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{{quote|The lever you have pulled – “Brakes” – is not in service. Please make a note of it.|Train computer}}{{Infobox Novel|
{{title dab away}}
novel name= Cold Fusion |
{{real world}}
image= [[Image:Ma-29.jpg|250px]] |
{{Infobox Story SMW
series=[[Doctor Who]] -<br/>[[Virgin Missing Adventures]] |
|image       = Ma-29.jpg  
number= 29 |
|adapted into = Cold Fusion (audio story)
doctor=[[Fifth Doctor]]<br>[[Seventh Doctor]] |
|series       = [[Virgin Missing Adventures]]
companions= [[Adric]]<br>[[Nyssa]]<br>[[Tegan]]<br>[[Chris Cwej]]<br>[[Roz Forrester]]  |
|range        = Virgin Missing Adventures
enemy= [[Ferutu|the Ferutu]] |
|number in range = 29
year= Unnamed Earth Colony, c. late [[27th century]]/early [[28th century]], during the [[Earth Empire]] era|
|number      = 29
writer= [[Lance Parkin]] |
|doctor       = Fifth Doctor
publisher= [[Virgin Books]] |
|companions   = [[Adric]], [[Tegan Jovanka|Tegan]], [[Nyssa]]
release date= [[December]], [[1996]] |
|featuring    = Seventh Doctor
format= Paperback Book, 319 Pages |
|featuring2  = Chris Cwej
isbn= ISBN 0426204891|
|featuring3  = Roz Forrester
previous story=[[The Plotters]]|
|enemy       = [[Ferutu]]
next story= [[Burning Heart]] }}
|setting      = [[Planet (Cold Fusion)|Human colony planet]], [[2592]]
|writer      = Lance Parkin
|cover        = [[Alister Pearson]]
|publisher   = Virgin Books
|release date = 5 December 1996
|format       = Paperback Book; 18 Chapters, 319 Pages
|isbn         = ISBN 0-426-20489-1
|prev        = The Plotters (novel)
|next        = Burning Heart (novel)
}}{{prose stub}}
{{dab page|Cold fusion (disambiguation)}}
'''''Cold Fusion''''' was the twenty-ninth novel in the [[Virgin Missing Adventures]] series. It was written by [[Lance Parkin]]. It was the only multi-Doctor story involving televised Doctors ever told by [[Virgin Books]]. It involved the unusual pairing of the [[Season 19 (Doctor Who 1963)|season 19]] [[Fifth Doctor]] with the [[Seventh Doctor]] near the end of the [[Virgin New Adventures]] line.


==Publisher's Summary==
Originally intended to be published alongside the novel ''[[So Vile a Sin (novel)|So Vile a Sin]]'' to emotionally leverage [[Roz Forrester]]'s death in that book, delays on ''Sin'' meant that people who read the book on publication didn't see this intended aspect of the book.
''''The entire universe is at stake and I'm locked in here with another incarnation of myself, and not even one of the good ones!''''


More than one [[TARDIS]] lands on a barren ice world. The [[fifth Doctor]], [[Adric]], [[Nyssa]] and [[Tegan]] find a once ordered society on the verge of collapse, as rebels wage a dirty war with [[Scientifica]], the ruling elite. All that stands between order and anarchy is the massed presence of an [[Adjudicator]] peacekeeping force.
As a multi-Doctor story, its perspective was unusual. The Seventh Doctor was portrayed as largely disdainful of his earlier self's presence because of the dangers it presented. Though temporal paradoxes and other consequences of two Doctors meeting were touched upon in televised multi-Doctor stories, here they were more central. Moreover, the structure broke with the format of televised multi-Doctor stories, which held that the latest incarnation was the "current" Doctor and therefore the effective headlining "star" of the show. On balance, ''Fusion'' was a Fifth Doctor novel that happened to feature the Seventh, rather than a Seventh Doctor novel that used the Fifth.


