BASIC PLOT
For twenty thousand centuries the Gallifreyans have been the most
powerful race in the universe. But now a new force has been unleashed,
one with the potential to change everything. Only the Doctor, trusted
member of the Time Lord council and a long time resident of Gallifrey,
can stop it.
DOCTOR
Uncertain, depending on when the book is set. He's definitely
played by Paul McGann, but it might be a young first Doctor, a future
Doctor who has returned to Gallifrey or an alternate version of the
eighth Doctor, living in a universe where the past was retroactively
changed.
COMPANIONS
Larna is the nearest, although she's not a companion in the
strictest sense.
MATERIALISATION CIRCUIT
The TARDIS usually resides in the Doctor's chambers on Gallifrey.
It travels to the Needle world in the far future and back again.
PREPARATORY READING
Cat's Cradle: Time's Crucible, Cold
Fusion, Lungbarrow. It would
also be useful to watch The Three Doctors, The Deadly Assassin, The
Invasion of Time, amongst others.
CONTINUITY REFERENCES
The dating for this book is left ambiguous. It's implied that it
might be the past, it might be the future, or it might be 'sideways',
in a parallel universe (although this idea is all but dismissed late
in the book), or most likely in an altered universe, since a theme of
the novel is having the power to change the past. I've attempted to
list the dates and their implications where possible. The most likely
dating at first glance would seem to be the past... but the Doctor
featured is played by Paul McGann. This isn't meant to sit
comfortably.
The title: The infinity symbol looks like an eight on its side.
This book could be seen as The Eight Doctors done right.
Back cover: "For twenty thousand centuries the Gallifreyans have
been the most powerful race in the cosmos" Twenty thousand centuries
is two million years - significantly less than the "Ten million years
of absolute power" quoted in Trial of a Time Lord, strongly suggesting
that this takes place in the past.
There are twelve chapters and we are told in The Deadly Assassin
that Time lords have twelve lives.
Pg 1 "Each snowflake melted as it batted into the thick walls of
the Citadel" The opening sentence is reminiscent of the opening
sentence of Timewyrm: Revelation ("They say no two snowflakes are the
same.")
"Gallifrey had been ruled by seers who remembered the future as
they remembered the past." The line of the Pythias was seen in
Time's
Crucible.
"But the memory cheats" A phrase uttered by John Nathan-Turner,
responding to fans' claims that the show wasn't as good as it used to
be.
Pg 2 "It hadn't been foretold that the Gallifreyan race would
become sterile, there was nothing in the Fragment about Looms, Houses,
Cousins, this, that or the other." Gallifrey became sterile in
Time's
Crucible, which also introduced Looms, Houses and Cousins.
Looms are
Rassilon's solution to the Time Lords (supposed) sterility - they are
genetic factories, from which new Gallifreyans spring fully grown.
Time Lord society is divided into Houses (which predate Rassilon), and
each House was assigned a Loom, which kept the Family stocked with 45
Cousins. We see meet Doctor's family and his Cousins in
Lungbarrow.
The other is one of the founders of Time Lords civilisation, along
with Rassilon and Omega. He kept in the shadows, remained nameless and
gave Rassilon the power to carry out his reforms. He was first seen in
the novelisation of Remembrance of the Daleks, then Time's Crucible
and Lungbarrow, along with a few other NAs.
Pgs 2-3 "Sing about the past again, and sing that same old song"
The song has 13 syllables per line, corresponding to 13 lives of Time
Lords.
Pg 3 "'A dream come true,' his wife agreed silently.' The woman is
Omega's wife, and will later be the Doctor's wife. She is Patience
(although she is never named as such here) and was seen in Cold
Fusion.
"'Who indeed?' the little man said" The Other. cf Lady Peinforte's
"that little man" in Silver Nemesis. Lady Peinforte may have been a
follower of the Pythia.
Pg 4 "We're immortal, barring accidents" This is how the Doctor
describes Time Lords in The War Games
Pg 5 "The air filled with an unearthly wheezing, groaning sound"
Presumably the Gallifreyans can travel in space but not time until
Omega opens the Eye of Harmony. It's not clear if the Other is on a
ship with Omega's fleet or not. Patience thinks he should be.
Pg 9 "A few tafelshrews had lived here once" Tafelshrews are small
mouse-like creatures native to Gallifrey, seen on page 23 of Time's Crucible and page 8 of Lungbarrow.
"Traditionally the time when vampires..." The Time Lords of
Rassilon's time fought the Great Vampires, as recounted in State of
Decay.
Pg 10 "The Chancellory Watch" The Chancellor was first mentioned in
The Deadly Assassin, but this is the first mention of a Chancellory
Watch. It's probably an excuse to use the term "Watchmen", a homage to
the Alan Moore comic strip of the same name.
"A spell in Traffic Control" Rodan worked here in Invasion of Time.
Pg 11 "The guard light probed the darkness" The light is alive!
Pg 13 "This part of the building is owned by Prydon College" The
Prydonian order is first mentioned in The Deadly Assassin. Prydon
makes a brief appearance in Time's
Crucible
and was one of the Heroes.
Pg 14 "Perhaps the best example was the Panopticon itself, the
enormous hexagonal hall" The Panopticon is the great hall where the
Time Lords have their meetings etc, as seen in The Deadly Assassin.
It's hexagonal, like the TARDIS console.
"The omniscate, the Seal of Rassilon, an ancient, swirling,
circular design that symbolised infinity and eternity" The Seal was
first seen in a Gallifreyan context in Deadly Assassin (although it
was sideways compared to the way we normally think of it), but it was
also seen in the Vogon hall in Revenge of the Cybermen (right way up)
"Far, far beneath there was the Eye of Harmony" The Eye holds the
captured black hole that fuels Gallifrey, as seen in The Deadly
Assassin, although we also saw [a conduit to] it in the Doctor's
TARDIS in the telemovie.
