Storm Warning (audio story)
Storm Warning was the sixteenth monthly Doctor Who audio story produced by Big Finish Productions. Released in January 2001, this was the first audio story to feature Paul McGann as the Eighth Doctor, his first time reprising the role in a full cast story since the 1996 television movie, which was his first on-screen appearance as the Doctor.
Publisher's summary
October, 1930. His Majesty's Airship, the R101, sets off on her maiden voyage to the farthest-flung reaches of the British Empire, carrying the brightest lights of the Imperial fleet. Carrying the hopes and dreams of a breathless nation.
Not to mention a ruthless spy with a top-secret mission, a mysterious passenger who appears nowhere on the crew list, a would-be adventuress destined for the Singapore Hilton... and a Time Lord from the planet Gallifrey.
There's a storm coming. There's something unspeakable — something with wings, crawling across the stern. Thousands of feet high in the blackening sky, the crew of the R101 brace themselves. When the storm breaks, their lives won't be all that's at stake...
The future of the galaxy will be hanging by a thread.
Plot
Part 1
In the TARDIS, the Doctor tries to find the TARDIS manual in the library, but comes across Frankenstein and a signed first edition of The Murder of Roger Ackroyd by Agatha Christie. Suddenly, while in the time vortex, a time ship continually crashes. The Doctor watches and sees a flock of vortisaurs, but the Doctor pilots the TARDIS forward. He pilots the TARDIS out of the time loop, but the vortisaurs approach the TARDIS.
In October 1930, British airship R101 flies to Karachi. Onboard, Lieutenant-Colonel Frayling is worried about the designs from his design team by Lord Tamworth, Minister of the Air and that the speed of the R101 will compromise its worthiness. However, Tamworth refuses to explain the speed as well as the sealed compartments, including an unnamed passenger in cabin 43. Suspicious, Tamworth sends his valet, Rathbone, to check on the health of the passenger of cabin 43. As Rathbone heads for the deck, he runs into Chief Steward Weeks and orders a pot of coffee for later. Rathbone doesn’t notice that Weeks is escorting someone to the smoking room. It is then revealed that the person Weeks is escorting is a stowaway, who is impersonating Simon Murchford, who is still in Cardington. The stowaway is revealed to be Charlotte Pollard.
Frayling informs Tamworth that a storm is approaching, but Tamworth refuses to listen and continues the voyage and says that they will make their arrival in an hour. Suddenly, a sound is heard from the outside and the R101 shakes. Charley’s disguise is blown in the process and confesses to Frayling that she got Murchford drunk and decided to take his place on the R101 for the sake of adventure. Charley then breaks away and runs. Tamworth sends Weeks to kill her quietly to ensure the mission’s success just when Tamworth hears something outside of the airship.
The Doctor is onboard the R101 as well and hears breathing noises in cabin 43. He uses one of Conan Doyle’s stethoscopes to overhear Rathbone to shut his charge with an injection. Suddenly, Charley runs into the Doctor, who then helps her hide, delighted by the fact that he met a new friend. Weeks gives up looking for Charley and Charley decides to go with the Doctor, but is unsure about his eccentricity and the fact that he has met Lenin, Geronimo and Empres Alexandra. The Doctor then tells Charley that his time machine fell out of the airship and is trying to locate it, but Charley is skeptical. Charley then tells the Doctor that they are onboard the R101 and is now over northern France. Horrified, the Doctor remarks that if he remembers his history, the R101 will crash.
Meanwhile in cabin 43, Rathbone hears the scratching at the porthole and peeks through. Suddenly, something bursts through the door and grabs him.
Part 2
The Doctor and Charley hear Rathbone’s screams and rushes to investigate. Weeks arrives at the same time and all three see that Rathbone is being attacked by a vortisaur. The Doctor grabs Weeks’ coffee and throws it at the vortisaur, which then retreats. The Doctor deduces that the vortisaur was following the trail of the TARDIS’s emergency materialization. The Doctor then says that the vortisaur will be back as it tasted blood and wonders why the passenger (“he, she or it”) is sealed in a deep sea diver’s suit. Rathbone, pulls out a gun and forces the Doctor away and Charley speaks softly to the passenger, calming it. The Doctor and Weeks decide to search for the vortisaur, grabbing the passenger’s morphine. Charley remarks that she always wanted adventure, but not like this.
