Subject: Further Time Lord stories/bios
Author:
Posted on: 2013-09-16 12:59:00 UTC

Bios

Stories

And specifically, there is a new story starring the Pathologist (Kaitlyn, who has so far refused to post), the Archivist (Neshomeh), the Supporter (Storme Hawk) and the Samurai (the Irish Samurai). I'll paste it in for those having trouble with the docs:




Degenerate Regenerate

“He’s dead, Jim - but not as we know it.”

The Supporter exchanged a blank look with the Archivist. “Um… who’s Jim?”

The Pathologist stared at the pair for a moment. “Er. Okay. It doesn’t matter.” She lowered her voice for a moment into a barely-audible mutter: “Primitives. What matters is that he’s dead… only not.”

“You’re going to have to explain that a bit better,” the Archivist suggested. “Because that wasn’t an explanation.”

“Right, right.” The Pathologist ran a hand through her hair. “Okay. You know Christmas?”

“With the eggs and things?” The Archivist frowned. “No, that’s the other one…”

“Trees,” the Supporter supplied. “And presents, and jolly red aliens coming down the chimney.”

“You wouldn’t be ‘jolly’ if you were that morbidly obese,” the Pathologist observed, “but I digress. It’s the trees I’m thinking about. They’re dead, yes?”

“They don’t have to be,” the Archivist pointed out. “That last planet we stopped over at, they grow all their plants in underground pots so they can be moved - I’ve got one back in my rooms-”

“They also killed one of our friends,” the Supporter reminded her, gesturing at the corpse under discussion.

“Oh, yes. And that’s bad. But he’ll get better, right?”

“That’s what I’m trying to discuss,” the Pathologist replied snippily. “A tree can be… no, look, forget the analogy. You remember his plan for getting past the Judoon and their genetic scanner?”

“I remember the Mechanic’s reaction,” the Archivist said with a slight smile. “‘You want to do what to my Chameleon Arch?’ Not that I don’t sympathise…”

“Right,” the Pathologist agreed. “So he partially altered his DNA to match the local inhabitants and fool the scanner.”

“It’s a shame it didn’t work,” the Supporter said, glancing at the body. “It was a really good plan.”

“Yes, except that DNA doesn’t work that way.” The Pathologist frowned. “Or it shouldn’t. But… okay, this next bit is going to sound painfully stupid.”

“Cool!” exclaimed the Archivist. “What? No, sorry, I mean - go ahead.”

The Pathologist took a deep breath. “When the Judoon shot him, the Time Lord part of him died as normal. But the Judoon had safeties on their guns to prevent them killing the locals even accidentally. The gun refused to kill the Arch-implanted part of his DNA - so he’s only half dead. And since regeneration relies on a Time Lord being actually dead, he’s stuck like this.”

“That’s awful!” The Supporter had to take a deep breath after her outburst before continuing. “How can we help him?”

“It should be fairly simple,” the Pathologist shrugged. “Once his Arch transformation is undone, he should be able to regenerate as normal. Only this partial transform didn’t take his memories, and didn’t create a capsule - so we need an intact Chameleon Arch to do it.”

“But the Mechanic took ours apart,” the Archivist pointed out. “Do we have enough time for him to reconstruct it?”

“We don’t need to!” the Supporter realised. “Archivist, you’ve got an Arch in your display room - I remember it!”

The Archivist twitched. “That’s not just a Chameleon Arch,” she pointed out. “That’s the original Arch - the one built by Rassilon himself to-”

“And it can save our friend,” the Pathologist cut her off. “Isn’t that more important?”

“No!” the Archivist wailed, but then sighed. “I suppose. Maybe.”

“Good.” The Pathologist looked at the Supporter. “Do you know where it is?”

“Absolutely,” the Supporter agreed, and dashed off. The small room was left in uncomfortable silence, the two Time Ladies not meeting each other’s gaze, until she returned.

The Archivist winced visibly as the Supporter ran back in, bouncing the Arch off the doorframe. “All right, but I’m setting it up,” she said, taking the device from the other woman. “It’s not that I don’t trust you, but…”

Soon enough, the Chameleon Arch was in place. The Pathologist took her place next to the machine and looked at her colleagues. “Ready?”

“Happy birthday,” the Archivist replied absently, still looking twitchy. The Pathologist shrugged and flicked the switch.

Nothing happened.

“Um…” the Supporter began.

“It’s fine,” the Pathologist assured her. “He’s just dying.”

“Oh, is that all?”

There was a sound from the body on the table - a sort of long sigh. Then, as the trio watched, his skin began to glow with rainbow light, growing more and more intense until they had to shield their eyes. There was a sudden, blinding pulse of light, and then it was over.

The Pathologist was the first to recover. Blinking away the afterimage of the light, she squinted at the newly-regenerated figure on the table. “Human,” she reported. “Apparently perfectly normal. Not sure about the hair, but at least he’s got all his teeth…” She leant forward. “Samurai? Can you hear me?”

“I say,” the Samurai replied, without opening his eyes or moving a muscle, “do you have to be so dashed loud? Some of us are trying to rest, you know.”

“He’s fine,” the Supporter surmised with a sigh of relief.

“I wouldn’t say so,” the Samurai retorted. “I’ve got the most terrible thirst.” He opened one eye, looking around furtively, and then sat jerkily upright. “Would there happen to be such a thing as a cup of tea around here?”




As far as I can track, then, the only Time Lords without stories are the Acoustician, the Analyzer, and the Weirdo. And counting both Librarians, we have a TARDIS crew of fifteen...

hS

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