Barbara wakes from Zarbi mind control
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Hrhoonda attempts to fend off the Zarbi with his crystal spear. As a larvae grub attacks Hrhoonda, Hrostar urges Vrestin to destroy the cave's crystals and escape, leaving Hrostar and Barbara behind.
Barbara, now wearing a mind-control device, enters the cave; Hrostar quickly removes it. Barbara, disoriented, questions how she returned, prompting Hrostar to explain the Zarbi's mind-control abilities through use of the device.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Shock giving way to horrified clarity, with flashes of defiant resistance buried beneath paralyzing fear. Her emotional arc in this event mirrors the physical removal of the bracelet: the initial numbness of control, the sharp pain of awakening, and the crushing weight of realization.
Barbara stumbles into the cave wearing the gold Zarbi mind-control bracelet, her movements sluggish and her expression vacant, betraying her enforced compliance. As Hrostar violently removes the device, she recoils in physical and emotional shock, her hands trembling as she touches her bare shoulders. Her disoriented questions—‘How did I get back here?’ and ‘I don’t understand’—reveal the bracelet’s psychological grip, while her dawning horror at Hrostar’s revelations (‘What will they do to us?’) marks the collapse of her denial. By the event’s end, she stands frozen, her ‘No!’ a futile protest against the Zarbi’s inescapable control.
- • To understand how she was controlled and why she feels ‘back here’ (seeking narrative coherence amid chaos).
- • To resist the Zarbi’s domination, even if only through verbal defiance (‘No!’).
- • That the bracelet’s removal will restore her agency (a belief shattered by Hrostar’s warnings).
- • That her companions (Ian, the Doctor, Vicki) are still out there, though she cannot articulate this hope yet.
Determined and resigned. His silence in this moment speaks volumes: he knows the battle is lost, but he fights anyway. There’s no fear in his actions, only the grim acceptance of a warrior who has accepted his fate. His death is a punctuation mark in the Menoptra’s downfall—heroic, but ultimately meaningless against the Zarbi’s tide.
Hrhoonda’s participation in this event is defined by his death—impaled by a larval Zarbi grub as he attempts to stave off the assault with his crystal spear. His body falls amid the chaos, the spear clattering to the ground, his final act a defiant but futile stand. Though he does not speak in this segment, his presence is felt in the background: the sound of his impalement, the visual horror of his corpse, and the way his fall spurs Hrostar’s urgency. Hrhoonda’s death serves as a brutal metaphor for the Menoptra’s plight—heroic resistance crushed by an indifferent, overwhelming force.
- • To delay the Zarbi’s advance, even for a moment, to buy time for his allies.
- • To die on his feet, refusing to surrender or be taken alive.
- • That the Menoptra’s cause is just, even if doomed.
- • That his death will inspire others to keep fighting (a belief reinforced by Hrostar’s continued resistance).
A storm of urgency, grief, and resigned defiance. His emotional state is a tightrope walk between hope and despair: he fights to save Vrestin, explains the Zarbi’s horrors to Barbara with clinical precision, and accepts his own capture with stoic finality. There’s a fatherly protectiveness in his interactions with Barbara, as if he’s preparing her for a trial he knows she cannot survive. His silence as the grub forces him down is louder than any scream—it’s the sound of a man who has seen the end and refuses to beg.
Hrostar is the emotional and narrative anchor of this event, his actions a whirlwind of urgency, explanation, and grim acceptance. He begins by barking tactical orders (‘Vrestin, smash the crystals!’), then shifts to desperate pleas for Vrestin’s escape (‘Vrestin, run! Get away!’). His removal of Barbara’s bracelet is violent and practical, his fingers digging into the gold metal as he wrenches it free. Throughout, his dialogue reveals the full horror of their situation: the bracelet’s control, the Crater of Needles’ fate, and the Zarbi’s inescapable dominance. When the larval grub forces him to his knees, his resignation is palpable—‘They will put us to work’—yet he does not break. His final act, warning Barbara of what lies ahead, is an act of grim mercy, ensuring she faces the truth before the Zarbi take them.
- • To ensure Vrestin’s escape, preserving a flicker of Menoptra resistance.
- • To free Barbara from the bracelet’s control and prepare her for the Crater of Needles, however brutally.