The Doctor and Weeks throw a table through a promenade window, shattering it and the R101 to tilt to port. The gap is now large for the vortisaur to get through and the Doctor cuts his arm with a glass shard to attract it. The vortisaur approaches calmly and licks the Doctor’s arm, tasting the time in his blood, much to Week’s astonishment. Weeks then knocks out the vortisaur with morphine and the Doctor decides that now he must get it back to its natural habitat, but that would mean getting back to the TARDIS. The Doctor and Weeks lock the vortisaur in the gallery and head to the lounge to find Tamworth.
Because of recent events, Frayling implores Tamworth to abort the flight, but Tamworth stubbornly refuses and threatens to have Frayling arrested if he tries anything to delay the mission. The Doctor then tells Tamworth that there’s a monster locked in the gallery and Tamworth is lead to believe that the Doctor is a spy. As the Doctor tries to explain himself, Tamworth says that he would be insulted if the Germans hadn’t snuck a spy onboard and have the Doctor executed to avoid word of the mission back home. The Doctor decides to play along that he is an agent of the Zeppelin Company and offers health to the passenger of cabin 43. Tamworth agrees and then tells Frayling that at 0030 hours, ascend to 5000 feet, which is three times higher than the R101 was designed for.
The Doctor returns to cabin 43 and informs Charley (who he calls “Fraulein”) that their cover is blown. Charley then plays along and the passenger seems to suffer some sort of anxiety and is conveying itself to Charley and Tamworth. They feel lightheaded as the air pressure is changing from the R101’s ascent. The Doctor realizes that the passenger is sensitive to this and could die, just when Rathbone pulls a gun to Charley’s head. The Doctor removes the passenger’s helmet and it’s revealed to be not human. Rathbone is thrown off as the passenger’s real appearance while Charley takes a liking to it because it reminds her of the dolphins when she went to Regent’s Park Zoo. The alien senses Charley’s compassion and speaks her name softly. Suddenly, an alarm goes off; they have reached the rendezvous. Tamworth informs the Doctor and Charley to escort the passenger to the lounge. Rathbone tries to object, but Tamworth’s in charge now. The Doctor and Charley wrap the passenger in a blanket and take it to a chair while Rathbone watches over.
Tamworth enters the lounge and announces the VIPs and explains that the passengers are selected as the best of the British to represent their country as ambassadors to another power. Suddenly, a bright light flashes outside the window and something lowers from the sky. It is then revealed to be an alien ship.
Part 3
The passenger is relieved that its people have returned for him and the passenger identifies himself as the Engineer Prime of the Triskele. Rathbone confronts the Doctor, who then forces Rathbone to confess that he’s a British Intelligence agent to ensure the Engineer Prime’s safety. The Engineer Prime then says that the R101 will continue and the hull of the Triskele ship becomes insubstantial to let the airship by. Charley then comments that she wanted to sneak on the R101 not just for adventure, but to meet the young trader who told her about his ravels at the Singapore Hilton on New Years’ Eve.
The R101 enters the Triskele ship’s interior. Tamworth tires to march out the guard of honor, but the Engineer Prime simply tells him that it won’t be allowed. The Engineer Prime decides that only three people may be allowed onboard the ship and chooses Tamworth, Frayling and the Doctor. Tamworth is skeptical, seeing how this is an insult to the British Empire, but the Doctor coaxes him into playing this out by telling him the glory of having first contact. Charley remains on the R101 with Rathbone, much to the doubts of Tamworth and the Doctor. Rathbone decides that after the delegations are over, he orders the crew to unload the crates from the sealed compartments. Charley is horrified to find that the crates contain weapons and ammunition.
The Engineer Prime is now able to move without touching the ground, now that he’s back on his respective ship. The delegations proceed and Tamworth explains that the Engineer Prime crashed to Earth sometime last winter and the British Intelligence thought that the Engineer Prime was bred by a foreign power. Rathbone contracted a spiritualist from Shoreditch named Madame Zelda, who was a legitimate psychic and has had made contact with the Triskele. The Engineer Prime states that he had not communicated with the humans, afraid that Earth was populated by “Uncreators”. By Madame Zelda’s word, the British decided to return the Engineer People back to his people because they didn’t want to risk a public landing where the Triskele ship would be spotted. The Doctor suspects that Tamworth’s intention isn’t humane.
