The Clockwise War (comic story): Difference between revisions
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The Doctor heads out of the ship and grabs Bill to return to the TARDIS, with a very angry Jodafra in hot pursuit. However, before he can attack the Doctor, his wrist is grabbed by Fey Truscott-Sade, appearing out of nowhere. Telling the Doctor he should just keep running as he always does, Fey throws Jodafra into the Clockwise Men, killing him as well. This leads to a chain reaction as the ''Rangiroa'' collapses in on itself, also killing everyone on board. As the Doctor begs Fey to stop, she refuses, and disappears. Running back to the TARDIS, the Doctor and Bill just barely escape the collapsing entropy bubble. | The Doctor heads out of the ship and grabs Bill to return to the TARDIS, with a very angry Jodafra in hot pursuit. However, before he can attack the Doctor, his wrist is grabbed by Fey Truscott-Sade, appearing out of nowhere. Telling the Doctor he should just keep running as he always does, Fey throws Jodafra into the Clockwise Men, killing him as well. This leads to a chain reaction as the ''Rangiroa'' collapses in on itself, also killing everyone on board. As the Doctor begs Fey to stop, she refuses, and disappears. Running back to the TARDIS, the Doctor and Bill just barely escape the collapsing entropy bubble. | ||
On a ruined castle floating in an area of red space, Fey approaches a robed figure she calls Absence, telling it that everything went as expected. Absence watches the death of Bellator through a portal, pleased at what it sees, and confirms it had sent the [[Phantom Piper]] to steal a complete map of the space/time vortex from [[Chiyoko]]. Fey states that with that information on their side, the Doctor has lost. | On a ruined castle floating in an area of red space, Fey approaches a robed figure she calls the Absence, telling it that everything went as expected. The Absence watches the death of Bellator through a portal, pleased at what it sees, and confirms it had sent the [[Phantom Piper]] to steal a complete map of the space/time vortex from [[Chiyoko]]. Fey states that with that information on their side, the Doctor has lost. | ||
=== Part three === | === Part three === | ||
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* [[Ohila]] | * [[Ohila]] | ||
* [[Dolios]] | * [[Dolios]] | ||
* [[Matildus Galathea]] | |||
* [[Peter Pan (character)|Peter Pan]] | |||
* [[Tinkerbell]] | |||
== References == | == References == | ||
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# [[DWM 526]] (8 pages) Next: The Death of the Doctor! | # [[DWM 526]] (8 pages) Next: The Death of the Doctor! | ||
# [[DWM 527]] (8 pages) Next: The Lost Boys | # [[DWM 527]] (8 pages) Next: The Lost Boys | ||
# [[DWM 528]] (8 pages) Next: The Path to Retribution | |||
== Continuity == | == Continuity == | ||
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[[Category:War Doctor comic stories]] | [[Category:War Doctor comic stories]] | ||
[[Category:Stories set in the Last Great Time War]] | [[Category:Stories set in the Last Great Time War]] | ||
[[Category:Stories set in Cornucopia]] |
Revision as of 15:56, 26 July 2018
The Clockwise War was a comic story published in Doctor Who Magazine in 2018.
A younger version of the War Doctor appears on the final page of part three and throughout part four of the story. However, unlike in multi-Doctor stories such as The Day of the Doctor, he is shown entirely in flashback through narration by the then-incumbent Twelfth Doctor, and is never met by the Twelfth Doctor.
Summary
Part one
In the tower of Silent Memory upon the desert of High Remorse on Gallifrey, the Time Lord Bellator ascends, followed by General Kenossium, to prepare for a ritual that will lead him to his final regeneration. Telling the Time Lords to hurry up because "I've heard this malarkey eleven times already", Bellator begins to regenerate, but something goes badly wrong. Part-way through the process, he ends up twisted and elongated, and collapses to the floor, dead, before dissolving in an orange puddle on the ground. A Gallifreyan soldier arrives to inform Kenossium that all six regenerations that have taken place in the last hour have failed and led to the deaths of the people involved.
In the TARDIS, the Twelfth Doctor is in a great rush, even missing Alan Turing and Ranesh's wedding, but for a reason he will not tell Bill. Before he can elaborate, the TARDIS hits a massive energy field, an 'entropy bubble', encompassing a huge variety of destroyed space craft floating in zero gravity, as the TARDIS is drained of its power. Realising they can breathe in the field, the Doctor and Bill leave to try and prevent the TARDIS being "sucked dry", before someone shoots the TARDIS. It is revealed to be Gol Clutha and her band of mercenaries, and they drag the Doctor and Bill to the dead remains of a colony ship, the Rangiroa. Gol seems surprised that the Doctor does not know who she is working for this time and believes the state of the ship is his fault, but he has no idea what she means. Gol shows the Doctor the other inhabitants of Rangiroa - lots of people who used to be celebrities and geniuses on their own worlds, now stranded and homeless on the ship. Wanting revenge, Gol prepares to shoot the Doctor but is distracted by something.