But is peace the only reason for the Adjudicator garrison? What exactly has been discovered deep below the planet's surface? Who are the mysterious [[Ferutu]]? And why is telling a ghost story a criminal offence?
== Publisher's summary ==
:"The entire [[universe]] is at stake and [[Seventh Doctor|I'm]] locked in here with [[Fifth Doctor|another incarnation of myself]], and not even one of the good ones!"


The fifth Doctor sides with the cause of justice and fairness as always. But, as a threat to the universe unfolds, he finds himself in conflict with his past... and his future.
More than one [[The Doctor's TARDIS|TARDIS]] lands on a barren ice world. The Fifth Doctor, [[Adric]], [[Nyssa]] and [[Tegan Jovanka|Tegan]] find a once ordered society on the verge of collapse, as rebels wage a dirty [[war]] with [[Scientifica]], the ruling [[elite]]. All that stands between order and [[anarchy]] is the massed presence of an [[Adjudicator]] peacekeeping force.


==Characters==
But is [[peace]] the only reason for the Adjudicator garrison? What exactly has been discovered deep below the planet's surface? Who are the mysterious [[Ferutu]]? And why is telling a [[ghost]] story a criminal offence?
*[[Fifth Doctor]]
**Is only just getting over his recent regeneration.
*[[Seventh Doctor]]
**His favourite biscuits are Chocolate Hob-Nobs.
**Has to hide his emotions on seeing Adric again.
*[[Adric]]
*[[Nyssa]]
*[[Tegan]]
*[[Chris Cwej]]
**Uses the alias Bruce Jovanka.
*[[Roz Forrester]]
**Is beginning to feel her age.
*[[Patience]]
**Born in the house of Blyledge on "Glorious [[Gallifrey]]".
**She has/had 13 grandchildren.
**Her [[Omega|husband]] was one of the first to explore the vortex.
*[[Adjudicator]] Provost-General [[Tertullian Medford]]
**A secret member of [[Unitatus]].


==References==
The Fifth Doctor sides with the cause of [[justice]] and fairness as always. But, as a threat to the universe unfolds, he finds himself in conflict with [[The Other|his past]]... and his future.
*The TARDIS has a [[lightspeed overdrive]].
*[[The Machine]] belongs to Patience.
*Tegan has seen [[Blake's 7]] and can cope with the idea of [[transmat]]s.
*[[Unitatus]] is what [[UNIT]] became; they use the old UNIT logo (a grid within a circle) as their herald.
*The colony has a [[Skybase]] in orbit.
*[[Ferutu|The Ferutu]] are beings from an alternate universe in which Gallifrey was destroyed shortly after [[Omega]]'s experiments; they have supplanted the role of the [[Time Lord]]s, and actively engage in protecting and shaping the universe. Their "technology" (if it can be called that) is more akin to magic runes.
**As the [[Seventh Doctor]] is able to keep them at bay with a chalk circle, they may be from the same universe as [[Morgaine]] and the others seen in [[DW]]: ''[[Battlefield]]''.
*The [[Embodiment of Gris]] is mentioned by the Fifth Doctor.
*The Fifth Doctor never uses expletives.
*The Doctor disarms several fusion bombs by using his [[Sonic screwdriver]] to reverse the polarity of the neutron flow, an act he states is beyond the capabilities of the [[Humanian Era]].
*The reasons that the Doctor seems to not remember meeting his past self in other multi-Doctor stories is discussed; in most of the televised adventures, it is credited to the [[Blinovitch Limitation Effect]].
*This story explains what happened to the Doctor's children. They were culled, but Susan was saved, this may explain the existence of John and Gillian


==Notes==
== Plot ==
*This is the only multi-Doctor story of either the [[Virgin New Adventures]] or the [[Virgin Missing Adventures]].
''to be added''
*The seventh Doctor comments about perspectives, and how "from a certain point of view, we're already dead. You. Me. Adric. Roz". When the book was published, the eighth Doctor had begun his travels and ''[[So Vile a Sin]]'' been "sort of" published showing Roz's death.
*Does the (seventh) Doctor remember events from his younger (fifth) self? Well Roz does hit him harder then he'd planned... this is one of the few attempts to explore the idea of multi-Doctor stories from the point-of-view of the future Doctor. He does attempt to get the fifth Doctor out of the way and back to trying to get Tegan home, but he avoids answering the question about how much he remembers.


