The Cactus and the Corpse (short story)
The Cactus and the Corpse was the fourth short story in the 2023 anthology Horrors of Arcbeatle. It acted both as a crossover between the Auteur and Coloth series, and as the first official release of both of these spin-offs. Due to a framing device of a story being told by a narrator significantly prone to digressions, the plot was told significantly out of order.
Summary
A human has becme lost in an infinite Library. They stumble upon a a strange, inhuman being resting by a campfire, who gives them some food and offers to tell them a story.
The story begins with a summary of the history of Coloth of the Ulk-Ra, and specifically the events surrounding his "senseless, brutal murder". This early death contradicts the highly optimistic predictions previously made by the soothsayer Ugrith-female about Coloth's life, causing her to be disgraced and commit suicide; this event reached historical significance, setting Coloth's tribe on a path of rationalistic enlightenment which would go on to produce "many of the Ulk-Ra's keenest scientific minds" centuries down the line. However, says the storyteller, Ugrith's prophecy had been correct; Coloth's premature death was an alteration to history, caused by a blunder on the part of "the people who ran the universe at the time". When the error is noticed in Heaven, the event gains further cosmic significance by boosting the political career of one "minor Tribune" from House Duskeriall who had coincidentally argued against the decision which led to Coloth's death, but been overruled by his superiors. This proves unfortunate when, some time later, the former Tribune, now Altissimus Cancellarius to the Supreme Being himself, takes advantage of this elevated position to murder the Supreme Being in an effort to steal his power.
Skipping ahead, the true beginning of the narrator's primary narrative finds Coloth alive and on the run, having been recently resurrected as a "hard-light techno-ghost manifesting out of a holo-cube" as part of a program of ladling up eyewitnesses to major historical events in order to verify the accuracy of various records. This operation is the work of the Bookkeepers of the pocket-dimensional Library itself; formerly the Plume Coterie, this clique of posthumans discovered the Library after domesticating the "world-birds" known as the Birdhemoths, and decided to attempt to sort through its infinite collections to "compile the complete and sufficient list of all true history books". Because they started this research program during the Cosmic War, when the Archons were still alive, and have yet to realise that this is no longer the case, the Coteries endeavour to do this with as little disruption to history as possible, hence merely taking a biodata-print of the subjects rather than physically rescuing them from their historical deaths, and also, as a rule, destroying the holo-cubes shortly after they're done interviewing the subjects. Coloth, however, was rescued from this second death by two teenage Novices, Maritsa and Callum, with whom he has been on the run in the Library ever since.
Camping on a deserted floor for the night, the three youths ponder their situation and where to go next. Coloth is disturbed by a large Birdhemoth feather in his possession, unable to remember how he acquired it, but is jolted out of that melancholy train of thought by the practical discussion at hand. Having agreed to get moving again early the next morning, the children check the infinite map of the Library which Callum possesses. They zero in on Floor 899,167,435,042, a few hundred flights of stairs down from their current location; the map's description of its contents is mostly blank, despite checkpoints indicating that it was scouted out by a Stocktaking Party led by Master Librarian Roland "a couple of centuries back". Though they are unsure of whether it means they didn't find anything of interest or found something "really dangerous", they are won over by the presence of bathrooms near the stairs where they'll be able to restock on water. Having all agreed on the plan, they agree to have Maritsa keep watch while the boys rest; to keep herself awake, she finds a pile of horror literature, selecting a dusty 21st century paperback entitled Horrors of Arcbeatle. Noticing that the first story she lands on, The Cactus and the Corpse, seems to be about her, she dutifully skips over it to the next entry, The Thing in the Woods.
