Part
One
[A London park]
(Welcome to an eerily quiet London. The Albert
Embankment, the Cenotaph, Trafalgar Square, the West End, Old
Billingsgate, Smithfield, everywhere that there is usually humanity
moving all hours of the day or night are empty. A dog sniffs around a
car where the driver's door has been left open. A milk float is
abandoned, with a smashed milk bottle and the money bag lying on the
pavement. Children's toys are left alone in the grass. The quiet is
shattered by the Tardis materialising.)
SARAH: It seems to be all right.
DOCTOR: Well, I told you I'd get you back home safely, didn't I?
SARAH: We set off from the Research Centre.
DOCTOR: Well, there's no point in going back there. No, I set course
for UNIT HQ.
SARAH: Well, this isn't UNIT HQ.
DOCTOR: The space time coordinates were a bit out, that's all. We can't
be far away.
SARAH: So where are we?
DOCTOR: Somewhere in London.
SARAH: And when?
DOCTOR: Well, when we left. Give or take a few weeks.
SARAH: It's not the nineteenth century or the twenty first?
DOCTOR: My dear Sarah, you are perfectly safe. Now all we've got to do
now is go and find a telephone and ring the Brigadier.
(The sound of a tree crashing to the ground.)
SARAH: What was that?
DOCTOR: Well, the parks department's cutting down some trees. Come on.
(Behind the Tardis are two deckchairs, one knocked over.)
[A London road]
(The Doctor finds a public telephone box but can't
get a dialing tone.)
DOCTOR: No, it doesn't work.
SARAH: It's probably been vandalised.
DOCTOR: That's a very unfair word, you know, because actually the
Vandals were quite decent chaps. Come on, let's see if we can go and
find a taxi.
SARAH: Some hopes. Well, there's a bus stop.
DOCTOR: Yes.
(There is life somewhere. A man comes down the fire escape of a large
building, but ducks out of sight when a Land Rover comes round the
corner with armed troops in it. Once it has gone past, the man hurries
down to his own car, throws a bag onto the passenger seat and drives
off.)
SARAH: There's no bus.
DOCTOR: There's no anything. No, nothing's moving. No bicycles, no
pedestrians, no cars, nothing.
SARAH: Why?
DOCTOR: Well, perhaps it's Sunday. Great Britain always closes on
Sundays. Come on, I think we'd better walk.
(The man in the car appears, but doesn't slow down when they gesture
for a lift. In fact, he nearly hits them.)
SARAH: Charming!
DOCTOR: Well, perhaps he doesn't like hitch-hikers.
[Jeweller's shop]
(The car pulls up outside a parade of shops in
Moorfields and the driver gets out, taking his bag with him. The Doctor
and Sarah arrive, and see the car with its passenger door left open.
They investigate. The man is inside looking over some chains and other
jewellery when he looks up and hides. The Doctor and Sarah enter.)
DOCTOR: Anybody here?
SARAH: Look.
(Sarah has spotted the bag on the counter. The man appears holding a
sawn off shotgun.)
PHILLIPS: I got here first. Turn round. Hands against that wall.
DOCTOR: Do as he says, Sarah. Sarah, do as he says! Look, I realise
that you're very busy, but would you mind telling me what's going on
around here?
PHILLIPS: You find your own places. There's plenty to choose from. I
got here first.
(Phillips runs out.)
DOCTOR: Sarah, no! He's liable to shoot you out of pure terror.
SARAH: I'll call the police.
(Phillips drives away. Sarah dials 999.)
SARAH: They're not answering.
(Outside is a screech of tyres and a deep roar. The Doctor and Sarah
run out to see the car looking as if it had wrapped itself around a
concrete pillar, but there is nothing in sight that it could have hit.
Phillips lies dead on the pavement.)
[UNIT HQ - temporary]
(A radio operator writes down a message.)
OGDEN: Right, okay, got it. Sarge? Another sighting.
BENTON: Thank you, Ogden.
(Benton marks it on a map while the Brigadier talks on a telephone.)
BRIGADIER: Yes, that's right. Frequency of sightings about the same.
There's not much we can do, sir, except plot them. No, sir, the Doctor
isn't back yet. I'm hoping he'll return very soon. Yes, all right. Yes,
all right, sir, I'll keep you informed. Goodbye.
YATES: Yes, got that. Thank you. Sir? Five more looters have been
picked up in Hyde Park.
BRIGADIER: Ogden. Get this off to General Finch, will you?
OGDEN: Sir.
BRIGADIER: I've asked the regulars for more men. We've got to get more
patrols out.
YATES: It's organised gangs now, sir.
BRIGADIER: What?
YATES: The looters.
BRIGADIER: Well, it's only to be expected.
YATES: We're going to need more detention centres.
BRIGADIER: Yes, all right, Yates. Get them set up! The looters are a
detail. It's these we've got to worry about.
[London]
(A police station is locked up. The Doctor is
carrying Phillips' bag of loot.)
SARAH: There must be somebody somewhere.
DOCTOR: Listen.
SARAH: Over there.
(A Land Rover drives past the end of the road.)
DOCTOR: It's stopping. Come on.
(The Land Rover reverses into a mews garage, and the doors shut before
the Doctor and Sarah arrive.)
[Garage]
(The Doctor and Sarah enter.)
DOCTOR: Hello? Hello?
(Two men drop something and hide, then one reappears holding an iron
bar. The Doctor easily deals with him, but the second man hits him over
the head then throws off Sarah. Outside there is automatic weapon fire.
The two men get up and run out. Sarah goes to help the Doctor.)
SARAH: Are you all right?
DOCTOR: Not really, no. Help me up, will you?
(Vehicles drive past outside.)
DOCTOR: Oh, it's an ill wind. At least we've got some transport. Open
that door, Sarah, will you?
(The Doctor puts Phillips' bag into the Land Rover as Sarah tries the
garage doors.)
SARAH: They're jammed.
(Something screeches nearby and what looks like a small pterodactyl
glides down the stairs and buzzes Sarah and the Doctor.)
DOCTOR: Get out! Come on, in the back!
(The Doctor throws a sack at the flying lizard, which gets caught it
its claws. They get into the Land Rover and it smashes the drivers
window with its long toothed beak. The Doctor fights it off, gets the
Land Rover started and smashes through the doors. Registration 20DM58 -
must be military.)
[UNIT HQ - temporary]
BRIGADIER: I'm sorry, sir, I can't agree to that.
FINCH: I'm giving you a direct order, Brigadier.
BRIGADIER: With respect, sir, I cannot and will not allow troops under
my command to open fire upon civilians.
FINCH: These civilians are looters, and central London is under martial
law.
BRIGADIER: What's happening is deplorable, sir, but may I remind you
that looters are not our main problem? Shortage of observation patrols
is.
FINCH: The army has been stretched to its limits with the evacuation of
eight million people.
BRIGADIER: The evacuation is now complete, sir.
FINCH: For you, perhaps, but not for us. All these wretched people have
to be fed, sheltered, cared for.
BRIGADIER: But the front line's here, sir, in central London. It's more
important to find the cause of this crisis than to deal with its
effects.
FINCH: All right, but what are you doing about it?
BRIGADIER: Plotting the incidents as they occur and searching London to
find their cause.
FINCH: And waiting for this mysterious scientific advisor of yours to
turn up?
BRIGADIER: That's right, sir.
FINCH: Hmm. I suppose he'll just materialise out of thin air.
BRIGADIER: Very probably.
FINCH: Very well. But while we're waiting for this Doctor of yours, you
will obey my orders. You can have your extra patrols, Brigadier, but my
instructions to them are that any looter who does not surrender
immediately will be shot.
[Warehouse]
(A group of armed soldiers are waiting as the
Doctor and Sarah drive in and get out of the Land Rover.)
NORTON: Halt! Place your hands above your head!
(The Corporal in charge fires into the air.)
NORTON: That will be your only warning. Raise your hands!
(The Doctor and Sarah obey.)
DOCTOR: Will you please tell me what's happening?
NORTON: Over there by the Land Rover. Turn round, lean forward, hands
against the side.
DOCTOR: Look, will you please tell me what's going on here?
NORTON: Turn round! Search their vehicle.
(Norton frisks the Doctor and Sarah while his patrol find the holdall
and a pile of fur coats in the Land Rover.)
NORTON: You have had a busy day, haven't you?
[Detention centre]
(A Sergeant reads out the charges to a man in a
denim jacket.)
DUFFY: Right. You were arrested today, found looting in possession of
two tape recorders, one radio and a colour television set. You will be
held for military trial. Photographs.
(A soldier takes the man away.)
DUFFY: Next. Names?
DOCTOR: Now, if I can have a word with someone in authority.
DUFFY: Names.
SARAH: Sarah Jane Smith.
DUFFY: Name?
DOCTOR: Doctor John Smith. No relation.
DUFFY: Age?
SARAH: Twenty three.
DUFFY: Age?
DOCTOR: You'd never believe me.
DUFFY: Offence?
NORTON: Looting furs, jewels and money.
DUFFY: Right. You'll be held for military trial. Over there for
photographs.
SARAH: But why are the military running everything?
DOCTOR: Come on, Sarah. Let's go and have our photos taken, shall we?
(They cross the room.)
DOCTOR: Oh, deary me, that's very antiquated equipment, isn't it? I'll
think you'll find that the right is my best side.
NORTON: Shut up and hold that in front of you.
DOCTOR: Oh, all right.
(Prisoner 177781 smiles for his mug shots.)
NORTON: Now you.
SARAH: Thank you.
( Prisoner 177782 also smiles for her pictures.)
DOCTOR: Now, what about one of both of us? Come and join in.
NORTON: Over there. Down there. On the floor.
DOCTOR: No, we'd rather stand, if you don't mind.
NORTON: Sit down!
(Sarah nods towards something behind them.)
DOCTOR: Oh! What a good idea. There we are.
(The Doctor takes a couple of folding chairs from the pile.)
DOCTOR: That's better.
NORTON: Keep them quiet.
PRIVATE: All right.
SARAH: What do we do now?
DOCTOR: Wait for the officer to turn up. Maybe we can get some sense
out of him.
SARAH: What on Earth's going on? What's happening?
DOCTOR: I've no idea. Maybe this gentleman here can enlighten us.
(The man in the denim jacket is sitting on the floor.)
DOCTOR: How do you do, sir? I'm the Doctor.
LODGE: You've got nothing to be cheerful about. There's no judge and
jury now, mate. Military law.
SARAH: But why?
LODGE: Where you been? Because of the monsters!
[Road]
(A three story building explodes as something very
large with equally big teeth smashes through it. A soldier reports in
on his R/T.)
SOLDIER: It's coming straight for us, sir, and we're trapped. Same as
usual. The bullets won't do any good. We're going to try and turn it
with the grenades.
(T Rex doesn't seem too happy with the big bang.)
SOLDIER: It's working, sir. Seems to be moving off.
[UNIT HQ - temporary]
(Reception is terrible.)
SOLDIER [OC]: It's running away now, sir. North north west in the
direction of
OGDEN: It's gone again. Happens every time, sir. Whenever we get a
sight, the R/T reception's diabolical.
BRIGADIER: Yes, I'm well aware of that.
BENTON: Yes, sir, but there must be some connection. Whatever's causing
the monsters is causing the interference.
BRIGADIER: The thought had occurred to me, Benton, but since we don't
know what's causing either we're not really much the wiser.
(A soldier puts a folder on a desk and the Brigadier picks it up.)
BRIGADIER: Latest batch of looters. File them.
BENTON: Right, sir.
BRIGADIER: Huh. Another message from the government here telling us to
make sure that law and order's maintained in the evacuative zone. They
seem to have forgotten the main problem.
BENTON: Yes, well, it's all right for them, stuck safe and sound up in
Harrogate. What a scruffy looking bunch we've got here.
SOLDIER: You can say that again.
BENTON: Hey, sir, look.
BRIGADIER: What?
(Benton hands over a mug shot.)
BRIGADIER: Good grief. Looter charged with stolen furs, jewellery and
money.
BENTON: And there's one of that journalist girl, Sarah Jane Smith.
BRIGADIER: They're being held at number five reception centre. Ogden,
number five reception. Get them on the R/T, will you?
OGDEN: No good, sir.
BRIGADIER: Oh, all right, I'll go there myself. Get my jeep, will you?
BENTON: There's a planning conference for General Finch in ten minutes,
sir. Well, shall I go?
BRIGADIER: No, you'd better stay here. Send a dispatch rider and get
them brought here as quickly as possible.
BENTON: Right, sir.
BRIGADIER: Typical. Absolutely typical. What is the man playing at?
[Detention centre]
(The Doctor appears to be asleep. Their guard is
reading a magazine. Lodge glances at him then Sarah.)
LODGE: Psst.
SARAH: Mmm?
(She nudges the Doctor.)
DOCTOR: Yes?
LODGE: (sotto) There's only him. We could make a break for it.
SARAH: (sotto) And get ourselves shot?
LODGE: (sotto) You know what they'll do with us?
DOCTOR: (sotto) No. Do you?
LODGE: (sotto) Twenty years in some detention camp. Look, with a bit of
luck we could get out of here. What do you reckon?
DOCTOR: (sotto) No, thank you very much.
(The officer has arrived.)
DUFFY: Right, on your feet! Prisoners, forward.
DUFFY: Prisoners numbers one seven double seven eight oh, one seven
double seven eight one and one seven double seven eight two, sir.
DOCTOR: We do have names, you know.
SHEARS: Just these three, Sergeant?
DUFFY: Yes, sir.
SHEARS: All right, let's get on with it. I have to be back at HQ in ten
minutes time. Evidence?
DUFFY: Seven eight oh, Lodge, sir. Caught in possession of two tape
recorders, one radio and a colour television set.
SHEARS: Anything to say?
LODGE: Well, yes. I, er, found the stuff, see. I was going to hand it
in.