==Continuity==
== Characters ==
*"Lightspeed overdrive" is first mentioned in [[DW]]: ''[[Logopolis (TV story)|Logopolis]]''.
* [[Fifth Doctor]]
*[[PDA]]: ''[[The Infinity Doctors]]'' reveals who Patience is.
* [[Seventh Doctor]]
*[[NA]]: ''[[Cat's Cradle: Time's Crucible]]'' and ''[[Lungbarrow]]'' both gave some idea of the time from which Patience is from.
* [[First Doctor]]
*This story begins a series of story arcs known as the "Psi Powers" arc for the [[Seventh Doctor]] continuing in [[NA]]: ''[[The Death of Art]]'' and ending in [[NA]]:''[[Sleepy]]''.
* [[Adric]]
* [[Nyssa]]
* [[Tegan Jovanka]]
* [[Chris Cwej]]
* [[Roz Forrester]]
* [[Patience]]
* [[Tertullian Medford|Adjudicator Provost-General Tertullian Medford]]
* [[Ziyou Wanle]]
* [[SAM drone]]
* [[Whitfield|Chief Scientist Whitfield]]
* [[Quint]]
* [[Quant]]
* [[Dareau|Adjudicator Dareau]]
* [[Adam (Cold Fusion)|Adam]]
* [[Falconstock]]
* [[Concierge (Cold Fusion)|Concierge]]
* [[Robot (Cold Fusion)|Robot]]


==Timeline==
== Worldbuilding ==
===For the Fifth Doctor===
=== Cultural references from the real world ===
*Cold Fusion takes place after: [[ST]]: ''[[Resonance]]''
* Tegan has seen ''[[Blake's 7]]'' and can cope with the idea of [[transmat]]s.
*Cold Fusion takes place before: [[ST]]: ''[[The Immortals]]''


===For the Seventh Doctor===
=== Foods and beverages ===
*Cold Fusion takes place after: [[NA]]: ''[[Return of the Living Dad]]''
* The [[Seventh Doctor]] orders a Dexheimer Spätlase Rädecke, a German eiswein (he normally doesn't touch synthetic [[wine]]s). His favourite [[biscuit]]s are [[chocolate]] [[HobNob]]s.
*Cold Fusion takes place before: [[ST]]: ''[[The Nuclear Option]]''
 
=== Individuals ===
* [[Tertullian Medford|Adjudicator Provost-General Tertullian Medford]] is a secret member of [[Unitatus]].
 
=== Individual Time Lords ===
* The [[Fifth Doctor]] badly remembers his life before his [[Third Doctor|second]] [[regeneration]].
* [[Patience (The Tides of Time)|Patience]] was in the [[house of Blyledge]] on "Glorious [[Gallifrey]]". She had thirteen children.
* [[The Doctor (The Brain of Morbius)|Patience's husband]] was one of the first to explore the [[Time Vortex]].
* In her memory, Patience and her husband's [[Susan Foreman's father|firstborn]] was soon going to be a father.
* [[The Doctor]]'s children were culled, but her granddaughter, [[Susan Foreman]], was saved.
* [[The Master]] destroyed the constellation of [[Mandusus]] with a segment of the [[Key to Time]] at some point before the [[Fourth Doctor]]'s regeneration.
* It is implied that the Doctor had a different name before being the [[First Doctor]], since he doesn't recognise Patience's husband's name as his own, but of a different [[Time Lord]].
*
 
=== Languages ===
* The Fifth Doctor speaks a sentence in [[Gallifreyan (language)|Gallifreyan]] to Patience.
 
=== Organisations ===
* [[Unitatus]] is what [[UNIT]] became; they use the old UNIT logo (a grid within a circle) as their herald.
 
=== Spacecraft ===
* The colony has a [[Skybase]] in orbit.
 
=== Species ===
* The [[Ferutu]] are beings from an alternate universe.
* The [[Embodiment of Gris]] is mentioned by the Fifth Doctor.
 