Playfully deciding that it should leave her to her reading, the Bookwyrm interrupts this story to go back in time 278 years within the Library's time-stream, and relate an event whose significance is not yet apparent, as witnessed by Master Librarian Baligant Caulphin: the arrival of a mysterious bearded man with the power to command the Library itself into the Void Gate Room of the Library, through which patrons from the outer multiverse enter and leave the Library (whereas patrons from the Third Universe itself use the Cosmic Gate on the "other side" of the Library). After scanning him with the device used by the Library's Receptionists to identify visitors, Caulphin is baffled by what he finds. The storyteller interrupts that story-strand there, though it heavily implies that the newcomer was the mysterious Creator of the Library, returned to it at long last as foretold in various prophecies.
Returning to the "present-day" thread of Callum, Coloth and Maritsa, the narrator finds them running for their lives from Master Librarian Naimon, an unpleasant and arrogant man descended from Roland, who ruined his own eyesight on purpose because near-sightedness is a mark of honour among librarians, but is nevertheless a dangerous shot with his crossbow, handed down from his famous grandfather. In fact, he has manage to wound Callum, though he and Maritsa are still evading him, hiding in a dead-end corridor of shelves, in an area of the Floor which is thick with such small, identical alcoves. Coloth, calling on his fragmentary training among the Ulk-Ra as an arborea warrior and hunter, has taken the high ground, walking silently on top of the shelves, but he is unable to find an edge before Naimon find the right aisle where the children are cowering, and he gives up the element of surprise to throw off his attempt to take a lethal shot at them. Maritsa misjudges her ability to tackle a man twice her size, however, and loses what little advantage Coloth had won them. Now holding all three of them at crossbow-point, Naimon captures them and begins gloating.
Because it dislikes people like Naimon, the narrator dodges out of having to relate Naimon's speech by going back in time again, to an event twenty years after the stranger's arrival. Dismissing the earlier suggestion that the stranger was the architect of the Library, "if there had ever been such a person". Instead, it transpires that he had identified himself, and been identified, as a surviving Mapper, one of the guild of Archons who "explored the outer reaches of reality — and beyond — in the earliest ages of the universe". This is surprising, first because the Mappers were previously believed to have all been lost within "the early millennia" of the Archons' history, "some to madness, some to the horrors and wonders that roamed in those days"; but also because it is abnormal for a native of the universe to enter via the Void Gate. The Mapper claims that he has simply been spending all those eons travelling through the Void and the Multiverse, and that the Library is now the only part of reality left for him to chart before he returns to the Cathedral of Time and presents the fruit of his labour to "the Lord Founder". As such, further endearing himself to them by making no obvious attempt to be allowed back into the universe through the Cosmic Gate, the returned Mapper lived among the Librarians for twenty years, leading Stocktaking Parties, creating supernatural maps of the Library such as the one which would later find its way into Callum's possession, and even taking on an apprentice among the Bookkeepers, none other than Roland.
By the time of the event the narrator has chosen to focus on, however, Roland's trust in his mentor is beginning to erode, having noticed a pattern to the Mapper's erratic behaviour, which suggests that he is not simply exploring the Library for its own sake or moving at random, but searching for something in particular. Finally threatening him with his crossbow, Roland gets the man to admit that he isn't the mythical Mapper at all; in that moment, a veil lifts from Roland's perception and he sees the old man as he really is, not the idealised white-bearded explorer but a skeletal corpse in disguise. Noting that his claim to be "him" had been getting old even before he came to the Library, and this will be the last time he uses the alias, the skeleton confirms that he is nevertheless a genuine Archon. When asked if he's "another" Archon, he briefly claims that he is not "un autre" but "l'Autre", before dropping the notion, admitting that he is simply "a bit of him" and slightly rearranging the letters of the French word to reveal his true name.
Returning to the present-day strand of narrative, the narrator quickly catches the listener up to speed: after capturing the children, Naimon searched them, and found Callum's map. Having noticed Roland's sigil, he became "overjoyed at the chance to get twice the glory in a single mission" and thus "commanded his prisoners to help him to the uncharted floor, to complete his ancestor's work at long last". Consequently, the present moment finds them having finally made their way through the maze of shelves, and to the staircases and lifts meant to lead down to the coveted floor. However, a mysterious tunnel-like hole has been eaten through the structure of the Library, rendering both the stairs and the lift unusable. Due to his ruined eyesight, Naimon is unable to see it, and ends up walking backwards into the cabin-less elevator shaft, falling to his death — despite Coloth, in a bout of selflessness, attempting to warn him at the last minute of the "Cho" in his midst.