Pg 15 "A vast statue of one of the Gallifreyan Founders stood at
each corner of the Panopticon" There are six founders, also seen in
The Ancestor Cell, although the number varies there.
"Lecturing at Patrex College" The Patrexian order was introduced in
The Deadly Assassin.
Pg 16 "All six walls were lined with bookshelves" The Doctor's room
is hexagonal, like the TARDIS console.
"He didn't recognise the planet it represented, and the globe
itself looked like the product of a non-Gallifreyan civilisation."
It's possible that the globe is of Earth.
Pg 17 "The man was powerfully built with rugged features, a
weathered face with dark eyes; the woman was a redhead, a little
plump." These are the Doctor's parents (see the description given on
page 77, through Larna's eyes). The description of the woman matches
that of the woman in the picture in Joyce's office in Unnatural
History, or Penelope in The Room with No Doors, or Compassion,
interestingly (who was introduced after this book was written). The
man is likely Joyce, who is played by Sean Connery (matching this
description and the one of page 77).
"A beautiful lady with short black hair and a straight golden
gown." The Doctor's wife (Patience). She's wearing a different body in
when we meet her later in the novel and in Cold Fusion, though.
"The alcove containing the food machine" The first Doctor
frequently used a food machine in the early stories.
Pg 18 "He had a high forehead, emphasised by his close-cropped
hair" The Doctor is Paul McGann without the wig used in the telemovie.
Pg 20 "'If you've got Gallifreyan eyes,' Peltroc murmured to
himself. 'Even if you haven't, it's still quite easy,' the Doctor
assured him." The Doctor may not have Gallifreyan eyes, as in the
Telemovie.
Pg 22 "I'll stick with the sonic screwdriver, I think" This may or
may not suggest that the novel is post-Fury from the Deep.
"There was a single word on the paper, written in capitals: WHO"
See page 77.
Pg 23 "All the Chancellory Watch are trained to resist the mind
probe" Seen in The Deadly Assassin and mentioned in The Five Doctors.
Pg 25 "A man his age, his height, but with flowing, shoulder-length
hair. All his children were dead..." This man is the [regular] eighth
Doctor, who on page 273 of Father Time
has a similar dream where he sees the short-haired Doctor, whose wife
was dead. Cold Fusion implies that the Doctor's children are dead.
Pg 27 "An Infinity Chamber" A bit like the overhead viewer seen in
the telemovie.
"Gallifrey's moon, Pazithi" Pazithi Gallifreya was first mentioned
in Time's Crucible and also seen in
Lungbarrow.
"A little over five hundred Time Lords were present [...] More than
half the total number" There are only 1000 Time Lords.
"Larna hesitated" Larna sounds like a cross between Romana (and she
has long blonde hair like the second Romana) and the Lady Larn. The
Lady Larn is a character from Eric Saward's story for the Radio Times
20th anniversary special, Birth of a renegade. In that story, Larn was
the only surviving descendent of Rassilon. Renegade students wanted to
make her president, and unsuccessfully tried to recruit the Doctor to
their cause. After the coup was defeated, the Doctor's mind was
selectively wiped - he was too highly respected to kill, so to render
him harmless he was made ignorant of the events leading up to the
coup. Shortly afterwards he left Gallifrey with the Lady Larn, now
known as Susan.
"It was Lord Hedin." Hedin first appeared in Arc of Infinity.
However, his might be his son, who was also called Hedin.
Pgs 27-28 "The Old Time." The Old Time is the period seen in
flashbacks in Time's Crucible and
Lungbarrow, before the curse of
sterility.
Pg 28 "The Magistrate" The Master, back when he was the Doctor's
friend, or possibly in the future when he is redeemed. Also see the
description on pages 30-31.
"Castellan" the Castellan is the commander of the guards, first
seen in The Deadly Assassin.
Pg 29 "The conjunction of the planets Tarva and Alambil" These are
the moons of Narnia, mentioned in Prince Caspian.
"Olyesti is one of the Three Minute Cities in the East."
Quennesander Olyesti Pekkary was Rassilon's nephew and the leader of
the expedition in Time's Crucible.
Pg 30 "The ceremonial Sash of Rassilon [...] the metal circlet that
hovered above his head like a halo" The Sash and the Coronet of
Rassilon were seen in The Invasion of Time.
"We really must look into the latest disturbances on Tyler's Folly.
Certain of the other higher powers are recommending that their people
withdraw from the area." Tyler's Folly was the hollow planet seen in
the Benny adventure Down and disturbances there led to the climactic
events of Where Angels Fear, with the higher powers of the universe
(including the Time Lords) running scared, which this is referencing
(and The Infinity Doctors was published the month before Where Angels
Fear). At least one other set of higher powers are the People from The
Also People and the Benny books.
Pg 31 "He was in Low Town" Low Town is the slums of Gallifrey, as
seen in The Eight Doctors.
Pg 32 "The Outsiders, those Gallifreyans who had rejected the
civilised life in favour of the wilderness beyond the walls and
domes." The Outsiders were seen in The Invasion of Time.
Pg 33 "Perhaps even something as sophisticated as a shayde." Shayde
is a servant of the Matrix Lords who helps out the Doctor in the comic
The Tide of Time and reappeared in various DWM comics.
Pg 35 "At the centre of the disturbance was the Doctor, his
skullcap in one hand" The Valeyard wears one of these, although that's
probably unconnected.
