Bert and Jo face the abandoned lift’s silence
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Bert and Jo assess their situation and attempt to use the telephone by the shaft.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Panic-stricken alarm masked by brusque pragmatism, his bravado crumbling under the weight of an unseen biological horror.
Bert crouches near the severed phone wire, his gruff confidence evaporating as he tests the dead line with calloused fingers. His shout of recognition for Dai breaks Jo’s momentary panic, and his stunned observation of the green glow on Dai’s skin forces him to confront the mine’s lethal contamination, overriding his instinctive reassurance.
- • Escape the contaminated shaft despite physical constraints
- • Protect Jo from immediate dangers while devising a way forward
- • Trusting in his knowledge of mine hazards may not be enough
- • The authorities’ assurances about safety must be false given the evidence
Anxious and alarmed, her controlled exterior barely containing the dread of an unfolding disaster beyond rescue operations.
Jo stands close to Bert, her sharp instincts honed by field training now sharpened further by crisis. She allows the groan from the shadows to guide her focus beyond the immediate and recognizes Dai’s dire state, her concern overriding initial frustration, underscoring her adaptability amid escalating peril.
- • Assess immediate risks to Bert and herself in the unstable environment
- • Determine viable paths to safety or aid while mitigating contamination exposure
- • The mine’s hazards extend beyond structural risks due to Bert’s observation
- • Their training must adapt to this unfamiliar biological threat
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
Bert seizes the pithead telephone and yanks the receiver, only to discover the wire severed by the cage’s fall—its copper strands splayed like blackened veins across the shaft’s grime. The dead line underscores their isolation and sabotage, transforming the phone from a lifeline to a mute witness of their plight.
Dai Evans’ skin glows with an unnatural green radiance, the luminescence pulsing faintly where the dim shaft light touches it. Bert’s horrified identification of the green glow links Dai’s condition to Ted Hughes’s earlier fate, revealing the biological contamination and escalating the peril from mechanical failure to toxic exposure.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The narrow, claustrophobic bottom of the lift shaft yawns around Bert and Jo, its walls slick with damp and choked with coal dust. The twisted remains of the cage loom nearby, and Cooper’s groan echoes from the black maw of the depths, transforming the confined space into a deathtrap where rescue is eclipsed by contamination and sabotage.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"The discovery of Dai's glowing body in the lift cage serves as the first in-situ evidence of the green substance’s lethality, which the Doctor later formalmente confirms at the bottom of the lift, forming a continuous thread of investigation into the contamination."
Doctor pushes forward into infected mine"The discovery of Dai's glowing body in the lift cage serves as the first in-situ evidence of the green substance’s lethality, which the Doctor later formalmente confirms at the bottom of the lift, forming a continuous thread of investigation into the contamination."
Doctor deciphers Jo’s escape plan"Both Bert and Jo, and the Doctor and team, encounter the green substance in different contexts—Bert through direct contact, the Doctor through forensic discovery and later visual confirmation—both revealing the insidious spread of contamination."
Bert relinquishes hope and Jo agrees to escape