The delegation arrives at the Triskelion, which is a three armed sigil. The Doctor comments that he has seen them on many other worlds in the past. The Triskele is an ancient race and was once feared across the universe. The Doctor, Tamworth and Frayling are then transported through the ship and the Doctor who is extremely excited that they are now in the world of the Engineers, which is a part of the Triskele that Frayling has been chosen to represent. Then the Triskelion takes them to the Uncreators, which are the dark and twisted Triskele, which are restrained in chains by the Engineers. The Uncreator Prime stands behind Tamworth and the Engineer Prime stands behind Frayling. Tamworth says that he is not interested in war because of all the horrors he has witnessed. The Uncreator Prime becomes angry and accuses the Engineer Prime of cheating the Uncreators of their representatives. The Uncreator Prime senses the Engineer’s thoughts and senses that a man named Rathbone is an Uncreator.
The Doctor guesses correctly that the third is the Lawgiver. The Engineers are the rational side of the race, the Uncreators are the dark and twisted side and the Lawgiver represents the free will of the Triskele as well as deciding what should be done. When the Triskele was once individuals, they allowed their own base to corrupt them, making them consign carnage in the universe. In order to make amends, they redesigned their own race by dividing them into three parts. However, throughout the entire Triskele race, there is only one Lawgiver. Should the Lawgiver die, the Uncreators will be released from neurological repression and will cause chaos. A Lawgiver couldn’t be decided from the Engineers or the Uncreators, so the Engineer Prime came to Earth, looking for a Lawgiver from the outside because choosing one from the Engineers or Uncreators will make the Lawgiver represent half of the race without equality. The Engineer Prime was also supposed to find an Engineer, an Uncreator and a human. The Doctor is not human and Tamworth rejected his birthright, and the Uncreator takes the opportunity to inform the Lawgiver that a more likely candidate for an Uncreator is onboard the R101—Rathbone. As Tamworth realizes this, he rushes back to the R101.
Tamworth is horrified to see that he is too late; Rathbone orders Weeks to escort the VIPs to their cabins and shoot Charley if she disobeys and failure to comply his orders will be treasonous. Once the VIPs are back in their cabins, Rathbone will lead the R101’s crew and take the Triskele ship by force for they—in Rathbone’s mind—will learn respect for the British Empire. Charley and Weeks follow Rathbone out of the R101, but suddenly, Rathbone is teleported to the Triskelion. There, the Uncreator Prime is impressed with the violence within Rathbone’s mind. The Doctor expresses disappointment in the fact that Rathbone came only for the Triskele ship. Tamworth had hoped that Triskele technology in the hands of the British would avert a tragedy.
Charley then appears and tries to warn everyone about Rathbone, who then fires a warning shot at her as he demands to speak to the leader and orders the Triskele ship to be surrendered immediately. Rathbone gives the Lawgiver one last chance to surrender. The Lawgiver refuses and Rathbone shoots and kills the Lawgiver. Now that the Lawgiver has perished, the Uncreators are free. The Uncreator Prime accuses the Engineer Prime for betraying their species by bringing humans to kill the Lawgiver. The Doctor realizes that the Uncreator Prime did this so its own race could be free from the Engineers as he, Charley, Tamworth and Rathbone watch in horror as the Uncreators become more bestial as they are no longer under control and declare war on humans.
Part 4
Rathbone collapses as his mind is no longer under control from the Uncreator Prime. Weeks and his men open fire at the Uncreators, but this isn’t helping. The Doctor realizes that this generation of Uncreators thinks that the humans are predators. The Doctor orders Weeks’ men to drop their weapons and tells Charley and the others to act ferocious to drive the Uncreators away. The Engineer Prime can’t join because this act is too barbaric for the Engineers.
The Uncreators are drawn back except for the Uncreator Prime, who has another plan. The Uncreator Prime uses the triskelion symbol on its chest, which is actually a device that has been passed down through the Uncreator Prime dynasty. The device is revealed to be an energy weapon and the Uncreator Prime aims it at the Doctor. Tamworth steps in and declares for the position of Lawgiver of the Triskeles. Tamworth knows he won’t win, but wants the others to escape. The Doctor tells Charley to take Rathbone and the others back to the R101 while he stays behind. Tamworth, however, manages to defeat the Uncreator Prime by with and brute force, getting it into a stranglehold. The Uncreator Prime controls Rathbone to shoot Tamworth. Rathbone fights to resist the control and manages to shoot the Uncreator Prime.