Pg 36 "Unlike almost everyone else, everyone apart from poor Savar,
the Doctor had travelled. This was a man who had looked up at other
skies, left footprints in alien soil." In Seeing I, Savar's eyes were
stolen by the I (an insect-like race) and used for technology. The
Doctor has travelled, so this might be set in the future, after his
return to Gallifrey. The 'footprints' reference is a paraphrasing of
the Doctor's speech to Ian in An Unearthly Child 2, just after the
TARDIS has landed in 100,000 B.C.
Pg 38 "Today, for the first time in recorded history, Sontaran and
Rutan fleets were sharing the same star system without instantly
trying to annihilate one another." The Sontarans were first seen in
The Time Warrior and the Rutans were mentioned then, but not seen
until Horror of Fang Rock. The past sections of Time's Crucible sees
the Hero Prydonius sent to monitor a minor disturbance between the
Sontarans and the Rutans - here we see the war finally ended, in the
distant future. The presence of Sontarans on Gallifrey invites
comparison to The Invasion of Time.
"A star that showed signs of extensive re-engineering to keep it
within main sequence." Presumably by the Hand of Omega (Remembrance of
the Daleks, Lungbarrow).
Pg 40 "He and the Magistrate were the only members of the Council
less than two thousand years old." This doesn't help much in
quantifying the Doctor's age.
Pg 41 "Becoming energy beings of pure intelligence" Like the
Celestis, in Alien Bodies.
"Swarming across the universe in such numbers that no one could
kill you all" Like Humans, as described in The Invisible Enemy.
Pg 42 "And such a very great time after the fall of our own
people." The fall of Gallifrey was predicted in Goth Opera and The
Crystal Bucephalus and finally seen in The Ancestor Cell.
Pg 43 "They knew some of the names that would appear in the history
books of the future: Varnax, Faction Paradox, Catavolcus, the
Timewyrm. Threats to the entire Time Lords race, but quantifiable
ones, ones that the Time Lords were destined to survive." Varnax
appeared in various aborted scripts for the Telemovie (as described in
The Nth Doctor). Faction Paradox are a Time lord cult dedicated to
paradox, introduced in Alien Bodies (and the prediction of survival
against them is wrong, in The Ancestor Cell). Catavolcus was a demon
appearing in the comic The Neutron Knights. The Timewyrm appeared in
the first four New Adventures.
"There was to be a conflict, a war fought at some point against an
implacable force." The Time Lords fight a mysterious Enemy in a future
war, as outlined in Alien Bodies, Interference, Dead Romance, The Taking of Planet 5 and The
Ancestor Cell.
Pg 44 "He barely scraped his PhD, as I recall." The Doctor scraped
by with 51% on the second attempt, according to The Ribos Operation.
Pg 47 "The Enemy Within" The title of the Telemovie, according to
Philip Segal is "Enemy Within". This was also the title of various
aborted scripts.
"Over ten percent of the Gallifreyan population was female, but no
more than a dozen of the thousands of Time Lords were women." This
explains why there were no female characters in The Deadly Assassin
and very few seen on Gallifrey at all.
Pg 48 :No better than Pengallia, Marnal or Morbius" Morbius was
seen in The Brain of Morbius. Marnal is mentioned fairly often
throughout this book, but it's not known whether this is a reference
to something else or not.
Pg 50 "The Doctor was the only person on Gallifrey to wear a
battered cashmere jacket, pressed silk shirt and tailored tan
trousers." This description matches the eighth Doctor's outfit.
Pg 52 "'Neath Panopticon dome/Rassilon faces Omega/But who is the
other?" (and the next line ends with "brother", interestingly) We hear
another Gallifreyan nursery rhyme in The Five Doctors. Another founder
was called Apeiron. One of the statues in The Ancestor Cell has
close-cropped hair like the Doctor here, but that might be the Other.
Pg 54 "They'll be Scooped down at Nine Bells tonight." The Time
Scoop was invented in Gallifrey's 'dark times' to capture aliens and
make them fight to the death for the Time Lords' pleasure (The Five
Doctors).
"Public Record cameras" Runcible was a reporter for the Public
Register Video in The Deadly Assassin.
Pg 55 "Once again the TARDIS time capsules travelled the universe
on official Time Lord business." Once again may refer to the
pre-Minyan policy on intervention (Underworld).
"His eyes had been removed" We see more details of this in Seeing
I.
Pg 57 "I'll need to see the fault locator records." The first
Doctor had a fault locator in the TARDIS, seen most prominently in The
Edge of Destruction.
"No alien race has access to the Matrix. Well, not any more. Over
the years, a number of races have tried and..." The Invasion of Time?
Almost certainly, except that Larna doesn't specify that the Sontarans
themselves tried, which would seem natural in this context.
Pg 58 "Aircar traffic had been diverted away from this part of the
city" Romana has an aircar licence in The Pirate Planet.
Pg 59 "There was no reason why the stairs couldn't be dimensionally
transcendental." It's possible the stairs inside the TARDIS in
Invasion of Time are like this.
Pg 62 "'General Sontar,' the Doctor gasped." Also in The Crystal
Bucephalus.
Pg 62 "The Supreme Council of the urSontaran Warburg" A Warburg is
also mentioned in Time's Crucible.
Pg 63 "And not all Time Lords are Gallifreyans" Ace was to become a
Time Lord in Season 27 (and possibly Cwej in Lungbarrow) and the
Doctor is half-human. On page 30, Castellan Voran is described as a
"Dromeian Counciller", although it's not clear if this is his race or
title. If it is his race, it's interesting that a non-Gallifreyan
later becomes president.
Pg 64 "Flowers of Remembrance of the Lost Dead" Flowers of
remembrance are also featured in The Ancestor Cell.
