The Twenty-Third of November Two Thousand and Twelve. Friday.
Today is the Forty-Ninth anniversary of Doctor Who, which is basically my favourite thing in the history of everything, ever. It's an unwritten rule of this blog that I don't go on about it here, because (as anyone who has got me on the subject knows) I can go on for hours about it. So apart from the odd mention I try to cover other, more varied subjects like egg and chips and vacuum cleaners (actually, have I done vacs? Have to do some research for that one then).
Next year is the big Fiftieth bash, which I am looking forward to immensely (so no ruining that please, Mayan Apocalypse people), and the whole fabulous history of the show will duly be celebrated then. So I want to briefly focus on part of it that isn't always celebrated: the Seventh Doctor Era (and who other than Doctor Who fans throw around terms like 'era'!)
Sylvester McCoy is brilliant. Is he the best actor to play the Doctor? Well, I'm not attempting some perverse revisionist anlysis of the series. But he is a fantastic performer, if I can make that distinction. There's always something going on when he's on screen. I think part of the reason he seems to wander over his delivery is he's constantly going in several directions at once. Like the other 'Classic Series' Doctors, he's continued to adventure through Big Finish's audio adventures, which you would think would not be his ideal medium. But recently I got to hear him say one of my favourite speeches twenty years after he didn't say it the first time.
Back in the 90s there was no Who on TV, but there were New Adventures for the Doctor in novel form. Some of the best of these were written by Paul Cornell, who later went on to write for the new series, penning Father's Day, and an adaptation of another of his novels, Human Nature (which if I were you I'd just pop off and read right now - here's a link to it. As brilliant as the TV version is, this is even better. Yes, really). In his second novel, Love and War he introduces the character of Bernice Summerfield, who is still going strong in adventures of her own to this very day. But he also writes a version of the Seventh Doctor that explored the emotional potential of the character in a way that did a lot of the groundwork for when the TV series returned. It's this book that Steven Moffat quotes from in The Girl in the Fireplace when the Doctor claims to be 'what monsters have nightmares about'. But here he qualifies that, sadly: 'But everyone's a monster sometimes...'
As part of the twentieth anniversary celebrations of the character of Bernice, Big Finish made an audio version of Love and War with that particular speech intact. I loved reading that all that time ago, and a couple of weeks ago hearing Sylvester say those lines, effortlessly shifting from impish bravado to sorrow, was a real treat. Some of my favourite Doctor Who.
So today I'm specifically celebrating the Seventh Doctor. Here's a little bit of fiction to do just that. Fans will remember the Doctor's confrontation with Fenric - the embodiment of 'evil since the dawn of time'. A very strange chess puzzle helped bring about Fenric's downfall.
Well, here he gets another chance to get the better of his Time Lord enemy...
Seven
Square
It was one
of those dimensions – branes, I think they're calling them nowadays
– where the laws of physics were simpler than we're used to.
Weirder than we're used to too, although if you were an abstract
distillation of ultimate evil you probably wouldn't particularly
notice the difference from our world. It could have been Washington
Square Park in New York City, but it was empty.
Time certainly had no
meaning.
'You're late,' said
Fenric, on this occasion occupying the form of an unfortunate warp
speleologist whose corpse had finished up here after an accident
while exploring a wormhole. He looked like a disgruntled ifrit.
The Time Lord known as
the Doctor doffed his hat apologetically, though it went unseen.
'I didn't think you'd
mind waiting. Considering what I'm offering you.'
The Doctor's feet
crunched on the gravel of the path that led up to a stone table where
Fenric sat. The two old enemies refused to catch the other's gaze,
even when the Doctor took the seat opposite Fenric and propped his
umbrella – topped by a handle the shape of a battered red question
mark – against the table.
Between them lay a
chessboard, its pieces in place before the first move had been made.
The Doctor gestured toward the board.
'This is what you
wanted, isn't it?' he said.
Fenric's bright red
face snarled.
'This is what I'm due!
A proper match – not some nonsensical puzzle that flouts the rules
of the game.'
The Doctor tutted.
'You agreed to the
conditions of my challenge. You can't cry foul just because things
didn't turn out so well for you.'
'You forget – I
solved your perfidious test. Yet even then your arrogance prevented
you from conceding the victory that was mine.' The words sizzled upon
Fenric's bloodless lips.
'Yes, well, you're not
alone in holding that opinion.' The Doctor glanced upward as if he
was aware there was another – unseen – audience for his words.
'Apparently even unspeakable evil is entitled to the right of
appeal.' Again, he gestured to the board. 'Here is your game.'
Fenric finally looked
at the Doctor directly. A less confident man might have withered
under the contempt of that gaze, but the Doctor continued to smile
amicably.
'You still insist on
wearing that ridiculous form,' said Fenric.
'You're a fine one to
talk,' replied the Doctor.
'At least you have
refined your apparel.'
The Doctor pointed to
his burgundy waistcoat, his eyebrows raised in mock surprise. 'This?'
'I did not care for
that hideous pullover of yours,' continued Fenric. 'It was not worthy
of a being of your standing.'
The Doctor puffed out
his cheeks.
'I just thought it was
funny,' he replied. 'Nothing worth getting in a tizz about.' He
immediately changed the subject. 'Shall we play? I'm keen to get this
over and done with. The uneven way time flows in this place is making
the back of my knees itch. I only called the game to this lower-lying
brane as a courtesy to you. I thought it might be easier for you to
access after your banishment.'
Fenric eyed his
opponent suspiciously.
'With your record that
seems uncharacteristically sporting of you.'
'Don't thank me yet,'
said the Doctor. 'There are some spatial anomalies that come hand in
hand with a bargain basement dimension like this. I do hope they
don't put you off your game.'
Fenric began to reply.
'What do you mea-?'
At last he noticed it.
His face twisted with rage.
'There are only
forty-nine squares on this board!'
The Doctor smiled.
'Your move.'
More soonliest
More soonliest
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