After he lands in a bloody mess on Floor 899,167,435,042, however, his blood has a very definite effect. It turns out that the Floor was marked as empty because centuries ago, Roland burnt it down — a very extreme, almost unthinkable measure for a Library to take in defence of the Library — to destroy the threat to the Library within after the skeleton attempted to sacrifice Roland's firstborn child to summon "a primordial god-serpent". Auteur's scattered ashes, however, have retained a kind of consciousness, and respond eagerly to the appearance of blood, using it as ink. Writing his own name in intricate, fractal patterns, Auteur manages to reconstitute himself into a "healthy" skeleton once more — his sixteenth regeneration.
After the children make their way down (by means of Coloth adjusting his hard-light form to a gigantic squash-like, quill-less cactus which serves to cushion the impact of the fall as Maritsa and Callum ride down on his back), Auteur happily greets the trio, appearing particularly excited to meet Coloth: he has met older versions of Coloth before, but knows this to be the first time Coloth is meeting him from his perspective. He also reveals that, viewing himself as a "script-doctor" to their "story", he has taken advantage of his presence in the Library to make a few alterations to their timeline; among other things, he destroyed one particular Birdhemoth who was supposed to become their friend and their means of escaping the Library, because he believed their adventures ought to begin with an extended adventure set entirely within the Library instead of them escaping immediately into the wider universe. This is the origin of the single feather whose origin Coloth couldn't remember, an echo of the destroyed timeline. Auteur also changed the spelling of Maritsa's name (previously Marissa) to protect her from the Interdimensional Copyright Office.
Losing interest in them because he "is on a schedule", Auteur then decides to resume the ritual Roland interrupted centuries ago, using the spilled blood of Roland's descendant Naimon to stand in for that of the actual firstborn. The object of the ritual turns out to be to summon "the Bookwyrm", whom his invocation describes as a "devourer of stories, eater of words and worlds" and the "ancient worm at the heart the great apple of knowledge". He intends to subdue the entity and ride it triumphantly back into the universe. However, when the Bookwyrm arises, revealing itself as the creator of the holes Callum, Maritsa and Coloth observed in the stairwell, it makes it clear that it has no interest in serving Auteur, and promptly eats him, as the narrator reveals itself to be none other than the Bookwyrm itself — a development which throws into a different relief prior asides made by the narrator about a "gentleman of [its] acquaintance" who had an obsession with books, and whom the Bookwyrm had described thusly: "a man, even now, very close to my heart; but some of his positions I find harder to digest than others".
Characters
- Auteur
- "Bloodthirsty creature"
- The Bookwyrm
- Callum
- Baligant Caulphin
- Coloth
- Human
- Maritsa
- Roland
- Naimon
- The Supreme Being
- The Tribune from House Duskeriall
- Ugrith-female
Mentioned only
- Jorge Luis Borges
- Basil Brush
- Professor Castarban
- The Devil
- Jark Haine
- Adolf Hitler
- The Last of the Lords Collective
- Urizen
- Laetitia Marshall
- Olivia Marshall
- Ojo the Unlucky
- The Queen of the Interdimensional Black Market
- The Scarlet Arisrian
- King Selvabon
Worldbuilding
- The Tribune rising to the office of Altissimus Cancellarius ("in your terms, the Metatron") is described as him having risen to "the First Sphere".
- The Plume Coteries' Library is described as one of the many "mini-worlds, or pocket dimensions, or bubble universes" which "orbit" around the Universe as its rings orbit the planet Saturn.
- Among the likely-fictitious hypotheses rattled off by the Bookwyrm regarding the Library's origins are that it's "simply always been here", that it was "conceived by the ghost of Jorge Luis Borges", or that it "grew from the seed bismuth".
