Christine Bush
Christine Bush (née Hallam) was the mother of Melanie Bush.
Biography
Christine's mother and father were both very rich. (PROSE: Spiral Scratch) She had a brother, John, (PROSE: Spiral Scratch) and went to Durham University with Alan Bush, whom she married. The couple did not have children until they were in their late thirties. According to one account, they had only one daughter, Melanie, in 1964. (PROSE: Business Unusual) According to another, they had an elder daughter, Anabel, born in 1962, who died at the age of three after falling down the stairs in an accident caused by Mel. This led the Bushes to move from 8 Gosling Street in Croxdale (PROSE: Spiral Scratch) to 36 Downview Crescent in Pease Pottage.
Christine was a well-liked member of the Weald community, involving herself in the Women's Institute and the Girl Guides and, thanks to a well-meaning friend, was made Honorary President of the Crawley and Area Dog Training (Obedience) Society despite the fact that the Bushes never owned a dog. She made money from coffee mornings, jumble sales and, occasionally, Amway.
When Mel was twelve, she asked her mother if she was adopted or if she had been an accident. Horrified by the question, Christine smothered her with love and presents for weeks. When she was older, Mel, as a joke, invited anti-blood sport activists into the house and painted her parents as bad people. (PROSE: Business Unusual)
In 1986 (PROSE: Head Games; AUDIO: We Are The Daleks) or 1989, Christine met the Sixth Doctor when he arrived at the house to pick up Mel. She was attacked by plastic controlled by the Nestene Consciousness and went to the hospital, as did Mel's friend Trey Korte. (PROSE: Business Unusual)
She was apparently on a cruise when the Sixth Doctor brought Mel back after his trial to the pocket of cauterised time created by "Stapleton Petherbridge". (AUDIO: The Wrong Doctors)
Personality
Mel believed that Christine was a middle-class snob. She insisted on calling her daughter "Melanie", ostensibly because she did not think that "Mel" suited her. She read The Sunday Times, was shocked by Mel's frank discussion of sexuality and the like - saying that she would not have sent her to London University had she known that she would turn out that way - and failed to pick up on the many signs that Trey Korte, whom she was attracted to, was gay. She favoured Rimmel nail varnish. (PROSE: Business Unusual)