- • That knowledge is a form of resistance (hence his insistence on explaining the Zarbi’s methods to Barbara).
- • That the Menoptra’s fight is over, but survival—even in the Crater—is still a victory of sorts.
None (as a larval extension of the Zarbi hive, it operates without individual emotion, driven by instinctive dominance and control). Its ‘mood’ is the cold, mechanical inevitability of a machine—though its physicality (mandibles, impaling) evokes primal terror.
The larval Zarbi manifests as a grotesque, impaling force—first skewering Hrhoonda with brutal efficiency, then shoving Hrostar to his knees to assert dominance. Its physical presence is a silent, visceral threat: mandibles glistening, body coiled for the next strike. It does not speak, but its actions—seizing Hrostar, preparing to drag Barbara and him to the Crater of Needles—communicate the Zarbi’s hive-minded efficiency and utter lack of mercy. The grub’s role is purely instrumental: an extension of the Zarbi’s collective will, enforcing control through pain and submission.
- • To subdue Hrostar and Barbara, ensuring their compliance for transport to the Crater of Needles.
- • To demonstrate the Zarbi’s absolute power through violent efficiency (e.g., impaling Hrhoonda).
- • That resistance is futile (enforced through overwhelming force).
- • That all beings—Menoptra or human—are reducible to labor units under Zarbi control.
Panicked but resolute, his emotions a tight coil of fear and duty. There’s no time for hesitation—only the instinct to obey Hrostar’s final command and flee. His silence in the scene’s latter half suggests shame or resignation, though his survival ensures the Menoptra’s story continues beyond this moment.
Vrestin is a fleeting but critical presence in this event, his role defined by Hrostar’s urgent commands (‘Vrestin, smash the crystals. Smash the crystals, Vrestin.’ and ‘Vrestin, run! Get away!’). He is already mid-escape when Barbara enters, his back visible as he flees through the cave’s back door. His absence in the latter half of the event underscores the Zarbi’s success in fracturing the Menoptra’s resistance—Hrostar’s pleas to him go unanswered, leaving Barbara and Hrostar to face the grubs alone. Vrestin’s flight is both a tactical retreat and a narrative foreshadowing of the Menoptra’s collapse.
- • To escape the cave and survive the Zarbi assault (prioritizing personal preservation over group solidarity).
- • To follow Hrostar’s last directive, even if it means leaving others behind.
- • That the cave is lost and further resistance is futile (hence his immediate flight).
- • That Hrostar’s orders, even in retreat, must be obeyed (a testament to their hierarchical trust).
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
Hrhoonda’s crystal spear is a futile but defiant weapon in this event, wielded in a last stand against the larval Zarbi grub. The spear’s gleaming point slices through the air as Hrhoonda thrusts it toward the invader, but the grub’s mandibles impale him first, sending the spear clattering to the ground. Its fall is a narrative punctuation mark—the end of Hrhoonda’s resistance and a symbol of the Menoptra’s crumbling defenses. The spear’s failure underscores the Zarbi’s overwhelming power: even the Menoptra’s most potent weapons are useless against their brute efficiency. Yet the spear’s presence in Hrhoonda’s hands speaks to the Menoptra’s unbroken spirit, their refusal to surrender without a fight.
The Menoptra cave’s structural crystals are the event’s ticking clock, their integrity directly tied to the characters’ survival. Hrostar’s urgent command to Vrestin (‘Smash the crystals!’) reveals their dual role: as potential weapons against the Zarbi and as the cave’s literal foundation. The crystals’ destruction—implied by Vrestin’s escape and the cave’s collapse—is both a tactical move and a narrative metaphor. Their shattering mirrors the collapse of the Menoptra’s refuge and the characters’ psychological states: Barbara’s dawning horror, Hrostar’s resignation, and the Zarbi’s inevitable victory. The crystals’ role is passive yet pivotal, their absence in the event’s climax (as the cave falls) a silent but devastating consequence of the Zarbi’s assault.