Led outside, the Doctor realises that as Gol is a temporal mercenary, the ships stranded in the energy field are actually time machines, not spaceships. He eventually comes face to face with the leader of the Rangiroa - Count Jodafra. Like Gol, Jodafra also believes that the Doctor has set them up and has come to gloat, having made Fey Truscott-Sade work for him, but the Doctor still does not understand why he thinks this. Suddenly, before they can go any further, they are interrupted by a sight that shocks even Gol - the return of the Clockwise Men.
Part two
On the banks of Westminster in London, Hugo Wilding walks alone along the River Thames. He is quickly identified by a very confident ex-colleague of his, Alexander Truscott, who confirms to a begrudging Hugo that he is soon due to be appointed as head of the Ministry of Defence. Alexander mentions that Hugo's 'side operation' of sending British agents to space to help defend from attacks is a secret that is safe with him, but Hugo quickly shouts at him for discussing it in public, and denies it exists. Apologising, Alexander quickly takes off.
On the Rangiroa, the sight of the Clockwise Men advancing on the group causes everyone to panic, and Gol and her group start attacking them. However, their shots go straight through them, and a simple touch from the Clockwise Men is enough to age the attackers to death. The Doctor, having removed his handcuffs, narrowly rescues Bill from the Clockwise Men and finally convinces Gol and Jodafra that the attack is nothing to do with him. The four escape into Jodafra's golden time machine, the Salvation, and it materialises next to the TARDIS so that the TARDIS can be powered up enough to break out of the entropy bubble. The Doctor and Jodafra get to work as Bill and Gol head outside to attack the Clockwise Men. However, Gol's proton cannon has no effect either, and a second Clockwise Man appears, attacking Gol and ageing her to death. When the Doctor and Jodafra finish their preparations, Jodafra reveals he was betraying the Doctor by swapping the settings to power up the Salvation instead of the TARDIS, but the Doctor shows how he swapped the settings first in anticipation.
The Doctor heads out of the ship and grabs Bill to return to the TARDIS, with a very angry Jodafra in hot pursuit. However, before he can attack the Doctor, his wrist is grabbed by Fey Truscott-Sade, appearing out of nowhere. Telling the Doctor he should just keep running as he always does, Fey throws Jodafra into the Clockwise Men, killing him as well. This leads to a chain reaction as the Rangiroa collapses in on itself, also killing everyone on board. As the Doctor begs Fey to stop, she refuses, and disappears. Running back to the TARDIS, the Doctor and Bill just barely escape the collapsing entropy bubble.
On a ruined castle floating in an area of red space, Fey approaches a robed figure she calls the Absence, telling it that everything went as expected. The Absence watches the death of Bellator through a portal, pleased at what it sees, and confirms it had sent the Phantom Piper to steal a complete map of the space/time vortex from Chiyoko. Fey states that with that information on their side, the Doctor has lost.
Part three
In the Indian Territory of America, 1882, Totika gets a surprise visit from a familiar face - the Marshal Bass Reeves. Being two years after their incident with the Stikini, she wonders why he came to visit, and he responds that he knows the feeling of being an outsider like her, and while he does not agree with what she did, he understands her anger and believes she deserves a second chance. However, they are interrupted by the sound of a TARDIS landing nearby. It is not the Doctor that emerges, though, but Kenossium, wishing to recruit Reeves for some reason.
Having escaped the entropy bubble, the Doctor and Bill head back to Cornucopia as the Doctor rushes ahead to meet with someone. Before he can do so, however, Bill grabs his wrist and shouts at him for not being open with her about his plans or who Fey really is, and the two walk off together. They enter a fancy office and the Doctor is immediately shouted at by a certain Miss Ghost for breaking in and taking his companion with him. As she reveals her true form as Annabel Lake, the Doctor explains he needs to access a very old file from her archives.