=== TARDIS ===
* The TARDIS has a [[lightspeed overdrive]].
* [[The Machine]] belongs to [[Patience (The Tides of Time)|Patience]].
 
=== Weapons ===
* The Fifth and Seventh Doctors both use a technique which they describe as being "beyond the science of the [[Humanian Era]]", namely reversing the polarity of the neutron flow to disarm several [[fusion bomb]]s.
* A [[SAM drone]] is a mass-produced drone.
 
== Notes ==
* In ''[[AHistory]]'', the author [[Lance Parkin]] confirms that the [[Patience's husband|husband]] of [[Patience (The Tides of Time)|Patience]], in her memory seen by the Fifth Doctor's [[telepathic contact]] with her, is the [[The Doctor (The Brain of Morbius)|character]] portrayed by [[Douglas Camfield]] during the mindbending sequence of [[TV]]: ''[[The Brain of Morbius (TV story)|The Brain of Morbius]]''.
* In ''Time, Unincorporated: Volume One'', it is revealed that the original version of [[PROSE]]: ''[[The Infinity Doctors (novel)|The Infinity Doctors]]'' would have confirmed that Patience's husband is ''also'' the character played by [[Robert Banks Stewart]] during the mindbending sequence of [[TV]]: ''[[The Brain of Morbius (TV story)|The Brain of Morbius]]''.
* This is the only instalment of the [[Virgin Missing Adventures]] in which the [[Seventh Doctor]] appears.
* The reasons that the Doctor seems to not remember meeting his future selves in other multi-Doctor stories are discussed. In most of the televised adventures, it is credited to the [[Blinovitch Limitation Effect]].
* The Seventh Doctor remembers the events of the novel from the perspective of the Fifth Doctor and uses this knowledge against his younger self. This also occurs in the audio stories ''[[Peri and the Piscon Paradox (audio story)|Peri and the Piscon Paradox]]'' and ''[[The Four Doctors (audio story)|The Four Doctors]]'' and the television story ''[[Time Crash (TV story)|Time Crash]]'' in which the [[Sixth Doctor|Sixth]], [[Eighth Doctor|Eighth]] and [[Tenth Doctor]]s respectively likewise remember the events portrayed from the point of view of their fifth incarnation.
* The Seventh Doctor describes his fifth incarnation as being "bland" and "not even one of the good ones." This reflects the [[Sixth Doctor]]'s low opinion of his immediate predecessor immediately after his [[regeneration]] as he told his companion [[Peri Brown]] that "he had a sort of feckless charm that simply wasn't [him]." ([[TV]]: ''[[The Twin Dilemma (TV story)|The Twin Dilemma]]'') The [[Eighth Doctor]] was more fond of his fifth incarnation than his two immediate predecessors. He once described him as "terribly polite." ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[The Four Doctors (audio story)|The Four Doctors]]'') By the time of his tenth incarnation, the Doctor expressed a fondness for his time as the Fifth Doctor. He looked upon his fifth incarnation as a turning point in his life. According to the Tenth Doctor, it was during his fifth incarnation that he truly began to enjoy himself. ([[TV]]: ''[[Time Crash (TV story)|Time Crash]]'')
* The [[Gallifreyan (language)|Gallifreyan]] sentence recited by the Doctor on page 124 is represented in the text by Greek letters: "Ανδ Ι τυρνεδ αρουνδ ανδ τηεψ ωερε αλλ ωεαρινγ εψεπατχηεσ." The passage doesn't actually mean anything in Greek, but if the symbols are transliterated letter-by-letter using a standard English keyboard layout the passage becomes "And I turned around and they were all wearing eyepatches," a reference to the infamous [[Inferno (TV story)#Story notes|Eyepatch Story]] which [[Nicholas Courtney]] often told at conventions of cast antics during the filming of ''[[Inferno (TV story)|Inferno]].''
* [[Lance Parkin]]'s charity story ''Executive Action'' (published in ''Walking in Eternity'') provides further details for the riots seen in Patience's memories. [[The Watch]] were rounding up all Womb-born, the Loom-born determined to become Gallifrey's dominant faction. According to [[Rema-Du]], loomed Gallifreyans were "pale imitations" compared to the naturally born. This is the same story that states [[Wardog]] and the others of the [[Special Executive]] were prototypes of [[Rassilon]]'s loom.
 