"The Tomb of the Uncertain Soldier" Many countries have a tomb of
the unknown soldier, commemorating the many men who died in the first
and second world wars. A soldier in a Time War would of course be an
uncertain soldier.
"The Time Wars" I think these were featured in the comics, but I'm
not sure.
Pg 67 "Dropping out of vworp drive" The comics use 'vworp' to
represent the sound of a TARDIS materialising.
Pg 68 "Qqaba was the last in the universe, of that Omega was
certain." Qqaba is the star that Omega turns into a black hole in the
comics Star Death, 4-D War and Black Sun Rising. It's also mentioned
in Time's Crucible.
"He ran his gloved hand over each casket in turn." These are the
Hands of Omega, Omega's remote stellar manipulators. One accompanied
the Doctor on his escape from Gallifrey in Lungbarrow, allowing him
access to the Old Time and later he retrieved it in Remembrance of the
Daleks, where he used it to destroy [what he thought was] Skaro and
its sun.
Pg 69 "Open" Omega's plan is activated with the same word that the
Doctor uses to address the casket in Remembrance of the Daleks.
"The protective field granting the ship temporal grace." Seen in
Invasion of Time, amongst other places.
Pg 70 "He heard it via the telepathic link to the
others" In Time's
Crucible, the early Gallifreyans are telepathic. See
continuity cock-ups below.
Pg 71 "He heard one of their voices, then the other." Whose is the
first voice? (Possibly this is just a sneaky way to introduce "the
other" naturally into the text).
Pg 75 "Sleep in My Mind" Most of the Doctor's family sleeps in his
mind, except when he really wants to remember them (Tomb of the
Cybermen).
Pg 76 "Same length of day and year, same gravity, same distance
from the same type of sun" Earth and Gallifrey have always had a lot
in common, so it's no surprise that the two populations look similar.
"Four Quartets" is by T.S. Eliot. The first quartet, Burnt Norton,
begins:
Time present and time past
Are both present in time future
And time future contained in time past
"There was only one timepiece in the whole room, an ormolu clock
from Earth" Ormolu is a mix of gold and mercury, used to give objects
a gold finish. In the early TV stories there is an ormolu clock in the
console room (especially Edge of Destruction).
Pgs 76-77 "The longer of the two hands was between the two and the
three, the shorter sat about a quarter of the way between the five and
the six." The time on the clock is just slightly before 5:15, the time
the first episode was aired on November 23 1963. This is probably the
clearest signal of when the novel is situated.
Pg 77 "There was a single word, hand-written, in capitals: OHM" OHM
is short for Omega and the SI units Larna refers to are represented by
the Greek letter Omega, but upside-down, the word reads WHO. This not
only forms a link between the Doctor and Omega, but ties in to the
original titles of the show, where WHO was superimposed over OHW. See
page 22.
"The first was a computer painting of a couple" Romana mentioned
computer paintings in City of Death. The description of the couple
here and the Doctor's wife complements the descriptions on page 17.
Pg 78 "'"Death is but a door",' she whispered." This is a voice
print, as in the Invasion of Time. The phrase is the inscription seen
in Silver Nemesis.
Pg 81 "The Great Key? The Key to Time?" Invasion of Time, season
16.
Pg 83 "He wore a ring on the middle finger of his right hand which
had the same blue gem set in it." This is the ring on the cover. The
Hartnell Doctor wore such a ring (used especially in The Web Planet).
In Cold Fusion, Patience says "You wear my husband's ring".
"'Yet you have this zero room for her.' 'This place is for me'" The
zero room aids in regeneration by providing a simple stable
environment, as seen in Castrovalva. Does this mean the Doctor has
already regenerated, or is he expecting to at some point?
"'You had the chance to leave. Why did you come back?' 'This is
home.'" This implies that The Doctor voluntarily returned to
Gallifrey.
"'Where did you meet?' 'We didn't'" This isn't nearly as obscure as
it seems - Patience was the Doctor's nursemaid from birth, so he had
known her all his life.
"There were a number of aliens too - Mr Saldaamir" Mr Saldaamir is
a blue skinned non-Gallifreyan, a friend of the Doctor's father. He
appears in Unnatural History, Beige Planet Mars,
Father Time and the short
story Fishy Business (and possibly Where Angels Fear). He's involved
in some shady project that might concern straightening out jumbled
timelines and alternate realities.
Pg 84 "The young son and the older woman. What would his father
think?" This is another reference to Patience being the Doctor's
nursemaid before she became his wife.
"The analogue Time Lords that had built the Tower" Does this imply
that the Time Lords in this novel are digital? These might be the
clockmakers referred to in Christmas on a Rational Planet
and some Benny books. Or they might be the Time Lords of the 'real'
universe. Or possibly the Time Lords of the Benny Universe (Dead
Romance). This is a fascinating passage, yet it's curious
that it has no apparent connection to anything else in the book, so
there's probably something cleverer going on. The clock tower with its
clockwork figures were created by Time Lords from a parallel universe,
who were erased one day (or conversely, the clock tower appeared one
day). Later on, we learn that Omega has been retroactively changing
the past, so it's possible that these Time Lords were alternate Time
Lords seen elsewhere before Omega's retconning. We're told that the
clockwork figures have complex, yet perfectly regulated social
interactions. In the very next scene we're told that life in the
Citadel normally ran like clockwork. It's possible that the Time Lords
of this novel are clockwork figures in the 'real' universe. This ties
in to a theory from Dead Romance,
that the chain of Time Lords who can put whole universes in bottles is
infinite, so we might be seeing a bottle universe here.
Pg 87 "You will always hear a name you understand" The Time Lords'
gift for language was mentioned in The Masque of Mandragora.
