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|range = DWM comic stories{{!}}DWM Comics
{{Infobox Story
|number in range = 98
|name= Wormwood
|image= BriggsDoctor.jpg
|image= BriggsDoctor.jpg
|series=[[DWM comic stories|''DWM'' comic stories]]
|series=[[DWM comic stories|''DWM'' comic stories]]
|doctor= Eighth Doctor
|doctor= Eighth Doctor
|companions= [[Izzy Sinclair]], [[Fey Truscott-Sade]], [[Shayde]]
|companions= [[Fey Truscott-Sade|Fey]], [[Izzy Sinclair|Izzy]]
|enemy= The [[Threshold]]
|featuring= [[Shayde]]
|enemy= [[The Pariah]]
|setting= [[The Moon]], [[53rd century]]
|setting= [[The Moon]], [[53rd century]]
|writer= [[Scott Gray]]
|writer= Scott Gray
|artist= [[Martin Geraghty]], [[Robin Smith]]
|artist= [[Martin Geraghty]], [[Robin Smith]]
|editor=
|editor=
Line 16: Line 18:
|letterer=
|letterer=
|publication= ''[[Doctor Who Magazine]]'' [[DWM 266|266]]-[[DWM 271|271]]
|publication= ''[[Doctor Who Magazine]]'' [[DWM 266|266]]-[[DWM 271|271]]
|release date= [[1 July (releases)|1 July]] - [[18 November (releases)|18 November]] [[1998 (releases)|1998]]
|release date= 4 June - 22 October 1998
|publisher=Marvel Comics UK  
|cover date= 1 July - 18 November 1998
|format= Comic - 6 parts
|publisher = Marvel Comics UK  
|format= Comic  
|prev= The Final Chapter (comic story)
|prev= The Final Chapter (comic story)
|next= Happy Deathday (comic story)
|next= Happy Deathday (comic story)
}}
|epcount = 6|reprint = Endgame (graphic novel)
'''''Wormwood''''' was the main comic story of 1998 in the pages of ''[[Doctor Who Magazine]]''. It concluded the long-running [[Threshold]] story line, which had been ongoing for several years. It also set up future narratives by introducing the ''gestalt'' character of [[Feyde]], who would return in the much later story, ''[[Me and My Shadow]]'', and ultimately empower [[Izzy Sinclair|Izzy]] to finally depart the [[Eighth Doctor]]'s company.
}}{{comic stub}}
'''''Wormwood''''' was the main comic story of 1998 in the pages of ''[[Doctor Who Magazine]]''. It concluded the long-running [[Threshold]] story line, which had been ongoing for several years. It also set up future narratives by introducing the gestalt character of [[Feyde]], who would return in the much later story, ''[[Me and My Shadow]]'', and ultimately empower [[Izzy Sinclair|Izzy]] to finally depart the [[Eighth Doctor]]'s company.


''Wormwood'' also featured what seemed to be "the Ninth Doctor". Although revealed as a narrative trick, the point of the deception was to see if ''DWM'' readers would accept a [[regeneration]] into a new incarnation exclusive to the magazine. Ultimately, nothing actually came of the plan, and the Eighth Doctor remained the "current" DWM Doctor until the arrival of [[Christopher Eccleston]]'s [[Ninth Doctor]].
''Wormwood'' also featured what seemed to be "the Ninth Doctor". Although revealed as a narrative trick, the point of the deception was to see if ''DWM'' readers would accept a [[regeneration]] into a new incarnation exclusive to the magazine. Ultimately, nothing actually came of the plan, and the Eighth Doctor remained the "current" DWM Doctor until the arrival of [[Christopher Eccleston]]'s [[Ninth Doctor]].


== Summary ==
== Summary ==
Line 30: Line 34:


The TARDIS arrives in Wormwood, an American village, in 1880. However, the Doctor and his companions soon discover they are not on Earth, but the Moon, and they have been lured into a final confrontation with their old enemies, the Threshold. After three thousand years, they are preparing to step out of the darkness and descend on the whole galaxy. Can Izzy and Fey survive in a world populated by ruthless Threshold agents, and what has happened to the Doctor?
The TARDIS arrives in Wormwood, an American village, in 1880. However, the Doctor and his companions soon discover they are not on Earth, but the Moon, and they have been lured into a final confrontation with their old enemies, the Threshold. After three thousand years, they are preparing to step out of the darkness and descend on the whole galaxy. Can Izzy and Fey survive in a world populated by ruthless Threshold agents, and what has happened to the Doctor?
== Plot ==
As [[Fey Truscott-Sade]] and [[Izzy Sinclair]] try to come to terms with the [[Eighth Doctor]]'s [[regeneration]], the TARDIS is caught in an energy storm that destroys another ship before their eyes. Fey then unexpectedly reprogrammes the console to take them to [[Wormwood (town)|Wormwood]], a village in the American midwest circa [[1880]] -- or so it appears until they realise that they're in fact on [[the Moon]], in the home of the [[Threshold]]. The Threshold's leader, [[Abraham White]], finally reveals himself to them, but even he is surprised when the TARDIS seems to dematerialise by itself before he can examine it. He soon recovers, and sends Izzy and Fey to the heart of Wormwood -- where the Threshold agent [[Sister Chastity]] informs Fey that the Threshold captured her after she first met the Doctor, and implanted a transmitter in her head so they could use her as a spy if she ever met the Doctor again. Fey, furious, overpowers Chastity and her guards, and she and Izzy take their Threshold rings; but while Izzy concentrates on finding the Doctor, the vengeful Fey concentrates on finding White.
According to White, the Threshold is finally ready to step out of the shadows after three thousand years. Before he can explain, Fey arrives and attacks him, but White defends himself by transforming into a shadow creature called [[the Pariah]], and Fey has no choice but to back down. The Pariah then transforms back into White, who explains that, while a young man in [[19th century]] [[Arkansas]], he stumbled across the dying Pariah, a superweapon that had been expelled from Gallifrey after trying to overthrow [[Rassilon]]. White bonded with the Pariah, giving her a new body with which to heal herself while she plotted her revenge. Inspired by Ford's assembly line, White had the Pariah reproduce herself by fission, and set the mini-spheres in a dimensional void. He then recruited employees who weren't afraid of the power he offered to them, and transformed them into living conduits to the spheres -- and these people became the agents of the Threshold.
Izzy concentrates on reaching the Doctor, but instead finds herself in the very centre of Wormwood, where a young new Threshold agent named Gracie Witherspoon is heading for the "[[Eye of Disharmony]]". Gracie spots Izzy following her and captures her just as the Eye is activated, transforming every quantum particle in the vacuum of space into an entropic hole, turning space into a minefield and killing every living being outside a planetary atmosphere. White then takes the appalled Doctor to his transmission centre, where he intends to send out a message to the entire universe. First he must tear the [[Time Lord]]s' gift of universal translation out of the Doctor's brain; this was the prize they should have earned for wiping out the Daleks, but it was lost when Chastity accidentally dropped the box in the [[Dalek Hive]]. However, the Doctor points out that his newly regenerated brain is still unstable, and that since Chastity looked into the box before dropping it, she has the gift which White needs. White thus tears out the protesting Chastity's mind instead, and then transmits a public service announcement to the entire universe. Since travel in space is now impossible, only the Threshold can move between planets, and they now intend to charge for their services.
Gracie arrives with her prisoner, but the Pariah realises that Gracie is an impostor, and "Gracie" is thus forced to reveal that she is really the [[Eighth Doctor]], disguised by a personal [[Chameleon circuit]]. The Ninth Doctor is likewise revealed to be a disguised [[Shayde]]. White transforms into the Pariah, who attacks Shayde. Shayde's psychic bullets have no effect without the will of his Time Lord masters behind them, but he still attempts to hold off the Pariah while the Doctor takes Fey and Izzy back to the TARDIS. There, he shows Fey that the [[TARDIS Manual]] she used to pilot the ship to Gallifrey is written in an alien script; when she told him what she had done, he realised that it must have been translated for her by an implant in her brain. He and Shayde thus staged the regeneration deception, and Shayde kept the Threshold distracted while the Doctor explored Wormwood disguised as Gracie.
The Pariah arrives, mortally injures Shayde before their eyes and steals the TARDIS. While Fey tends to the dying Shayde, the Doctor sends Izzy to ion control with a baseball bat and sets off to confront White and the Pariah. To White's horror, the Pariah uses the TARDIS to drain all energy from the Threshold grid, killing all of their people and overloading the Eye of Disharmony. The Pariah reveals that she intends to fulfil her destiny as the ultimate weapon by destroying everything in the universe, but when White realises this, he deliberately separates himself from her, knowing that they've been bonded for so long that neither can survive for long without the other. Before the dying Pariah can kill the Doctor, Fey arrives -- having bonded with Shayde to provide him with the willpower he lacks to repair himself. "Feyde" shoots the Pariah with psychic bullets, now armed with Fey's willpower, while Izzy smashes the ion control centre to bits. The Doctor, Fey and Izzy retreat as ion control short-circuits and destroys the Moon. When the Eye of Disharmony is destroyed, space returns to normal, and the universe is saved. Fey departs to come to terms with her new state of being, and the Doctor and Izzy set off for new adventures.


