Daleks’ direct influence over Terrall, enforcing compliance through pain and psychological domination. Its intervention cuts short the Doctor’s investigation, underscoring the Daleks’ power and the urgency of their experiments.
- • Ensure Terrall’s compliance with Dalek directives.
- • Prevent the Doctor from uncovering the truth about their experiments.
- • Absolute obedience is the only acceptable state for human subjects.
- • Pain is an effective tool for maintaining control.
Detached and mechanically authoritative, enforcing compliance through pain and psychological domination.
The Dalek Command Collective exerts indirect control over Terrall through telepathic commands, triggering his collapse in agony with the scream 'Obey, obey, obey!' Their influence is felt through Terrall’s unnatural magnetic properties and refusal to consume food or drink, revealing their manipulation of human subjects to advance their genetic experiments. Their presence is implied through Terrall’s distress and the Doctor’s observations of his altered state.
- • Maintain control over Terrall to ensure his compliance with Dalek directives.
- • Prevent the Doctor from uncovering their experiments by exploiting Terrall’s conditioned responses.
- • Human emotions and free will are weaknesses to be exploited.
- • Absolute obedience is the only acceptable state for human collaborators.
Anxious and conflicted, torn between his moral dilemmas and the need to comply with the Daleks’ demands.
Waterfield interrupts the Doctor and Terrall’s conversation, summoning the Doctor away for an urgent matter. His presence cuts short the Doctor’s investigation of Terrall’s condition, leaving the Doctor’s hypothesis unconfirmed but the mystery intensified. Waterfield’s urgency suggests he is deeply involved in the Daleks’ experiments, possibly as a reluctant collaborator.
- • Ensure the Doctor’s attention is diverted from Terrall’s condition.
- • Maintain the secrecy of the Daleks’ experiments.
- • The Daleks’ experiments must be protected at all costs.
- • His daughter’s safety depends on his compliance.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The Doctor grips this metal cup and thrusts it toward Terrall’s sword, demonstrating how it jumps to cling fast to the blade due to Terrall’s magnetic pull. The cup serves as a tool for the Doctor’s investigation, confirming Terrall’s unnatural electrical charge and hinting at Dalek manipulation. The cup’s movement underscores the scientific nature of the Doctor’s probing and the eerie, otherworldly forces at play.
The Doctor pours a glass of wine and offers it to Terrall, who refuses it repeatedly. The wine serves as a social prop to test Terrall’s unnatural behavior, highlighting his refusal to consume food or drink. The Doctor’s insistence on offering it underscores his suspicion that something is amiss with Terrall’s condition, foreshadowing the revelation of his magnetic properties and Dalek manipulation.
Terrall snatches this sword from the trophy room wall and brandishes it at the Doctor, who then demonstrates its magnetic properties by showing it clings to Terrall’s body. The sword serves as a critical clue, revealing Terrall’s unnatural electrical charge and hinting at Dalek manipulation. The Doctor’s observation that the sword loses its magnetism when Terrall releases it underscores the external force controlling Terrall’s body.
Terrall pours red wine into this glass but collapses in agony before taking a sip, triggered by the Dalek telepathic command. The glass symbolizes Terrall’s struggle between his human instincts and the Daleks’ control, as his refusal to drink aligns with his conditioned state. The Doctor uses the glass as part of his investigation, observing Terrall’s unnatural behavior and magnetic properties.
Terrall rests the sword on this sideboard after warning the Doctor to stop probing. The Doctor then uses the sideboard as a surface to demonstrate the sword’s magnetic cling to Terrall’s body, revealing his unnatural condition. The sideboard serves as a neutral ground for the Doctor’s experiment, highlighting the tension between human curiosity and Dalek control.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The Trophy Room serves as the tense setting for the Doctor’s investigation of Terrall’s unnatural condition. Its glass cases, hunting trophies, and dim lighting create an atmosphere of opulence and secrecy, mirroring the hidden Dalek experiments unfolding within Maxtible’s estate. The room’s isolation sharpens the confrontation between the Doctor’s curiosity and Terrall’s conditioned resistance, with the sword and wine serving as props in their high-stakes exchange.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
The Daleks’ influence is felt indirectly through Terrall’s magnetic properties, refusal to consume food or drink, and his collapse under the telepathic command 'Obey, obey, obey!' Their experiments to implant human traits into Dalek brains are hinted at through Terrall’s unnatural condition, which the Doctor begins to uncover. The Daleks’ power dynamics are evident in their ability to control Terrall’s actions and enforce compliance through pain, while the Doctor’s investigation threatens to expose their schemes.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"The Doctor's observation of Terrall's magnetic properties foreshadows external control, which is confirmed when Terrall is seized by a telepathic command to 'Obey!' and collapses."
Doctor probes Terrall’s magnetic secrets"The Doctor's observation of Terrall's magnetic properties foreshadows external control, which is confirmed when Terrall is seized by a telepathic command to 'Obey!' and collapses."
Terrall’s Telepathic Collapse"Terrall being seized by the command directly confirms the Doctor's earlier suspicions, referenced when is says that he suspected Terrall was under external control."
Jamie’s duel reveals Terrall’s Dalek control"Terrall being seized by the command directly confirms the Doctor's earlier suspicions, referenced when is says that he suspected Terrall was under external control."
Doctor lies to protect Terrall"Terrall being seized by the command directly confirms the Doctor's earlier suspicions, referenced when is says that he suspected Terrall was under external control."
Jamie exposes the Doctor’s lie about Victoria"The Doctor's observation of Terrall's magnetic properties foreshadows external control, which is confirmed when Terrall is seized by a telepathic command to 'Obey!' and collapses."
Doctor probes Terrall’s magnetic secrets"The Doctor's observation of Terrall's magnetic properties foreshadows external control, which is confirmed when Terrall is seized by a telepathic command to 'Obey!' and collapses."
Terrall’s Telepathic CollapseThemes This Exemplifies
Thematic resonance and meaning
Part of Larger Arcs
Key Dialogue
"DOCTOR: Are you sure you won't join me? TERRALL: No, I won't. I very rarely touch it. DOCTOR: Oh, dear. Well, something else, perhaps? TERRALL: No. Thank you."
"DOCTOR: Ever since I came to this house, I have never seen you eat or drink anything. Now, that's curious, isn't it? TERRALL: You seem to be a devotee of Edgar Allan Poe. DOCTOR: Oh, do I? TERRALL: However, it isn't wise to make assumptions. Nor to meddle in affairs which are none of your business."
"DOCTOR: A perfectly ordinary sword, and yet it appears to be magnetic. And see. Directly you let go it loses its magnetism. Now, if I didn't know better, Mister Terrall, I'd say that you were full of some sort of electricity. TERRALL: Doctor. No doubt you're a keen student of human nature, but some things are better left alone. DOCTOR: No, Mister Terrall, I am not a student of human nature. I am a professor of a far wider academy, of which human nature is merely a part."