Honeymoon Horrors (short story): Difference between revisions

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[[Category:Stories set in 3104]]
[[Category:Stories set in 3104]]
[[Category:The Brilliant Book 2012 short stories]]
[[Category:The Brilliant Book 2012 short stories]]
[[Category:Doctor Who short stories]]

Revision as of 16:51, 8 May 2023

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Honeymoon Horrors, as titled on the contents page, was a short story published in October 2011 in The Brilliant Book 2012, tying in with A Christmas Carol. It was told in an epistolary format, including a series of letters from Amy Pond and Rory Williams to the Eleventh Doctor about the progress of their honeymoon as well as facsimiles of in-universe flyers in their possession: Play Among the Stars, and Come Aboard the Thrasymachus for the ship Thrasymachus, and Welcome, traveller, to Sardicktown for Sardicktown itself.

Summary

Amy Pond and Rory Williams's attempt at a space-time-hopping honeymoon keeps going wrong, interrupted by various adventures. When they eventually find a brochure for an inviting space cruise ship, they think they've finally found the peaceful retreat they need, little suspecting that the ship will fly over, and crash-land towards, the exceedingly unpleasant township of Sardicktown, whose flyer advertises such highlights as Dr Henry Fizzog's Museum of the Macabre and "the largest collection of antique and decorative pins in the Horsehead Nebula".

Plot

Amy Pond and Rory Williams are trying to enjoy their honeymoon, and send the Eleventh Doctor letters reporting on their progress. Their first destination was the Globe Theatre on 13 January, 1605, where they saw a performance of Romeo and Juliet, enjoying it despite the stink of the crowd. However, things got worse quite quickly after the curtain call, with William Shakespeare trying to come on to Amy and King James I trying to have Amy and Rory thrown in the Tower when he overhears Rory saying that they know the Doctor. Amy writes the Doctor a postcard which ends with a request to pick them up from the wine cellar of their hotel, where they are hiding in empty barrels.

The Doctor's next recommendation is the Gardens of Zul-Thep on 9 July 3104, where they are attacked by giant killer bees attracted by the jam they brought for their picnic. Rory sends the Doctor a voice-mail urgently asking him to pick them up.

Their next destination is 1881 Arizona, but Wyatt Earp turns out to be "nothing like the films", and tries to shoot Rory. There are also large numbers of aliens hanging about. Amy sends the Doctor a telegram asking him to come stop the aliens and the randier cowboys, and also to bring some Salvon for Rory, who's had a "cactus accident".

Their next stop is a beach on Drago 14 where their beach day is ruined by acid-spitting land squids who melt Rory's Terry Pratchett book and also give him an acid burn on his thumb. Rory is further put out when a visit to a bookshop yields no replacement, as Pratchett's book has been out of print for "almost four hundred years" and, in point of fact, the shop no longer sells print books at all. However, in a travel agent's next to a shop that sells acid-proof towels, Amy finds a brochure for Solaris World Holidays' long, romantic cruises on the Thrasymachus. The two become set on the idea, especially as the picture of the "Mr and Mrs P from Earth" giving a testimonial for the Honeymoon Special are in fact themselves, suggesting it is a foregone conclusion that they'll go on the cruise at a slightly earlier point in time.

However, another brochure of which take little note, Welcome, traveller, to Sardicktown advertises their real destination: Sardicktown, a city whose tagline is "Enjoy your visit! But don't linger too long." and where notable sights range from Garglespike's collection of pins to the Duckchester Tanneries whose tanners "can strip the hide off a giant Camoose in less than five minutes", the Scratchington Fish Market, Dr Henry Fizzog's Museum of the Macabre, and of course Sardick Towers, which is not even open to the public but which "you can see from most streets if you crane your neck". It includes a peculiar number of dire warnings about the weather and the savagery of large flying fish.

Characters

References

Notes

Continuity