- Maritsa owns a pocket-watch, which is described as "rusting", but still works nevertheless.
- The Library opens every day at eight a.m..
- Maritsa and Callum discuss the punishments they would receive for Coloth being "overdue": after one month, they would have lost their ranks as Novices, but now that Coloth has been missing from the archives for over three months, they would face being "put in the stocks" at least.
- At some point, Adolf Hitler was Time-Ladled by the Bookkeepers so they could "ask him about South America". As per normal procedure, they subsequently smashed his holo-cube.
- Individuals who visited the Library on the day of Auteur's arrival included the Scarlet Arisrian, Professor Castarban, "an ambassador of the Cardiac Monarchies", "fourteen of the Lesser Burrowing Minds", Jark Haine, Olivia and Laetitia Marshall, "Selvabon, King of Dwarves", the Last of the Lords Collective, and Ojo the Unlucky.
- One of the books maimed in Naimon's attack on the children is a "table-sized volume" of the Encyclopaedia Galactica, "79th Edition".
- Maritsa believes that she is qualified to apply stitches to Callum's wound because she "took a bookbinding class once".
- Naimon is described as being "all Javert-like devotion to the rules".
- The terms "the Multiverse" and "the Omniverse" are used interchangeably.
- Auteur admits that his people have many names, claiming to have coined "a few". They include "Archons", "Lords of the Universe", "Lightbringers", "angels", "Celestials", "Grigori", "Sun Builders", and Auteur's personal favourite, "Authors of History".
- Urizen is referenced as the Lord Founder and the Demiurge. The Bookwyrm claims that his reign ended in a coup against Urizen, during which "God had been declared unfit for command by his angels", so that they had "cleaved his eternal spirit from his undying flesh and buried it beneath the Cathedral like a dirty secret", allowing his role as Supreme Being to be "passed down through an anonymous lines of figureheads".
- It is said that during his twenty-year stint posing as the returned Mapper, Auteur taught the elder librarians "an understanding and power over the written word which dwarfed even the most erudite of papyromancers".
- Auteur mentions having "hearts to spare" and is later confirmed to have a triple heartbeat.
Notes
- Due to the two previous stories of the anthology, The Cabinet of Paradox Park and Lonely in Your Nightmare, not having any connection to the DWU, this wiki considers Samhain Miracles to be the preceeding story.
- The joking suggestion that the Plume Coteries' Library might have been conceived by the ghost of Jorge Luis Borges alludes to the resemblance between the Library and the titular setting of Borges's 1941 short story The Library of Babel. The story is referenced again when the Bookwyrm says of the Library "it's not quite the Library of Babel, but it's home".
- Meanwhile, the mentioned alternative of the Library having "grown from the seed bismuth" references the mysterious claim made throughout the science-fantasy webcomic Gunnerkrigg Court that the titular structure originally "grew from the Seed Bismuth".
- At one point, the narration uses the term "lifekind", a collective name for the sentient lifeforms of the universe which was coined by Douglas Adams and used liberally throughout The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy.
- After finding the in-universe version of Horrors of Arcbeatle, Maritsa wonders what an "Arc-Beetle" is, only for the Bookwyrm to mention in narration that there is in fact such a being and that it, the Bookwyrm, knows what it, the Arc-Beetle, is. In fact, an entity by that name appeared in Aristide Twain's 2020 10,000 Dawns story The New Path; like the Bookwyrm, it was depicted as an animal-like, godlike, and substantially metafictional being.
- Among the list of visitors to the Plume Coteries' Library are Jark Haine, a recurring character from The Crew of the Copper-Colored Cupids, as well as Ojo the Unlucky, a public-domain character originating in L. Frank Baum's Land of Oz books. The Arisrians also originated in The Crew of the Copper-Colored Cupids, making the Scarlet Arisrian a further point of crossover. Yet more elements from the Copper-Colored Cupids series mentioned in the story include the Interdimensional Tavern (as simply "the Tavern"), the Interdimensional Black Market (and its Queen), the Embodiments, and the Interdimensional Copyright Office.
