From Eternity (short story): Difference between revisions
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The Doctor, working for the [[Time Lord]]s, is interviewing an [[The Entity (From Eternity)|entity]] who has committed terrible crimes. | The Doctor, working for the [[Time Lord]]s, is interviewing an [[The Entity (From Eternity)|entity]] who has committed terrible crimes. | ||
The entity explains that his | The entity explains that, in his first experience with intelligent life, he was unable to establish contact, and the life eventually devolved into a primitive state, later followed by their sun's implosion. | ||
When he next encountered intelligent life, he was able to establish contact, but once again the civilisation decayed and the sun imploded. He concluded that some kind of infection was at work. | When he next encountered intelligent life, he was able to establish contact, but once again the civilisation decayed and the sun imploded. He concluded that some kind of infection was at work. |
Revision as of 03:55, 28 May 2014
From Eternity was the second short story in the Short Trips anthology Short Trips: Monsters. It was written by Jim Mortimore. It featured an unspecified Doctor.
Summary
The Doctor, working for the Time Lords, is interviewing an entity who has committed terrible crimes.
The entity explains that, in his first experience with intelligent life, he was unable to establish contact, and the life eventually devolved into a primitive state, later followed by their sun's implosion.
When he next encountered intelligent life, he was able to establish contact, but once again the civilisation decayed and the sun imploded. He concluded that some kind of infection was at work.
The entity next contacted the Iarcho. He tried to warn them of the infection, but they didn't take notice. He killed several of them as a warning, but still their society decayed; the entity destroyed their sun.
At this point the entity realised that for him time moved in reverse to the rest of the universe. What he saw as de-evolution was actually evolution.
He admits his guilt to the Doctor and hopes for redemption.
Time for him eventually progresses to the beginning of the universe, which is his end. Instead of nothingness, however, he experiences a new universe.
Characters
References
to be added
Notes
- The Doctor's incarnation is not clearly specified in this story. The only clues given are the Entity's description of the Doctor: "harshly, angular face" and "thumb-tucked arrogance".
Continuity
- The Doctor would later meet another entity which experiences time in reverse in COMIC: Room with a Deja View. The Doctor, along with his grandchildren, would experience time in reverse himself in COMIC: Time in Reverse.
External links
to be added