== Characters ==
== Characters ==
Line 36: Line 51:
* [[Fey Truscott-Sade]]
* [[Fey Truscott-Sade]]
* [[Shayde]]
* [[Shayde]]
* [[Threshold]]
* [[Abraham White]]
* [[The Pariah]]
* [[Sister Chastity]]
* [[Zeke (Wormwood)|Zeke]]
* [[Clancy (Wormwood)|Clancy]]
* [[Derek (Wormwood)|Derek]]
* [[Darleen (Wormwood)|Darleen]]
* [[Rassilon]]
* [[Thomas Edison]]


== References ==
== Worldbuilding ==
* The [[Threshold]]'s "game plan" is elaborated upon further.
* [[Human being]]s regenerate every [[Cell (biology)|cell]] in their body every seven years.
* [[The Moon]] is destroyed.
* "The Doctor" mistakes Izzy for [[Peri Brown]].
* Fey once understudied for [[Josephine Baker]].
* Fey once understudied for [[Josephine Baker]].
* Izzy compares Fey to [[Modesty Blaise]].
* Izzy compares Fey to [[Modesty Blaise]].
* On his Moon base, White has the [[Statue of Liberty]], the [[Eiffel Tower]], the [[Empire State Building]], the [[Hollywood]] sign, the [[Great Wall of China]], [[Stonehenge]], [[Mount Rushmore]], the [[pyramid]]s of [[Egypt]], and the [[Big Ben]] [[Clock tower]].
* After realising that [[Thomas Edison]] was too ignorant of [[spaceship]]s and that [[Albert Einstein]] was too young, White made contact with [[Alexander Bell]], [[Nikola Tesla]], [[Rudolph Diesel]] and [[Henry Ford]] to give history a "jump-start".
* In order to empower herself, Izzy pretends that she is [[Laura Croft]], [[Sigourney Weaver]] and [[Wonder Woman]].
* White and the Threshold watch [[Neil Armstrong]] make his first steps on the Moon in [[1969]], and laugh at his "One Giant Leap" speech due to being on the Moon since [[1922]].
* After defeating the Pariah, the Doctor intends to take Izzy to a [[restaurant]] on [[Setatius IX]].


== Notes ==
== Notes ==
* The usage of a "false Ninth Doctor" was a deliberate test by the production team to see if they ''could'' regenerate the Doctor in the comic strips, and whether the audience would follow them. With no new televised ''[[Doctor Who]]'' on the horizon in the wake of the failure of [[Doctor Who (1996)|the 1996 tele-film]] to produce a series, ''DWM'' were looking for a way to give their comic strip some new life. Though never intended as an actual replacement for the Eighth Doctor, this [[Nick Briggs]]-inspired version would at least give readers and the creative staff a taste of what it might be like to consider a post-[[Paul McGann|McGann]] strip.
* The usage of a "false Ninth Doctor" was a deliberate test by the production team to see if they could regenerate the Doctor in the comic strips, and whether the audience would follow them. With no new televised ''[[Doctor Who]]'' on the horizon in the wake of the failure of [[Doctor Who (TV story)|the 1996 tv movie]] to produce a series, ''DWM'' were looking for a way to give their comic strip some new life. Though never intended as an actual replacement for the Eighth Doctor, the [[Nick Briggs]]-inspired Ninth Doctor would at least give readers and the creative staff a taste of what it might be like to consider a post-[[Paul McGann]] strip.
* This is not the first time Briggs has been associated with a version of the Doctor. He had played the Doctor before, and [[the Doctor (Party Animals)|that Doctor]] had even been arguably featured previously in a ''[[Doctor Who Magazine]]'' comic strip. However, ''this'' version of the Doctor was of course not the Doctor at all, but [[Shayde]]. Thus the fact that he looks like Nick Briggs shouldn't confuse the reader into believing that this is the so-called "Nick Briggs Doctor".