SHEARS: You've been found guilty of looting. Under the authority vested
in me by the Emergency Powers Act, I'm issuing an order that you be
held in a military detention centre for the duration of the emergency.
You'll be handed over to the civil authorities for trial and sentence
when time permits. Next!
DUFFY: Seven eight one and seven eight two were caught together, sir,
in possession of furs, jewels and stolen money.
SHEARS: Were they now?
DUFFY: Yes, sir.
SHEARS: Anything to say?
SARAH: We found those things after someone else had stolen them.
SHEARS: And you were going hand them in?
SARAH: Yes.
SHEARS: Very original. You've been found guilty of looting.
DOCTOR: Now just one moment.
DUFFY: Hey, keep quiet.
SHEARS: Well, what is it?
DOCTOR: Sir, I am the scientific advisor to UNIT, and I demand to be
put in immediate touch with Brigadier Lethbridge Stewart.
SHEARS: I suppose he's an old friend of yours?
DOCTOR: Yes, as a matter of fact he is.
SHEARS: How very interesting. You've been found guilty of looting.
Under the authority vested in me by the Emergency Powers Act, I'm
issuing an order that you'll be held in a military detention centre for
the duration of the emergency. You will be handed over to the civil
authorities for trial and sentence when time permits. Put them on the
next transport for detention centre, will you?
DUFFY: Sir.
SHEARS: I must be off.
DUFFY: Attention!
SHEARS: Carry on, Sergeant.
(Shears leaves.)
DUFFY: Right, back over there.
LODGE: See? I told you. Stuck in a detention camp for months. In
prison.
SARAH: What are we going to do, Doctor? Nobody will listen to us.
DOCTOR: (sotto) Tell me, my friend. What was that idea that you had
about escaping?
LODGE: (sotto) Well, there's three of us. We could jump him.
DOCTOR: (sotto) Oh, I think we can be a bit more original than that,
can't we?
LODGE: (sotto) So what do we do, then?
DOCTOR: (sotto) We have a fight.
LODGE: Eh?
DOCTOR: You're the nark, aren't ya? It was you wot grassed on us!
LODGE: I never grassed in my life!
DOCTOR: Yes, you did. Come on! On your feet! Come on, up!
LODGE: All right then, you great dressed up twit, you asked for it!
(The Doctor blocks the punch.)
DOCTOR: (sotto) Steady.
(They exchange blows then Lodge starts to throttle the Doctor.)
SARAH: Guard, stop them! You have to stop them!
SOLDIER: Break it up! Break it up!
(The Doctor grabs the soldier with a nerve pinch to the back of the
neck, and he collapses. Lodge takes his weapon.)
LODGE: What did you do?
DOCTOR: Never mind that now. Come on, let's get out of here.
LODGE: Ah, no, not you. You go that way.
SARAH: But we'll run straight into the soldiers.
LODGE: Yeah, and while they're busy with you, I'll get away.
DOCTOR: Oh, so much for honour amongst thieves. Hai!
(The Doctor kicks the weapon out of Lodge's hands and throws him onto
the stage.)
DOCTOR: Come on, quick, out of here! Come on!
[Outside the Detention centre]
(The building looks like a school or church hall.
There is a Land Rover parked by a gate in the wall. They get in.)
SARAH: What are you looking for?
DOCTOR: A piece of wire to jump the ignition. I'll try in the back.
(The Doctor gets out and sees a weapon pointed at him.)
NORTON: Ready for the detention centre?
[Land Rover]
(The Doctor and Sarah are handcuffed to each other
in the back as they are driven through leafy suburbia.)
SARAH: Honestly, Doctor.
DOCTOR: And how was I to know it was detention centre transport?
SARAH: Oh well, I can see us being locked up for months. Sewing mail
bags probably. I mean, let's face it. Nobody's listened to us so far.
(The Land Rover stops suddenly. They peer out of the back to see T Rex
showing off his big teeth.)
Part Two
[Workshop]
(As two soldiers run forward to shoot at the
dinosaur, the Doctor and Sarah creep out of the back and run for it.
They arrive gasping at a garage workshop and slam the doors behind
them.)
SARAH: That thing. What was it?
DOCTOR: A Tyrannosaurus Rex. The largest and fiercest predator of all
time.
SARAH: But, but those things died out millions of years ago.
DOCTOR: Yes, sixty five million years ago, to be precise.
(The Doctor pulls Sarah to the workbench.)
SARAH: What?
(The Doctor looks through the tools as someone watches from the
shadows. Outside, the grenades have finally made the T Rex back off.)
[Land Rover]
SOLDIER 2: They've gone!
SOLDIER 3: Oh no!
[Workshop]
(The Doctor is trying to pick Sarah's handcuffs
with a small screwdriver.)
SARAH: Ow!
DOCTOR: Sorry.
(He finally succeeds.)
DOCTOR: There we are. Right, now let's review the situation. A
prehistoric monster's turned up in central London.
SARAH: Well, how how do you know it's only central London?
DOCTOR: Because those soldiers were talking about the central zone,
weren't they.
SARAH: But where did that monster come from?
DOCTOR: That's a very good question, Sarah.
SARAH: Suppose suppose there was an egg, buried in the ground
somewhere, and somehow or other it hatched out?
DOCTOR: What, producing a sweet little baby monster?
SARAH: Yes. Ah. No. No, how would it grow to that size without anyone
noticing.
DOCTOR: Perhaps somebody kept it as a pet and turned it out when it got
too big to feed.
SARAH: Oh.
DOCTOR: Anyway, aren't you forgetting that pterodactyl that attacked us
in the warehouse?
SARAH: I suppose you've got the explanation, then.
DOCTOR: Yes, as a matter of fact, I think I have.
(A man runs for the door.)
DOCTOR: Hello? Who are you?
PEASANT: Back! Back, accursed wizard!
DOCTOR: Wizard? I'm no wizard, I assure you. You've got no need to be
frightened of me.
(The man produces a knife.)
SARAH: Doctor, be careful.
DOCTOR: How did you get here?
PEASANT: The witch. She's cast a spell on me. I'll tell the priest and
have her burned!
DOCTOR: Yes, yes, of course. Look, do you know what year it is?
SARAH: What's the name of the King?
PEASANT: Well, Richard, of course. But he's in the Holy Land. John
rules now. Look, take the curse off me, wizard. Send me home.
DOCTOR: I only wish I could.
PEASANT: Send me home. Send me home or you die!
DOCTOR: I'm afraid I don't have that power.
(The man lunges at the Doctor. Sarah grabs him from behind, then a
sound fills the workshop and she lets the man go. He moves back to near
the door and disappears.)
SARAH: What happened? He was going to kill you.
DOCTOR: Fascinating. Absolutely fascinating. That was a time eddy. For
a moment there, time went backwards.
(A vehicle pulls up outside.)
SARAH: Doctor.
(Sarah looks out through the doorway.)
SARAH: Soldiers. they're searching. They're coming nearer!
DOCTOR: Can you bolt that door?
SARAH: No!
DOCTOR: Hide.
(They stand either side of the door. It opens, and the Doctor is about
to give the person entering a karate chop when he sees who it is.)
DOCTOR: Hai! Brigadier.
BRIGADIER: What do you think you're doing, Doctor?
[UNIT HQ - temporary]
BRIGADIER: It all started just after you, Doctor,
and as we later discovered, Miss Smith, went off on your last little
jaunt.
SARAH: We were helping you, and if you knew what we'd been through.
BRIGADIER: Yes, some other time, Miss Smith, if you don't mind?
BRIGADIER: A variety of prehistoric reptiles began to appear in the
central London area. There was, as you can imagine, considerable panic
and some loss of life.
(The Doctor finds a bag of sugar and puts four heaped teaspoons into
his mug of tea.)
DOCTOR: How many of these things have been seen up to now?
BRIGADIER: Well, the pins record the sighting
BENTON: It's a colour code, Doctor. We're using red pins for
Tyrannosaurus, blue for Triceratops, green for the Stegosaurus and pink
for your actual Pterodactyl.
BRIGADIER: Thank you, Benton. We soon realised that these creatures
only appear in central London. We therefore evacuated the entire area
and set up this temporary HQ, which as you can see from the map, is on
the periphery of the zone.
SARAH: You've evacuated everybody?
BRIGADIER: Eight million people. I'm happy to say the evacuation was
carried out without a hitch. Of course the criminal element has been
taking advantage of the situation.
SARAH: Looters, you mean. Like those people we met.
BRIGADIER: There's been quite a bit of that, I'm afraid. But we're
keeping them under control.
DOCTOR: Well, that's absolutely marvellous, Brigadier. Now what're you
doing about the real problem?
BRIGADIER: Well, as soon as these creatures appear, we make sure that
they're contained within the evacuated zone, and don't wander off into
populated areas.
DOCTOR: Well, having contained them, what do you do then?
BRIGADIER: Ah, well, that's where you come in, Doctor. So far we've
absolutely no idea where they're coming from or come to that, where
they go.
SARAH: Where they go?
BRIGADIER: Yes, that's one of the few good things about the entire
situation. According to my patrols, they seem to vanish. Just
disappear. No one sees them come, no one sees them go.
SARAH: But things that size, where could they go?
DOCTOR: Well, that's pretty obvious, isn't it, Sarah?
SARAH: Hmm?
DOCTOR: Back where they came from, into the past.
(Finch and Yates enter.)
FINCH: All right, Brigadier, you can have your extra patrols, but I
warn you, I shall expect results.
DOCTOR: Mike, my dear fellow, how are you? Good to see you again.
YATES: Doctor.
FINCH: Who's this?
BRIGADIER: Sir, this is the Doctor, our scientific advisor.
FINCH: Oh. We've been waiting for you, you know. May I ask where you've
been?
DOCTOR: Certainly.
FINCH: Well?
DOCTOR: You can ask but I don't guarantee that you'll get a reply.
BRIGADIER: Doctor, this is General Finch. He's in overall charge of the
entire operation.
DOCTOR: Oh, is he indeed. How do you do, General.
BRIGADIER: The Doctor's already come up with a most interesting theory,
sir. He believes these creatures are coming to us from the past.
FINCH: Huh. Very interesting. How?
BRIGADIER: Yes, um. Doctor?
DOCTOR: Somebody or something is operating a temporal displacement on a
very vast scale.
FINCH: Never mind your scientific gobbledygook.
DOCTOR: The creatures are being brought from the past into the present,
General, staying here for a while and then returning to their own time.
FINCH: Rubbish!
DOCTOR: I take it then that you have a better theory.
FINCH: Yes. Some mad scientist fellow has been secretly breeding these
things. Now they've all got away.
SARAH: Ah, no, General, now I thought that, but if you think about it
FINCH: Who's this?
SARAH: Oh. Sarah Jane Smith. How do you do?
FINCH: (to Yates) Civilians are not allowed in this zone. Have her
evacuated immediately.
DOCTOR: Er, Miss Smith is presently acting as my assistant, General.
You were saying, my dear?
SARAH: We have just met a man from the past. A peasant from the age of
King John. No, honestly, General, it's true.
FINCH: I'm not staying here to listen to this rubbish.
YATES: I think you'll find it is worth listening to the Doctor, sir.
He's given us a great deal of help in the past.
OGDEN: Okay, out. Sergeant? Another sighting.
BENTON: Oh, thank you, Ogden.
BRIGADIER: Where is it, Benton?
BENTON: Section five, sir. Somewhere here.
FINCH: Send for the artillery right away. We shall need field guns.
BRIGADIER: Sir.
DOCTOR: You'll do no such thing, Brigadier.
FINCH: I'll thank you to stop interfering
DOCTOR: General, we need to study this creature, not shoot at it. How
much do you think we'll learn from a dead dinosaur? Come on, Brigadier.
I want you to take me down there right away.
[Yard]
BRIGADIER: All right, where is it?
CORPORAL: It's behind that building, sir. I've put an observer up on
the roof keeping track of it.
(The man on the roof gestures.)
CORPORAL: It's coming this way, sir!
DOCTOR: Good grief! It's a Stegosaurus. What a splendid specimen. No,
no, don't shoot. I want to take a good look at it.
BRIGADIER: Be careful, Doctor!
DOCTOR: Don't worry, Brigadier, it's a vegetarian.
[UNIT HQ - temporary]
YATES: Well, after all that business in Wales with
the giant maggots, I had to have a spot of leave. Suppose it was a
reaction, really.
SARAH: Oh, I'm not surprised.
YATES: As soon as I get back, of course, all this business blows up.
SARAH: It's weird seeing London like this. All those deserted streets.
YATES: I rather like it.
BENTON: Excuse me, sir.
OGDEN: Trap two, over.
YATES: Have you noticed the air?
SARAH: Hmm?
YATES: It's clean. No cars, no people. Do you know yesterday I saw a
fox in Piccadilly?
SARAH: And nightingales in Berkeley Square?
YATES: It's not impossible.
SARAH: No. No, I like London the way it was, traffic jams and all.
YATES: Yes, I expect you're right.
OGDEN: Okay. Out. Sir? Message from spotter control, sir. The Doctor
and the Brigadier have arrived. Oh, the Doctor now has the monster
under close observation, Miss.
[Yard]
DOCTOR: Right, we'll need some rope and a strong
net.
BRIGADIER: You intend to catch it?
DOCTOR: Yes, of course. I want to observe it under laboratory
conditions. Have you got any rope?
CORPORAL: We've got some towing rope, sir.
BRIGADIER: You're going to tie it up?
DOCTOR: That's my intention, yes.
BRIGADIER: All right, Corporal, carry on.
CORPORAL: Right, sir.
DOCTOR: That creature has an amiable disposition, Brigadier, and a
brain about the size of a walnut. I think we should be able to deal
with it, don't you?
CORPORAL: The rope, sir.
BRIGADIER: Well, of all the lunatic schemes. All right then, let's give
him a hand.
(The sound starts up, everyone stands still then moves backwards except
the Doctor, and steggy fades away.)