- The names of all the Librarians in the story except for Callum and Maritsa — including Roland, Caulphin, Baligant, and Naimon — are drawn from medieval French literature, primarily the Song of Roland.
- One line is a metafictional reference to an infamous typo in the Target novelisation of Delta and the Bannermen, which caused the text to nonsensically claim that the Seventh Doctor was "peeing over a shelf" as opposed to peering over that shelf.
“Just pee over a shelf,” Maritsa groaned. “Lots of people do.”
That was a really funny thing to say from the perspective of a very narrow group of people in all of time and space; but none of them were in the room, and, judging by your lack of reaction, you weren‘t one of them either. Unless the penny‘s only just dropped from my belabouring the joke? A-ha. Yes, I went there.
- Callum and Maritsa were named after Calum and Marissa, similar characters who appear in a similar (but distinct) "infinite Library" setting in Lawrence Miles's spec script for a Tenth Doctor TV story, The Book of the World. In her prior, fairly brief appearance in White Canvas, Maritsa was in fact referred to as "Marissa" like the Miles character; the copyright-dodging nature of this slip-up is referenced by Auteur, who is credited with changing her name to "Maritsa" from now on.
As for you, you're lucky I got here and switched out that S for a T. You flew close to the sun there, for a second, jeune fille. The Interdimensional Copyright Office has eyes everywhere, surely your Masters have told you that…
Continuity
- The Bookwyrm mentions two names for the Universe. One is "the Bellbreaker's Cradle", a name which originated in PROSE: Wringing Off [+]Loading...["Wringing Off (novel)"]; it is here attributed to the Weathermen, a group mentioned in Wringing Off and PROSE: The Bloodletters [+]Loading...["The Bloodletters (novel)"]. The other is "the Third Universe", a numbering used in AUDIO: Quinnis [+]Loading...["Quinnis (audio story)"], PROSE: Auteur's Abecedarium [+]Loading...["Auteur's Abecedarium (short story)"] and PROSE: Resurrection of the Author [+]Loading...["Resurrection of the Author (short story)"]; it is here attributed to the Council of Frogs, also mentioned as a multiversal authority in PROSE: And Today, You [+]Loading...["And Today, You (novel)"].
- The story concurs with PROSE: Samhain Miracles [+]Loading...["Samhain Miracles (short story)"] in explicitly placing the Ulk-Ra's planet, from the original PROSE: War Crimes [+]Loading...["War Crimes (short story)"] short story, in the Amazolian system — which had been introduced, for its part, in Nate Bumber's Faction Paradox short stories PROSE: Cobweb and Ivory [+]Loading...["Cobweb and Ivory (short story)"], PROSE: A Farewell to Arms [+]Loading...["A Farewell to Arms (short story)"] and PROSE: A Farewell to R.M.S. [+]Loading...["A Farewell to R.M.S. (short story)"].
- The Bookwyrm recalls the events of PROSE: War Crimes [+]Loading...["War Crimes (short story)"], lingering on the political aftereffects of one "lowly Tribune from House Duskeriall" having fruitlessly argued to have Ossu destroyed instead of returning him to Ulk. This Tribune, as identified in War Crimes, is Gothaparduskerialldrapolatkh. This event is linked to Goth's subsequent promotion to Chancellor as seen in TV: The Deadly Assassin [+]Loading...["The Deadly Assassin (TV story)"]. The Bookwyrm mentions that the Tribune wanted the Presidency so much that he "couldn't even keep it from showing on his face, if you know what I mean"; this nods to the physical resemblance between Goth as seen in The Deadly Assassin and the First Time Lord as seen in TV: The War Games [+]Loading...["The War Games (TV story)"], identified as the then-President of Gallifrey in a variety of sources starting with PROSE: Doctor Who and the Doomsday Weapon [+]Loading...["Doctor Who and the Doomsday Weapon (novelsation)"]: the suggestion is that the character regenerated into a face identical to his superior's as a manifestation of his subconscious desire for the job. The idea of subconscious factors influencing a Time Lord to regenerate into the face of someone they'd met before was prominently used to explain the Twelfth Doctor's resemblance to Lobus Caecilius in TV: The Girl Who Died [+]Loading...["The Girl Who Died (TV story)"].
