Damaged Goods (novel)

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Damaged Goods is the fifty-fifth Virgin New Adventures novel, published in 1996. It features the Seventh Doctor, Chris Cwej and Roz Forrester. The novel was notably written by Russell T Davies, nearly a decade before he revived the Doctor Who television franchise as executive producer.

Publisher's summary

"Wherever this cocaine has travelled, it hasn't gone alone. Death has been its attendant. Death in a remarkably violent and inelegant form."

The Seventh Doctor, Chris and Roz, arrive at the Quadrant, a troubled council block in Thatcher's Britain. There's a new drug on the streets, a drug that's killing to a plan. Somehow, the very ordinary people of the Quadrant are involved. And so, amidst the growing chaos, a bizarre trio moves into number 43.

The year is 1987: a dead drug dealer has risen from the grave, and an ancient weapon is concealed beneath human tragedy. But the Doctor soon discovers that the things people do for their children can be every bit as deadly as any alien menace - as he uncovers the link between a special child, an obsessive woman, and a desperate bargain made one dark Christmas Eve.

Plot

The N-form is an ancient Gallifreyan weapon but this one is damaged. "There's a piece of N-form in every gramme of coke" The N-form has been reactivated for a future war. They were built for the war against the Great Vampires, so the damaged N-form has found a vampiric waveform, the boy Gabriel Tyler and his long lost twin brother that his mother gave away.

Mrs Jericho has adopted Gabriel's twin, Steven. Gabriel is draining life from Steven and creating the vampiric waveform as the boys have psi powers. Mrs Jericho believes it to be unfair that Steven is the dying brother and thinks saying that is dying and seeks out Gabriel. the N-form now running a mock taking what's left of the ex-drug dealer "the capper" and seek out Mrs Jericho and Gabriel.

Mrs Jericho has a Lithopedian a "stone baby", a rare phenomenon which occurs most commonly when a foetus dies during an abdominal pregnancy, is too large to be reabsorbed by the body, and calcifies on the outside, shielding the mother's body from the dead tissue of the baby and preventing infection. This is Mrs Jericho's un-born child that she has always wanted and with the psi power of Steven has been giving this stone baby life driving Mrs Jericho insane. As she is the centre of the vampiric waveform, the N-form comes after her. She becomes part of the N-form and starts to destroy the Quadrant estate and activates the attack. Every one who has taken the cocaine has a engram on the brain which act as a "dimensional vent, through which the N-form can the physical world, shoving itself into the brain and taking over. As a shaft of metal is working its way through the brains of the cocaine uses, the only why she can be stopped is by the Doctor activating the shutdown with the use of the Patrexian numbers.

But to get to the data core of the N-form, the Doctor must take some cocaine so he has a engram to connect to the N-Form. Activating the shutdown, Mrs Jericho finely gives birth to her child. The N-form is shutdown but at a price. All but Gabriel Tyler are killed as well most of the people on the Quadrant estate and ever user of the cocaine. Doctor travels back to the charismas Eve when Winnie gave away Steven. Also when Bev look down at the Doctor when she was younger.

Characters

References

Culture

  • Chris wears an earring in his right ear, unknowingly identifying with gay culture (1980s gay culture dictated that the right was the "gay" ear).

Diseases and illnesses

  • Twenty years after meeting Chris, David contracts HIV1.

Gallifreyan technology

  • N-Forms exist in a pocket dimension.

Individuals

Psychic powers

Species

  • Haemovores went extinct as their evolution fed on itself.

Technology

Time Lords

  • Patrexes are a Gallifreyan Chapter of artists, aesthetes and shallow Epicureans with pretentious minds. They think there's something beautiful about the death of suns.

Notes

  • This novel written by new series creator Russell T Davies and features a council estate and a family named Tyler, a similarity to the Tyler family of the TV series. The surname Tyler is one used often by Davies in many of his works throughout his writing career.

Continuity

External links


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