BRIGADIER: It's gone!
CORPORAL: It must have gone round the corner, sir. Should we go after
it?
DOCTOR: It's all right, Corporal, don't bother.
[UNIT HQ - temporary]
FINCH: Disappeared? You mean you disappeared when
it got too close?
DOCTOR: No, sir.
FINCH: Then what happened? How did you lose it?
BRIGADIER: I've no idea, sir. One moment we were discussing the
possibility of capturing it and the next, it had gone.
FINCH: Vanished into thin air, I suppose?
DOCTOR: Yes, General Finch. That is precisely what happened.
FINCH: Did you see this happen?
BRIGADIER: Well, not exactly.
DOCTOR: The Brigadier and his men couldn't see what happened, sir. They
were temporally affected by a time eddy.
FINCH: A what?
DOCTOR: Whenever a creature appears or disappears, the temporal
displacement causes a localised distortion in time. Now as far as the
people in the immediate vicinity were concerned, time literally runs
backwards, so naturally, they'd have no recollection of what had
occurred.
FINCH: The man's mad. Temporal displacement. Time travel is impossible,
we all know that.
SARAH: I've travelled through time, General. The Doctor knows what he's
talking about.
BRIGADIER: Sir, suppose we accept the Doctor's theory, for the purposes
of discussion. What happens next?
DOCTOR: Well, we must capture one of the creatures.
FINCH: And what good will that do?
DOCTOR: Well, I think a study of one of these dinosaurs, General, might
lead me to the source.
YATES: It couldn't be a natural phenomenon, could it, Doctor? Something
going wrong with time?
DOCTOR: Then why are they contained to this one area? These giant
reptiles existed all over the planet, Mike. They'd be popping up
everywhere.
SARAH: Doctor, what about that man we saw in the garage?
DOCTOR: Well, I think he was an accident. Whoever's responsible for
these apparitions, General, is operating from somewhere in this area.
YATES: You're overlooking one thing. This whole zone has been
evacuated.
DOCTOR: Well, that's where you're wrong, Mike. Someone's there and
whoever it is is using vast amounts of power.
BRIGADIER: But all power's been cut off in central London. Just minimal
emergency supplies.
DOCTOR: Then someone, Brigadier, is making their own.
[Control room]
(A set of numbers display on a monitor. A man in a
white lab coat makes a note on a clip board.)
BUTLER: Power output holding steady.
(Everyone say Hi! to Martin
Jarvis.)
WHITAKER: Good.
BUTLER: The next time transference is due in one hour, Professor.
WHITAKER: It may have to wait.
BUTLER: One must maintain the time transference on schedule. The
sequence has been carefully calculated.
WHITAKER: How can I be expected to work on the main project when I have
these constant distractions?
BUTLER: Well, these distractions have emptied London for us. We must
keep the authorities off balance.
WHITAKER: Very well, Butler, but it will not be my responsibility if
the countdown is delayed.
[Makeshift laboratory]
(The Doctor is working at a bench in what appears
to be a school biology room. There is a diagram of the human eye on the
blackboard.)
YATES: Do you really think you can knock out a dinosaur with that
thing?
DOCTOR: Naturally.
YATES: How?
DOCTOR: By a simple molecular reaction.
YATES: I see.
DOCTOR: I doubt it. The principle hasn't really been developed on Earth
yet.
YATES: What exactly will it do?
DOCTOR: Well, it'll temporarily neutralise creatures' brain cells.
YATES: I didn't think these creatures had any brains?
DOCTOR: All animals have brains of some sort, Mike.
YATES: What'll happen to the dinosaur when you switch this thing on?
DOCTOR: It'll faint.
YATES: And what will you do with your monster when you've got it?
DOCTOR: Surround it with an electrical field and wait for it to
disappear.
YATES: And what'll that tell you?
DOCTOR: Well, the source of the power that is moving these creatures
through time.
YATES: Will you get an accurate fix?
DOCTOR: Mmm, pretty accurate. Enough for the Brigadier and his merry
men to round up the guilty parties anyway.
YATES: Jolly good, Doctor. Well, I think I'd better let you get on with
it.
DOCTOR: Yes, that would be helpful.
(Sarah enters.)
SARAH: Doctor? Listen, Doctor, that General Finch is being impossible.
What are you making?
DOCTOR: Oh, no. Look, ask Captain Yates, there's a good girl.
YATES: Can I help you, Miss Smith?
SARAH: Er, yes. That wretched General of yours, he's trying to have me
evacuated.
YATES: You're a civilian. You've got no official status.
SARAH: Oh, nonsense. I'm the Doctor's assistant, aren't I, Doctor?
DOCTOR: Hmm? Yes, yes, anything you like.
SARAH: There you are.
YATES: Tell you what, I'll fix you up with a temporary pass, but just
stay out of sight of General Finch. Excuse me.
SARAH: Yes, thank you.
(Yates leaves.)
SARAH: What did you say that thing is?
DOCTOR: I didn't.
SARAH: Can I help at all?
DOCTOR: No.
SARAH: Oh, come on, Doctor. I'm supposed to be your assistant. There
must be something I can do.
DOCTOR: Well, there is.
SARAH: What?
DOCTOR: Go away.
SARAH: Oh. All right, I'll go and chat up that nice Captain Yates.
DOCTOR: Yeah, I'm sure he'd enjoy that.
SARAH: I'll leave you in peace then.
(Sarah leaves and the Doctor locks the door behind her. However, that
is not the only entrance to the room.)
BRIGADIER: Ah, there you are, Doctor. Now, what are you up to?
DOCTOR: Oh no!
[Control room]
BUTLER: Our friend from UNIT is here.
WHITAKER: What? He has strict instructions never to come here.
BUTLER: He says there's some kind of an emergency. He must see you.
WHITAKER: All right, bring him in. (pause) What is it?
YATES: I'm sorry, Professor, but I thought I'd better warn you.
[Makeshift laboratory]
BRIGADIER: This is the Doctor, sir, our scientific
advisor. Doctor, this is the Right Honourable Charles Grover, Minister
with special powers.
GROVER: I do apologise for the interruption, Doctor. I realise how busy
you are.
DOCTOR: Well, I'm glad somebody does.
GROVER: I understand you may be able to help us find a solution to this
crisis.
DOCTOR: Yes, I sincerely hope so. Aren't you the chap who started the
'Save Planet Earth' society?
GROVER: I had something to do with it.
DOCTOR: You also wrote that book, Last Chance For Man, didn't you?
GROVER: Yes, that's right.
DOCTOR: Oh, my dear Grover, I'm delighted to meet you. This planet
needs people like you.
BRIGADIER: Yes, of course. You two have a great deal in common. The
Doctor's very keen on this anti-pollution business.
GROVER: And so should you be, Brigadier. It affects all our lives.
BRIGADIER: Oh, quite, sir, quite.
GROVER: Now I mustn't keep you, Doctor, I just wanted to make your
acquaintance.
DOCTOR: Oh, nonsense, nonsense, no need to rush away. Come over here.
Let me explain to you what I'm doing. Now then, in the first place
[Control room]
WHITAKER: That's absolute nonsense. There's no way
he can find us.
YATES: If the Doctor says he can do it, I believe him. He's probably
the greatest scientist on this planet.
WHITAKER: That is a matter of opinion.
BUTLER: You realise what'll happen if he's right? It'll be the end of
Operation Golden Age. Everything we've planned will be ruined.
WHITAKER: Very well, if he's such a danger to us, you will have to deal
with him.
YATES: How?
WHITAKER: Well, you're the soldier.
YATES: I'll do nothing to harm the Doctor, nor will I allow him to be
harmed. If we descend to that sort of thing, we're no better than the
society we intend to replace.
WHITAKER: Captain Yates, I respect your principles but if the Doctor
succeeds in capturing a dinosaur, then the whole project may be
jeopardised.
BUTLER: But what can we do?
WHITAKER: You must sabotage the Doctor's stun gun.
[Makeshift laboratory]
(It is a substantial stun gun, a two handed affair
with twin 'barrels'.)
GROVER: Well, I admire your courage, Doctor. I only hope it works.
DOCTOR: I think it will. All we need now is a dinosaur to try it out
on.
BRIGADIER: We're doing our best to get you one, Doctor. All my spotter
patrols are on maximum alert.
GROVER: Tell me, Doctor, have you any theories as to why all this is
happening?
DOCTOR: Yes. I believe these dinosaurs are being used purely as a
terror weapon in order to clear central London.
GROVER: But why?
DOCTOR: Well, presumably, so that some vast project can be carried out.
Something for which people will get in the way.
GROVER: Yes, but why London? Who not the Yorkshire Moors or the
Highlands of Scotland?
DOCTOR: Why, indeed. Well, there must be some overriding reason. There
must be something that they need that's only available to them here.
(Benton enters.)
BENTON: Sir, they've spotted one. Section twelve, power station. The
Chief Engineer said if we don't remove it quickly, he'll have to switch
off.
DOCTOR: Any idea what kind it is?
BENTON: Er, a pato-something.
DOCTOR: Apatosaurus, commonly known as the brontosaurus. Large, placid
and stupid. That's exactly what we need.
BRIGADIER: Transport standing by, Doctor.
DOCTOR: Will you excuse us, Minister? I'll let you know as soon as
we've captured it. Come on, Brigadier.
[Control room]
(Whitaker hands Yates a disc about an inch across
and a third deep.)
WHITAKER: There you are, Captain Yates. Attach this device to the
Doctor's stun gun and it will be rendered completely ineffective.
[Power station]
(The long-necked vegetarian creature is standing
around, baffled. Yates drives up.)
YATES: Where is it?
CORPORAL: It's round that corner, sir.
(The Brigadier and Doctor drive up in another Land Rover.)
YATES: It's round there.
DOCTOR: Jolly good. Right, let's go and take a look at it.
(The Brigadier and the Doctor walk off, leaving the stun gun in the
vehicle.)
CORPORAL: Right, Collins, put this back there.
COLLINS: Right, Corporal.
(Collins reverses Yates' Land Rover out of the way, and Yates joins the
Doctor.)
BRIGADIER: Are you sure this is the kind you want, Doctor? It's rather
large.
DOCTOR: The bigger, the better, Brigadier.
BRIGADIER: Really, why is that?
DOCTOR: The larger the mass, the greater the temporal displacement for
my instruments to measure.
YATES: Doctor, suppose this gadget of yours doesn't work?
DOCTOR: Then I shall simply turn round and come back, feeling rather
foolish.
YATES: But isn't that thing dangerous?
DOCTOR: Not unless it's roused, Captain Yates. Mind you, I wouldn't
like to try it on a Tyrannosaurus Rex.
BRIGADIER: Right, bring the Doctor's, that thing in my jeep. Bring it
over here.
YATES: It's all right, Corporal. I'll get it.
CORPORAL: Sir.
(Yates runs back to the vehicle. He glances to see no one is looking,
and fixes the magnetic metal disc to the barrels.)
BRIGADIER: We'll be ready with covering fire.
DOCTOR: That won't be necessary.
BRIGADIER: Just in case, Doctor. Stand by!
(Yates brings the stun gun and power pack to the Doctor. The soldiers
set up a grenade launcher. The Doctor takes up a forward position and
aims the stun gun at the apatosaurus. Nothing happens. He checks the
settings and connections and power levels and tries again. Still
nothing. There is a time eddy, the apatosaurus disappears. Behind him,
a T Rex roars. The Doctor tries the stun gun again.)
BRIGADIER: Fire!
Part Three
[Power station]
(The grenade explodes between the Doctor and the T
Rex. The Doctor starts to run but a second grenade burst knocks him off
his feet. He staggers away, leaving the stun gun.)
BRIGADIER: Fire!
(Yates draws his pistol and runs to help the Doctor.)
BRIGADIER: Cease fire! Captain Yates!
(Yates reaches for the stun gun, removes the disc and fires directly up
at the giant carnivore. Its eyes roll up, and Yates hurries over to the
Doctor before it crashes to the ground, unconscious.)
[Control room]
YATES: You tried to murder him! You deliberately
materialised a savage monster knowing it would attack him!
BUTLER: An unavoidable mistake.
YATES: Oh, that was no mistake. I warned you I wouldn't have the Doctor
harmed.
BUTLER: Well, you sabotaged the stun gun.
YATES: I agreed to delay his experiments, not to kill him.
BUTLER: Captain Yates, may I remind you, you were the one who said he
was such a danger to us.
YATES: Let me tell him everything, explain to him what we're trying to
do? He'll be sympathetic. He might even help us.
WHITAKER: No, that's out of the question.
BUTLER: If he doesn't agree with us, what happens then?
YATES: There's no need to kill him.
WHITAKER: He must be delayed. Now once the temporal energy has
dispersed, the creature will return to its own time and the Doctor's
instruments will lead him straight to us. Now, what stage has he
reached?
YATES: They've taken the creature to a hangar on the fringe of the
zone.
BUTLER: Then you'd better get over there, Captain Yates.
YATES: To do what?
BUTLER: More sabotage, I'm afraid. All you have to do is to ensure that
the Doctor's instruments don't function. The creature will return to
its own time, the Doctor will learn nothing, and we shall have the
delay we need.
YATES: And the Doctor won't be harmed?
WHITAKER: Of course not.
YATES: I'll do what I can.
(Yates leaves.)
WHITAKER: I'm not satisfied with that young man's loyalty. He's far too
concerned about this precious Doctor of his.
[Hangar office]
(The Doctor checks that T Rex is secure in its
chains in the main hangar, and surrounded by detectors.)
BRIGADIER: All set up then, Doctor?
DOCTOR: Yes, I think so. Mind you, that creature isn't what I wanted at
all. What I really wanted was a brontosaurus.
BRIGADIER: What's the difference?
DOCTOR: The difference, Brigadier, is that the brontosaurus is a placid
vegetarian, whereas the Tyrannosaurus is the largest and fiercest flesh
eater ever known on your planet.
