Confrontation begins in Gabriel Chase attic
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
The Doctor and Ace's presence is detected by Josiah Samuel Smith, who interrupts their interaction with a query about who is there.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Calm exterior with underlying alertness, masking anxiety over discovery
The Doctor stands between Ace and the telephone, his tone shifting from detached explanation to urgent warning. His fingers hover near Ace's hand, eyes flicking toward the unseen intruder. He adopts a casual facade but his body language betrays tension, one foot half-raised as if ready to intercept or flee.
- • Prevent Ace from revealing their presence to Josiah
- • Distract Josiah with casual deflection
- • Believes supernatural threats require secrecy until better understood
- • Trusts his preparation and wit to navigate crises
Intrigued yet dismissive before tension heightens her alertness
Ace examines chemicals with mild disgust before noticing the telephone. Her curiosity about its operation leads her to attempt using it, oblivious to the danger. The Doctor's sharp intervention leaves her startled as she's abruptly caught between initiative and compliance.
- • Gain understanding of the telephone's function
- • Follow the Doctor's instructions despite skepticism
- • Trusts the Doctor's guidance
- • Believes practical knowledge is valuable regardless of circumstances
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The Doctor invokes 'Newgate Prison' as a cultural shorthand when warning Ace about the telephone, transforming a historical reference into a contemporary threat. His mention creates an unspoken boundary between Victorian authority and modern consequence.
Arsenic is noted by the Doctor amidst the taxidermy preservatives, grounding Josiah's unnatural experiments in Victorian-era toxicology. Its presence reinforces the scene's atmosphere of macabre science consumed in darkness.
Listed among Ace's taxidermy inventory, borax's inclusion underscores the Victorian context of preservation techniques Josiah employs. Its mention blends into the scene's scientific discussion before the supernatural confrontation shifts focus toward concealment.
Ace identifies carbon tetrachloride similarly among taxidermy supplies, part of the mundane scientific context before the telephone's sinister potential emerges. Its presence adds to the workshop atmosphere while remaining inert during the sudden intrusion.
The Doctor acknowledges benzine as part of the preservative inventory during the discussion of Victorian chemicals. Though not a focal element, its presence establishes Josiah's scientific facade, which shatters when the telephone connects to supernatural forces.
Ace picks up the candlestick telephone to investigate its function, unaware it connects internally to the house rather than externally. The Doctor immediately grabs it, yanking the receiver from her hand to prevent use, while Josiah's inquiry leads to the device becoming a conduit for tension as Smith intrudes on their conversation.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The attic's cluttered physical space becomes a battleground of curiosity and caution. Dim light filters through shuttered dormers while chemical odors blend with the creak of floorboards under tense movement. Ace's casual inspection shifts to urgent displacement as the Doctor's protective stance centers on the telephone, transforming research into stealth.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
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