Doctor pursues the god’s trail

The Doctor examines Buller’s corpse with Litefoot, uncovering chisel-like incisors and impossibly large rat hairs that point to a supernatural origin. Recognizing Buller as a cabbie, he links the mutilations to Weng-Chiang’s godhood. Ignoring Litefoot’s skepticism, the Doctor seizes a lantern and strides into the autopsy room’s shadows, compelling Leela to follow. His pursuit signals the hunt for Chang’s lair has begun, dragging both allies and pursuers into the god’s expanding web of terror. key_dialogue: [ DOCTOR: I think they're rat hairs. LITEFOOT: But they're nearly three inches long. Hairs on a rat can't be more than what, quarter of an inch? DOCTOR: Yes, of course I know what I'm saying. DOCTOR: Interesting, isn't it, because I've just remembered something else about Weng-Chiang. DOCTOR: He was the god of abundance. Yes, he made things grow. Can I borrow that? ]

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

5

Intensely focused and driven by mounting certainty, masking exasperation at Litefoot’s reluctance

The Doctor receives a specimen jar from Litefoot and places it on the table, then analyzes Buller’s corpse for chisel-like incisors and enormous rat hairs. He swaps his cane for the victim’s clothes to examine them, identifying the cabbie’s uniform and linking the mutilations to post-mortem animal interference. Ignoring Litefoot’s skepticism, he seizes the constable’s lantern and departs abruptly, summoning Leela to follow despite her confusion.

Goals in this moment
  • Determine the supernatural origin of the mutilations and link them to Weng-Chiang
  • Pursue physical evidence into the autopsy room’s shadows before further clues are lost
Active beliefs
  • Weng-Chiang’s influence is manifesting through grotesque biological anomalies in modern London
  • Immediate action and pursuit of tangible evidence are necessary to prevent further harm
Character traits
analytical determined perceptive dismissive of skepticism
Follow The Fourth …'s journey

Frustrated by the Doctor’s dismissive attitude toward conventional forensic logic but intrigued by his insights

Litefoot examines Buller’s corpse and specimen, engaging the Doctor in skeptical dialogue about the impossible scale of the rat hairs and the post-mortem timing of the mutilations. He resists the Doctor’s supernatural inferences, insisting on natural explanations. After the specimen discussion, he watches as the Doctor takes possession of the constable’s lantern and exits, his medical authority momentarily overridden by the Doctor’s urgency.

Goals in this moment
  • Establish the medical facts of the corpse’s mutilations using rational pathology
  • Resist the imposition of supernatural explanations until evidence becomes undeniable
Active beliefs
  • Pathological assessment based on known science is the primary path to truth
  • The Doctor’s readiness to embrace the bizarre may stem from prior unscientific encounters
Character traits
skeptical methodical professionally cautious perplexed
Follow George Litefoot …'s journey
Supporting 2
Leela
secondary

Unquestioningly loyal but impatient with hesitation

Leela observes the Doctor’s deductions and Litefoot’s skepticism from a distance. When the Doctor takes the victim’s clothes for analysis, she identifies them as belonging to the man they had seen earlier. As the Doctor departs with the lantern, she follows despite his command to stay. Her warrior instincts align with his urgency rather than his caution.

Goals in this moment
  • Support the Doctor’s investigative thrust despite unspoken commands
  • Maintain active awareness of threats and details in the shadowy environment
Active beliefs
  • Trust in the Doctor’s judgment stems from proven victories over tangible evil
  • Loyalty is rendered through decisive action, not passive obedience
Character traits
obedient to instinct alert and reactive pragmatic alignment with the Doctor
Follow Leela's journey

Aggressive devotion to the cause, devoid of hesitation or fear

The Chinaman appears silently after the Doctor exits, brandishing a wicked axe. He embodies Li H’sen Chang’s fanatical enforcers, moving from the shadows to physically interrupt the investigation. His sudden attack compels the Doctor and Leela to flee, marking the first overt violent response from the Tong of the Black Scorpion’s operatives in this narrative thread.

Goals in this moment
  • Eliminate perceived threats to Li H’sen Chang’s operations
  • Demonstrate the Tong’s presence and willingness to assert violent control
Active beliefs
  • Absolute loyalty to Weng-Chiang justifies any act of violence
  • Disrupting the Doctor’s investigation is a sacred duty
Character traits
hostile silent and sudden fanatically devoted
Follow Li H'sen …'s journey
Constable Quick

Constable Quick is briefly mentioned as the source of the river-recovered victim and as the owner of the lantern seized …

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

5
The Doctor's Cane

The Doctor’s polished wooden cane is momentarily surrendered to hold Buller’s clothes, then reclaimed during the urgent transition to investigation. It serves as both walking aide and authoritative prop during discussions, subtly emphasizing his investigative dominance and habitual readiness.

Before: Possessed by the Doctor as a personal item
After: Regained by the Doctor, carried as he leads …
Before: Possessed by the Doctor as a personal item
After: Regained by the Doctor, carried as he leads the group into the shadows
Buller's Mutilated Clothes

Buller’s torn and bloodstained cab driver clothes are swapped by the Doctor for his cane during examination. The Doctor identifies them as the victim’s uniform, linking the mutilations to a known person and establishing the post-mortem timing of the animal interference. The clothes become a visual and logical bridge between Buller’s identity and the crime.

Before: Discarded near the autopsy table, awaiting examination
After: Held by the Doctor, later linked to the …
Before: Discarded near the autopsy table, awaiting examination
After: Held by the Doctor, later linked to the cabbie’s identity
The Constable’s Lantern

The constable’s sturdy metal lantern, originally illuminating the forensic context, is seized by the Doctor mid-dialogue. He requests and receives it to probe the autopsy room’s shadows. Its flickering light becomes both tool and guide as he pursues unseen threats, shifting from neutral forensic item to active instrument of pursuit.

