Doctor probes Brigadier's amnesiac mind
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
The Doctor and Brigadier catch up on old acquaintances, discussing the whereabouts of Sergeant Benton, Harry Sullivan, Jo Grant, Sarah Jane, and Liz Shaw.
The Brigadier's memories of his past encounters with the Doctor and his companions begin to resurface, triggered by the mention of their names.
The Brigadier experiences a moment of unease and recalls a mysterious event from his past, indicating a deeper psychological impact.
The Doctor and Brigadier discuss the Brigadier's memories and potential causes for his mental block, exploring the possibility of trauma or induced effects.
The Brigadier resists the idea of treatment, asserting his mental stability and loyalty, while also revealing his past interactions with Doctor Runciman.
The Brigadier shares details about his life after leaving UNIT, including his teaching position and administrative work.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Proudly self-reliant but internally unsettled, masking vulnerability with bluster and erupting when pressured
Seated in a leather armchair, the Brigadier listens in growing confusion as names from a forgotten life return as whispers. His posture stiffens with defensive denial when the topic shifts to his mental state and the suggestion of treatment, growing agitated and insisting on his complete fitness.
- • Maintain his self-image as mentally capable and autonomous
- • Dismiss any suggestion of mental health intervention to avoid humiliation
- • Acknowledging weakness is a breach of integrity
- • Past errors—like a 'nervous breakdown'—cannot define him
- • Trust in institutional loyalty should supersede personal concerns
Clinically hopeful yet tempered by respect, masking underlying urgency to restore connection before time’s damage becomes permanent
Standing across from the Brigadier, the Doctor methodically recites names of former companions as echoes of those same names drift through the quarters. He broaches the possibility of an induced mental block, pressing gently but persistently to uncover why the Brigadier’s past remains inaccessible.
- • Probe the nature of the Brigadier’s amnesia to determine its source
- • Gently reawaken suppressed memories without triggering resistance
- • Time and trauma can conceal shared history, not erase it
- • Empathy and patience may dissolve mental barriers more effectively than force
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The navigation scanner remains inactive until Nyssa activates it late in the scene, illuminating the quarters with a blue glow as a mysterious stranger begins to awaken. Though not central to the dialogue, its presence signals a shift from domestic intimacy to scientific observation during their reunion.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The Brigadier’s quarters function as a private sanctuary turned psychological battleground. Once a haven of scholarly routine, it becomes a stage where shared history is painfully re-examined through whispered names and fraught confession. Old military certificates and photographs silently judge the silence between old allies.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
School Corps appears as the Brigadier mentions his post-military role as CO in the School Corps, describing duties involving ‘bit of admin, bit of rugger’, positioning his current identity within a structured, semi-military academic institution. It grounds his denial of mental issues in institutional pride.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"The Doctor’s failed attempt to jog the amnesiac Brigadier’s memory (in the Headmaster’s study) escalates into the Brigadier’s fragmented but eventual recovery of memory when names of past companions are mentioned."
Doctor struggles to reach amnesiac Brigadier