Pg 88 "She was safe in the Doctor's bed." Shag #1.
Pg 89 "Only butterflies, and this was just a dream." Likely a
reference to the Butterfly Room, a symbol of the eighth Doctor's
personality.
Pg 90 "Her waist-length hair was bedraggled." Another Time Lady who
had a great deal of hair was Cousin Innocet. The two are probably
unrelated, though.
Pg 91 "'Are you alive or dead in there, puss?' he asked the box
solemnly." This is a joke about Schrodinger's cat, a thought
experiment, where quantum uncertainty could have an effect on the
macroscopic world that wouldn't be confirmed until it was observed.
Pg 97 "His hearts as black as his robes" I'm sure this is a
misquote from somewhere obvious, but I can't place it.
"The Magistrate had known the Doctor all his life, and although
they'd had their differences in the past, it was clear that they loved
one another." Who says the Doctor is straight? Also, it's possible
that "their differences" refers to the period when the Magistrate was
known as the Master, if this is set in the future.
Pg 101 "If, say the Cybermen were to destroy the Earth before the
human race had reached their full potential, then the consequences to
universal history would be catastrophic." This is Attack of the
Cybermen and the Doctor was unwittingly sent by the Time Lords to
protect the web of time.
"The intervention of certain higher powers" The Guardians?
Pg 107 "'Baxterium?' he whispered." Baxterium is named for Stephen
Baxter, award-winning science fiction author. See page 194.
Pg 109 "The Keeper of the Matrix [...] wore ceremonial robes" The
Keeper of the Matrix guards the key that allows access into the
Matrix. At the end of The Ultimate Foe, the Keeper of the Matrix is
the Valeyard.
Pg 114 "The Doctor let the memories wash over him. 'Many times.'"
The Doctor has experienced the loss of loved ones many times,
suggesting a future setting.
Pg 115 "My Lord president, this breach is so large, so powerful,
that the most surprising thing about it is that the past hasn't
already been affected." The breach affects the past retroactively,
suggesting an alternate-Gallifrey setting.
Pg 117 "A sculpture that resembled a molecular model" There's one
of these in the Castellan's office in the Invasion of Time.
"A sepia portrait of Castellan Fordfarding, an old man with a high
forehead, an aquiline nose and thin white hair." The House of
Fordfarding is mentioned in Time's
Crucible. The description is
suspiciously close to that of the first Doctor, so either Castellan
Fordfarding was played by William Hartnell, or in this universe, the
Doctor we know became Castellan and instead the (first?) Doctor is
played by Paul McGann. Another portrait matching this description can
be seen on the front cover of Lungbarrow.
Pg 118 "With its pantograph and pivots it looked like a shaving
mirror." There was also a shaving mirror in the TARDIS console in
Season 14, although it's not clear if that too was a retinal scanner.
Pg 121 "'Centro is where you left him,' the Castellan assured
them." Presumably a comics reference.
"Then who is it? The Klade? The Tractites? The Ongoing?" K-L-A-D-E?
Why, that's an anagram of -- The Klade are mentioned in
Father Time. The Tractites
are a race inhabiting an alternate Earth, from Genocide. The Ongoing
may be a comics reference.
Pg 130 "The timezone in which the Time lords lived was around ten
billion years after Event One" Not only does this pin down the setting
of the story, it says that Gallifrey actually exists in a specific
time. As a side note, A History of the Universe dates Genesis of the
Daleks to c 4000 B.C. and in that story the Time Lord refers to having
mastered simple technologies "when the universe was less than half its
present size". Make of that what you will.
Pg 134 "It would have no toes and only three fingers." The stripped
down Sontaran warrior explains the difference between appearances in
the Sontarans, a clone race.
"We exist in a state of grace" Temporal grace, preventing any harm
coming to anyone in a TARDIS.
Pg 137 "There was a brick-lined column, like a vast chimney stack,
capped by a vast iron globe set in the centre of the floor of the
Panopticon, a hundred storeys above, down to the Eye of Harmony, a
thousand miles below." This description matches the Eye as seen in the
Deadly Assassin.
Pg 140 "There were vast insects, bizarre mechanisms, , even purely
abstract shapes. Some were more human: angular-faced women in golden
cloaks; a blue-skinned figure in an immaculate business suit;a man
with a single bionic eye." The insects are probably the Charrl, future
inhabitants of Earth, from Birthright. The angular-faced women might
be the Drahvins, but the image isn't quite right. The blue-skinned
figure is Mr Saldaamir. The man with a single bionic eye is Silver, from
Hope.
"The Magistrate saw himself with six faces, wearing a black tunic."
The six faces are Delgado, Pratt, Beevers, Ainley, his form in First
Frontier and Eric Roberts.
Pg 145 "The Doctor's own TARDIS was stuck in one form." It's not
said which form, but in the previous paragraph it fits inside the
space of a little cupboard.
Pg 148 "Gallifreyans had traditionally resisted the urge to
transform into beings of pure energy." The Celestis take this option
in Alien Bodies (although there's a strong counterargument to doing so
in the Taking of Planet 5).
"But if Gallifrey could fall, then what hope for the lesser races?"
Gallifrey falls in The Ancestor Cell.
Pg 151 "[Savar] had been a friend of the Doctor's father. He had
been the Doctor's friend." Just an interesting note.
Pg 154 "He and I studied the Old Times together. The ROO texts"
Rassilon, Omega and the Other. Also mentioned on page 119 of Goth Opera.
"Imagine Gallifrey's might in the hands of the Daleks or the
Faction Paradox." That's spooky and predates The Ancestor Cell by two
years.
Pg 155 "Inside its impossibly large control room was a three-sided
central console." Early TARDISes with fewer features?
