Death's Head (audio story)

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Death's Head is the second audio play in the Kaldor City series. Written by Chris Boucher, it features an investigation into the attempted murder of Chairholder Uvanov.

Publisher's summary

"Taren Capel? The mad god of the robots. He was famous, briefly, but then, weren't we all?"

Someone is spinning a web. Links are forming between one man's need for violence and another's desire for power; a desert ore processing station and a long dead enemy of the state. Someone, maybe everyone, is being manipulated.

Carnell is the obvious culprit, but who is the psychostrategist working for, and what could their motive possibly be?

Kaldor City - Death's Head uses the characters, situations and settings that appear in Chris Boucher's Doctor Who novel Corpse Marker, to tell a complex tale of sex, money and death.

Cast

(in order of appearance)

References

Individuals

  • Stenton Rull is head of security.
  • Justina is apparently an old friend of Hume. They went to school together. Justina doesn’t consider Hume to be an “old friend”. Hume apparently recommended Justina for the position of Uvanov's executive assistant. In truth, Justina helps Hume get close to Uvanov as he previously he helped her in an attempt to discredit Rull and give her lover, Iago, and by association herself, more power.
  • Iago considers his job title as Uvanov’s 'Security Consultant', rather than 'Personal Bodyguard' as it’s more expensive.
  • Firstmaster Strecker is murdered by Rull, he was shot at close range. Rull killed Strecker as he felt responsible for getting an attendant at the Gentlemen's Oasis into trouble.
  • Sheen And Rov were apparently rebel sympathizers.
  • Taren Capel is known as 'the mad god of the robots'.

Objects

Blind Heart Desert

Allusions

  • "Eat, drink and be merry. For there’s a shack in the sewerpits waiting for all of us." – Landerchild quoting someone.

Notes

  • This story introduces the character of Blayes, played by Tracy Russell, who features more prominently in later plays. The sixth play in the series, AUDIO: Storm Mine, is told entirely from this characters' viewpoint.
  • Iago's statement that you can't prove a negative echoes the words of scientific skeptic James Randi.
  • The copyright notice printed on the CD release of this production states: "Unauthorised copying, hiring, renting, public performance and broadcasting is strictly prohibited or Uvanov will be kicking your corpse."
  • This story was part of a recording block that also consisted of AUDIO: Occam’s Razor.[1]
  • The third edition of Mad Norweigan Press' reference work AHistory gives a year of 2889 for the events of this story.

Continuity

  • The play sets up several ideas that only receive some kind of resolution later in the series, such as the existence of Taren Capel's skull (although the one seen here is a fake) and several clashing schemes and plots that the Topmasters, Carnell and Iago are attempting to put into action.
  • The origin of the skull presented to Uvanov is explained in the story PROSE: Skulduggery where Rull kills a technician who ends up in a morgue where Cotton has an undue influence over the Head of Forensics: the plan is articulated that Cotton should and probably has stripped the flesh from the technician's head and used his skull as the one that Uvanov is presented with.
  • Carnell muses about the existence of an alien grand manipulator whose goals and methods would be unknowable, foreshadowing the emergence of the Fendahl in AUDIO: Checkmate.
  • The attendant whom Rull 'helps' is later revealed, in AUDIO: Hidden Persuaders, to be an agent for The Church of Taren Capel named Manzerak.
  • Uvanov’s previous executive assistant, described here as the one that sold him out, was Cailio Techlan. (PROSE: Corpse Marker)
  • Iago shot Rull in the leg. (AUDIO: Occam's Razor)
  • Uvanov gives instructions to manipulate Blayes into the becoming a rebel leader. (AUDIO: Hidden Persuaders)
  • Iago and Carnell both make reference to a great illusion, Iago also mentions it in AUDIO: Metafiction. In later installments of the series the idea that all in not what it seems becomes an increasingly prominent theme, particularly in AUDIO: The Prisoner:
  • A variation of the following exchange between Blayes and Iago is repeated at the climax of AUDIO: Checkmate:
    • "Nice place you’ve got here." - Blayes
    • "It goes with the job." – Iago

External links

Footnotes