From: pih@doc.ic.ac.uk (Paul Ian Harman) Newsgroups: alt.drwho.creative,alt.ql.creative Subject: Doctor, Samuel Beckett (Part Three) Date: 24 Oct 1994 18:06:25 -0000 Organization: Dept. of Computing, Imperial College, University of London, UK. Message-Id: <38gt31$fjq@oak61.doc.ic.ac.uk> Nntp-Posting-Host: oak61.doc.ic.ac.uk Okay, here it is: after a broadcastinh hiatus of four months, the third part in this (probably) ten-part series. Thanks for your patience and (mostly) kind comments... ~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~ Doctor, Samuel Beckett ---------------------- or A Leap in Time -------------- by Paul Harman ============== Part Three ~~~~~~~~~~ Gooshie looked up from the computer screen that he was studying. "This Gallifrey of yours, Doctor," he began. The Doctor had a hand on his temple, and seemed to be in a little pain. "Doctor...?" Gooshie asked. The Doctor looked up, and shook his head. "Sorry, what? Oh, yes." "I'm not sure we have the sort of energy required to send the brainwave transmissions that far." "Rubbish!" shouted th Doctor, then his hand shot to his head. Tina stepped towards him, but the Doctor shook her off. "It's nothing, just a Venusian migrain coming on, that's all. Where was I? Oh, yes - surely you can tap the power from that fusion reactor over there?" he said, waving towards the Quantum Accelerator. "Well, not really. You see, it functions quite differently..." Ah, I wish I had my TARDIS with me... er, how long could you sustain the projection?" "For about five minutes, give or take, before we burn out all our power cables." "That's long enough!" the Doctor replied. "We can use the TARDIS as a bridge." "So, Doctor, are you going to join us?" asked the tallish man, dressed in black and gold. "Don't rush the would-be President, Castellan!" jested one of the guards. "President?" Sam thought. "Follow me, K9." he said. "Negative, Master. I remain." "Fair enough. Keep the fort!" Sam strode boldly out of the TARDIS, the effect of which was greatly reduced as the doors closed on the monstrous scarf, tripping him up. "I have a fix on Dcotor Beckett!" said Ziggy. "It is faint. Without the Doctor's co-ordinates, I owuld not have spotted it." Al was already half-way to the Imaging Chamber when the Doctor called out. "Al- wait! I'm coming too." "You won't be able to see very much." Al replied. "I thought this room was supposed to be hologrammatic!" the Doctor exclaimed, looking around at the bare blue walls, an indeterminate distance away. "That's not quite how it works: it's more a neat transmission into my brain's 'sight' centre. Don't ask _me_ how it works, Sam did it." "Bother. However, you may need my help." Al seemed somewhat distracted, and so the Doctor wandered about the featureless walls. Silently, something appeared and the Doctor caught it out of the corner of his eye. Performing a comical double-take, he turned to look at the figure. A gentleman with a grey beard, dressed in a white lounge-suit and a white wide-brimmed hat, sitting in a wickerwork chair was staring at him. "Doctor..." he began. Sam looked at the craft which he had just left: a tall blue box, seemingly an old telephone box of some kind. He frowned, trying to match the memories of endless corridors with... this. "Impossible..." he thought. He walked around to the back of the craft to check. No, it wasn't there. "It's smaller on the outside than inside..." he whispered. "Are you coming, Doctor?" the Castellan asked. "Or do you wish to delay Chancellor Flavia further by studying that... primitive craft you seem to love so much." "I'm coming..." Sam replied, still trying to work out how what he had seen inside the box had actually _been_ inside the box. "Some sort of hyperspace warp, perhaps..." the physicist inside him thought. "This is going to be one hell of a difficult leap!" ~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~ -- -+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+- Paul `Ozymandias' Harman : pih@doc.ic.ac.uk -+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+- +-+-+-+-+-+ The amazing changing quote currently stands as follows: +-+-+-+-+-+ "Time Travel is a very confusing thing. Or may having been to was be." - Andy Wardley (on alt.fan.douglas-adams)