Pg 157 "I of the Needle" The I were the race that stole Savar's
eyes in Seeing I.
"Hedin was still a Hedin." Hedin is presumably a family name, so
the counsellor seen in Arc of Infinity might have been an ancestor or
a descendent of the Hedin here.
"Was that before or after your wedding? [...] It was before the
grandchild [...] You looked much as you do now" The grandchild is
presumably Susan and this may or may not tie into Lungbarrow, where
Susan was the granddaughter of The Other and came from the old times
(and although she recognises the Hartnell Doctor, she acknowledges
that he doesn't look like her grandfather).
Pg 158 "Two million years ago, Rassilon, Omega and the others took
their starbreakers to Qqaba." We get a potted history of Gallifrey. As
with the back cover, two million years places this firmly before Trial
and its "Ten million years of absolute power."
"Oh, you think I'm just another Morbius, intent on raising an army
and conquering the universe" The Brain of Morbius.
"Change begins at home. That's why you came back." This also echoes
the speech from Trial of a Time Lord and the line "I should have
stayed at home." The Doctor coming back from his travels suggests the
future, though.
Pg 159 "I stepped from him" Is this a term of affection for Savar's
TARDIS, the way the Doctor refers to his TARDIS as 'she', or is
Savar's TARDIS sentient (It speaks, telepathically, on the next page).
That might suggest the future seen in Alien Bodies, when TARDISes are
sentient (due to Compassion - a future that was averted in The
Ancestor Cell).
"I could see birds in that alien sky" Another paraphrase from the
Doctor's speech in episode 2 of An Unearthly Child.
"Nothing was fixed, nothing." The past is fluid from Omega's
domain, again suggesting that this is 'sideways'. Interestingly the
triple concepts of past, future and sideways that are possible
settings for this novel within 'regular' continuity are exactly the
three concepts outlined for the original direction of the show, back
in season 1.
Pg 160 "I abandoned my dying ship, made for the escape unit" In
Sanctuary, the escape unit is the Jade Pagoda (although that wasn't
what it was in Iceberg).
"I saw the pages behind ours, other times and spaces. Not parallel
universes, but palimpsest universes." The 'pages' behind the current
reality might be the more familiar reality of the show, or the Time
Lords of the Benny universe. This also rules out the idea of this
being a parallel universe in the traditional sense of the definition.
Pg 161 "They came while I slept" 'They' are the I.
Pg 163 "The Effect can change the past?" Like the history of this
book, perhaps.
Pg 164 "The Time Lords of old could see the future." They lost this
ability in Time's Crucible.
Pg 166 "A million times more habitable land than even a Dyson
Sphere could provide." A Dyson Sphere is a habitable sphere built
around a star. The People of the Worldsphere live inside a Dyson
Sphere (The Also People, the Benny books).
"The sky had fallen." This might tie in with
Father Time and the falling of the Supremacy.
Pg 169 "This thing is an abomination,' one of the monks intoned."
The Time Lords have been seen as monks before, both in the form of The
Meddling Monk and also in Dead Romance
and Tears of the Oracle.
Pg 173 ""He had his own special insight into the man." It's not
clear what the Doctor's insight on Omega is, whether it's to do with
the Other, or if this is set in the future, the events of The Three
Doctors.
"This could very well be the decision that leads to the destruction
of Gall-" We see this occur in The Ancestor Cell and technicians at
the beginning of that book are monitoring events to look out for just
such a decision.
Pg 177 "The blackstar was devised to crack open Dyson Spheres." We
saw a war between the Time Lords and the People in Walking to Babylon.
"A disc, the light sliding from the omniscate on its top surface"
This is the bomb that the Time Lords send towards earth in
Interference book 2.
"Even during the Vampire Wars we never had to resort to the -"
State of Decay. Note that the Doctor speaks of the Vampire wars as
though he was there. He might be referring to history, or it might be
a slip of the tongue, Remembrance of the Daleks style.
Pg 178 "They'll need the Great Key." The Great Key was also used to
arm a powerful weapon in The Invasion of Time.
"Activate an eyeboard." We see eyeboards in Seeing I, which are
based on Gallifreyan technology courtesy of Savar's eyes.
Pgs 187-188 "There was someone with him... a woman...
professional-looking with a generous mouth, wearing a tailored suit
and baggy coat... heavily pregnant, with long legs, high cheekbones
and ruffled black hair... a teenager, blonde streaks in her ginger
hair and Rupert Bear trousers... a wiry young woman with blue eyes and
fair hair..." These are the eighth Doctor's companions from various
places. The heavily pregnant woman is Bernice, pregnant with the
Doctor's child in the aftermath of The Dying Days. The fair-haired
woman is Sam Jones. The professional woman is probably Grace Holloway.
The ginger-haired teenager is Izzy from the DWM comic strip.
"The Sagittarius Galaxy had already been absorbed." Once again,
Doctor Who mixes up constellations and galaxies, in the best tradition
of the TV series.
Pg 189 "The Doctor dusted down his jacket, straightened his scarf."
It's interesting to note that this Doctor is given a scarf, when the
eighth doesn't have one. Mind you, the first Doctor in An Unearthly
Child had one.
Pg 190 "Sideways in time." Battlefield.
Pg 193 "Those are Thompson Lamps. [...] They are everlasting." The
Doctor used everlasting matches in the novelisation of Doctor Who in
an Exciting Adventure with the Daleks.
Pg 194 "The Time Ships" This is by Stephen Baxter, for whom
Baxterium is named (see page 107) and is the authorised sequel to The
Time Machine.
Pg 195 "Librarinth" A combination of library and labyrinth, also
mentioned in Father Time.