Tamworth now has control over the ship along with thousands of others, but can’t return back to England. Tamworth decides to remain on the Triskele ship, but not as the Lawgiver, but an advisor to help the Engineers and Uncreators make amends to maintain peace between the two races. The R101’s engines start and Tamworth asks one thing from the Doctor before leaving—to make sure that the passengers of R101 gets down safely. The Doctor knows the ultimate fate of the R101, but promises that he will. The Doctor and Charley then return to the R101 and the Doctor tells Charley that she has a chance to stay on the Triskele ship (to avoid her dying on the R101), but she refuses because she saw parachutes on the R101. The Doctor and Charley board the R101 as it emerges from the Triskele ship, which then ascends back to the sky and out into space.
As the R101 continues on its original course, Weeks returns to the gallery where the vortisaur is still locked up to feed it food scraps. Weeks contemplates taking the vortisaur home seeing how its tame, but something is disturbing it.
The Doctor and Charley return to the lounge, hoping to tell Frayling to evacuate the airship. However, Frayling points out that the Doctor told him to stand up for himself and now he’s not returning to England empty handed. Rathbone still has the energy weapon from the Uncreator Prime and the Doctor realizes that they return to England with the weapon, they will use it during the Battle of Britain and history will be changed. The Doctor reluctantly assaults Rathbone and takes the triskelion device, hoping to throw it out of the shattered window of the airship, but the vortisaur is blocking his way. Charley joins the Doctor as they are chased by Rathbone.
Rathbone finds the Doctor and Charley near the leather gasbags of the R101 and the Doctor warns Rathbone that they are leaking. The Doctor then comes to the realization that the vortisaur clawing at the hull, combined with the storm winds battering the ship without its stable gasbags will cause a chain reaction that will cause the R101 to crash. Seeing how the R101 is going to blow up anyway, the Doctor threatens to use the triskelion device to destroy it, along with the entire airship itself. Rathbone calls his bluff and swings at an axe at him. He misses and hits one of the gasbags, heralding the R101’s destruction. The Doctor then throws the triskelion device out of the airship. Rathbone dives for it, but in the process, he loses balance and falls from the catwalk and out of the airship’s hull. The Doctor and Charley are about to face death, but the vortisaur arrives at the scent of Time Lord blood. The Doctor marks that he used to ride vortisaurs at the Time Lord Acadamy as he and Charley mount the vortisaur’s back and ride out of the falling R101.
Onboard the R101, Frayling is still in the lounge and calls the flight lieutenant to increase evacuation. Frayling then realizes that he should have listened to the Doctor and opens one last bottle of champagne. He toasts the R101 and everyone onboard as the airship crashes and explodes.
The Doctor and Charley watch from afar as the fate of the R101 is carried out. The Doctor decides to take the vortisaur back to the Time Vortex, but it seems agitated as it’s frightened by Charley. Charley tries to calm it down, but the Doctor realizes the problem. 54 people boarded the R101 and there were 54 casualties. Tamworth wasn’t on the airship when it crashed, so the 54th death was Charley, who was meant to die on the airship. The vortisaur calms down and Charley sees that the Doctor looks disturbed. Before the Doctor can explain, Charley accepts his “reluctant invitation” to travel with him in his time machine. The Doctor can’t bring himself to tell her the truth and Charley then names the vortisaur Ramsay after the Prime Minister as they both hop on the vortisaur’s back. The Doctor and his new companion, Charley Pollard, ride Ramsay back to the TARDIS.
Cast
- The Doctor - Paul McGann
- Charley Pollard - India Fisher
- Lord Tamworth - Gareth Thomas
- Lt-Col Frayling - Nicholas Pegg
- Rathbone - Barnaby Edwards
- Chief Steward Weeks - Hylton Collins
- Triskele - Helen Goldwyn
References
The Doctor
- The Doctor finds a signed first edition of the Agatha Christie novel The Murder of Roger Ackroyd on board his TARDIS. He played Tiddlywinks with Tsarina Alexandra and later with Vladimir Lenin on an overnight train from Switzerland to Petrograd. He has also met Geronimo.
- The Doctor states that he learnt to ride Vortisaurs bareback at the Academy.
Notes
- The theme arrangement was composed by David Arnold, who has composed a wide range of impressive film scores, such as Stargate, Independence Day, Godzilla, Hot Fuzz, Paul and Sherlock. (David Arnold's IMDB page)
- The 2001 Eighth Doctor audio drama covers carry the Doctor Who logo in copper. The BBC only noticed this halfway through the season, and were not happy. Gary Russell persuaded them to let Big Finish keep the logo for these four plays, if he promised never to use them again.[source needed]
- Although the events portrayed are based on an actual occurrence, all of the characters involved are fictional.
