Yates’s treachery and capture at HQ
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Captain Yates reveals his betrayal by pointing a gun at the Brigadier, Benton, and the Doctor, and explains the conspirators' plan to 'roll back time' using Whitaker's machine.
The Doctor attempts to reason with Yates, explaining the catastrophic consequences of resetting time, but Yates remains resolute in his beliefs.
Bryson and Benton intervene, disarming Yates and subduing him, thus neutralizing the immediate threat.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Composed but seething, masking fear with controlled outrage and a resolve to challenge Yates’ actions head-on.
The Brigadier stands rigidly before Yates’ pistol, demanding answers while attempting to assert authority over the mutiny. His military bearing wavers briefly under the threat but quickly shifts to confrontation, revealing his deep sense of duty and frustration at Yates’ betrayal.
- • Assert institutional authority and chain of command
- • Protect the Doctor and Benton from Yates’ armed confrontation
- • Blind obedience to UNIT’s chain of command is essential
- • Betrayal like Yates’ must be confronted immediately
Tense and alert, navigating a precarious loyalty between duty to command and moral duty to intervene.
Benton steps back from Yates, poised to intervene should violence erupt. His posture is tense, revealing the strain of divided loyalty between his oath to the Brigadier and his recognition of Yates’ grave miscalculation.
- • Protect the Brigadier and Doctor from harm
- • Neutralize Yates’ threat without further escalation
- • The chain of command must be upheld unless it crosses moral lines
- • Immediate violence must be preempted by decisive action
Conflict between guilt and conviction, betraying a desperate hope that his actions will ultimately restore a world he believes was purer.
Yates holds the group at gunpoint, his apologetic demeanor masking fanatical resolve. He insists his actions are justified by a misguided idealism, dismissing the moral cost of time erasure while speaking in measured, almost conversational tones.
- • Execute Grover and Finch’s plan by seizing control of the HQ
- • Persuade the Brigadier and Doctor to accept the necessity of time reset
- • Modern civilization is irredeemably corrupt and must be erased
- • A time-reset to a mythic past is achievable and desirable
Intensely urgent, masking a simmering anger beneath his measured tone as he grapples with Yates’ blind idealism.
The Doctor pleads with Yates not to fire, appealing to his ideals and warning of the catastrophic consequences of the time-reset. His voice is urgent, revealing a deep concern not just for immediate safety but for the ethical implications of Yates’ actions.
- • Prevent Yates from firing and causing immediate harm
- • Avert the time-reset conspiracy before it can be implemented
- • No cause justifies the erasure of entire generations
- • Idealism, unchecked by ethics, leads to tyranny
Startled into paralysis, caught between ingrained obedience and the shock of seeing colleagues armed and confronting one another.
Bryson stunned by the violence erupting around him, drops the tea tray as chaos engulfs the temporary command post. His unease and confusion mirror the broader disintegration of institutional control.
- • Comply with orders despite instability
- • Avoid immediate conflict or harm
- • Following proper procedure ensures safety
- • Armed confrontation violates institutional norms
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The Brigadier’s Portable Radio Set becomes a critical point of contention as Yates orders its deactivation. Its silencing underscores the total subversion of command structure and the conspirators’ need to isolate the HQ from outside intervention.
Yates’ Coercive Handgun becomes the physical manifestation of his betrayal, dominating the scene with its threat. Its presence halts all resistance, forcing submission and enabling Yates to articulate the conspirators’ plan unchallenged before Benton physically removes the weapon.
Yates uses Sarah’s Intelligence Note to substantiate Grover’s conspiracy and the existence of an underground base, referring to it as proof of their plan. The note’s content becomes a pivotal point in his justification, reinforcing the conspirators’ narrative with documentary evidence.
The UNIT Temporary Tea Tray becomes a symbol of mundane, orderly routine shattered by crisis. Bryson’s dropping of the tray captures the sudden intrusion of violence into a scene defined by bureaucratic ritual, emphasizing the fragility of institutional control.
The Whitaker-Butler Time Eddy Weapon is the conspirators’ ultimate aim, referenced by Yates as the means to erase modern civilization. Though not physically present, its conceptual presence looms over the conversation, instilling urgency and moral gravity into the confrontation.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The temporary UNIT command hub at Denham Manor transforms from a cramped operational center into a site of institutional betrayal. Its makeshift plywood desks and flickering radio sets, once symbols of coordinated crisis response, now serve as a stage for armed insurrection.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
International UNIT HQ is invoked by the Brigadier as a potential source of external pressure against Finch’s conspiracy. Its existence highlights the broader organizational structure that could intervene but is currently cut off by Yates’ radio silencing.
General Finch’s command asserts dominion over UNIT through evacuation orders and authoritarian directives. Yates acts as Finch’s proxy in the HQ coup, bending institutional protocol to facilitate Grover’s conspiracy.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Captain Yates' revelation of the conspirators' plan to 'roll back time' in the temporary UNIT HQ sets up Adam's eventual shift in allegiance when he overhears Grover's true intentions. Adam's exposure to the same core deception directly parallels the Brigadier and the Doctor's confrontation with Finch, creating a thematic echo where insider betrayal leads to revelation."
Adam breaks Sarah and Mark free"Captain Yates' revelation of the conspirators' plan to 'roll back time' in the temporary UNIT HQ sets up Adam's eventual shift in allegiance when he overhears Grover's true intentions. Adam's exposure to the same core deception directly parallels the Brigadier and the Doctor's confrontation with Finch, creating a thematic echo where insider betrayal leads to revelation."
Sarah seizes control to escape"Benton subdues Captain Yates, neutralizing an internal threat to UNIT and the Doctor. This same Benton later defies General Finch’s orders to send reinforcements, using physical force to assert the moral chain of command, showing Benton’s consistent loyalty to the Doctor and Brigadier."
Benton manhandles Finch into submission"Benton subdues Captain Yates, neutralizing an internal threat to UNIT and the Doctor. This same Benton later defies General Finch’s orders to send reinforcements, using physical force to assert the moral chain of command, showing Benton’s consistent loyalty to the Doctor and Brigadier."
Benton exposes critical patrol shortage"Yates' disclosure of the time reset plan in UNIT HQ is structurally mirrored when Sarah reveals to Mark and Adam that Grover intends to 'wipe out millions of people.' Both moments escalate the moral stakes and reveal the full truth behind the conspiracy."
Grover confirms genocidal plan to prisoners"The Doctor's attempt to reason with Yates about the consequences of time reset mirrors his confrontation with Grover and Whitaker in the control room. Both scenes show the Doctor appealing to shared humanity against a plan that would erase it, but with escalating stakes and dwindling time."
Doctor reverses time reset attempt"The Doctor's attempt to reason with Yates about the consequences of time reset mirrors his confrontation with Grover and Whitaker in the control room. Both scenes show the Doctor appealing to shared humanity against a plan that would erase it, but with escalating stakes and dwindling time."
Sarah learns Grover has been exiled"The Doctor's attempt to reason with Yates about the consequences of time reset mirrors his confrontation with Grover and Whitaker in the control room. Both scenes show the Doctor appealing to shared humanity against a plan that would erase it, but with escalating stakes and dwindling time."
Doctor halts Grover's time reset planThemes This Exemplifies
Thematic resonance and meaning
Part of Larger Arcs
Key Dialogue
"YATES: Put it down, sir."
"DOCTOR: Just what are they going to do, Mike?"
"YATES: They're going to roll back time. The world used to be a cleaner, simpler place. It's all become too complicated and corrupt."