Arnold reveals the Doctor’s sabotage
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Staff Sergeant Arnold discusses Captain Knight's absence and dismisses Weams and Blake. Chorley speculates on the fate of the ammunition carriers, stirring unease.
Jamie and Professor Travers arrive seeking news of the Doctor. Arnold reveals that the Doctor was not killed as there was no explosion. He believes the Doctor may have sabotaged the explosives.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Suspicious and determined, masking any underlying anxiety with a firm, no-nonsense demeanor.
Arnold dominates the scene with his authoritative presence, revealing the sabotage of the detonator and immediately suspecting the Doctor. His tone is accusatory and insistent, reflecting his military mindset and distrust of outsiders. He pressures Jamie into revealing the Doctor’s whereabouts, leveraging the urgency of the situation to assert his control. Arnold’s actions underscore the military’s growing paranoia and the fracturing alliances within the ops room, as he prioritizes finding the Doctor over maintaining unity.
- • Locate the Doctor to either clear his name or hold him accountable for the sabotage.
- • Maintain control over the ops room and the military’s response to the crisis.
- • The Doctor is a liability or a threat to the military’s mission.
- • Jamie knows more than he is letting on and can be pressured into cooperation.
Relieved yet indignant, shifting to resolute determination as he challenges Arnold’s accusations.
Professor Travers enters the ops room with Jamie, visibly relieved to hear the Doctor is alive. He immediately defends the Doctor against Arnold’s accusations, dismissing the sabotage claim as 'rot' and insisting the Doctor is their only hope. His tone is firm and protective, rooted in his long-standing friendship with the Doctor and his scientific trust in his abilities. Travers stands as a moral counterbalance to Arnold’s suspicion, grounding the scene in the Doctor’s credibility.
- • Defend the Doctor’s reputation and role in resolving the crisis.
- • Reinforce the Doctor as the group’s only viable solution to the Yeti and fungal threat.
- • The Doctor is incapable of sabotage and is a trusted ally.
- • Arnold’s accusations are baseless and driven by paranoia or misinformation.
Not directly observable, but inferred as either frustrated (if sabotaged) or strategically absent (if evading capture or pursuing his own plan).
The Doctor is absent from the scene but is the central figure of the confrontation. His disappearance and the sabotage accusation cast a shadow over the ops room, driving the tension between Arnold and the Doctor’s allies. The Doctor’s reputation as a trusted figure is both defended by Travers and attacked by Arnold, framing him as either a savior or a saboteur. His absence forces the characters to grapple with his role in the crisis, highlighting the stakes of his potential return or continued absence.
- • Resolve the Yeti and fungal crisis (implied by Travers’ defense).
- • Avoid capture or manipulation by the military (if Arnold’s accusations are true).
- • The military’s methods are hindering the solution to the crisis.
- • His knowledge and actions are critical to stopping the Great Intelligence.
Neutral and focused, adhering to the chain of command without visible emotional investment.
Weams is present in the ops room but plays a minimal role in this exchange. He confirms the Captain’s absence and acknowledges Arnold’s orders to stand down, reacting to Jamie and Travers’ arrival with neutral compliance. His presence reinforces the military’s structured hierarchy and the ops room’s role as a command hub, though he does not actively participate in the confrontation. Weams’ demeanor suggests he is focused on operational tasks rather than the interpersonal tensions unfolding.
- • Follow Arnold’s orders and maintain operational readiness.
- • Avoid drawing attention to himself amid the rising tensions.
- • The military’s protocol must be followed, even in high-pressure situations.
- • Arnold’s authority should not be questioned in the absence of the Captain.
Neutral and focused, adhering to the chain of command without visible emotional investment in the confrontation.
Corporal Blake is present in the ops room but plays a secondary role in this exchange. He is ordered by Arnold to stand down, implying his prior involvement in investigating the tunnel explosion. Blake’s compliance and lack of dialogue suggest he is following orders without questioning them, though his earlier actions (e.g., inspecting the detonator) indicate his role in uncovering the sabotage. His presence underscores the military’s structured response to the crisis, even as tensions rise.
- • Follow Arnold’s orders and maintain operational discipline.
- • Contribute to the investigation of the sabotage without drawing attention to himself.
- • The military’s protocol must be followed, even in chaotic situations.
- • Arnold’s suspicions about the Doctor may be valid, but it is not his place to challenge them.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The Charing Cross Explosives Detonator is the critical piece of evidence in Arnold’s accusation against the Doctor. Though not physically present in the ops room during this exchange, its sabotage is the catalyst for the confrontation. Arnold references it implicitly, revealing that it was tampered with—no explosion occurred despite the button being pressed and the circuit being complete. This object symbolizes the fracture in trust between the military and the Doctor’s allies, as its failure forces Arnold to suspect foul play and Jamie to defend the Doctor’s innocence. The detonator’s role is purely narrative here, serving as proof of sabotage and a turning point in the scene’s tension.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The Goodge Street Ops Room serves as the claustrophobic epicenter of the confrontation, its confined space amplifying the tension between Arnold’s accusations and the Doctor’s allies’ defenses. The room buzzes with radios crackling ambush reports, an illuminated Underground map tracking the fungal spread, and the echoes of gunfire, creating an atmosphere of urgency and desperation. This location functions as both a command hub and a pressure cooker, where distrust and paranoia simmer beneath the surface. The ops room’s role is to facilitate military coordination, but in this moment, it becomes a stage for the fracturing alliances and the high-stakes dilemma facing Jamie and Travers.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Jamie asks after the Doctor's whereabouts, and Travers goes with Jamie looking for the Doctor, who Arnold states was not killed but sabotaged things."
Jamie’s Revenge Theory and Time Collides"Jamie asks after the Doctor's whereabouts, and Travers goes with Jamie looking for the Doctor, who Arnold states was not killed but sabotaged things."
Victoria Reveals Time-Travel Truth"Jamie asks after the Doctor's whereabouts, and Travers goes with Jamie looking for the Doctor, who Arnold states was not killed but sabotaged things."
Jamie and Victoria Reunite with Travers"Arnold reports back on the tampered detonator. Later Arnold shares with Jamie and Travers his belief the Doctor sabotaged the explosives. The suspicion and the evidence for it is continuous."
Detonator Sabotage Confirmed"Arnold's suspicion of the Doctor is directly countered by Travers identifying him as their only hope, creating a point of debate."
Arnold demands Jamie reveal the Doctor’s location"Arnold's suspicion of the Doctor is directly countered by Travers identifying him as their only hope, creating a point of debate."
Arnold demands Jamie reveal the Doctor’s locationKey Dialogue
"ARNOLD: He weren't killed in the explosion, if that's what you mean."
"ARNOLD: Somebody had tampered with it, and it's my guess it was this Doctor feller."
"TRAVERS: What rot, Arnold. The Doctor's a friend of mine. He's the one man that can help us."
"ARNOLD: Oh is he now? Well, he weren't nowhere to be seen. He'd disappeared."
"JAMIE: Do you think the Yeti got him?"
"ARNOLD: No."
"JAMIE: What makes you so sure?"
"ARNOLD: Dunno. Just a hunch. Hey, wait a minute, where d'you think you're going?"
"JAMIE: He may be lying injured."
"ARNOLD: No, we'd have found him. Unless you know where he is?"
"JAMIE: I might."
"ARNOLD: Take me to him, could you?"
"JAMIE: Aye."