Annabel takes back the form of Miss Ghost, blindfolds the Doctor and Bill, and drives them to her secret Wonderland headquarters, but the Doctor quickly has to take the wheel as their car is intercepted by an air-truck, being ridden by a defiant Fey. Annabel jumps off and begins exchanging fire with Fey, but Fey aims at the car being ridden by the Doctor and Bill instead. When Annabel attempts to punch Fey, she turns intangible. Realising she must become tangible for even a split second when shooting, Annabel kicks her and uses her sonic screwdriver to divert the air-truck into the ground, where it explodes on contact, and she barely escapes with the Doctor. However, Fey emerges from the flames, unharmed.
At Wonderland HQ, the Doctor and Annabel meet up with Patrick Lake about the Doctor's request as Bill quietly recovers with a drink, feeling somewhat shaken for being the target of a shooting for once. Eventually, data about Fey reaches the Lakes, revealing her to be believed to have been killed in action in 1944. The Doctor explains how she used to be a good friend of his - travelling with him and eventually bonding with the Gallifreyan secret agent Shayde. Finally, the Doctor promises to explain all to Bill about what happened to her. The event did not take place in his current incarnation, however. Instead, it happened on "the worst day of the Time War."
Part four
The Twelfth Doctor narrates his experiences of the Time War, with the action moving in flashback to the Dorian Nexus. As explosions rained down, Ohila and the Sisterhood of Karn recited an incantation, and two people rushed around a large weapon - Fey and a much younger War Doctor. The Doctor had recruited Fey from her own war, where she eventually became renowned for her efforts, gaining a large variety of names. However, just as the Doctor had allies in the Sisterhood, so did the Daleks, in the form of the Morlontoa of the Seventh Sky, a multidimensional unreality form that could turn objects and living things into their opposites, as well as wipe out whole planets. The War Doctor explained how he was creating a Quantum-Intrinsic Field Projector, used to bounce the Morlontoa's unreality wave back at it. The Sisterhood eventually finished chanting the Hythala Invocation, firing "living symbols of strength and hope", assisting the Doctor at great mental strain to themselves.
However, the group also had the planet's inhabitants to save - the childlike Loshann, and as Fey commanded a Gallifreyan soldier to get them to a TARDIS, the Doctor's Projector hit the Morlontoa, and he rejoiced... but not for long. The Morlontoa's attacks were still able to get through, distorting and killing most of the Sisterhood and the Ninth Prydonian Guard, in a very similar way to how Bellator died. The worst attack of all, however, came to the children. Turning into hideous monsters, they attacked the Doctor and Fey, forcing Fey, against her wishes, to kill them off one by one to protect the Doctor's machine. Immediately after doing so, the Projector failed anyway, leaving both the Doctor and Fey distraught and the planet essentially doomed. As the Doctor led the group back to his TARDIS, Fey heard the cries of one child who was unaffected, and diverted to rescue them. However, the final seconds she spent doing so were seconds she did not have, leaving her, the child, and the rest of the planet struck by the Morlontoa's unreality wave. Although the Doctor was mortified and wanted to save her, Ohila held him back, as nobody could survive in the unreality wave. With the TARDIS unable to move during the attack, the Doctor had no choice but to watch as Fey died and disintegrated before him. As the TARDIS set off once more, the Doctor refused to be called by that title ever again.
Back in Wonderland HQ, the Twelfth Doctor explains he was too young back then to understand the true reality of war. As Fey is shown, still alive, looking over London, the Doctor says that while he does not know how she is back, she is now the most dangerous human to ever exist, and wants to destroy everything he loves.
Characters
- Twelfth Doctor
- Bill Potts
- Bellator
- Kenossium
- Gol Clutha
- Maakku
- Jodafra
- Hugo Wilding
- Alexander Truscott
- Fey Truscott-Sade
- Absence
- Bass Reeves
- Totika
- Annabel Lake
- Patrick Lake
- War Doctor
- Ohila
- Dolios
- Matildus Galathea
- Peter Pan
- Tinkerbell
References
- The Sisterhood of Karn fought in the Time War.
- Fey and the Doctor command the Ninth Prydonian Guard.
- The Morlontoa releases unreality spores.
Notes
- The name of the Time Lord General who debuted in TV: The Day of the Doctor is revealed to be Kenossium.
- The title of the comic is reminiscent of the Ninth Doctor novel The Clockwise Man.
Original print details
- (Publication with page count and closing captions)
- DWM 524 (8 pages) Next: The Sacrifice!
- DWM 525 (8 pages) Next: Kill Bill!
- DWM 526 (8 pages) Next: The Death of the Doctor!
- DWM 527 (8 pages) Next: The Lost Boys
- DWM 528 (8 pages) Next: The Path to Retribution
Continuity
to be added
|