== Continuity ==
* "Lightspeed overdrive" is first mentioned in [[TV]]: ''[[Logopolis (TV story)|Logopolis]]''.
* The Doctor badly remembers the events of his first two incarnations. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[The World Shapers (comic story)|The World Shapers]]'')
* [[PROSE]]: ''[[The Infinity Doctors (novel)|The Infinity Doctors]]'' reveals who Patience is in [[The Infinity Doctors universe|one universe]].
* [[PROSE]]: ''[[Cat's Cradle: Time's Crucible (novel)|Cat's Cradle: Time's Crucible]]'' and [[PROSE]]: ''[[Lungbarrow (novel)|Lungbarrow]]'' both gave some idea of the time from which Patience is from.
* The Fifth Doctor is still recovering from the effects of his [[regeneration]] three days earlier. ([[TV]]: ''[[Logopolis (TV story)|Logopolis]]'', ''[[Castrovalva (TV story)|Castrovalva]]'')
* Nyssa refers to her father [[Tremas]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Keeper of Traken (TV story)|The Keeper of Traken]]'')
* The Fifth Doctor tells Nyssa that nothing important was lost when they forced to jettison a quarter of the TARDIS during [[Event One]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[Castrovalva (TV story)|Castrovalva]]'')
* Tegan reminds the Fifth Doctor that she never got the chance to be an air hostess. ([[TV]]: ''[[Logopolis (TV story)|Logopolis]]'')
* Adric mentions that the [[Keeper of Traken]] was able to divert the TARDIS' course. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Keeper of Traken (TV story)|The Keeper of Traken]]'')
* The Doctor reminds Adric that the Master supposedly died on [[Castrovalva]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[Castrovalva (TV story)|Castrovalva]]'')
* The Fifth Doctor remembers the mindbending battle with Morbius. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Brain of Morbius (TV story)|The Brain of Morbius]]'')
* Adric has only known the Doctor for several weeks. They first met on Adric's homeworld [[Alzarius]] during the [[32nd century]] towards the end of the Doctor's [[Fourth Doctor|fourth incarnation]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[Full Circle (TV story)|Full Circle]]'')
* Chris refers to [[Serenity (Cold Fusion)|Serenity]], the last surviving planet of the [[Traken Union]]. The [[Sixth Doctor]] and [[Peri Brown]] visited it on one occasion. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[The Guardians of Prophecy (audio story)|The Guardians of Prophecy]]'')
* The Seventh Doctor refers to his fifth incarnation's numerous failed attempts to return Tegan to [[Heathrow Airport]] in [[1981]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[Four to Doomsday (TV story)|Four to Doomsday]]'')
* [[Whitfield]] refers to the [[Ice Warrior]] invasion of [[Earth]] in [[May]] [[1997]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Dying Days (novel)|The Dying Days]]'')
* The Fifth Doctor mentions that he was once a [[scientific advisor]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[Spearhead from Space (TV story)|Spearhead from Space]]'', et. al)
* The Fifth Doctor refers to his encounter with [[Omega]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Three Doctors (TV story)|The Three Doctors]]'')
* [[Kalkrav]]ian [[nun]]s are present at the [[transmat]] station, and Medford was involved in the [[Kalkravian Revolution]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Big Hunt (novel)|The Big Hunt]]'', ''[[Paydirt (short story)|Paydirt]]'', [[COMIC]]: ''[[Miranda (comic story)|Miranda]]'', et al.)
* The Fifth and Seventh Doctors would later meet each other again in [[AUDIO]]: ''[[The Sirens of Time (audio story)|The Sirens of Time]]'', prior to the events of [[AUDIO]]: ''[[The Veiled Leopard (audio story)|The Veiled Leopard]]'' and briefly in their eighth incarnation's TARDIS in [[AUDIO]]: ''[[The Four Doctors (audio story)|The Four Doctors]]'', though neither retained any memory of that experience.
* [[Bernice Summerfield]] would later encounter the Ferutu on [[Dellah]] in [[2596]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Twilight of the Gods (BNA novel)|Twilight of the Gods]]'')
* [[The Machine]] has [[TARDIS control room (Dr. Who and the Daleks)|the same control room as Dr. Who's TARDIS]], complete with the rocking chair, seen in [[TV]]: {{cs|Dr. Who and the Daleks (theatrical film)}}.
* When explained [[dimensional immanence]], Patience quotes the principle of [[electrokinetic theory]] from [[TV]]: {{cs|Dr. Who and the Daleks (theatrical film)}}.
 