"It was bound in reptile hide of some kind, with an omniscate
embossed on the cover." That's the Seal of Rassilon (this is a book
about future prophecy of the Time Lords).
Pg 196 "He slammed the book shut, suddenly pale." There's an event
towards the end of the prophecy book that unnerves the Doctor,
presumably the destruction of Gallifrey in The Ancestor Cell. The
three men are sure that the Doctor won't prevent the event from
occurring (especially true if he causes it).
Pg 197 "We are Gallifreyan/Human hybrids, the Children of
Kasterborous" Kasterborous is the constellation in which Gallifrey is
located. Interestingly, the Doctor is a Gallifreyan/Human hybrid (the
Telemovie) and he has a child who comes from the far future (Father
Time), and there's some suggestion that he might also be Miranda's
biological father, so it's possible that these guys are the Doctor's
descendants.
"We are from the Accidentally Left Behind When Everyone Else
Transcended This Reality Interest Group." On the other hand, they
might be future People.
"I think that Helios is Merlin." Merlin is a future Doctor
(Battlefield), so Helios might be the Doctor.
"We are clearly the super-evolved survivors of the Thal race,
fleeing the penultimate destruction of Skaro that sparked off the
Final Dalek War." The penultimate destruction of Skaro is quite
amusing, especially as this book was a reaction to the retconning of
Skaro's destruction in War of the Daleks.
Pg 200 "We'd tell you the correct answer: thirty five." Not so
coincidentally, the number of years of Doctor Who that this book
celebrates.
Pg 204 "A rather battered segment of the Key to Time." It had to
show up somewhere.
"A semi-organic helmet" Ice Warriors?
"The much coveted Crown of the Fifth Galaxy" The Peladon stories
featured representatives from Galaxy Five, but it's not clear if this
is the same thing (in Legacy it's a terrorist organisation, not a
galaxy at all).
"A blue-gold ovoid with a flower growing from it..." Uncertain
reference
"They were set into the floor, like a bomb bay, or the way into a
Kansas storm shelter." The Kansas storm shelter is a reference to The
Wizard of Oz, which itself was the inspiration for Ace.
Pgs 206-207 "'I know you,' he realised. 'Yes,' Helios said simply.
'As I know you.'" It's not clear who Helios is, but he's the only one
of the three able to remember both the past and the future. The Merlin
hint is rather suspicious, so I'll suggest that he really is a
far-future Doctor.
Pg 207 "But you have already taken your first steps on... [...]
you've seen the enemy." The Ancestor Cell.
Pg 208 "And for a fleeting moment she was a smaller, fuller woman"
We see two incarnations of Patience. The shorter woman is the
incarnation the Doctor married. The blonde woman is the regenerated
Patience who we see in Cold Fusion.
Pg 209 "A King of Infinite Space" This is a line from Hamlet, but
also a reference to the Kings of Space in
Dead Romance, who are the Time Lords from a higher
bottle universe.
"I was born a Gallifreyan, but I've lived long enough that I may
just have evolved beyond that." Patience has developed the power of
regeneration, but she wasn't born with it. This reconciles apparently
contradictory parts of Cold Fusion and Lungbarrow.
Pg 210 "I am two million years old" The early Time Lords really do
live forever.
Pg 211 "The Doctor remembered the night that he had been too late"
This is the same scene as on page 173 of Cold Fusion.
Pg 213 "'Isn't the Doctor one of the Four Names too?'
'He is. But Rassilon was very clear that the Doctor should only be killed
when he -'" Lance Parkin has confirmed that this refers to the same
"four names" mentioned in The Adventuress of
Henrietta Street.
Pg 215 "He's probably jumped into that TARDIS of his and left
Gallifrey again." It looks like the Doctor has a habit of leaving
Gallifrey.
Pg 216 "The wide belt she usually wore with it was missing" Shag #2
"I was right on the brink of death in the matter universe"
Patience's death is recounted in Cold Fusion.
Pg 217 "If he's got the power to create all this, he must be able
to whip up an escape route." Much of this is a parallel to The Three
Doctors. As the Doctor didn't comment on the familiarity of the
situation then, that suggests that this takes place either in the
future or an alternate reality.
Pg 221 "That's how he chooses to represent the singularity."
Omega's singularity was also represented by a fire in The Three
Doctors, although here it's a blazing fire in a fireplace and there is
was a single column of flame. It's not clear whether the Doctor
already knew this or not.
Pg 222 "A beard that curled down his chest" Omega has a face,
suggesting that this is before The Three Doctors.
Pg 223 "When matter is transmitted, a duplicate is created at the
destination and the original is destroyed." This is quite similar to
the description of Lucretia's transmat phobia in Down.
Pg 224 "I have seen a universe where there was no Rassilon and the
Time Lords were gods thanks to me." The Time Lords are gods in Dead
Romance.
"'Parallel universes?' 'Such places exist, but this was our
universe, riddled with paradox and contradiction like weevils in a
biscuit.'" This seems to rule out the setting as a parallel universe.
If it's sideways, it's 'our' universe, except that the past has
changed.
Pg 229 "Hang on, I'm two hundred and twenty-nine pages in, with
only another fifty-one to go." Cool.
Pg 231 "As President you will be given full access to
the Matrix,
the Great Key, the Demat Gun, the Magnetron, the
blackstars" The Demat
gun was a powerful Time Lord weapon seen in The Invasion of Time
(powered by the Great Key). The Magnetron was the device the
Time Lords used to move Earth in The Mysterious Planet [with thanks to
Alex Hargrave].
Interestingly, in Invasion of Time, the Demat Gun is forbidden
knowledge and although the Doctor discovers how to build it, his
mind
is wiped at the end, yet here both the great Key and the Demat
Gun are
common knowledge.