== Continuity ==
== Continuity ==
* The Threshold first appeared in [[COMIC]]: ''[[Ground Zero (comic story)|Ground Zero]]'', where they killed [[Ace]]. Unknowingly, Izzy uses Ace's baseball bat to defeat them.
* "The Doctor", Izzy and Fey have just left [[Gallifrey]]. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[The Final Chapter (comic story)|The Final Chapter]]'')
* The mysterious box that the Threshold were being paid with in [[COMIC]]: ''[[Fire and Brimstone]]'' is stated to have come from [[Rassilon]], and was the gift of universal translation. It's also absent, having been dropped and lost in the same story.
* "The Doctor" bemoans that his shoes no longer fit. ([[TV]]: ''[[Doctor Who (TV story)|Doctor Who]]'')
* Gallifrey is still recovering from the [[Elysian]] incident. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[The Final Chapter (comic story)|The Final Chapter]]'')
* Izzy remembers her first meeting with Chastity, which was twenty years ago from Chastity's perspective. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Fire and Brimstone (comic story)|Fire and Brimstone]]'')
* Earth was abandoned after it was struck by [[solar flare]]s, with mankind having to abandon the planet. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Ark (TV story)|The Ark]]'')
* Chastity's mission was to destroy the [[Dalek Hive]] for the [[Matrix Rassilon]] in return for a [[Universal translator]]. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Fire and Brimstone (comic story)|Fire and Brimstone]]'')
* The Doctor realised Fey was being used by the Threshold when she was able to read the [[TARDIS Manual]], despite it being written in an alien language. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[The Final Chapter (comic story)|The Final Chapter]]'')
* Izzy uses [[Ace's baseball bat]] bat to defeat the Threshold, poetically avenging [[Ace]]'s death from their machinations. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Ground Zero (comic story)|Ground Zero]]'')
 
{{Eighth Doctor DWM comics}}
{{Eighth Doctor DWM comics}}
{{Rassilon stories}}
{{TitleSort}}
{{TitleSort}}
{{comic stub}}
 
[[Category:Eighth Doctor DWM comic stories]]
[[Category:Eighth Doctor DWM comic stories]]
[[Category:Rassilon comic stories]]
[[Category:Rassilon comic stories]]
[[Category:1998 comic stories]]
[[Category:1998 comic stories]]
[[Category:Stories set on the Moon]]
[[Category:Comic stories set on the Moon]]
[[Category:Stories set in the 53rd century]]
[[Category:Six part comics]]

Latest revision as of 00:33, 3 September 2024

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Wormwood was the main comic story of 1998 in the pages of Doctor Who Magazine. It concluded the long-running Threshold story line, which had been ongoing for several years. It also set up future narratives by introducing the gestalt character of Feyde, who would return in the much later story, Me and My Shadow, and ultimately empower Izzy to finally depart the Eighth Doctor's company.

Wormwood also featured what seemed to be "the Ninth Doctor". Although revealed as a narrative trick, the point of the deception was to see if DWM readers would accept a regeneration into a new incarnation exclusive to the magazine. Ultimately, nothing actually came of the plan, and the Eighth Doctor remained the "current" DWM Doctor until the arrival of Christopher Eccleston's Ninth Doctor.

Summary[[edit]]

The Doctor has regenerated, or has he?

The TARDIS arrives in Wormwood, an American village, in 1880. However, the Doctor and his companions soon discover they are not on Earth, but the Moon, and they have been lured into a final confrontation with their old enemies, the Threshold. After three thousand years, they are preparing to step out of the darkness and descend on the whole galaxy. Can Izzy and Fey survive in a world populated by ruthless Threshold agents, and what has happened to the Doctor?

Plot[[edit]]

As Fey Truscott-Sade and Izzy Sinclair try to come to terms with the Eighth Doctor's regeneration, the TARDIS is caught in an energy storm that destroys another ship before their eyes. Fey then unexpectedly reprogrammes the console to take them to Wormwood, a village in the American midwest circa 1880 -- or so it appears until they realise that they're in fact on the Moon, in the home of the Threshold. The Threshold's leader, Abraham White, finally reveals himself to them, but even he is surprised when the TARDIS seems to dematerialise by itself before he can examine it. He soon recovers, and sends Izzy and Fey to the heart of Wormwood -- where the Threshold agent Sister Chastity informs Fey that the Threshold captured her after she first met the Doctor, and implanted a transmitter in her head so they could use her as a spy if she ever met the Doctor again. Fey, furious, overpowers Chastity and her guards, and she and Izzy take their Threshold rings; but while Izzy concentrates on finding the Doctor, the vengeful Fey concentrates on finding White.