== External links ==
{{dwrefguide|who_ma29.htm|Cold Fusion}}
* {{whoniverse|ma29|Cold Fusion}}
* [http://mysite.science.uottawa.ca/rsmith43/cloister/coldf.htm The Cloister Library: '''Cold Fusion''']
 
* [http://doctorwho.org.nz/archive/tsv48/lanceparkin.html Lance Parkin by Paul Scoones (Interview) - TSV 48]
{{MA}}
{{TitleSort}}


==External Links==
* [http://www.drwhoguide.com/who_ma29.htm The Doctor Who Reference Guide detailed synopsis of '''Cold Fusion''']
*{{whoniverse|MA29.php|Cold Fusion}}
[[Category:Fifth Doctor novels]]
[[Category:Fifth Doctor novels]]
[[Category:Seventh Doctor novels]]
[[Category:Seventh Doctor novels]]
[[Category:Multi-Doctor stories]]
[[Category:Multi-Doctor novels]]
[[Category:Psi Powers arc]]
[[Category:MA novels]]
[[Category:Virgin Missing Adventure Novels]]
[[Category:1996 novels]]
[[Category:1996 novels]]
[[Category:Stories set in alternate timelines]]
[[Category:Regeneration novels]]
[[Category:Stories set in 2592]]
[[Category:Time Lord novels]]

Latest revision as of 23:20, 29 April 2024

RealWorld.png

prose stub
You may wish to consult Cold fusion (disambiguation) for other, similarly-named pages.

Cold Fusion was the twenty-ninth novel in the Virgin Missing Adventures series. It was written by Lance Parkin. It was the only multi-Doctor story involving televised Doctors ever told by Virgin Books. It involved the unusual pairing of the season 19 Fifth Doctor with the Seventh Doctor near the end of the Virgin New Adventures line.

Originally intended to be published alongside the novel So Vile a Sin to emotionally leverage Roz Forrester's death in that book, delays on Sin meant that people who read the book on publication didn't see this intended aspect of the book.

As a multi-Doctor story, its perspective was unusual. The Seventh Doctor was portrayed as largely disdainful of his earlier self's presence because of the dangers it presented. Though temporal paradoxes and other consequences of two Doctors meeting were touched upon in televised multi-Doctor stories, here they were more central. Moreover, the structure broke with the format of televised multi-Doctor stories, which held that the latest incarnation was the "current" Doctor and therefore the effective headlining "star" of the show. On balance, Fusion was a Fifth Doctor novel that happened to feature the Seventh, rather than a Seventh Doctor novel that used the Fifth.

Publisher's summary[[edit] | [edit source]]

"The entire universe is at stake and I'm locked in here with another incarnation of myself, and not even one of the good ones!"

More than one TARDIS lands on a barren ice world. The Fifth Doctor, Adric, Nyssa and Tegan find a once ordered society on the verge of collapse, as rebels wage a dirty war with Scientifica, the ruling elite. All that stands between order and anarchy is the massed presence of an Adjudicator peacekeeping force.

But is peace the only reason for the Adjudicator garrison? What exactly has been discovered deep below the planet's surface? Who are the mysterious Ferutu? And why is telling a ghost story a criminal offence?