- The Doctor states several times that there were no survivors of the R101 crash. In actuality, eight people survived the crash itself. Two of these individuals later died from injuries sustained in the crash, bringing the total number of survivors to six.
- As the first Eighth Doctor audio drama, this was also the first Big Finish audio drama to take after the events of TV: Doctor Who, then the most recent televised appearance of the Doctor.
- This audio drama was recorded on 18 May 2000 at The Moat Studios.
- An illustrated preview of this story appeared in DWM 300 illustrated by Lee Sullivan.
Continuity
- According to AUDIO: Terror Firma, the Eighth Doctor had numerous adventures prior to this story. During this time, he travelled with siblings Samson and Gemma Griffin as well as Mary Shelley (AUDIO: Mary's Story, et al)
- Although this story depicts the Doctor's first supposed meeting with Charley, it is later revealed that, earlier in his personal timeline, she had not only met but became a companion of the Sixth Doctor (AUDIO: The Condemned to AUDIO: Blue Forgotten Planet). The fact that Doctor does not recognise her later in his timeline was due to his memories of travelling with Charley being supplanted by fabricated memories of travelling with Mila. (AUDIO: Blue Forgotten Planet) Still earlier, in an alternative timeline, the Fourth Doctor met both his eighth incarnation and Charley while he was travelling with Leela. On that occasion, he was very impressed by Charley, telling her that he considered her to be very clever. However, he lost all memory of this encounter when the proper timeline was restored. (AUDIO: The Light at the End)
- The Vortisaur known as Ramsay stays in the TARDIS until AUDIO: Minuet in Hell.
- In the far future, radio broadcasts concerning the launch of the R101 could be accessed via the Gogglebox inside the Moon. (AUDIO: The Reaping, AUDIO: The Gathering)
- The Doctor recalls his encounter with Mary Shelley and Lord Byron near Lake Geneva in Switzerland in June 1816. (AUDIO: Mary's Story)
- The Doctor finds a copy of The Murder of Roger Ackroyd which is missing its last page. This would later be revealed to have been a birthday present from his former companion Samson Griffin. (AUDIO: Terror Firma)
- The Doctor mentions that he was onboard the RMS Lusitania when it sank on 7 May 1915. (AUDIO: The Sirens of Time)
- In an alternative timeline in which the Nazis won World War II, an alternative version of the Eighth Doctor likewise used the alias "Johann Schmidt." (AUDIO: Colditz, AUDIO: Klein's Story)
- The Doctor compares the R101 to the Sandminer Storm Mine 4 (TV: The Robots of Death) and the Hyperion III (TV: Terror of the Vervoids).
- The Doctor mentions that he was in South Africa during the Second Boer War and met several Afrikaans. (PROSE: Players)
- Charley would later tell the Doctor that she stowed away on the R101 in order to meet a young man named Alex Grayle in the Singapore Hilton on New Year's Eve 1930. (AUDIO: Seasons of Fear)
- At the time that she boarded the R101, Charley was attending a finishing school run by Miss Lime. (AUDIO: Zagreus)
- The R101 was launched from the Cardington airbase. (AUDIO: Zagreus)
- Suffering from survivor's guilt after the crash of the R101, Simon Murchford later became an Anglican minister in the hopes of reconciling his guilt. (AUDIO: The Next Life) He succeeded Reverend Matthew Townsend as the Cardington airbase's chaplain following his death in 1951. (AUDIO: Zagreus)
- Charley would later be haunted by the expression on Rathbone's face as he fell from the R101 to his death. Although he was the first of many people who attempted to kill her, she was eventually unable to even remember his name. (AUDIO: The Next Life)
- The Pollards' cook Edith Thompson was the only person who knew that Charley intended to stowaway aboard the R101 and helped her to prepare for the adventure. (AUDIO: The Fall of the House of Pollard)
- Lord Richard Pollard spent years researching the R101 and can name everyone onboard from Lord Tamworth to "the lowliest cabin boy." Several letters mentioned a rendezvous with a foreign power but he was never able to get to the bottom of it. (AUDIO: The Fall of the House of Pollard)
External links
- Official Storm Warning page at bigfinish.com
- Storm Warning at the Doctor Who Reference Guide
- DisContinuity for Storm Warning at Tetrapyriarbus - The DisContinuity Guide