Edward Greyhaven: Difference between revisions
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{{Infobox Individual|species = Human|job = Politician|origin = Earth|only = The Dying Days (novel)}} | {{Infobox Individual | ||
|image = Edward Greyhaven.jpg | |||
|species = Human | |||
|job = Politician | |||
|origin = [[Earth]] | |||
|only = The Dying Days (novel) | |||
}} | |||
'''Lord Edward Greyhaven''' was a [[British]] [[politician]]. He was described as having an aquiline face. In informal settings, he asked people to call him Teddy. | |||
This was all part of Greyhaven's plan to acquire Martian technology to make Britain great again, in exchange for a method to refertilise Martian soil. However, when [[Alexander Christian]] provided him evidence that Xznaal was conducting experiments on British prisoners, Greyhaven saw that Xznaal had broken their agreement. This made him initiate his backup plan. | He was a captain of industry before entering government and served as a [[Minister of Science]] in the 1970s. He oversaw massive investment in science and technology. This meant Britain led the world in pure research, even though British industry was not in a state where it could use any of these developments. | ||
In the mid-to-late 1970s, Britain's ''[[Mars Probe 13]]'' astronauts accidentally wandered into the city of the [[Argyre Clan]] [[Ice Warrior]]s and were slaughtered. To appease the Ice Warriors, Minister Greyhaven agreed to ensure humanity wouldn't return to Mars and had the British secret service create disinformation, and sabotage [[NASA]] data, to discourage future missions. To cover up the deaths, he had ''Probe 13'' commander [[Alexander Christian]] framed as a murderer and imprisoned. | |||
In later years, he made a fortune as a consultant and was later made a peer. He claimed in public to have little influence by the 1990s, which wasn't entirely true; he did well whichever party was in power. | |||
In [[1997]], when he was in his late 60s, he helped get Britain back to Mars in the ''[[Probe 97]]'' mission. However, he was secretly in contact with the [[Ice Warrior]] Lord [[Xznaal]] and plotting a coup, alongside his protege [[Home Secretary]] [[David Staines]]. Greyhaven arranged for the craft to land where there were [[Ice Lord]] [[tomb]]s. While the [[astronaut]]s on the surface explored, Greyhaven killed the crew in the [[Mars Orbiter|Orbiter]] still circling Mars by opening the [[airlock]]s remotely. The astronauts' exploration of the tombs gave Xznaal a pretext to claim grave desecration, a crime under Martian law that justified conquering the the [[United Kingdom]] as reparations. Xznaal was crowned [[British monarchy|King of England]] and Greyhaven became acting [[Prime Minister of the United Kingdom|Prime Minister]]. | |||
This was all part of Greyhaven's plan to acquire Martian technology to make Britain great again, with vast new technology and mass employment, in exchange for a method to refertilise Martian soil; democracy was considered irrelevant. However, when [[Alexander Christian]] provided him evidence that Xznaal was conducting experiments on British prisoners, Greyhaven saw that Xznaal had broken their agreement. This made him initiate his backup plan. | |||
The reason he had killed the Orbiter crew was so the ship would be available for Greyhaven to use as a last resort. He activated the Orbiter's rockets and set it to crash into Xznaal's clan home. Though Xznaal found Greyhaven and killed him, the Ice Lord was unable to stop the Orbiter from annihilating his entire clan. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Dying Days (novel)|The Dying Days]]'') | |||
== Behind the scenes == | |||
* Greyhaven is both visually modelled on actor {{w|Ian Richardson}} (someone [[Lance Parkin]] often bases a character on) and a pastiche of Richardson's famous character of {{W|Francis Urquhart}}, the scheming politician in {{wi|House of Cards (British TV series)|House of Cards}}.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20041101183333/http://www.bbc.co.uk/cult/doctorwho/ebooks/dyingdays/notes/page5.shtml Author's Notes chapter 3 (archives)]</ref> | |||
* While the Urquhart character was a [[Conservative Party|Conservative]], Greyhaven's party is never mentioned (so he can be around no matter who won the 1997 election). [[Mars Probe 13]] happened "over twenty years ago", leaving it vague who was in government at the time. | |||
== Footnotes == | |||
{{reflist}} | |||
{{NameSort}}{{Prime Ministers of the United Kingdom}} | |||
[[Category:20th century individuals]] | [[Category:20th century individuals]] | ||
[[Category:British politicians]] | [[Category:British politicians]] | ||
[[Category:Human murderers]] | [[Category:Human murderers]] | ||
[[Category:Human politicians]] | |||
[[Category:Martian Invasion of 1997]] |
Latest revision as of 15:01, 12 August 2023
Lord Edward Greyhaven was a British politician. He was described as having an aquiline face. In informal settings, he asked people to call him Teddy.
He was a captain of industry before entering government and served as a Minister of Science in the 1970s. He oversaw massive investment in science and technology. This meant Britain led the world in pure research, even though British industry was not in a state where it could use any of these developments.
In the mid-to-late 1970s, Britain's Mars Probe 13 astronauts accidentally wandered into the city of the Argyre Clan Ice Warriors and were slaughtered. To appease the Ice Warriors, Minister Greyhaven agreed to ensure humanity wouldn't return to Mars and had the British secret service create disinformation, and sabotage NASA data, to discourage future missions. To cover up the deaths, he had Probe 13 commander Alexander Christian framed as a murderer and imprisoned.
In later years, he made a fortune as a consultant and was later made a peer. He claimed in public to have little influence by the 1990s, which wasn't entirely true; he did well whichever party was in power.
In 1997, when he was in his late 60s, he helped get Britain back to Mars in the Probe 97 mission. However, he was secretly in contact with the Ice Warrior Lord Xznaal and plotting a coup, alongside his protege Home Secretary David Staines. Greyhaven arranged for the craft to land where there were Ice Lord tombs. While the astronauts on the surface explored, Greyhaven killed the crew in the Orbiter still circling Mars by opening the airlocks remotely. The astronauts' exploration of the tombs gave Xznaal a pretext to claim grave desecration, a crime under Martian law that justified conquering the the United Kingdom as reparations. Xznaal was crowned King of England and Greyhaven became acting Prime Minister.
This was all part of Greyhaven's plan to acquire Martian technology to make Britain great again, with vast new technology and mass employment, in exchange for a method to refertilise Martian soil; democracy was considered irrelevant. However, when Alexander Christian provided him evidence that Xznaal was conducting experiments on British prisoners, Greyhaven saw that Xznaal had broken their agreement. This made him initiate his backup plan.
The reason he had killed the Orbiter crew was so the ship would be available for Greyhaven to use as a last resort. He activated the Orbiter's rockets and set it to crash into Xznaal's clan home. Though Xznaal found Greyhaven and killed him, the Ice Lord was unable to stop the Orbiter from annihilating his entire clan. (PROSE: The Dying Days)
Behind the scenes[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Greyhaven is both visually modelled on actor Ian Richardson (someone Lance Parkin often bases a character on) and a pastiche of Richardson's famous character of Francis Urquhart, the scheming politician in House of Cards.[1]
- While the Urquhart character was a Conservative, Greyhaven's party is never mentioned (so he can be around no matter who won the 1997 election). Mars Probe 13 happened "over twenty years ago", leaving it vague who was in government at the time.
Footnotes[[edit] | [edit source]]
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