The Fifth Doctor sides with the cause of justice and fairness as always. But, as a threat to the universe unfolds, he finds himself in conflict with his past... and his future.

Plot[[edit] | [edit source]]

to be added

Characters[[edit] | [edit source]]

Worldbuilding[[edit] | [edit source]]

Cultural references from the real world[[edit] | [edit source]]

Foods and beverages[[edit] | [edit source]]

Individuals[[edit] | [edit source]]

Individual Time Lords[[edit] | [edit source]]

Languages[[edit] | [edit source]]

  • The Fifth Doctor speaks a sentence in Gallifreyan to Patience.

Organisations[[edit] | [edit source]]

  • Unitatus is what UNIT became; they use the old UNIT logo (a grid within a circle) as their herald.

Spacecraft[[edit] | [edit source]]

Species[[edit] | [edit source]]

TARDIS[[edit] | [edit source]]

Weapons[[edit] | [edit source]]

  • The Fifth and Seventh Doctors both use a technique which they describe as being "beyond the science of the Humanian Era", namely reversing the polarity of the neutron flow to disarm several fusion bombs.
  • A SAM drone is a mass-produced drone.

Notes[[edit] | [edit source]]

  • In AHistory, the author Lance Parkin confirms that the husband of Patience, in her memory seen by the Fifth Doctor's telepathic contact with her, is the character portrayed by Douglas Camfield during the mindbending sequence of TV: The Brain of Morbius.
  • In Time, Unincorporated: Volume One, it is revealed that the original version of PROSE: The Infinity Doctors would have confirmed that Patience's husband is also the character played by Robert Banks Stewart during the mindbending sequence of TV: The Brain of Morbius.
  • This is the only instalment of the Virgin Missing Adventures in which the Seventh Doctor appears.
  • The reasons that the Doctor seems to not remember meeting his future selves in other multi-Doctor stories are discussed. In most of the televised adventures, it is credited to the Blinovitch Limitation Effect.
  • The Seventh Doctor remembers the events of the novel from the perspective of the Fifth Doctor and uses this knowledge against his younger self. This also occurs in the audio stories Peri and the Piscon Paradox and The Four Doctors and the television story Time Crash in which the Sixth, Eighth and Tenth Doctors respectively likewise remember the events portrayed from the point of view of their fifth incarnation.
  • The Seventh Doctor describes his fifth incarnation as being "bland" and "not even one of the good ones." This reflects the Sixth Doctor's low opinion of his immediate predecessor immediately after his regeneration as he told his companion Peri Brown that "he had a sort of feckless charm that simply wasn't [him]." (TV: The Twin Dilemma) The Eighth Doctor was more fond of his fifth incarnation than his two immediate predecessors. He once described him as "terribly polite." (AUDIO: The Four Doctors) By the time of his tenth incarnation, the Doctor expressed a fondness for his time as the Fifth Doctor. He looked upon his fifth incarnation as a turning point in his life. According to the Tenth Doctor, it was during his fifth incarnation that he truly began to enjoy himself. (TV: Time Crash)
  • The Gallifreyan sentence recited by the Doctor on page 124 is represented in the text by Greek letters: "Ανδ Ι τυρνεδ αρουνδ ανδ τηεψ ωερε αλλ ωεαρινγ εψεπατχηεσ." The passage doesn't actually mean anything in Greek, but if the symbols are transliterated letter-by-letter using a standard English keyboard layout the passage becomes "And I turned around and they were all wearing eyepatches," a reference to the infamous Eyepatch Story which Nicholas Courtney often told at conventions of cast antics during the filming of Inferno.
  • Lance Parkin's charity story Executive Action (published in Walking in Eternity) provides further details for the riots seen in Patience's memories. The Watch were rounding up all Womb-born, the Loom-born determined to become Gallifrey's dominant faction. According to Rema-Du, loomed Gallifreyans were "pale imitations" compared to the naturally born. This is the same story that states Wardog and the others of the Special Executive were prototypes of Rassilon's loom.

Continuity[[edit] | [edit source]]

External links[[edit] | [edit source]]