Fabula
S1E30 · The Day of Darkness

Barbara’s existential dread surfaces

After Ian and Susan depart to investigate the garden’s escape route, Barbara remains in the temple with the Doctor, her psychological unraveling now fully exposed. She voices her terror of the temple’s spirits—an escalation of her earlier unease—framing it as a collective, suffocating presence of the dead. The Doctor, though reassuring, is visibly torn between his companions’ safety and Barbara’s vulnerability, which now threatens to fracture their unity. Her fear isn’t just personal; it’s a metaphor for the moral weight of their interference in Aztec culture, a weight she can no longer ignore. The Doctor’s hesitation in this moment underscores his divided loyalty: does he prioritize the group’s survival or address Barbara’s existential crisis before it becomes irreversible? The tension here isn’t just about escape—it’s about whether the companions can remain cohesive under the pressure of their actions’ consequences.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

2

Ian proposes using the stone in the garden as another escape route, suggesting that he and Susan investigate the tomb from the garden side, while Barbara stays behind, prompting a brief discussion about who should accompany him.

hope to determination ['garden']

After Ian and Susan depart to explore the tomb entrance in the garden, Barbara expresses her escalating fear and despair to the Doctor, revealing her feeling that the spirits of those who died in the temple are watching and waiting for her demise.

anxiety to dread

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

4

Territorial and despairing, overwhelmed by the oppressive atmosphere of the temple and the weight of their actions.

Barbara remains in the temple after Ian and Susan depart, her psychological state deteriorating as she voices her terror of the temple’s spirits. She describes a suffocating presence of the dead, framing her fear as both personal and collective. Her dialogue reveals her existential dread and the moral weight of their interference in Aztec culture, marking a turning point in her arc as she can no longer ignore the consequences of their actions.

Goals in this moment
  • Communicate the depth of her fear and moral conflict to the Doctor, seeking validation or resolution.
  • Resist the suffocating influence of the temple’s spirits, which she perceives as a physical and metaphysical threat.
Active beliefs
  • The temple’s spirits are a tangible, oppressive force that reflects the moral consequences of their interference.
  • Their actions in Aztec culture have irreversible and devastating implications.
Character traits
Vulnerable Existentially despairing Morally conflicted Introspective
Follow Barbara Wright's journey

Confident but concerned for Barbara’s well-being, masking his own urgency to escape.

Ian departs the temple with Susan to investigate a stone in the garden as a potential escape route, leaving Barbara and the Doctor behind. He reassures Barbara of their caution and the feasibility of the plan, demonstrating his pragmatic and action-oriented nature. His departure marks a shift in the group’s dynamic, as Barbara’s psychological state becomes the focal point of the remaining interaction.

Goals in this moment
  • Secure an escape route from the temple by investigating the garden stone.
  • Reassure Barbara and the Doctor that the plan is feasible and safe.
Active beliefs
  • Physical action and problem-solving are the keys to resolving their predicament.
  • Barbara’s emotional state, while concerning, is secondary to the immediate need for escape.
Character traits
Pragmatic Action-oriented Reassuring Determined
Follow Ian Chesterton's journey

Concerned but torn, struggling to balance Barbara’s emotional crisis with the practical need for escape.

The Doctor remains in the temple with Barbara after Ian and Susan leave, attempting to reassure her despite her escalating existential dread. His dialogue is marked by repetition and urgency, revealing his internal conflict between addressing Barbara’s psychological unraveling and focusing on their escape. His hesitation underscores his divided loyalty and the moral weight of their interference in Aztec culture.

Goals in this moment
  • Reassure Barbara and prevent her psychological collapse from derailing their escape plan.
  • Maintain the group’s cohesion amid the moral and physical pressures of their situation.
Active beliefs
  • Barbara’s fear is a manifestation of the temple’s oppressive atmosphere and their interference in Aztec history.
  • Their survival depends on both physical action (like Ian’s plan) and emotional resilience.
Character traits
Reassuring (though increasingly strained) Conflict-averse Loyal but divided Moralistic
Follow The First …'s journey
Supporting 1
Susan Foreman
secondary

Confident in the plan but concerned for Barbara’s well-being, masking her own urgency to escape.

Susan departs the temple with Ian to investigate the garden stone as a potential escape route, reassuring Barbara before leaving. Her departure leaves Barbara and the Doctor alone, shifting the focus to Barbara’s psychological unraveling. Susan’s absence highlights the group’s fragmentation and the urgency of their situation.

Goals in this moment
  • Assist Ian in investigating the garden stone as a means of escape.
  • Reassure Barbara and the Doctor that the plan is feasible and safe.
Active beliefs
  • Physical action and problem-solving are critical to their survival.
  • Barbara’s emotional state, while concerning, is secondary to the immediate need for escape.
Character traits
Supportive Loyal Pragmatic Reassuring
Follow Susan Foreman's journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

1
Ian's Escape Route Stone (Garden of Peace)

The garden stone is referenced as a potential escape route by Ian, who proposes investigating it to free a blockage and open a path to the tomb from the other side. Its mention marks a shift in the group’s focus from Barbara’s psychological state to practical action, symbolizing the tension between emotional and physical survival. The stone’s role is pivotal in the group’s plan to escape the temple, though its success remains uncertain.

Before: Located in the garden, partially blocking access to …
After: Ian and Susan depart to investigate it, leaving …
Before: Located in the garden, partially blocking access to the tomb, unexamined by the group.
After: Ian and Susan depart to investigate it, leaving its potential as an escape route unresolved but central to the group’s survival strategy.

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

1
Aztec Temple Interior

The temple interior serves as a confined and oppressive space where Barbara’s psychological unraveling reaches its peak. The stone walls and ritualistic atmosphere amplify her fear of the dead, framing the temple as a physical and metaphysical battleground. The Doctor’s attempts to reassure her are undermined by the temple’s suffocating presence, which reflects the moral weight of their interference in Aztec culture.

Atmosphere Oppressive, ritualistic, and suffocating, with a palpable sense of the dead watching and waiting.
Function A confined space trapping the companions, both physically and psychologically, where Barbara’s existential crisis unfolds.
Symbolism Represents the moral and historical consequences of their interference in Aztec culture, as well as …
Access Restricted to those trapped within (Barbara and the Doctor), with no immediate means of escape.
Stone walls that echo with Barbara’s despair A ritualistic atmosphere that amplifies her fear of the dead

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

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Key Dialogue

"BARBARA: Oh, we're like drowning people, Doctor."
"DOCTOR: Oh, now, now, now, don't worry, don't worry, don't worry. Don't give up hope."
"BARBARA: Maybe it's this place. I just feel sometimes as if all the people who've died here are watching, waiting for me to die, too."