SARAH: It will stay asleep, won't it, Doctor?
DOCTOR: Yes, for a while.
BRIGADIER: Don't you worry, Miss Smith, those chains will hold him
down. Well, Doctor, now what do we do?
DOCTOR: We sit back and wait for it to dematerialise.
SARAH: Then perhaps I can have your attention.
DOCTOR: Carry on, Sarah, I'm all ears.
SARAH: Well, I've been checking up into this whole question of time
travel.
DOCTOR: You should have come to me. I know all about time travel.
SARAH: Ah, I know you know about it, but what I'm interested in,
Doctor, is other people who know about it.
DOCTOR: Oh, are there any?
SARAH: Oh, one or two have dabbled.
DOCTOR: Oh, fascinating. The trouble is the Blinovitch limitation
effect. If they could overcome that their problem's
SARAH: I think someone has.
DOCTOR: What, on this planet?
SARAH: This is the only one I've been able to check up on, Doctor.
DOCTOR: Oh, yes, yes, of course. Er, let's see now, there was this this
Chinese scientist called Chun Sen. Oh, hang about, he hasn't been born
yet, has he.
SARAH: Quite, but there is a man called Whitaker. Now he's the leading
scientist in this field.
BRIGADIER: Whitaker. That name rings a bell.
SARAH: He claimed to have developed a workable theory of time travel.
BRIGADIER: I remember. He applied for a big government grant. It was
refused.
DOCTOR: Oh, why?
SARAH: Whitaker was always an outsider, always mixed up in quarrels
with other scientists. No one believed his theory would work.
BRIGADIER: Yes, that's right. All the government scientific advisors
said the fellow was a crank. What about him?
SARAH: He's disappeared.
DOCTOR: Has he indeed?
SARAH: About six months ago, he completely vanished. I checked with my
newspaper contacts up north. No trace.
DOCTOR: And you think he could be behind all this?
SARAH: Well, it's a possibility. He was a brilliant scientist, and he
must have been bitterly disappointed when the government refused that
grant.
DOCTOR: You could be right, Sarah. It's worth checking up on.
BRIGADIER: Yes, I'll get on to it. Intelligence records may have
something on him.
DOCTOR: Yeah, I'd like to see the application for that grant. See the
man's working papers.
BRIGADIER: Right. They must be on file somewhere.
DOCTOR: Oh, Brigadier, have your fellows brought the Tardis back to
UNIT HQ for me yet?
BRIGADIER: Yes, should be there by now.
DOCTOR: Could you give me a run down there?
BRIGADIER: Yes, of course.
DOCTOR: Good, thanks, there's one or two things inside I think I might
need.
SARAH: Oh, what about your little pet out there?
DOCTOR: Oh, he'll be all right for a while. You've placed guards?
BRIGADIER: General Finch has lent me a squad.
DOCTOR: Good.
SARAH: But suppose it dematerialises while you're not here?
DOCTOR: Then my instruments will obtain the necessary readings. Coming?
SARAH: Yes, yes. Er, Brigadier?
BRIGADIER: Mmm?
SARAH: Can I bring a camera back here with me?
BRIGADIER: Whatever for?
SARAH: Well, for my story. I'm a journalist, remember? You don't think
I'm going to miss an opportunity like this?
BRIGADIER: I am sorry, Miss Smith. This whole affair's under strict
security black-out. You can take your photographs when the crisis is
passed.
SARAH: Oh! When the crisis is passed, there won't be anything to
photograph.
(Everyone leaves. A short time later, Yates enters and looks over the
monitoring equipment.)
[Makeshift laboratory]
BRIGADIER: The Minister has some information for
you, Doctor, about this elusive fellow Whitaker.
DOCTOR: Have you, sir?
GROVER: I was chairman of the committee that considered his application
for a government grant.
DOCTOR: So you've seen his working papers?
GROVER: Oh, yes, not that I understood them, of course, but my
scientific colleagues on the committee assured me that they were utter
nonsense.
DOCTOR: So you don't think that he could be behind what's been
happening here.
GROVER: Oh, out of the question. I'm afraid the poor fellow's just a
harmless crank.
SARAH: That's not what I've heard, Minister. According to my sources
he's a brilliant scientist.
GROVER: May I ask what are your sources?
SARAH: His colleagues at Oxford, the science correspondent of The Times
and the editor of Nature.
GROVER: He may be brilliant in other fields, Miss Smith, but as far as
his time travel theory is concerned, I was assured it's worthless.
Doctor, I understand that you have set up an experiment which may give
us the answer to all this?
DOCTOR: Yeah, well, it's a possibility, Minister, but I can't guarantee
it.
GROVER: I'd be very interested to hear about it.
BRIGADIER: Well, why don't we go to my office, sir? It'll be more
comfortable there.
GROVER: Thank you very much.
DOCTOR: That's a good idea.
GROVER: General Finch?
FINCH: I must be getting back to HQ, sir.
BRIGADIER: This way, sir.
GROVER: Thank you.
(The Brigadier, Doctor and Grover leave.)
SARAH: Isn't it marvellous. The one real clue to this whole business
and they totally ignore it.
FINCH: I'm interested, Miss Smith. Where is this fellow Whitaker?
SARAH: Well, that's just it, you see. No one knows.
FINCH: No one?
SARAH: He vanished about six months ago. Just upped and left
home.
FINCH: Well, people do disappear, change their names, start a new life
for themselves.
SARAH: No, it's too big a coincidence. I'm not going to let go of this.
FINCH: What can you do?
SARAH: Keep looking until I find him. I'll make them believe me. The
Brigadier's being completely uncooperative. He wouldn't even let me get
some photographs of that monster they've got chained down.
FINCH: Well, you've got a pass, haven't you?
SARAH: Oh! I tried! When I got back there, they wouldn't let me in.
Said I had to have a special pass.
FINCH: Special army pass from my HQ.
SARAH: You couldn't give me a pass, could you? I wouldn't publish
anything until it was all over and I got proper permission.
FINCH: I don't carry passes about with me, you know. Look, take this to
my HQ.
(Finch writes on a piece of paper.)
FINCH: See my adjutant. He'll fix you up.
SARAH: Oh, that's marvellous! Where is your HQ?
FINCH: Show this to my driver. He'll take you there.
SARAH: Oh, what about you?
FINCH: I've got one or two things to settle here.
SARAH: Thank you.
(Later, while Yates is in the hangar looking at the dinosaur, the
Doctor and Brigadier return.)
DOCTOR: What a charming fellow. You know, it's lucky for you,
Brigadier, that somebody with some sense is in charge of this
operation.
BRIGADIER: Unfortunately General Finch is in charge of the military
side.
DOCTOR: Yes, quite. Where's Sarah?
BRIGADIER: Maybe General Finch took her out to dinner.
DOCTOR: Huh! Didn't look like the beginnings of a beautiful friendship
to me. Oh, by the way, Brigadier? I've got to get down to the hanger.
Could you lend me a jeep?
BRIGADIER: Yes.
(The Brigadier makes a telephone call.)
BRIGADIER: Brigadier speaking. Lay on a jeep for the Doctor, will you?
Oh, and did you see Miss Smith leave here? Oh, thank you. She went off
in the General's car.
DOCTOR: Oh.
[Hangar office]
(Sarah has got her camera and takes a picture of T
Rex through the observation window. The automatic flash goes off. More
flashes and the dinosaur's eyes flicker. A few more then Sarah decides
on some close ups. She goes into the hangar proper and takes more flash
photographs within arms reach of the monster. As she puts down the
camera to change the film, T Rex rises up. Sarah screams and runs back
to the office. The external door is locked. The dinosaur rises onto its
hind legs, roaring. Meanwhile, the Doctor is driving through
surburbia.)
SARAH: Help! Someone! Open the door! Help! Open the door, for God's
sake!
(T Rex uses its tail to batter the wall between it at Sarah.
SARAH: Help! Can anyone hear me? I can't get out! The door's stuck!
Help me!
(The tail smashes the window and wall. A piece of timber falls on
Sarah's head, knocking her out and leaving her with a nasty cut above
her eye. A few moments later, the Doctor enters.)
DOCTOR: Come on, up! Come on! Come on, get up. That's it!
(The Doctor drags the groggy Sarah along the side of the buildings
while T Rex smashes the hangar to pieces. He bundles her into the Land
Rover as it comes bursting through the wall.)
[Makeshift laboratory]
DOCTOR: It's a nasty bump. Nothing too serious.
How do you feel?
SARAH: Scared. Do you realise somebody tried to kill me?
BRIGADIER: I don't want to seem unsympathetic, Miss Smith, but you have
only got yourself to blame.
SARAH: Well, somebody locked that door so I couldn't get out.
DOCTOR: She's right, you know, Brigadier. That door was bolted on the
outside.
BRIGADIER: Maybe one of the soldiers didn't realise she was in there.
(Benton enters with a soldier carrying the Doctor's time eddy
monitoring equipment.)
BENTON: Here we are, Doctor. Hasn't been knocked about too much.
DOCTOR: Thanks, Sergeant. Put it down there, will you? When the
creature vanished, it was still in the electrical forcefield,
Brigadier, so we should learn something.
(Benton has some of the chains that were holding T Rex down. A link has
been cut.)
BENTON: We found this, sir. They were all like that. Cut clean through.
DOCTOR: And this machine's been sabotaged. There's not a single
reading.
BRIGADIER: Dismissed! No, not you, Benton.
(The soldier leaves.)
DOCTOR: Well, at least we've learnt something, Brigadier. Somebody
inside this organisation is working against us.
BENTON: Yes, but what I can't understand, sir, is why should anyone
want to cut those chains?
DOCTOR: It was a deliberate attempt on Sarah's life.
BRIGADIER: Why should anybody want to kill her?
BENTON: They were probably after you, Doctor. I mean, they expected you
to go back there.
BRIGADIER: Yes, of course, that'll be it. Well, Doctor, any
suggestions?
DOCTOR: Yes, I shall build another detector.
BRIGADIER: We haven't got to capture another dinosaur?
DOCTOR: No, no. No, this time I'm going to try something different. I'm
going to build a portable device to detect that power source.
BRIGADIER: Well, why didn't you do that in the first place?
DOCTOR: Because, Brigadier, it cannot be as accurate or as powerful as
this would have been. But it could give us the general direction.
SARAH: Doctor? Exactly how much energy would be needed to make these
things appear?
DOCTOR: Oh, something like a small nuclear generator.
SARAH: Then why don't we look for one?
BRIGADIER: Miss Smith, that was one of the first things that occurred
to me. I made a thorough check and I can assure you that there are no
unaccounted for nuclear generators in the central London area.
DOCTOR: No, he's right you know, Sarah. It is pretty unlikely, isn't
it. Look, why don't you try and get some rest.
SARAH: All right.
DOCTOR: Right, I'll be getting on with it.
(The Doctor goes into the Tardis.)
BRIGADIER: I've got yet another planning conference with General Finch.
Look after Miss Smith, Benton. BENTON: Right, sir.
(The Brigadier leaves.)
BENTON: Well, would you like a cup of tea or anything?
SARAH: Typical! Run away and play while the grown-ups get on with the
real work.
BENTON: What do you mean?
SARAH: The power's coming from somewhere, right? So there must be an
independent source.
BENTON: I suppose so, but where would you start
SARAH: So if it is a nuclear reactor it would have been designed and
assembled, and all that could be traced. There'd be records.
BENTON: The Brigadier's checked all that, Miss. If there was anything
there then he would have found it.
SARAH: Well, maybe it was all secret.
BENTON: Too secret for the Brigadier to know about?
SARAH: Yes, why not? Can you get me some transport?
BENTON: Oh no, I couldn't do that.
SARAH: Oh, they told you to look after me. Come on.
BENTON: Well, where do you want to go, and what shall I tell the
Doctor?
SARAH: Well, tell him. Tell him I've gone out to play, hmm? Come on.
BENTON: (silent) Oh no.
[Grover's office]
(Grover opens his own office door.)
GROVER: Come in! What a pleasant surprise.
SARAH: I don't suppose you remember, Minister, but we met briefly at
UNIT.
GROVER: You're far too modest, Miss Smith. Of course I remember. I'm
sorry you had to find your own way here but I'm down to a skeleton
staff.
SARAH: Oh, thank you.
GROVER: However, I can offer you a cup of tea. We have our own little
generator down in the basement. Petrol driven. Can I get you a cup?
SARAH: Er, no, not at the moment, thank you. I'm sorry to bother you
like this, but you seem to be the only member of the government still
in London.
GROVER: Oh, I am. The rest all shot off to Harrogate, but I told the
Prime Minister if I'm in charge, I'm going to stay here, on the spot.
Now, what can I do for you?
SARAH: Well, you know the Doctor's theory about these materialisations?
They must need a tremendous energy force.
GROVER: Yes?
SARAH: Well, the Doctor said it would have to be something like a
nuclear generator and that started me remembering something. Wasn't
there a plan once to build underground quarters for the government in
the event of an atomic war?
GROVER: Yes, back in the cold war days. Oh, I see what you're getting
at. Oh, I don't think any of them were ever built, you know.
SARAH: Are you sure of that? Each of those places was to have its own
nuclear generator.
GROVER: That's right. I was a junior backbencher at the time but I
remember plans were made and then shelved when the situation eased.
SARAH: But suppose one was built, right here in London.
GROVER: That's a very ingenious theory, young lady. What does the
Brigadier think about it, or the Doctor?
SARAH: I'm not telling anyone about it until I can get some evidence.
GROVER: I wonder, if it could have happened as you say.
SARAH: Oh, I thought if I came to you, you could help me check up on
it.
GROVER: And so I can. In there are confidential ministerial files going
back years. Let's take a look.
SARAH: Thank you.
[Filing room]
(Grover shows Sarah into an adjoining room full of
metal filing cabinets. A panel slides across the door when he closes it
behind him. Sarah reads a clip board on top of a cabinet, which is some
sort of index.)