- The Tribune is said to have wanted the Supreme Being's job "since he was constructed", rather than "born", referencing the looms as established in PROSE: Cat's Cradle: Time's Crucible [+]Loading...["Cat's Cradle: Time's Crucible (novel)"].
- The Bookwyrm quips that the Supreme Being's killer was in fact "not the Devil — any of them". Various purported "true" identities of the mythical Devil have been depicted as real beings in the Doctor Who universe, including Azal in TV: The Dæmons [+]Loading...["The Dæmons (TV story)"], Sutekh in TV: Pyramids of Mars [+]Loading...["Pyramids of Mars (TV story)"], Scratchman in PROSE: Scratchman [+]Loading...["Scratchman (novelisation)"], the Master in PROSE: Prologue to The Centenarian [+]Loading...["Prologue to The Centenarian (short story)"], the Carnival Queen in PROSE: Christmas on a Rational Planet [+]Loading...["Christmas on a Rational Planet (novel)"], and the Beast in TV: The Impossible Planet [+]Loading...["The Impossible Planet (TV story)"]/The Satan Pit [+]Loading...["The Satan Pit (TV story)"].
- The Bookwyrm treats the murder of the Supreme Being by the Tribune as the de facto start of the Cosmic War. This concurs with the pivotal role the events of TV: The Deadly Assassin [+]Loading...["The Deadly Assassin (TV story)"] are shown to possess in the cosmology of the War in Heaven in PROSE: Crimes Against History [+]Loading...["Crimes Against History (short story)"] and PROSE: The Book of the War [+]Loading...["The Book of the War (novel)"], sparking a period of political unrest which led to the rise of House Paradox on the Homeworld and renewed experimentation with the newly-unearthed Caldera.
- The Tribune is described as an "ageless celestial being". Later, Auteur himself cites "the Celestials" as one of many names for his kind. The Master described the Time Lords as "a celestial race" in AUDIO: Faustian [+]Loading...["Faustian (audio story)"], and the Toymaker was repeatedly described as "celestial" by the First Doctor in TV: The Celestial Toymaker [+]Loading...["The Celestial Toymaker (TV story)"], with later stories treating it as part of the character's title, referring to him as the Celestial Toymaker.
- The posthumans Maritsa and Callum are described as "human, or at least human-ish" by the Bookwyrm; "human-ish" was used as a derogatory term for early posthumans in PROSE: Down [+]Loading...["Down (novel)"], then later cited as a positive identity used by some posthuman groups (alongside "new humans", "proto-humans" and "digi-humans") in TV: The End of the World [+]Loading...["The End of the World (TV story)"].
- The Bookwyrm reflects on the fact that "common sense won't help you one whit" in finding the difference between fiction and non-fiction books; as an example, he cites the Basil Brush Annual 1976 as something which surprisingly records true events rather than fictional ones. The anthropomorphic fox Basil Brush was, in fact, shown as a real being existing in the same universe as the Doctor in three narrative board games: GAME: TV Comic's Counter Game [+]Loading...["TV Comic's Counter Game (game)"], GAME: Basil Brush goes Rent Collecting [+]Loading...["Basil Brush goes Rent Collecting (game)"] and GAME: TV Terrors Autograph Hunt [+]Loading...["TV Terrors Autograph Hunt (game)"]. These tie-in extras were printed within TV Comic at the time when the magazine carried both Doctor Who and Basil Brush comics.