The gold Zarbi mind-control bracelet is the event’s central symbol of oppression, a physical manifestation of the Zarbi’s hive-minded dominance. Hrostar violently rips it from Barbara’s shoulders, the metal clattering to the cave floor as she stumbles back, disoriented. The bracelet’s removal is not just a plot device—it’s a visceral metaphor for the shattering of Barbara’s enforced compliance, revealing the psychological scars left by her captivity. Hrostar’s warning (‘Don’t touch!’) underscores its lingering danger, even inert, while its gold color—ostentatious and deceptive—highlights the Zarbi’s ability to disguise control as ornament. The bracelet’s presence (and absence) frames the event’s core tension: the illusion of freedom versus the reality of inevitable recapture.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The Menoptra hideout cave is the pressure cooker of this event, its crystal walls amplifying the chaos of the Zarbi assault. The cave’s confined space forces the characters into close quarters, heightening the tension as Hrhoonda falls, Vrestin flees, and Barbara awakens to horror. The cave’s role is multifaceted: it is a battleground (where Hrhoonda’s spear clashes with the grub), a refuge (now collapsing), and a prison (its back door sealed by rubble). The cave’s atmosphere is claustrophobic and desperate, its air thick with dust, the scent of blood, and the metallic tang of the Zarbi’s control devices. The sound of shattering crystals and Hrhoonda’s impalement echo off the walls, creating a cacophony of defeat. Symbolically, the cave represents the Menoptra’s last bastion of resistance, its collapse mirroring the fracturing of their will to fight.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
The Zarbi’s presence in this event is a silent, overwhelming force, manifested through the larval grub’s brutal efficiency and the gold bracelet’s lingering control. Though the Zarbi themselves do not speak, their influence is omnipresent: in the bracelet’s removal (a reminder of their dominance), Hrhoonda’s impalement (a demonstration of their power), and the larval grub’s seizure of Hrostar (a statement of their inevitability). The Zarbi’s organizational goals—systematic control, labor exploitation, and the eradication of resistance—are on full display, reduced to their most visceral form. Their power dynamics are absolute: they do not negotiate, they do not show mercy, and they do not acknowledge individuality. The event underscores their hive-minded efficiency, where even a larval grub operates as an extension of the collective will.
The Menoptra resistance is a fractured, dying force in this event, its presence felt in Hrostar’s desperate commands, Hrhoonda’s defiant last stand, and Vrestin’s fleeting escape. The organization’s goals—survival, resistance, and the protection of their hideout—are all undermined by the Zarbi’s assault. Hrostar’s tactical orders (‘Smash the crystals!’) and pleas for Vrestin to flee reveal a group clinging to strategy even as their world collapses. Hrhoonda’s death and the cave’s destruction symbolize the Menoptra’s inability to hold their ground, while Vrestin’s escape is a bittersweet acknowledgment that their fight must continue, even in defeat. The Menoptra’s power dynamics are those of the underdog: outmatched, outmaneuvered, but refusing to surrender without a fight.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Barbara's captivity and mind control directly enable the Zarbi to attack the Menoptra's cave."
Barbara betrays Menoptra under Zarbi control"The brutal attack of the cave leads to Barbara's mind control device being removed, and Barbara waking up."
Barbara learns her enslavement fate"The brutal attack of the cave leads to Barbara's mind control device being removed, and Barbara waking up."
Hrhoonda’s Last Stand and the Cave’s Collapse"Barbara's despair is followed by her capture."
Barbara learns her enslavement fate"Barbara's despair is followed by her capture."
Hrhoonda’s Last Stand and the Cave’s Collapse"The brutal attack of the cave leads to Barbara's mind control device being removed, and Barbara waking up."
Barbara learns her enslavement fate"The brutal attack of the cave leads to Barbara's mind control device being removed, and Barbara waking up."
Hrhoonda’s Last Stand and the Cave’s Collapse"Barbara's despair is followed by her capture."
Barbara learns her enslavement fate"Barbara's despair is followed by her capture."
Hrhoonda’s Last Stand and the Cave’s CollapseThemes This Exemplifies
Thematic resonance and meaning
Key Dialogue
"HROSTAR: Vrestin, smash the crystals. Smash the crystals, Vrestin."
"HROSTAR: You were morphatised. Look! The Zarbi can control everyone, even us, the Menoptra, when they use that metal."
"BARBARA: What will they do to us?"
"HROSTAR: We are to be taken to the Crater of Needles. They will put us to work. Once there you might well wish that you had not been spared."