GROVER: Fantastic filing system they have in here. I hardly understand
it myself, but then of course I've only been Minister for six months.
SARAH: Could it be this? Top secret construction projects.
GROVER: I wonder? Number two three nine five. Now that should be over
here somewhere. No, there's nothing here. This is all about building
RAF early warning stations in Scotland.
SARAH: Well, perhaps one of the other files in the same category?
GROVER: Oh, we can but look. Good Lord! You're right. Look.
SARAH: They built it twenty years ago, right in the centre of London.
GROVER: And there's a map here, showing its exact position.
SARAH: Well, there's Whitehall, so this must. It's here. It's right
here. It must be under this building!
(Grover opens the sliding door. Beyond it is a passageway of red
painted brick, with a fire extinguisher and lighting.) GROVER: After
you, Miss Smith.
[Makeshift laboratory]
(The Doctor comes out of the Tardis.)
DOCTOR: Sergeant? Sergeant Benton?
(Benton enters.)
BENTON: Yes, Doctor?
DOCTOR: Look, I'll need some more electronic equipment. Can you
organise it?
BENTON: Yes, of course.
DOCTOR: Ah, thanks very much. How's Miss Smith?
BENTON: Oh, fine, as far as I know.
DOCTOR: Er, did you give her somewhere to rest?
BENTON: Well, she didn't want to rest. I got her some transport and she
shot off somewhere.
DOCTOR: Oh, where?
BENTON: She wouldn't say. She said to tell you she'd gone out to play.
DOCTOR: You know, sometimes that girl baffles me.
[Underground room]
(The walls are of brick painted red. Butler has
taken off his lab coat and joined them.)
SARAH: You're mad. You're absolutely raving mad!
GROVER: On the contrary, Miss Smith, my associates and I are on the
only ones who are sane.
SARAH: Creating monsters in central London?
GROVER: There's a very good reason for it, which you will one day
learn. I'm afraid I must leave you.
SARAH: They'll find me, you know.
GROVER: I very much doubt it, Miss Smith. Not where you're
going.
(Butler and Grover leave, locking the door. Sarah sits in a tall backed
chair in the middle of the room. The lights begin to flash blue. She
turns the chair but cannot avoid them. Finally her eyes glaze over.)
[Spaceship - small room]
(When she wakes up, she is lying down and wearing
a denim suit. A young man in similar clothing is smiling at her.)
MARK: Welcome, sister.
SARAH: Who are you? Where am I?
MARK: My name is Mark. I welcome you to the people.
SARAH: What people?
MARK: You'll soon remember.
SARAH: And where is this?
MARK: The spaceship. You see, it's all come true.
SARAH: What's going on? Where am I?
MARK: We're on our way. Soon we shall arrive on the planet that's to be
our new home.
SARAH: Planet? Spaceship? What are you talking about?
(Mark uncovers a porthole and Sarah looks out into the inky blackness,
where there is only a half-sunlit planet visible in the distance.)
MARK: We left Earth three months ago.
Part Four
[Makeshift laboratory]
(Finch and Yates enter.)
FINCH: I'd like an explanation of this latest fiasco, Brigadier. You
capture a dinosaur and lose it again, an aircraft hangar is wrecked,
and into the bargain, Miss Smith is almost killed. Now why is this man
allowed to persist in his ridiculous and useless schemes? You deny that
absolutely nothing has been achieved?
DOCTOR: Nothing has been achieved, General Finch, because of sabotage.
Now the chains holding the Tyrannosaurus were deliberately severed, and
somebody attempted to murder Miss Smith by locking her in the hanger
with the creature.
(Yates is unhappy to hear all this.)
DOCTOR: To top it all, my apparatus has been messed about with.
However, all that's in the past now. I've got a new scheme. So if
you'll excuse me, I'll be getting on with it. Brigadier, did you bring
over that new car of mine when you moved your headquarters?
BRIGADIER: Yes, I think so. It should be in the garage with the rest of
our transport.
FINCH: What are you up to now?
BRIGADIER: I'll explain in a moment, sir. Better just see the Doctor on
his way.
(The Brigadier and the Doctor leave.)
YATES: I'd like to know what's been going on, sir.
FINCH: I've no idea what you're talking about.
YATES: I agreed to sabotage the Doctor's apparatus and delay his
experiment, but I didn't agree to murder.
[Outside UNIT HQ - temporary]
BRIGADIER: You'll never get it off the ground,
Doctor. Wouldn't you rather have a jeep?
DOCTOR: Not a bit of it, Brigadier. This new car of mine is exactly
what I need. Speed is of the essence, you know.
BRIGADIER: Well, take care. Call in as soon as you have any
information.
DOCTOR: Right.
(The new Who-mobile is a sort of two seater mini-hovercraft with very
upswept wings at the back and a pair of jet exhausts pointing out
between them. The Doctor drives it to Smithfield Market, where he stops
and checks his portable time eddy detector. He consults the map and
moves off again.)
[Spaceship]
(Sarah examines a clay bowl. Mark enters with an
older woman wearing beige and an older man in a green jacket.)
MARK: Here she is.
RUTH: Don't worry, my dear. We'll look after you.
(Everyone say Hi to Carmen
Silvera, making a return visit.)
ADAM: You're the first to recover.
RUTH: You're bound to feel a little strange at first.
SARAH: Who are you?
ADAM: We're the elders.
SARAH: How did I get here?
RUTH: You must have been chosen.
SARAH: Wait a minute. I know you. You're Lady Cullingford.
RUTH: Here I am Ruth.
SARAH: I interviewed you about that Private Member's Bill of yours
against the pollution of rivers. And you're Nigel Castle, the novelist.
ADAM: Not any more. I have better work for my hands.
(Adam picks up the clay bowl.)
SARAH: I know you too. You're
MARK: John Crighton.
SARAH: The athlete. You jumped two point three six two metres in the
last Olympics.
ADAM: All that's behind us now.
RUTH: And you were a journalist?
SARAH: I still am. Where are we going?
MARK: I told you, to New Earth.
SARAH: Sorry, I seem to have forgotten.
ADAM: A small planet, very much like the Earth we've left behind, but
at an earlier stage of development.
RUTH: Still pure, undefiled by the evil of man's technology. Air that
is still clean to breathe.
MARK: Simple pastoral people, innocent and unspoiled.
ADAM: It'll be our task to guide them. To see that the evil developed
on Earth will not be repeated.
SARAH: Our task? Just the four of us?
MARK: There are over two hundred of us on this ship.
(Mark switches on a monitor. It shows images of figures lying on
shelves four high in sections A and C.)
MARK: You see? They'll all be recovering soon, just as you did.
(Mark turns off the monitor.)
ADAM: And this is only one of the ships of the fleet. Show her, Mark.
(The monitor shows four identical spaceships.)
MARK: There are seven ships in all.
SARAH: Those people. Why were they all asleep?
ADAM: To save food and oxygen. It was all explained to you.
RUTH: It's a three month journey, and almost over.
SARAH: I've been here on this spaceship for three months?
MARK: We all have.
SARAH: I can't believe it!
(Sarah touches the bump she got in the hangar a few hours ago.)
SARAH: Three months?
[London]
(The Doctor stops and takes another reading, then
drives off again eagerly. He pulls up outside an Underground station
and tries again. The reading goes up to four out of maximum five when
he points it at the closed station, so he goes over an picks the lock
on the gates.)
[Underground station]
(Carrying the detector and a large torch, the
Doctor heads down to a platform, where a handkerchief test shows air
being pulled out of the station through a grille. He hears a noise, and
hides underneath a bench as Butler comes onto the platform and puts a
key in the lock of a maintenance door before pressing one of the
louvres. There is the sound of a lift arriving. Butler opens the door
and steps into a lit cupboard containing the overalls and mops. He
shuts the door, there is the lift sound and the light disappears. In
the bunker, Butler heads down the corridor to the reactor room and
communications room, according to the sign on the wall. Cabinet room
and sleeping quarters and Sickbay are the other way.
The Doctor comes out of hiding and tries the door louvres. The lift
heads up to him as he picks the lock. The Doctor puts down his torch
and gets inside the lift, then looks for the switch to make it go down
again. It turns out to be the third coat hook from the door, which
swivels 180 degrees.)
[Control room]
(The lift light flashes on a diagram of the
underground complex. According to this, the Cabinet room and reactor
room are next to each other. There is also a Sick bay, Minister's day
room and Royal Suite. The Control room is in the centre of the
complex.)
BUTLER: I trust you now have everything you need, Professor?
WHITAKER: I don't know yet. If I need more equipment, you'll have to
provide it.
BUTLER: It isn't easy getting this stuff for you. Every time I go onto
those streets I risk being shot as a looter.
WHITAKER: Well, you could take the Ministry
(They spot the flashing light.)
BUTLER: Someone's using the blue lift.
(The Doctor steps out of the lift, looks at the sign on the wall and
goes the same way that Butler did. He is watched on CCTV.)
BUTLER: It's him. Yt's the Doctor, UNIT's scientific advisor. How did
he find us?
WHITAKER: Presumably you led him here.
BUTLER: Needn't be such a bad thing. We can deal with him here and now.
Let's see. He's going towards the reactor.
(Butler presses one of many red buttons on a panel, and a steel shutter
slams down in front of the Reactor room door just as the Doctor gets
there. The Doctor heads down another passageway, and a shutter comes
down behind him.)
WHITAKER: He's heading towards the Cabinet room.
BUTLER: Right.
(The Doctor turns left in front of a lift, turns another corner and
gets a shutter coming down in front of him this time. Butler sniggers.
The Doctor is now trapped outside a lift, which opens for him. The
Doctor steps in and is taken upwards. There are no overalls and mops in
this one, but the same blue light flashes on the diagram.)
BUTLER: He's in the lift. Is everything ready?
(Whitaker is absorbed at another monitor with a set of yellow levers in
front of it. The monitor shows a pterodactyl basking on a boulder.)
BUTLER: Excellent.
(Gently, Whitaker pulls back one lever and a time eddy picks up the
overgrown bat.)
[Underground station]
(The Doctor steps out of the lift and stoops for
his torch and eddy detector. The squawk of the pterodactyl fills the
air as it swoops past him. The Doctor ducks back into the lift, which
now has the mops and buckets back in it, and uses one to drive back the
dinosaur as it pokes its beak in to try and get at him. Then he comes
out, fends it off with the mop again and runs up the stairs, leaving
his equipment behind.)
[Spaceship]
SARAH: Don't you think that people have a right to
choose what kind of life they want?
RUTH: People on Earth were allowed to choose. And see what kind of a
world they made. Moral degradation, permissiveness, usury, cheating,
lying, cruelty.
SARAH: There's also a lot of love and kindness and honesty. You've got
a warped view of things.
RUTH: You mustn't say such things.
SARAH: I'll say whatever I like.
MARK: The strain of reawakening must have disturbed her mind.
SARAH: There's nothing wrong with my mind.
ADAM: I was assured that everyone had been most carefully selected. I
don't think you're going to be happy with us. If you feel like this,
why did you join us?
SARAH: I didn't join you. I was brought here against my will.
RUTH: We shall have to do something about this. She'll be a disruptive
influence.
ADAM: I think you'd better come with me.
SARAH: Where to?
RUTH: You can't be allowed to go about saying these things. You'll have
to be re-educated.
[Underground station]
(The Doctor returns with the Brigadier, in a Land
Rover. He leads the way underground with a pencil light.)
DOCTOR: Mind the steps, Brigadier. Right, now it's through here.
(The Doctor picks up his big torch and opens the cupboard door.)
DOCTOR: Here it is.
[Blue lift]
DOCTOR: Don't just stand there. Come on in. Close
the door. Now the activating mechanism is right here.
(But there are no pegs on the wall.)
BRIGADIER: Where?
DOCTOR: Well, it was there, but now it seems to have gone.
BRIGADIER: You sure we've come to the right place?
DOCTOR: Sure? Of course I'm sure.
[Grover's office]
DOCTOR: Look, I tell you that it is there,
Minister. Somewhere beneath that underground station is some kind of
emergency shelter for the government.
GROVER: You must have been talking to Miss Smith.
DOCTOR: Oh, what about?
GROVER: Didn't she tell you? She came to me with the most marvellous
theory about such a place having been built under central London.
DOCTOR: And had it?
GROVER: I'm afraid not. We went through the files together. The place
was planned but it was never built.
BRIGADIER: You're sure of that, sir?
GROVER: Well, I had the file here somewhere after we'd looked at it.
There we are.
BRIGADIER: Project abandoned. No further action to be taken. See,
Doctor?
DOCTOR: You'll forgive me, Minister, if I prefer to believe the
evidence of my own eyes. Where did Miss Smith go to after she visited
you?
GROVER: Back to UNIT HQ. I sent her in my own car.
DOCTOR: Are you quite certain?
GROVER: I can check for you.
DOCTOR: Thank you, sir.
GROVER: (into intercom.) Is my chauffeur still there?
MAN [OC]: Yes, sir. Shall I tell him to bring the car round?
GROVER: No, tell him to come in here, please.
MAN [OC]: Yes, sir.
GROVER: Would you two like a cup of tea? I've become quite an expert.
BRIGADIER: That's very kind of you, sir. I don't think so just at the
moment.
GROVER: Come in. (Butler enters, wearing a chauffeur's uniform.)
BUTLER: You wanted me, sir?
GROVER: The young lady from UNIT who was visiting me. Where did you
take her?
BUTLER: Well, back to UNIT HQ, sir.
DOCTOR: Are you quite sure of that?
BUTLER: Oh yes, sir. I saw her go inside.
[Spaceship 'reminder' room]
(Sarah is being indoctrinated, watching a film
showing buckets of filth being dredged.)
BUTLER [OC]: Ever since the dawn of the Industrial Revolution, man has
continued to pollute the planet which until now has been his only home.