- The Plume Coteries are described as using a Time-Ladle to safely extract individuals from space and time for interrogation. PROSE: A Farewell to R.M.S. [+]Loading...["A Farewell to R.M.S. (short story)"] recounted that the Plume Coteries had bargained with the Great Houses for time scoop technology, without specifying what they would do with it.
- The spherical Plume Coteries diplomatic craft from PROSE: A Farewell to Arms [+]Loading...["A Farewell to Arms (short story)"] is identified as a Shapeship, a type of Void Ship and one of a used fleet purchased by the Coteries from the Space Lords of Fractallax. The Space Lords and the Old High Fractallaxian language had previously been mentioned in PROSE: Out of the Box [+]Loading...["Out of the Box (short story)"], which did not explicitly link them. The Sphere, the Daleks' spherical craft in TV: Army of Ghosts [+]Loading...["Army of Ghosts (TV story)"], was also described as a Void Ship.
- The Bookwyrm describes the Space Lords of Fractallax as "the second-oldest, second-mightiest race in the universe", comically echoing the Tenth Doctor's description of the Time Lords of Gallifrey as as "the oldest, most mighty race in the universe" in TV: The Sound of Drums [+]Loading...["The Sound of Drums (TV story)"].
- In a metafictional joke, Maritsa finds a copy of an an in-universe version of Horrors of Arcbeatle itself; after noticing an in-universe The Cactus and the Corpse, she skips past it to the next story in the anthology, an in-universe version of PROSE: The Thing in the Woods [+]Loading...["The Thing in the Woods (short story)"].
- Arisrians were previously mentioned, using the variant spelling Arisians, in PROSE: Auteur's Abecedarium [+]Loading...["Auteur's Abecedarium (short story)"].
- The Embodiments of the Void were previously referenced in PROSE: Auteur's Abecedarium [+]Loading...["Auteur's Abecedarium (short story)"], PROSE: Cybergeddon [+]Loading...["Cybergeddon (novelisation)"], and POEM: Auteur and the Homeworld [+]Loading...["Auteur and the Homeworld (poem)"].
- The Mappers, a group introduced in PROSE: Going Once, Going Twice [+]Loading...["Going Once, Going Twice (short story)"], are discussed at some length.
- Auteur is stated to have regenerated "sixteen times now", counting his regeneration from the ashes on Floor 899,167,435,042; the Bookwyrm notes that this is "a few too many, going by the book", adding, "but rules had never meant much to him". The idea that a Time Lord's regeneration cycle was normally limited to twelve regenerations was introduced in TV: The Deadly Assassin [+]Loading...["The Deadly Assassin (TV story)"] and also prominently referenced in TV: Doctor Who [+]Loading...["Doctor Who (TV story)"], where the Eighth Doctor identically said "But rules never meant much to him" of another Time Lord who outlived his original allotted number of regenerations, namely the Master.
- Auteur recalls his "little mésaventure on Kratoam", namely his original death in PROSE: Going Once, Going Twice [+]Loading...["Going Once, Going Twice (short story)"].
- Stacking up memorable quotes to try and make his first meeting with Coloth "count", Auteur says in quick succession "You may have changed your appearance, but I know who you are", quoting the War Chief's greeting to the Second Doctor in TV: The War Games [+]Loading...["The War Games (TV story)"], as well as "We meet at last; I wondered if we ever would", the Second Doctor's own greeting to the Dalek Emperor in TV: The Evil of the Daleks [+]Loading...["The Evil of the Daleks (TV story)"] — and "Coloth, I presume", a cultural rather than Doctor Who-specific reference.
- Auteur remembers meeting an older Coloth before, and references having recently done something to do with "television", following which "old Aesc" agreed to drop him off at the Library. This suggests that from his perspective, Auteur's arrival at the Library followed directly on from his role in the events of PROSE: And Today, You [+]Loading...["And Today, You (novel)"].
- Maritsa previously appeared in PROSE: White Canvas [+]Loading...["White Canvas (novel)"] alongside Coloth, under the name of "Marissa". Auteur mentions having altered the spelling of her name, replacing an S with a T.