Victoria mourns Kemel’s death

In the aftermath of Maxtible’s forced departure—his Dalek-converted body now a weapon of the Empire—Victoria stands alone in the underground tunnel, her grief for Kemel raw and immediate. The line ‘Poor Kemel’ is a quiet, devastating acknowledgment of his violent death at Maxtible’s hands, a moment that underscores the Daleks’ dehumanizing brutality. This beat serves as an emotional anchor, contrasting the companions’ desperation with the Doctor’s strategic sabotage unfolding elsewhere. Victoria’s grief is not just personal; it’s a microcosm of the Daleks’ broader destruction, foreshadowing her eventual reckoning with loss and her father’s sacrifice. The tunnel’s isolation amplifies the weight of her words, marking a turning point in her emotional arc as she begins to confront the cost of survival in this war.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

1

Maxtible obeys and leaves; he is still partially controlled by the Daleks, resulting in tension regarding his allegiances and the fate of the others. Victoria expresses sorrow for Kemel, deepening the emotional weight.

Neutral to sorrow

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

3

Grieving with quiet devastation, her sorrow tinged with guilt for surviving while Kemel did not. The line ‘Poor Kemel’ is both an elegy and a reckoning—she is beginning to understand the true cost of the Daleks’ war.

Victoria stands alone in the underground tunnel, her body language collapsed inward—shoulders hunched, hands clasped tightly—as she utters the line ‘Poor Kemel’ in a voice thick with grief. Her physical presence is minimal but devastating: no dramatic gestures, just the quiet devastation of a young woman confronting the irrevocable loss of a protector. The tunnel’s dim light casts long shadows, mirroring the weight of her sorrow.

Goals in this moment
  • To honor Kemel’s memory in the face of his violent end
  • To process her own complicity in the events leading to his death (e.g., her inability to protect him)
Active beliefs
  • That the Daleks’ cruelty knows no bounds, and their war will claim more innocent lives
  • That survival in this conflict requires emotional armor she is not yet sure she can forge
Character traits
Empathetic to a fault Resilient yet emotionally vulnerable Morally grounded in the face of atrocity Expressive through understatement
Follow Victoria Waterfield's journey
Supporting 2
Kemel
secondary

Posthumously, Kemel’s emotional state is one of tragic finality—his death a testament to the Daleks’ brutality. Victoria’s grief humanizes him in death, elevating his sacrifice beyond his mute enforcer role.

Kemel is posthumously referenced in Victoria’s line ‘Poor Kemel’, his death the direct cause of her grief. His physical absence is palpable: the tunnel, once a space of shared captivity, now feels emptier without his silent, protective presence. The violence of his end—throttled by Maxtible and cast into the chasm—is implied but not shown, making Victoria’s lament all the more haunting.

Goals in this moment
  • To protect Victoria and Jamie (a goal fulfilled in life, but cut short by the Daleks)
  • To resist the Daleks’ control, even if only through his defiance in death
Active beliefs
  • That loyalty to those he cared for (Victoria, Jamie) was worth any cost
  • That the Daleks’ evil could not be reasoned with, only resisted
Character traits
Loyal to a fault (even in death) A silent guardian whose strength was his quiet resolve Symbolic of the Daleks’ ability to destroy even the most steadfast allies
Follow Kemel's journey

None (emotionally nullified by Dalek conversion; operates as a tool of the Empire). His absence is a void, emphasizing the Daleks’ ability to erase individuality.

Maxtible is already absent from the scene by the time Victoria speaks, having departed as a Dalek-converted weapon after throttling Kemel to his death. His physical absence looms large, however, as the catalyst for Victoria’s grief. The implication is that he is now fully subsumed by the Daleks’ control, his humanity erased—another casualty in their genocidal machine.

Goals in this moment
  • To fulfill the Daleks’ unspoken commands (implied by his departure)
  • To enforce the Daleks’ will through violence (as demonstrated by Kemel’s murder)
Active beliefs
  • That his allegiance to the Daleks is absolute (no residual humanity remains)
  • That resistance is futile, and compliance is the only path forward
Character traits
Dehumanized by Dalek conversion Obedient to Dalek commands without question A weapon of the Empire, stripped of autonomy
Follow Theodore Maxtible's journey

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

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Precarious Underground Tunnels Beneath Skaro Control Room

The underground tunnels beneath Skaro’s control room serve as a claustrophobic, echoing chamber for Victoria’s grief. The narrow ledges and sheer chasms below mirror the emotional precipice she stands upon—isolated, vulnerable, and confronting the abyss of loss. The tunnel’s darkness amplifies the weight of her words, turning ‘Poor Kemel’ into a lament that reverberates through the empty space, underscoring the Daleks’ ability to strip away even the most basic human connections.

Atmosphere Oppressively silent, with a suffocating stillness that amplifies Victoria’s whispered grief. The air feels thick …
Function A space of solitary reflection and mourning, where Victoria is forced to confront the cost …
Symbolism Represents the moral and emotional isolation imposed by the Daleks. The tunnel is a liminal …
Access Restricted to those who have been brought here by the Daleks (prisoners, enforcers, or converted …
The dim, flickering light casting long shadows that seem to move with Victoria’s sorrow The echo of her voice bouncing off the stone walls, making her grief feel amplified and inescapable The distant hum of Dalek machinery, a reminder that their influence permeates even this hidden space

Organizations Involved

Institutional presence and influence

1
Daleks

The Daleks’ presence is omnipresent in this moment, even in their absence. Victoria’s grief for Kemel is a direct consequence of their dehumanizing machinery—Maxtible’s conversion into a weapon, Kemel’s murder, and the broader war they wage. The tunnel, though physically separate from the control room, is still a part of their domain, a space where their influence is felt in the silence and the shadows. Victoria’s lament is, in a way, a quiet rebellion against their inhumanity.

Representation Via the institutional brutality that led to Kemel’s death and Maxtible’s conversion. The Daleks are …
Power Dynamics Exercising absolute authority over life and death. The Daleks’ power is not just physical but …
Impact The Daleks’ influence is felt in the emotional devastation they leave in their wake. Victoria’s …
To maintain control through fear and violence (as demonstrated by Kemel’s murder and Maxtible’s conversion) To ensure that even moments of grief are subsumed by their dominance (Victoria’s solitude is a form of control) Through the conversion of individuals into weapons (Maxtible’s transformation) Through the systematic destruction of human connections (Kemel’s death, Victoria’s isolation)

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

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Part of Larger Arcs

Key Dialogue

"VICTORIA: Poor Kemel."