Chemical and industrial wastes have caused widespread poisoning of the
air and the rivers. Even the oceans are
(The room goes quiet. Mark enters with a tray.)
MARK: I've brought you something to eat.
(A small piece of bread and a drink.)
SARAH: Not going to get overweight, am I.
MARK: That's pure bread.
SARAH: But not much of it.
MARK: Once you've been reminded, you'll eat with the rest of us.
SARAH: Reminded?
MARK: Of the truth. We all come in here from time to time to be
reminded of the purposes of our mission.
SARAH: You're here because you want to be. I don't.
MARK: You must have been selected, otherwise why would you be here?
SARAH: I was brought here. Kidnapped!
MARK: Watch the film. It'll remind you of the truth.
SARAH: I want to talk to you!
(Mark leaves and the film restarts.)
BUTLER [OC]: Dangerous concentrations of cumulative poisons such as
mercury are already being found in fish and when fish start to die,
when the very seas where life began are now becoming lifeless and
stinking
[Spaceship]
RUTH: We can't afford this girl's disruptive
influence.
ADAM: One girl among so many of us. Can't do much harm.
RUTH: She could corrupt the whole of our group. We can't afford the
risk.
MARK: What can we do?
RUTH: If she doesn't respond to re-education, we shall have to destroy
her.
[Control room]
WHITAKER: Final tests have all been positive. Now,
once the power build-up from the reactor is complete, we shall be ready
to commence the countdown.
GROVER: And when the experiment is over the colonists and their
spaceship will be able to emerge onto their new Earth.
FINCH: How much longer before this countdown begins?
WHITAKER: Oh, a matter of hours.
FINCH: I'm under great pressure from the government. The whole
country's been disrupted by this evacuation of London.
GROVER: It won't be for much longer.
FINCH: They're on to Whitaker, you know? Trying to trace him.
BUTLER: Remember, the Doctor's already discovered the existence of this
place.
YATES: I warned you not to underestimate him.
GROVER: I agree he's a very intelligent man. I think he suspects my
involvement.
FINCH: We ought to dispose of him.
YATES: No, sir. We must not descend to those methods.
GROVER: Quite right, Captain Yates. But perhaps there's another way.
FINCH: What do you mean?
GROVER: You, General Finch, will be able to block the Brigadier from
taking positive action in finding this place. As far as the Doctor is
concerned, we must discredit him.
[Makeshift laboratory]
BRIGADIER: Apart from your story, Doctor, which,
forgive me, is pretty unbelievable, there isn't a shred of evidence to
suggest that this place exists. Now you heard the Minister yourself. It
was never built.
DOCTOR: Grover was covering up because he's implicated himself.
BRIGADIER: And what possible reason could the Minister have for being
involved in the apparition of these monsters?
DOCTOR: The monsters are a side-issue, Brigadier, a device to clear
central London. No, some vast scheme is underway, I'm sure of it, and
it's rapidly moving towards its climax.
BRIGADIER: Well, what do you expect me to do?
DOCTOR: Get back to that underground station with explosives.
BRIGADIER: I can't do that without authority. I need permission from
General Finch.
DOCTOR: Then get it!
BRIGADIER: All right, Doctor, I'll do my best, vut he'll probably
insist on referring it to the Minister, And if your theory's true,
that's not going to get us anywhere.
(The Brigadier leaves. Benton enters through the other door.)
BENTON: There's a call for you, Doctor.
DOCTOR: Who is it?
BENTON: He wouldn't give his name. He said he'd only talk to you. (into
phone) Hello, would you put the Doctor's call through to here, please?
Oh, thank you. Doctor.
(Benton leaves.)
DOCTOR: (into phone.) Hello?
[Control room]
WHITAKER: Is that you, Doctor?
DOCTOR [OC]: Yes, who's that?
WHITAKER: Er, my name is Whitaker, Doctor.
[Makeshift laboratory]
WHITAKER [OC]: I understand you've been trying to
trace me.
DOCTOR: Whitaker. The man with the time travel theories. Tell me, are
you responsible for these apparitions?
[Control room]
WHITAKER: Well, in a way, but I was tricked. It's
the Minister, Grover. He told me I was working on a government project.
But I've escaped and now they're after me.
DOCTOR [OC]: Where are you now?
WHITAKER: I'm in the hangar where you were conducting your experiments.
I hoped you'd be here.
[Makeshift laboratory]
DOCTOR: Well look, can you get down to UNIT
headquarters, it's in a ma
WHITAKER [OC]: I can't. I'm afraid to move.
DOCTOR: Oh, all right. You stay where you are. I'll come to you.
[Control room]
WHITAKER: Can you come alone, Doctor? I don't
trust anyone else.
[Makeshift laboratory]
DOCTOR: Yes, all right. I'll be with you as soon
as I can. Goodbye.
[Hangar office]
DOCTOR: Whitaker?
(There is a large device with a transparent dome on the office table.)
[Control room]
(Butler watches the Doctor on a monitor while
Whitaker is at the time eddy machine.)
BUTLER: He's arrived.
WHITAKER: Good. I'm ready for him.
[Hangar office]
DOCTOR: Whitaker? Whitaker, where are you?
(A time eddy starts up and a stegosaurus appears in the hangar. Finch
and the Brigadier enter the office with two soldiers.)
FINCH: There's your monster maker, Brigadier. Caught in the act.
Part Five
[Hangar office]
BRIGADIER: Doctor, you're under arrest.
[Spaceship 'reminder' room]
(The indoctrination film has moved on to man's
inhumanity towards man.)
BUTLER [OC]: Overcrowding in man, as in all other animal species,
increases hostility and aggression, leading to the greatest crime of
all, war. With the development of the atomic bomb, man now has the
choice of destroying his planet quickly, through war, or slowly,
through pollution.
(The film stops as Mark enters.)
MARK: How are you feeling now?
SARAH: Hungry, tired and I've got a headache.
MARK: Sarah, you're in grave danger.
SARAH: Oh, what's that supposed to mean?
MARK: The elders are very dedicated to our cause. They are not going to
permit a disruptive influence.
SARAH: You mean they'll kill me? Perhaps the time that I spent in
suspended animation has affected my thinking in some ways? Take me back
to the elders. Let me talk to them again.
MARK: Yes, of course.
(Mark opens the door. Sarah jabs her elbow into his midriff and runs
out, locking him in.)
MARK: Sarah! Sarah!
[UNIT HQ - temporary]
(Night has fallen when the Doctor is escorted in
at gunpoint. Benton and Yates stand.)
FINCH: All right. Captain Yates, take this man and lock him up.
BRIGADIER: Sir, aren't we going to question him first?
FINCH: There's no time for that now. I must report his capture to the
Minister.
DOCTOR: Yes, and no doubt he'll be very pleased to hear it, since he
arranged the whole thing.
FINCH: You are in an extremely dangerous position, Doctor. I advise you
to keep silent.
DOCTOR: Oh, that's just what you want, isn't it, my silence?
BRIGADIER: We really should interrogate this man now, sir. Trying to
discover his base, the names of his associates.
FINCH: All that can come later.
DOCTOR: Yes, well now that you've caught me, General, you can end the
evacuation and return your eight million Londoners, can't you.
FINCH: That decision doesn't rest with me. It rests with the Prime
Minister. Captain Yates?
YATES: Sir?
FINCH: Until further orders, you'll keep that man under close arrest.
Come with me, Brigadier.
BRIGADIER: Sir?
FINCH: I want you with me when I make my report. Brigadier?
(Finch and the Brigadier leave.)
DOCTOR: Now listen to me, Mike. We haven't got much time. I want you to
raise all the men you can muster and some kind of high explosive. Now
I've got a pretty good idea where their base is.
YATES: Sergeant Benton?
BENTON: Sir?
YATES: Take the Doctor to a cell and lock him up.
BENTON: Sir?
YATES: Keep him under constant guard. He's to talk to no one.
DOCTOR: So it was you, Mike.
YATES: I'm sorry, Doctor. I'll be in the Brigadier's office.
(Yates leaves.)
BENTON: Right, that empty storeroom. Fix it up as a temporary cell.
Check the lock on the door and do something about barring the windows.
Oh, and put in a camp bed. Now move.
(The soldiers leave.)
BENTON: All right, Doctor, what's going on?
DOCTOR: Captain Yates is the man inside who's working against us.
BENTON: Come on, Doctor.
DOCTOR: I'm afraid it's true.
BENTON: Well, what about the Brigadier?
DOCTOR: What indeed?
BENTON: Right then, Doctor, you'd better get busy.
DOCTOR: What?
BENTON: You'd better start overpowering me, hadn't you. You know, a bit
of your Venusian oojah?
DOCTOR: Thank you, Sergeant Benton.
DOCTOR: Are you ready?
BENTON: Yeah!
(Benton tenses and shuts his eyes tight. The Doctor uses the pressure
grip at the back of Benton's neck to put him to sleep.)
[Control room]
GROVER: Sorry, gentlemen. Well, the Doctor's
safely under arrest at UNIT headquarters.
WHITAKER: How long will they hold him?
GROVER: Long enough. Soon the Doctor and his associates and everyone on
this planet, except our chosen group, will never have existed. Shall we
begin?
WHITAKER: I've been waiting for you. As you know, the temporal beam has
reached back through time and brought forward objects from the past.
Now, by a completely different application of the same basic principle,
I am about to reverse time. At least, in a limited field.
(Whitaker switches on and nods to Butler, who throws a tea mug onto a
red board, where it smashes to pieces.)
WHITAKER: I shall now activate the time field.
(Whitaker pulls a different yellow lever and the eddy appears. The
shattered mug reforms and rises back into Butler's hand.)
WHITAKER: There you are, Minister. For the space of a few seconds, I
rolled back time itself.
[Spaceship]
(Hiding behind a panel, Sarah watches Adam get
himself a drink from a dispenser. He leaves, she runs over to another
door and opens it. Inside are various control consoles and an
illuminated panel on another door which says Danger Depressurized.
Sarah is about to press a button when some levers start moving of their
own accord. She goes to the next one, and presses numbered buttons, but
nothing happens.)
[Spaceship 'reminder' room]
(Mark is watching the film.)
BUTLER [OC]: The rules of so-called civilised society are breaking down
as increased protest and disorder calls for stronger and more violent
repression from the authorities, which in turn leads to more political
violence. All over Europe
(Sarah enters. Mark leaps up and tries to get past her.)
SARAH: Look, Mark, you've got to listen to me. I've got something very
important to tell you. Please!
[UNIT HQ - temporary]
BENTON: There was nothing I could do, sir. He
attacked me.
FINCH: Were there no guards?
BENTON: I'd sent them off to fix up a cell, sir.
FINCH: What do you mean, he attacked you? There isn't a mark on you.
BRIGADIER: The Doctor uses a rather unique form of unarmed combat, sir.
FINCH: You'll be court martialled, Sergeant. Brigadier?
BRIGADIER: Sir?
FINCH: I'm instituting a full scale search for the Doctor at once. I
shall want the full cooperation of you and your men. They are to shoot
on sight. Meanwhile, put this man under arrest. Captain Yates.
(Finch and Yates leave.)
BRIGADIER: Well, don't just stand there, Benton. Go and put yourself
under arrest.
BENTON: Sir?
BRIGADIER: Where's the Doctor gone?
BENTON: To that underground place, I think, sir.
BRIGADIER: Then we've got to find him before General Finch does. Get
the men ready.
BENTON: Right, sir.
[Spaceship side room]
(Sarah pushes lots of buttons. Nothing happens)
SARAH: Now will you believe me?
MARK: There must be some explanation.
SARAH: Mark, where is this planet we're heading for?
MARK: In another solar system close to Earth.
SARAH: The nearest possible solar system to us is four light years
away. With the most advanced spaceships developed, it would take
hundreds of years to reach there.
MARK: One of our members invented a new space drive.
SARAH: Do you see that bruise? I got that just before I was kidnapped
and brought here. Now if I'd been here three months, it would have
gone.
MARK: You were in suspended animation.
SARAH: Oh, Mark! I've only been here a matter of hours. All right. All
right, if we're in space, how did I get here?
MARK: You must have been transferred from one of the other ships.
SARAH: There aren't any other ships. All this is a fake! We're not on a
spaceship at all.
MARK: Oh, that is ridiculous!
SARAH: I'll prove it to you. I'm going out through that airlock!
MARK: That opens directly out into space. You'll be killed.
SARAH: No, I won't, because the whole set up is a fake. Now go out
there and watch.
[Spaceship]
(From the main area, Mark watches Sarah open the
outer airlock door and step through with a smile on her face. Adam
enters.)
ADAM: Mark? Ah, there you are. What's the matter? Are you all right?
MARK: Yes, yes, yes, I'm fine, I'm fine.
ADAM: Ah. How's our young friend?
MARK: She's all right.
ADAM: Ah. I thought I might have a chat with her. Is she still in the
reminder room?
MARK: Yes, but I think we should leave her there a little bit longer. I
think that's what she needs.
ADAM: You know, it might be a good idea for all of us to spend a little
time in the reminder room before we arrive.
(Meanwhile, the Doctor is driving a Land Rover around Fuller &
Co, Chiswick, evading other UNIT vehicles.
[Underground bunker]
(Sarah can hear voices.)
BUTLER [OC]: Well, Professor, that's the first time I've ever seen a
Minister lost for words.
[Control room]
(Sarah peers round the door.)
BUTLER: Mmm?
WHITAKER: We shall need the reactor running at full power.
BUTLER: Oh, it is.
WHITAKER: Check it again.
BUTLER: The reactor is working perfectly.
WHITAKER: The power levels are critical. I must be assured that they
are sufficient to trigger the time field.
BUTLER: All right, I'll check it again.
[Underground bunker]
(Sarah hides.)
WHITAKER [OC]: Thank you very much.
(Butler comes out of the control room and walks away. Sarah starts to
follow him then discovers the lift. She presses the up button.)
[Grover's office]
(Grover is about to open the door to the filing
room lift when his intercom beeps.)
