The Broken Clock was the third story in the audio anthology Missy: Volume One, produced by Big Finish Productions.
Publisher's summary
Tonight, on Dick Zodiac's America's Most Impossible Killers, Detective Joe Lynwood hunts the most impossible killer of his career.
There's a trail of bodies. Impossible bodies. And Joe has one long night to solve the case.
Luckily, DI Missy Masters from Scotland Yard in England, London, England is here to help...
Plot
to be added
Cast
to be added
References
to be added
Notes
to be added
Continuity
to be added
External links
The Master stories |
---|
| Early life |
Television | | | Prose | | | Comic | | | Audio | | | Webcast | |
| | "Inventor" |
| | War Chief |
| | UNIT era | | | The cycle ending |
| | Reborn Master | | | "Merlin" |
| | Pryce |
| | Child Master |
| | War Master | | | Saxon Master | | | Missy | | | The Lumiat |
| | Spy Master | | | Unclear incarnation |
| | Other realities |
| | From stories considered not part of the DWU by this Wiki |
| | According to one account, the Master had the appearance of Roger Delgado while on Gallifrey. According to another, he had Anthony Ainley's likeness. According to another one, the one with James Dreyfus's appearance was the incarnation who ran away from Gallifrey.
Divided Loyalties, A Brief History of Time Lords and The Legions of Death feature, or otherwise acknowledge, the War Chief, but in the process contradicted the notion put forward by other stories that he was an incarnation of the Master.
One account suggests that the incarnation portrayed by Roger Delgado may be the same as the one portrayed by Peter Pratt while some others distinguish them.
According to one account, the incarnation portrayed by Gordon Tipple is the one portrayed by Anthony Ainley, while some others state that the Ainley one was already lost by then.
While fighting to extend his life at the end of his regeneration cycle, many bodies were possessed by the Beevers incarnation, but all kept somehow reverting to his real being until he finally regenerated into the MacQueen one. Hence, these sections cannot be strictly chronological |
|