Doctor confronts Chronotis over mysterious signal
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
The Doctor and Romana arrive at Professor Chronotis' rooms, where they are greeted with tea and biscuits. Chronotis interacts with them, initially confused about their visit.
The Doctor inquires about who sent the signal they received, and Chronotis denies sending it, leading to a moment of intrigue.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Externally genial but internally pressured, masking suspicion with bravado as he insists Chronotis sent for him
The Doctor strides in with Romana, immediately adopting the role of host at Chronotis’ behest, calling for tea and organizing the serving with brisk politeness. His probing about the distress signal sharpens the edge beneath his jovial demeanor, betraying a restless urgency that contradicts the relaxed setting.
- • To confirm whether Chronotis sent a distress signal
- • To elicit a direct response from Chronotis without appearing confrontational
- • Time Lords should trust one another’s signals as a matter of course
- • Politeness is a tool to lower another’s guard and reveal more than they intend
Wary but affable, maintaining control through social ritual while deflecting from the subject of a sent signal
Professor Chronotis moves with slow, deliberate courtesy—pouring tea, offering biscuits, and deflecting questions with feigned absent-mindedness about time’s passage. His relaxed posture conceals a guarded precision, as he uses hospitality as a buffer against direct inquiry, deftly turning inquiry back onto his visitors.
- • To avoid admitting he sent a signal
- • To maintain control of the social dynamic in his own rooms
- • Deception through politeness is safer than confrontation
- • Time Lord decoherence about tenses offers a credible cover for forgetfulness
Detached and analytical, assessing Chronotis’ behavior against known Time Lord patterns without emotional reaction
Romana enters with the Doctor, participating in the tea ritual with quiet observation. She questions Chronotis about his centuries in Cambridge, noting his eccentric stability, establishing his long-established pattern of deflection and distinguishing him from transient or reckless Time Lords.
- • To understand Chronotis' length of stay and apparent stability in Cambridge
- • To gauge the genuineness of his forgetfulness and hospitality
- • Centuries in one place imply eccentric consistency, not chaos
- • Time Lord behavior follows predictable patterns, even when a bit unmoored
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The alien paperback lies among Chronotis’ cluttered books, unremarked upon in this moment but economizing on stage presence to prime the mystery. Its mundane-seeming placement belies its future significance, overlooked in the ritual of tea and deflection.
Two delicate porcelain cups are carefully poured and handed over by Chronotis, becoming instruments of social ritual and tools for deflection. Their steam and bergamot scent wrap the room in domestic guise while masking tension with measured courtesy.
The serving tray arrives with theatrical slow ceremony, part of Chronotis’ performance of hospitality. It organizes the ritual of pouring and serving, visually framing the deflection tactic and making civility itself a barrier to the truth.
The Doctor’s large carpet bag swings into frame as he and Romana enter, a silent emblem of his transient presence and hidden tools. Its whispering quality—mentioned but not sounded—hints at the unknown agency it carries, a counterpoint to Chronotis’ deliberate hospitality.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
Chronotis’ cluttered rooms in St Cedd’s College serve as a theater of hospitality turned interrogation chamber. The sloping ceilings and leaded windows bathe the scene in muted light, while ancient books and forgotten time artifacts frame the tension as domestic ritual. The room’s brooding sense of time slipping reinforces the notion that even Time Lords can lose track of history.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Wilkin's recognition of the Doctor from previous visits (in 1955, 1960, and 1964) and his mention of the Doctor's multiple incarnations callbacks to the Doctor's time-traveling nature, reinforcing his alien identity to the audience and setting up his trustworthiness."
Doctor and Romana reunite with St Cedds past"Wilkin's recognition of the Doctor from previous visits (in 1955, 1960, and 1964) and his mention of the Doctor's multiple incarnations callbacks to the Doctor's time-traveling nature, reinforcing his alien identity to the audience and setting up his trustworthiness."
Doctor and Romana depart St Cedds"Chronotis' small talk with Parsons about faculty parties and his role as an eccentric academic is echoed later when the Doctor and Romana meet Chronotis, who is again in his study offering tea and biscuits, reinforcing his consistent character traits."
Parsons borrows books from an eccentric don"Chronotis' small talk with Parsons about faculty parties and his role as an eccentric academic is echoed later when the Doctor and Romana meet Chronotis, who is again in his study offering tea and biscuits, reinforcing his consistent character traits."
Parsons questions Chronotis about the alien bookThemes This Exemplifies
Thematic resonance and meaning
Key Dialogue
"DOCTOR: What can I do for you? You mean what can I do for you? You sent for me."
"CHRONOTIS: Sent for you?"
"DOCTOR: Yes, we got your signal."