GROVER: Yes?
MAN [OC]: Your car's ready, sir.
GROVER: Oh, thank you.
(Sarah is in the filing room, rising upwards. Grover collects his coat
and leaves. The panel slides back from the door and Sarah carefully
opens it then enters the empty office. She looks into the outer
office.)
[Army Land Rover]
(The Doctor is driving through a wooded area when
he spots a helicopter overhead. It reports back to a pursing army
patrol.)
PILOT [OC]: Tango one to patrol. Over.
ARMY: Patrol. Over.
PILOT [OC]: He's turned off. He's heading for the Common. Over.
ARMY: Roger. Out.
(The Doctor comes to a fork in the road, and reverses as he sees the
army heading towards him. He drives into the trees to avoid the
helicopter.)
PILOT [OC]: Tango one to patrol. Over.
ARMY: Patrol. Over.
PILOT [OC}: He's turned again. Heading into the trees. I've lost him.
He's somewhere among those trees. Over.
ARMY: Patrol out.
[Common]
(The army pulls up alongside the Doctor's
abandoned Land Rover and the Corporal gets out to look around.)
ARMY: Right, everybody out.
(From a small rise, the Doctor watches the patrol leave their vehicle
and the Corporal sends his men off in different directions.)
ARMY: You, down there. You, over there.
(Now on his own, the Corporal moves off. The Doctor carefully ducks
down amongst the bracken and ferns to avoid the patrols. One of the
soldiers decides to stop for a cigarette break. The Doctor makes his
way to the Army Land Rover. As he gets in, the helicopter continues to
search the area.)
PILOT [OC]: Tango one to patrol. Any luck? Over.
DOCTOR: (London accent) Hello Tango one. Patrol here. It's all right,
we've got him. Yeah, we're bringing him in now. Listen, inform all the
other units, will you? Over.
PILOT [OC]: Roger, patrol. Congratulations. We'll inform HQ. Get them
to call off the search. Out.
(The helicopter flies off and someone starts shooting at the Doctor. He
drives off as the Corporal comes running down the slope and gets into
the Doctor's original Land Rover, which won't start.)
[UNIT HQ - temporary]
SARAH: I tell you I have got a pass.
BRYSON: Then I must see it, Miss. I've got strict instructions.
SARAH: Never mind your instructions.
BRYSON: I've got to check everybody's pass.
SARAH: Look, where's the Brigadier?
BRYSON: Well, he's out.
SARAH: But where?
BRYSON: I can't tell you that, Miss.
SARAH: Please, you've got to tell me!
BRYSON: Well, they're out on this big hunt, Miss, looking for the
Doctor.
SARAH: The Doctor?
BRYSON: Well, they had him arrested but he escaped. Well, he made the
monsters.
SARAH: Don't be ridiculous.
BRYSON: Well, they caught him red-handed.
SARAH: Well, where's Captain Yates or Sergeant Benton?
BRYSON: All out on this man-hunt, Miss.
(Sarah thinks, then starts writing a note.)
SARAH: Look, I'm going to leave this note for the Brigadier. Now you
see that he gets it, hmm?
BRYSON: Yes, Miss.
(Sarah finishes writing.)
SARAH: Oh, am I glad to see you.
FINCH: Miss Smith.
SARAH: What's all this about the Doctor?
FINCH: Re-captured. Where is he now?
BRYSON: I'm sorry, sir. Who, sir?
FINCH: The Doctor. I heard a message over the R/T to say he'd been
caught. Wasn't at my HQ so I thought they must have brought him here.
BRYSON: No, sir, he's not here, sir.
SARAH: Look, the Doctor isn't behind all this, but I know who is. I
know everything!
FINCH: Do you, now.
SARAH: You
FINCH: All right. Dismissed.
BRYSON: Sir?
FINCH: Get out!
(Bryson leaves.)
FINCH: Now, Miss Smith, what's all this about?
SARAH: Well, you're never going to believe this. It's Grover, the
Minister. He's behind everything.
FINCH: Oh, come now. That's impossible.
SARAH: No, I promise you, it's the truth. They're operating from a
hidden control centre. It's underground and it's right beneath Grover's
office. Well, that's why he stayed in London.
FINCH: He stayed because he's in charge of the emergency.
SARAH: He's causing the emergency! You've got to stop him, put him
under arrest. We can raid that place with your men.
FINCH: Oh, come now. I can't take action against a Minister of the
Crown simply on your word.
SARAH: I can prove what I'm saying is true. Come to Grover's office
with me.
FINCH: Hmm. Well, I think your story needs investigating. Have you told
anyone?
SARAH: There's nobody here to tell. I'd only just arrived when you
turned up.
FINCH: Have you any idea why the Minister should be doing all this?
[Grover's office]
FINCH: I don't understand. The place is absolutely
deserted. Very bad security. Now where's this special room?
SARAH: Over there. Shouldn't we have brought some of your men here with
us? I mean, might be quite a few of them down there.
FINCH: There's still no proof of your extraordinary story, Miss Smith.
I must check it myself first. Delicate business this, you know.
[Filing room]
FINCH: It's just a file room.
SARAH: It's a lift. The controls are in here.
(Sarah fiddles inside the top drawer of the cabinet that contained the
alleged bunker files.)
FINCH: What's all this bumf?
SARAH: Oh, just a lot of old ministry files. There.
(The lift starts down. She turns to see Finch is pointing his pistol at
her.)
SARAH: Oh, boy. I really do choose my friends, don't I.
(The lift arrives.)
FINCH: I think you know the way.
[Control room]
FINCH: Returning your prisoner, sir.
GROVER: How did you leave the ship?
SARAH: There isn't any spaceship. Stop playing.
GROVER: Did she tell anybody?
FINCH: No, fortunately everyone was out of the way. I think the Doctor
has escaped again.
WHITAKER: I did everything you asked me to incriminate him. All wasted.
FINCH: You did very well.
GROVER: Have you any idea where he is?
FINCH: He's probably on his way here now. But he needn't worry us. The
countdown is too close.
GROVER: It's time to go into the final phase. You, Whitaker, will
produce a last wave of apparition monsters all over London to drive out
any remaining people. (to Finch) You will order the complete withdrawal
of all your troops, including UNIT.
FINCH: The Brigadier is bound to protest.
GROVER: You have final authority. Overrule him.
FINCH: Well, I'll see to it right away. What about the girl?
GROVER: Leave her to me.
FINCH: Well, don't lose her again.
(Finch leaves.)
GROVER: Now then, what are we to do with you?
SARAH: Just don't put me back on your fake spaceship, that's all.
GROVER: I don't think that'd be a good idea. You're rather a bad
influence.
SARAH: What you're doing to those people on there is cruel. They all
believe that they're going to a new world.
GROVER: And so they are, but their new world is this one. This world of
ours swept clean and returned to its early innocence.
SARAH: You're going to take them back to the past?
GROVER: We're going to bring the past to them.
SARAH: I don't understand.
GROVER: By rolling back time, by taking the Earth back to an earlier,
purer age.
SARAH: Oh, what about all the people on Earth now?
GROVER: They'll vanish. They and their ancestors will never have been
born.
SARAH: That's horrible! It's worse than murder.
GROVER: No, you don't understand. But I hope, Miss Smith, when you do
understand, you'll want to be with us. If you're ready, Whitaker?
WHITAKER: Yes.
(On the time target monitor, a triceratops appears on a roof across
from Westminster Abbey. Near Parliament, a brontosaurus grazes on a
tree. A stegosaurus is a couple of streets away from St Paul's, a T Rex
in front of a Georgian terrace. The Doctor encounters another
brontosaurus by Smithfield Market. He turns around and the time eddy
dumps another T Rex almost on top of him.)
Part Six
[Smithfield Market]
(The Doctor's Land Rover stalls and refuses to
start again. He tries to get into the market proper but the shutters
are locked. Then the predator spots the prey and the two giant lizards
approach each other. T Rex grabs Bronto behind the head and the Doctor
quietly sneaks away. Once out of sight of the fighting dinosaurs he
runs, only to stop again as an Army Land Rover comes round a corner
towards him.)
FINCH: Leave him to me.
(Benton and the Brigadier drive up behind the Doctor.)
BRIGADIER: My prisoner.
FINCH: Get out of the way, Brigadier.
BRIGADIER: I'm sorry, General, this man is a UNIT prisoner. I'm taking
him into custody.
FINCH: Get out of my way!
BRIGADIER: Benton?
(Benton stands and aims his semi-automatic at the General.)
FINCH: You realise this is mutiny?
BRIGADIER: There's no question of mutiny, sir. I'm only doing my job.
FINCH: You'll place this man under close arrest. I'm holding you
responsible for him.
(Finch gestures his driver to carry on, and the Land Rover drives
away.)
BRIGADIER: Coming, Doctor?
[Bunker store room]
SARAH: Oh, you're not going to shut me in there?
BUTLER: You won't be there long.
SARAH: Where are you lot going?
BUTLER: Much further than you'd ever believe.
SARAH: You won't just leave me here?
BUTLER: Don't worry, you're coming with us.
(Butler locks her in. Well, at least this room has a light switch,
wooden boxes and a large coil of rope, together with a big ventilation
grille on the wall.)
[UNIT HQ - temporary]
BRIGADIER: Doctor, I can get away with holding you
here, keeping you out of General Finch's hands, but what you're
suggesting is mutiny. What the blazes are you doing?
(Bryson is disconnecting the radio set.)
BRYSON: Orders, sir. We're evacuating. All the others have gone.
BRIGADIER: Whose orders?
BRYSON: General Finch, sir. I thought you knew all about it.
BRIGADIER: This is ridiculous. The whole of London crawling with
monsters and he decides. What about the spotter patrols?
BRYSON: They've all gone, sir. Everyone's out of the area.
BRIGADIER: Good grief!
DOCTOR: Look, face up to it, Brigadier. General Finch is involved just
like Grover.
BRIGADIER: Is everybody in this conspiracy?
DOCTOR: Well, Captain Yates certainly is.
BRIGADIER: Now that I can't believe.
BENTON: Well, he's been pretty odd lately, sir, and he was very keen on
locking the Doctor up.
BRIGADIER: He was merely obeying orders.
DOCTOR: Hmm. There's a note here from Sarah. There you are. Yes, she
says she's got positive proof of Grover's involvement and the existence
of the underground base. Here, see for yourself.
BRIGADIER: Where the blazes is she?
DOCTOR: Er, Private? When was this note left?
BRYSON: Very early this morning, sir. She went off with General Finch.
DOCTOR: Thank you.
BRIGADIER: Benton, I want a call to Geneva.
BENTON: Right, sir.
BRIGADIER: I'll get on to International UNIT HQ. They must put pressure
on the government.
DOCTOR: There's no time for that.
BRIGADIER: Well, can you suggest anything else we can do?
DOCTOR: Yes. Attack that underground base now.
BRYSON: Sir?
BRIGADIER: Yeah?
BRYSON: Excuse me, sir, but, er, are we evacuating or not?
BRIGADIER: No.
BRYSON: Oh, well, in in that case, sir, what should I do?
BRIGADIER: Oh, go and make us all a cup of tea.
(Bryson leaves, smiling.)
BENTON: Yes? Yes, put him through now, please. Geneva on the line, sir.
There, sir.
BRIGADIER: Thank you.
YATES: Put it down, sir.
(Yates has his pistol pointed at the Brigadier.)
YATES: Over there, Sergeant.
Benton backs away to join the Brigadier and Doctor.)
YATES: (into radio.) Would you cancel that call, please? We won't be
needing it now.
BRIGADIER: And what do you think you're doing, Captain Yates?
YATES: I'm really sorry, sir.
(Sarah finally gets the grille off the wall and crawls into the shaft.)
DOCTOR: Just what are they going to do, Mike?
YATES: They're going to roll back time. The world used to be a cleaner,
simpler place. It's all become too complicated and corrupt.
DOCTOR: Roll back time, I see. Can Whitaker really do that?
YATES: I believe so. All the preliminary experiments have been
successful.
DOCTOR: Do you realise what'll happen if they succeed?
YATES: We shall find ourselves in the golden age.
DOCTOR: There never was a golden age, Mike. It's all an illusion.
YATES: Not this time. We're going to make it come true.
BRIGADIER: Really. How?
DOCTOR: Whitaker's machine creates a protective field, and anyone
within that field will be unaffected. Anybody outside it will just
cease to exist.
YATES: Quite right, Doctor.
BRIGADIER: Are we inside this protective field?
YATES: Perhaps, perhaps not. We're on the very edge of the zone here,
but it doesn't matter.
BENTON: You mean it doesn't matter to you not existing?
YATES: I'm not important. The others'll get there.
DOCTOR: Now listen to me, Mike, I
(Yates turns his weapon on the Doctor.)
DOCTOR: Look, I understand your ideals. In many ways I sympathise with
them. But this is not the way to go about it, you know? You've got no
right to take away the existence of generations of people.
YATES: There's no alternative.
DOCTOR: Yes, there is. Take the world that you've got and try and make
something of it. It's not too late.
BRYSON: Oh, I didn't know you were back, Captain Yates, sir.
(Yates turns, Bryson drops the tea tray and Benson kicks Yates' gun out
of his hand then grabs him around the neck.)
[Spaceship]
ADAM: Welcome. Welcome to the people. We've
revived you because it's almost time for our landing on New Earth.
(Ruth enters.)
RUTH: Adam? That girl's gone. She's not in the reminder room.
ADAM: Well, she can't have gone far.
(Sarah sneaks in through the airlock.)
RUTH: But we must find her.
(Mark spots Sarah and shakes his head. Sarah goes into the small room.)
ADAM: Oh, very well, my dear, I'll help you, but all our friends are
waking up. Aren't you going to say welcome to them?
RUTH: Later.
ADAM: Oh, excuse me.
MARK: I'll be back in a minute.