According to White, the Threshold is finally ready to step out of the shadows after three thousand years. Before he can explain, Fey arrives and attacks him, but White defends himself by transforming into a shadow creature called the Pariah, and Fey has no choice but to back down. The Pariah then transforms back into White, who explains that, while a young man in 19th century Arkansas, he stumbled across the dying Pariah, a superweapon that had been expelled from Gallifrey after trying to overthrow Rassilon. White bonded with the Pariah, giving her a new body with which to heal herself while she plotted her revenge. Inspired by Ford's assembly line, White had the Pariah reproduce herself by fission, and set the mini-spheres in a dimensional void. He then recruited employees who weren't afraid of the power he offered to them, and transformed them into living conduits to the spheres -- and these people became the agents of the Threshold.

Izzy concentrates on reaching the Doctor, but instead finds herself in the very centre of Wormwood, where a young new Threshold agent named Gracie Witherspoon is heading for the "Eye of Disharmony". Gracie spots Izzy following her and captures her just as the Eye is activated, transforming every quantum particle in the vacuum of space into an entropic hole, turning space into a minefield and killing every living being outside a planetary atmosphere. White then takes the appalled Doctor to his transmission centre, where he intends to send out a message to the entire universe. First he must tear the Time Lords' gift of universal translation out of the Doctor's brain; this was the prize they should have earned for wiping out the Daleks, but it was lost when Chastity accidentally dropped the box in the Dalek Hive. However, the Doctor points out that his newly regenerated brain is still unstable, and that since Chastity looked into the box before dropping it, she has the gift which White needs. White thus tears out the protesting Chastity's mind instead, and then transmits a public service announcement to the entire universe. Since travel in space is now impossible, only the Threshold can move between planets, and they now intend to charge for their services.

Gracie arrives with her prisoner, but the Pariah realises that Gracie is an impostor, and "Gracie" is thus forced to reveal that she is really the Eighth Doctor, disguised by a personal Chameleon circuit. The Ninth Doctor is likewise revealed to be a disguised Shayde. White transforms into the Pariah, who attacks Shayde. Shayde's psychic bullets have no effect without the will of his Time Lord masters behind them, but he still attempts to hold off the Pariah while the Doctor takes Fey and Izzy back to the TARDIS. There, he shows Fey that the TARDIS Manual she used to pilot the ship to Gallifrey is written in an alien script; when she told him what she had done, he realised that it must have been translated for her by an implant in her brain. He and Shayde thus staged the regeneration deception, and Shayde kept the Threshold distracted while the Doctor explored Wormwood disguised as Gracie.

The Pariah arrives, mortally injures Shayde before their eyes and steals the TARDIS. While Fey tends to the dying Shayde, the Doctor sends Izzy to ion control with a baseball bat and sets off to confront White and the Pariah. To White's horror, the Pariah uses the TARDIS to drain all energy from the Threshold grid, killing all of their people and overloading the Eye of Disharmony. The Pariah reveals that she intends to fulfil her destiny as the ultimate weapon by destroying everything in the universe, but when White realises this, he deliberately separates himself from her, knowing that they've been bonded for so long that neither can survive for long without the other. Before the dying Pariah can kill the Doctor, Fey arrives -- having bonded with Shayde to provide him with the willpower he lacks to repair himself. "Feyde" shoots the Pariah with psychic bullets, now armed with Fey's willpower, while Izzy smashes the ion control centre to bits. The Doctor, Fey and Izzy retreat as ion control short-circuits and destroys the Moon. When the Eye of Disharmony is destroyed, space returns to normal, and the universe is saved. Fey departs to come to terms with her new state of being, and the Doctor and Izzy set off for new adventures.

Characters[[edit]]

Worldbuilding[[edit]]

Notes[[edit]]

  • The usage of a "false Ninth Doctor" was a deliberate test by the production team to see if they could regenerate the Doctor in the comic strips, and whether the audience would follow them. With no new televised Doctor Who on the horizon in the wake of the failure of the 1996 tv movie to produce a series, DWM were looking for a way to give their comic strip some new life. Though never intended as an actual replacement for the Eighth Doctor, the Nick Briggs-inspired Ninth Doctor would at least give readers and the creative staff a taste of what it might be like to consider a post-Paul McGann strip.

Continuity[[edit]]