Pg 237 "He could sense the powers of evil and darkness drawing
closer" These aren't Omega, but those that will follow him, presumably
Faction Paradox and the Enemy.
Pg 240 "It was a metal casket that bore a disturbing similarity to
a coffin." Other caskets seen in the series are the Hand of Omega in
Remembrance and the Doctor's casket in Alien Bodies. A transmat copy
of the Doctor's body does get put in this one, so just possibly this
is the casket that turns up in Alien Bodies.
Pg 246 "The Magistrate moved her aside and then took a stubby black
tube from his belt." The Tissue Compression Eliminator.
Pgs 246-247 "I know what you have been and what you will be." Omega
causes the Magistrate to vanish. It's not clear whether he kills him
(placing this in the future or sideways) or this is the catalyst that
turns him evil (instead of The Dark Path). It's interesting to note
that he's abandoned here by the Doctor, or at least Omega in the
Doctor's body, which might explain his turning to evil and hating the
Doctor (assuming he survives).
Pg 253 "You're not the Doctor, are you?" Omega inhabits the
Doctor's body, just as he did in Arc of Infinity.
Pg 255 "She was fast asleep beside him" Shag #3.
Pg 257 "He didn't have his - the Doctor's - glasses on." The Doctor
needs glasses? The fifth Doctor did in Castrovalva and Frontios.
Pg 259 "She'd been his tutor, his friend, his first love, his wife,
the mother of his children." Just wanted to point this out.
"He was a Time Lord from the Noble House of Lungbarrow on the
planet Gallifrey. He had been born of the loom, son of the greatest
explorer of his age and a human woman, Annalise... no... his mother's
name had been Penelope. He knew his father's name at least: his
father's name wasn't Ulysses, and he was a professor at
Berkeley." The differing accounts of the Doctor's origins make a great
point in this novel about retroactive changing of the past. We see
House Lungbarrow in Lungbarrow. The
explorer reference is to the
Doctor's father, Ulysses, in the various Nth Doctor scripts. Penelope
from The Room With No Doors matches the description of his mother on
page 17. Daniel Joyce is a professor at Berkeley in Unnatural History
(and note that Joyce wrote Ulysses).
Pg 267 "I've left that place behind, with all its squabbling and
imperfections and unrequited love and decay and..." In Ghost Light,
when asked about the things he hates, one of the things the Doctor
mentions is unrequited love.
Pg 270 "'Snap,' he said calmly." The second and sixth Doctors
exchange this word when they meet in The Two Doctors.
"This is Skaro" The nuclear fallout is still raging.
Pg 271 "Destroying and undestroying planets with the merest
thought." This section tries to point out the danger of retcons, for
example the undestruction of Skaro in War of the Daleks.
Pg 272 "Of course you can rewrite history, but you shouldn't." This
contradicts The Aztecs deliberately, with a paraphrase of "You can't
rewrite history. Not one line."
Pg 275 "The Monument to Lost Explorers" This might be related to
the expedition in Time's Crucible.
"The cultivation of roses and chess endgames." The rose garden
appears in the novelisations of The Five Doctors and The Massacre and
in Timewyrm: Revelation. Chess is a popular game in the series, from
the Doctor's games with K9 to The Curse of Fenric.
Pg 279 "I'll be away from Gallifrey for most of the time, leading a
team of specialists." Larna's new job appears to involve working with
Joyce in San Francisco and she's namechecked in Unnatural History.
Pg 280 "The Doctor smiled." This might be the catalyst to the
Doctor leaving Gallifrey, but it's a lot less clear than it might be.
OLD FRIENDS AND OLD ENEMIES
The Magistrate (The Master, but here a friend of the Doctor's),
Hedin (although possibly not the same Hedin seen in Arc of Infinity),
Patience (from Cold Fusion), Savar (from Seeing I), Omega, with cameo
appearances by Rassilon and the Other.
NEW FRIENDS AND NEW ENEMIES
Larna (mentioned later in Unnatural History), Castellan Voran,
CONTINUITY COCK-UPS
The setting isn't a cock-up, it's deliberately ambiguous and ties
into the theme about the dangers of changing the past.
- Pg
70 "He heard it via the telepathic link to the
others" In Time's
Crucible, the early Gallifreyans are telepathic, but they
lose this
ability before Omega launches (and there's a great deal made of that
at the end), so this is an inconsistency.
PLUGGING THE HOLES [Fan-wank theorizing of how to fix continuity
cock-ups]
- Possibly there's some residual telepathy left, or this is an
artificial telepathic link for Omega's mission.
FEATURED ALIEN RACES
The Time Lords (who might possibly not be the Time Lords we know),
FEATURED LOCATIONS
Gallifrey (the Citadel and Low Town, on the outskirts of the
Dome), timeframe uncertain.
The Needle world, and a space station placed in orbit around it,
the far future.
Omega's world of anti-matter.
IN SUMMARY - John Anderson and Robert Smith?
This highly unusual novel throws you for a loop the first time
around, as your fan gears mentally grind in three directions, trying
to fit this into place. However on second reading, it's a whole new
novel, one that's concerned with big, hard SF ideas, detailed
worldbuilding and which plays its theme like a finely tuned
instrument. The first third is wonderful, even though almost nothing
happens - the details are fascinating and you're pulled into the
puzzle of the setting immediately. It drags a bit in the middle, but
things pick up again for the much-criticised final third when events
relocate to the far future. The Doctor is fabulous, with Paul McGann
written all over him. There's lots of fun pieces, too many to mention,
although the resolution is stunningly anticlimactic. However, this is
a book to be savoured.