[Spaceship side room]
MARK: What did you find? Where are we?
SARAH: Somewhere under central London. The whole ship is a fake.
MARK: Why did they cheat us?
SARAH: Well, it's too complicated to explain now, but it's something to
do with altering the course of time.
MARK: Those poor people. What can we do?
SARAH: Tell them the truth.
[UNIT HQ - temporary]
(Benson is packing explosives into a rucksack while
Bryson is on the radio.)
BRYSON: Come in mobile patrols. All mobile patrols, come in please.
Over.
(Static.)
BENTON: There we are, Doctor. Blow your way into the Bank of England
with that lot.
DOCTOR: Thank you, Sergeant.
BRYSON: Trap two.
BRIGADIER: I still think we should wait for reinforcements.
DOCTOR: We can't wait.
BRYSON: Please acknowledge. Over.
DOCTOR: That project's going to be activated any moment now and when
that happens, your reinforcements will vanish. And so will you.
(Benson hands the Doctor a long coil of nylon rope.)
BRYSON: Trap two calling all mobile patrols.
BRIGADIER: Oh, very well. Benton, you stay here.
BRYSON: Please acknowledge. Please acknowledge.
BRIGADIER: Try and collect those mobile patrols. As soon as you've
assembled any kind of force, rendezvous with the Doctor and myself at
the tube station.
BENTON: Right, sir.
BRIGADIER: Keep trying, Bryson.
BENTON: Er, good luck, Doctor!
DOCTOR: Thank you.
[Spaceship]
(Sarah is talking to the newly revived people.)
SARAH: Oh, can't you understand? It's all a trick. You're not on a
spaceship. You're not going to another planet.
ROBINSON: That can't be true! They promised us. We're going to a new
world! I went into everything very carefully. I sold my house.
(Ruth and Adam enter.)
MARK: She's telling us the truth!
ADAM: It's all right, Ruth, she's here.
MARK: Adam, we've been tricked!
RUTH: How did you get out of the reminder room? Where have you been?
SARAH: Out of the ship.
RUTH: The girl's mad.
ROBINSON: Look, I don't understand all this.
SARAH: Do you know what's on the other side of that airlock? A flight
of steps.
RUTH: Adam, we must lock her up.
MARK: I saw her open the airlock.
RUTH: And I can see that she's very persuasive.
MARK: Adam, she's telling us the truth.
RUTH: Now listen to me, all of you. This poor girl is unbalanced. She
should never have been selected. Already she's contaminated one of us.
MARK: I'm going out through that airlock so you can see.
RUTH: Stop him! We'll all be killed!
(Robinson grabs Mark and they struggle.)
ADAM: Mark! We can't have fighting.
RUTH: You see? They're a danger to themselves and to all of us.
SARAH: There is no danger.
RUTH: Oh no you don't!
SARAH: Look, the people who organised all this, they've got a machine
that's going to affect time itself. It's got nothing to do with space
travel.
RUTH: We must lock her up. Come on.
SARAH: No, you've got to help me stop them, otherwise the whole
world'll be in danger! Millions of people are going to be wiped out!
(Ruth and another woman drag Sarah away. Robinson pulls Mark along.)
MARK: Adam, that's the truth! Robinson, will you listen?
[Spaceship side room]
(Adam flicks a switch on a console.)
ADAM: Hello? Hello, can anyone hear me?
BUTLER [OC]: This is Spaceship One. We are receiving you.
ADAM: Thank God. I'd like to speak to Charles Grover, please. I've got
to speak to Charles Grover. Something very disturbing has happened.
[Road]
(A T Rex roars nearby, and a brontosaurus is
standing across the road as the Doctor drives up.)
DOCTOR: Hang on to your hat, Brigadier.
(They drive between the legs of the brontosaurus.)
[Control room]
BUTLER: I don't know how she got away but somehow
she's got back into that spaceship and she's stirring them all up.
GROVER: Can't you reassure them?
BUTLER: It's no good, I tried. Our friend Adam insists on talking to
you.
GROVER: There's not much time.
BUTLER: Well, you'd better talk to them. Adam sounded in quite a state.
GROVER: In that case, I'd better dress for the occasion.
[Outside Moorgate station]
(A stegosaurus is blocking the entrance to the Met
and Circle lines. The Doctor and Brigadier get out of the Land Rover,
and the Brigadier throws a grenade at it. The close bang makes the
creature back slowly away.)
[Spaceship]
(More people have been woken. Everyone is watching
the flashing Danger Depressurized sign on the airlock as thud is
heard.)
RUTH: You had no right to call him. We could have dealt with this
ourselves.
ADAM: I think he's got a lot to answer for.
ROBINSON: How will he reach us from the other ship?
RUTH: There's a shuttle. It's just locked on to us.
(A figure in spacesuit and helmet comes in through the outer airlock
door.)
ROBINSON: What's he doing now?
ADAM: Equalising the air pressure.
(The sign goes out and the figure enters via side room.)
GROVER: Well, Adam, what's the problem?
[Underground station]
BRIGADIER: Well, I never thought I'd find myself
blowing up a tube station. If you're wrong, Doctor, I'm going to have a
job explaining this to London Transport.
DOCTOR: Well, don't worry, Brigadier, I'm never wrong. If we don't get
down there, there won't be a London Transport to explain to.
[Spaceship 'reminder' room]
(Sarah and Mark have their hands bound behind
them.)
GROVER: You really are a terrible problem to me, Miss Smith.
MARK: You cheated us!
GROVER: I had to.
MARK: Why? Why couldn't you tell us the truth?
SARAH: He didn't dare tell you. Don't you understand, Mark? Millions of
people will be wiped out. That's the truth, isn't it?
GROVER: Put that way, yes, I'm afraid it is.
[Spaceship]
(Outside the room, Adam is listening.)
GROVER [OC]: Yet, in a sense, these people will come to no harm at all
because they will never have been born. I had to tell a story that
would be acceptable to people like Adam. The sort of people I wanted to
recruit.
[Spaceship 'reminder' room]
SARAH: Yes. Kind, decent people who just might
object to the destruction of generations of human beings!
GROVER: I'm only deceiving them about the means, not the ends. They
will have their new world, but it will be this world returned to an
earlier purer age.
MARK: The end can never justify the means. What you're doing is
criminal.
GROVER: Mark, for the sake of the others, can't you accept the
situation?
MARK: No, never.
SARAH: We'll go on telling them the truth every chance we get.
GROVER: In that case, I must see that you don't get the chance. Once
this project has been completed, I can only hope that you will adjust
to life in the new world. I really am very sorry about all this. I can
only hope that in the future we shall be friends.
[Underground station]
(The Doctor is attaching wires to the explosives
when they hear a roar from the far end of the platform.)
BRIGADIER: We've got company.
DOCTOR: Good grief. It's a triceratops. Look, Brigadier, try and keep
it occupied while I'm finishing this off, will you? Don't worry,
they're none too bright.
BRIGADIER: Right.
(The Brigadier takes a flare from his own rucksack, lights it and walks
towards the triceratops.)
BRIGADIER: All right, Doctor. I think I can cope with it.
[Spaceship 'reminder' room]
(Adam enters.)
MARK: Adam, you've got to help us.
ADAM: I know. I overheard. I had to wait until Ruth was out of the way.
(Adam cuts them free.)
ADAM: Now, what are we going to do?
SARAH: Get to the flight deck and open that airlock!
[Underground station]
BRIGADIER: Are you ready, Doctor? This is the last
flare.
DOCTOR: Yes. Yes, nearly ready. Come on.
(The Doctor trails the wires away from the cleaner's cupboard and back
to the stairs. The Brigadier backs away from the confused dinosaur and
joins him. The Doctor pushes the detonator and KaBOOM!)
DOCTOR: Right, let's take a look.
(The cupboard floor has been blown away.)
DOCTOR: Ah, there it is. Right, I'm going down there.
BRIGADIER: I'll come with you.
DOCTOR: No, I'd rather go on my own. It's less conspicuous. You go and
get those reinforcements, will you?
BRIGADIER: Right.
[Outside the Underground station]
(The Brigadier uses the radio in the Land Rover.)
BRIGADIER: Greyhound one to Trap Two. Over.
[UNIT HQ - temporary]
BENTON: Trap Two. Sergeant Benton here, sir.
[Underground station]
BRIGADIER: Now look, we've broken through and the
Doctor's inside. What about those reinforcements?
[UNIT HQ - temporary]
BENTON: Just one mobile patrol, sir. That's all I
could raise.
BRIGADIER [OC]: Better than nothing. Bring them along.
BENTON: Yes, sir.
BRIGADIER [OC]: Quick as you can, Benton, out.
(Finch is covering Benton with his pistol.)
BENTON: Look, sir, I've got to send those reinforcements. The
Brigadier's in trouble.
FINCH: You'll do as you're told, Sergeant.
BENTON: Sir, I've got to send them.
FINCH: I'm warning you, Sergeant.
BENTON: Very good, sir.
(Benton turns back to the radio then swings round quickly grabbing
General's gun hand. They tussle, and Finch is pushed backwards over a
table.)
FINCH: You'll be court martialled for this, Sergeant!
BENTON: Yes, sir.
(Benton thumps the General's gun hand against the table.)
BENTON: Very sorry, sir!
[Spaceship]
ADAM: I think you should at least listen, Ruth.
ROBINSON: That does sound reasonable, to listen.
RUTH: Very well. What is it you want me to listen to?
SARAH: I think it's best if you just watch.
RUTH: What's she going to do?
MARK: Open the airlock.
RUTH: But she'll kill herself! She'll kill us all!
ADAM: If she's wrong, she's the only one that will suffer.
(Sarah is inside the airlock. She opens the outer door and nothing
happens. Smiling, she returns through the inner door.)
MARK: You see?
(The other people mutter in the background.)
SARAH: The people who tricked you are out there. Now is your chance to
demand an explanation.
(Ruth leads everyone out. Meanwhile, the Doctor is in the bunker. He
hides as Butler approaches, then grabs him and uses his pressure points
to knock him out.)
[Control room]
WHITAKER: Everything's ready.
GROVER: General Finch should be here.
WHITAKER: I hope you don't propose to wait. The timing is crucial.
GROVER: He must be somewhere in the area. So long as he's in the
protective field, he'll be all right.
ADAM: Stop! We shall have no part in this.
(The people from the spaceship enter. Mark grabs Whitaker before he can
pull a lever.)
RUTH: You've cheated us.
GROVER: My friends, listen to me. I have not cheated you. Let Professor
Whitaker pull that lever and you shall have the golden age that I
promised you.
ADAM: You're going to destroy all the civilisations of man. Leaving
Earth for another planet, that was one thing, but this is evil!
GROVER: Civilisation has already destroyed man. It's time to make a
fresh start. If we take the Earth back in time, we can guide man onto a
better path.
(The Doctor enters.)
SARAH: Oh, Doctor!
GROVER: Congratulations, Doctor. You're just in time to be present at
the most important moment in the world's history.
DOCTOR: On the contrary, I'm just in time to prevent an atrocity.
(The Brigadier and Benton enter with a couple of soldiers.)
BRIGADIER: Don't move, any of you! Benton.
(Whitaker throws off Mark and pulls a lever. A fierce time eddy fills
the room, freezing everyone. Only the Doctor is unaffected, who pushes
against the effect to put the lever back where it was. Then the Doctor
goes to another panel and flicks some switches. Grover dives for the
lever again.)
WHITAKER: No! He's reversed the polarity!
(Whitaker and Grover fight over the lever.)
DOCTOR: Keep back!
(Grover pulls the lever down again, and he and Whitaker and the console
disappear.)
SARAH: Well, where've they gone?
DOCTOR: Back to their golden age. And I hope they like it.
[UNIT HQ - temporary]
BRIGADIER: I still don't understand, Doctor. When
Whitaker first pulled that switch, was time reversed or wasn't it?
DOCTOR: It was for the world outside the forcefield. Your time was just
frozen for a few seconds.
SARAH: But what about you? Oh no, don't tell me. You're a Time Lord.
DOCTOR: Quite!
SARAH: Poor Grover.
BRIGADIER: The man was mad.
DOCTOR: Yes, well, of course he was mad. But at least he realised the
dangers this planet of yours is in, Brigadier. The danger of it
becoming one vast garbage dump inhabited only by rats.
BRIGADIER: It'll never happen, Doctor.
DOCTOR: It's not the the oil and the filth and the poisonous chemicals
that are the real cause of pollution, Brigadier. It's simply greed.
BRIGADIER: Hmm. Well, I've got work to do, writing my deposition for
General Finch's court martial.
BENTON: Excuse me, sir? What about Captain Yates?
BRIGADIER: Extended sick leave and a chance to resign quietly. Best I
could do.
DOCTOR: Poor Mike.
BRIGADIER: Come on, Benton.
BENTON: Still I'll say one thing. Not many Sergeants get the chance to
punch a General on the nose.
BRIGADIER: Just don't make a habit of it, Benton.
(The Brigadier and Benton leave.)
DOCTOR: Well, there you are, Sarah. I told you I'd get you home safely,
didn't I.
SARAH: Oh, of all the cheek.
DOCTOR: Well, it's not my fault if people get up to no good while we
were away.
SARAH: Alien monsters, robber barons, then dinosaurs. It'll be a long
time before I get in that Tardis again.
DOCTOR: Oh. It's a pity, that.
SARAH: Why?
DOCTOR: Well, er, I was rather thinking of making a trip to Florana.
SARAH: Where?
DOCTOR: Florana. Probably one of the most beautiful planets in the
universe.
SARAH: Well, count me out.
DOCTOR: It's always carpeted with perfumed flowers.
SARAH: I'm not listening.
DOCTOR: And its seas are as warm milk and the sands as soft as swan's
down.
SARAH: No, Doctor.
DOCTOR: The streams flow with water that are clearer than the clearest
crystal.
SARAH: No.
(Laughing, Sarah puts her hands over her ears.)
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