Narrative Web
Object

LeMaitre's Execution List

A bureaucratic document listing prisoners condemned to the guillotine during the Reign of Terror. LeMaitre wields this list as a tool of revolutionary power—demanding it from the jailer, altering entries (e.g., crossing out Ian Chesterton's name while leaving Barbara Wright and Susan Foreman's unmarked), and brandishing it to manipulate the Doctor. The list is presented to Robespierre in his office, where its stark entries fuel ideological tensions and accusations of excessive violence. It serves dual purposes: (1) an official record of executions, and (2) a manipulative instrument to control fates and lure the Doctor into Robespierre's inner circle.
9 appearances

Purpose

List prisoners for execution and authorize alterations to their fates

Significance

Drives revolutionary bureaucracy's life-and-death power; LeMaitre's changes spare Ian temporarily but seal Barbara and Susan's peril, while serving as manipulative lure to ensnare the Doctor in Robespierre's inner circle

Appearances in the Narrative

When this object appears and how it's used

9 moments
S1E40 · The Tyrant of France
Robespierre’s Paranoid Confession

LeMaitre’s list of recent executions is the visual and thematic catalyst for the event’s confrontation. Physically, it is thrust across Robespierre’s desk at the scene’s outset, its stark entries (342 names in nine days) serving as a brutal reminder of the regime’s violence. The Doctor’s gaze likely lingers on it, using it as a silent reproach to Robespierre’s justifications. When Robespierre confesses to the executions of Danton and the Girondins, the list becomes a symbolic shorthand for the carnage, its cold tally sharpening the emotional impact of his words. The object is never explicitly referenced in dialogue, but its presence looms over the exchange, a mute accuser. By the end of the event, the list remains on the desk—untouched, unacknowledged in words, yet indelibly linked to Robespierre’s unraveling.

Before: Freshly presented by LeMaitre, the list is crisp and official, its ink likely still damp. It is gripped firmly in LeMaitre’s hand as he enters, then placed on Robespierre’s desk with bureaucratic precision. The paper is unblemished, its edges aligned—reflecting the regime’s orderly brutality.
After: The list remains on Robespierre’s desk, now slightly askew, as if disturbed by his restless hands during his confession. Its presence is no longer a mere report but a haunting artifact, a physical manifestation of the guilt Robespierre can no longer suppress. The Doctor’s unspoken challenge hangs over it, transforming it from a tool of administration into a silent witness to the regime’s moral decay.
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