Before: Held by Constable Quick as practical lighting in …
After: In the Doctor’s possession, casting beams into the …
Before: Held by Constable Quick as practical lighting in the morgue
After: In the Doctor’s possession, casting beams into the darkness as he exits
The Doctor's House of the Dragon Axe

The Tong enforcer’s crude axe crashes into the wooden surface of the autopsy room moments after the Doctor exits, announcing their presence. The weapon’s brutal efficiency underscores the immediate lethal intent of Li H’sen Chang’s cult, contrasting with the Doctor’s analytical approach and Leela’s defensive thorn.

Before: Concealed by the Chinaman as he lurks in …
After: Wielded in attack, marking the transition from investigation …
Before: Concealed by the Chinaman as he lurks in the shadows
After: Wielded in attack, marking the transition from investigation to violent confrontation
Litefoot's Specimen Jar

Litefoot hands the Doctor a glass jar containing a preserved specimen, presumably a fragment of Buller’s anatomy. The Doctor places it on the table, analyzes its contents during the dialogue, and uses it as a key piece of evidence linking the mutilations to Weng-Chiang. Litefoot’s skepticism and the Doctor’s urgent interpretation escalate the specimen’s narrative significance.

Before: Contained in a jar, freshly handed to the …
After: Examined by the Doctor and momentarily set aside …
Before: Contained in a jar, freshly handed to the Doctor by Litefoot
After: Examined by the Doctor and momentarily set aside as the investigation pivots to other clues

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

1
Autopsy Room

The stark tiled autopsy room serves as the stage for forensic examination and revelation. Lit by dim lamps and the Doctor’s lantern, it reveals Buller’s mutilated corpse and the jarred specimen under tension. The room’s frigid silence and clinical purpose amplify the grotesque mystery of the post-mortem animal interference, enabling the Doctor’s sudden pivot into shadowed pursuit.

Atmosphere Taut with forensic rigor and creeping dread, lit by flickering artificial light that casts shifting …
Function Investigation site and repository of empirical truth where pathology and supernatural collide
Symbolism Represents the collision between reason and the unknown, the place where science confronts the irrefutable …
Access Restricted to authorized personnel only, but implicitly breached by the Doctor’s urgency
Tiled walls stained with dark residue from prior examinations Single overhead lamp providing dim, uneven illumination

Organizations Involved

Institutional presence and influence

1
Tong of the Black Scorpion

The Tong of the Black Scorpion manifests through the Chinaman’s ambush with an axe, signaling their readiness to interrupt investigations into Li H’sen Chang’s operations. Though unspoken in dialogue, the enforcer’s ritualistic violence reflects the organization’s fanatical devotion to Weng-Chiang and its commitment to silencing threats to their criminal-theatrical empire.

Representation Through a solitary fanatical enforcer acting independently but in alignment with organizational imperatives
Power Dynamics The Tong operates from the shadows of Victorian London’s underworld, asserting violent control while avoiding …
Impact The Tong’s existence and willingness to kill highlight the breakdown of Victorian institutions’ ability to …
Protect the secrecy of Li H’sen Chang’s operations in London’s Chinatown theater Silence any investigation that threatens the god’s growing influence over modern London Deploying fanatical enforcers to enact brutal public displays that mask supernatural designs as criminal acts Leveraging London’s racist and xenophobic attitudes to operate covertly within marginalized immigrant communities

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

What led here 5

"The Doctor's explanation of the Tong of the Black Scorpion and Weng-Chiang's mythology directly informs his theory about the large rat hairs found on Buller's body, linking the cult's belief in 'making things grow' to the grotesque mutations."

Doctor warns of Weng-Chiangs return
S14E21 · The Talons of Weng-Chiang Part …

"The Doctor's explanation of the Tong of the Black Scorpion and Weng-Chiang's mythology directly informs his theory about the large rat hairs found on Buller's body, linking the cult's belief in 'making things grow' to the grotesque mutations."

Spy watches from outside the mortuary
S14E21 · The Talons of Weng-Chiang Part …
Causal medium

"The police whistle outside the police station during Chang's interrogation interrupts the proceedings, mirroring the immediate danger outside the mortuary later where the Chinaman ambushes the Doctor and Leela."

Leela uncovers corpse amid interrogation
S14E21 · The Talons of Weng-Chiang Part …

"Buller's accusation that Chang abducted Emma directly leads to the Doctor identifying Buller's dead body in the autopsy room as a licensed cab driver, reinforcing the escalating violence and the Doctor's unfolding investigation."

Buller confronts Chang in locked dressing room
S14E21 · The Talons of Weng-Chiang Part …

"The discovery of a body in the Thames, coupled with the revelation of abnormally large rat hairs on Buller's body, escalates the mystery from disappearances to grotesque deaths linked to supernatural forces and Weng-Chiang."

Body surfaces in the Thames mud
S14E21 · The Talons of Weng-Chiang Part …
What this causes 2

"The Chinaman ambush with an axe outside the mortuary directly leads to Leela's intervention and use of the Janis thorn, propelling the Doctor and Leela toward investigating the sewers as the source of the disappearances."

Leela’s blade thwarts the axe assassin
S14E21 · The Talons of Weng-Chiang Part …

"The Chinaman ambush with an axe outside the mortuary directly leads to Leela's intervention and use of the Janis thorn, propelling the Doctor and Leela toward investigating the sewers as the source of the disappearances."

Doctor and Leela descend into the sewers
S14E21 · The Talons of Weng-Chiang Part …