Ships (short story)

Ships was a short story in the Brief Encounter range in Doctor Who Magazine. It was the only such story to feature Dodo Chaplet and details a possibility for Dodo's post-TARDIS life quite opposed to that in Who Killed Kennedy.

The title plays on the phrase "ships the pass in the night", as it details an exceptionally brief encounter between Dodo and Sarah Jane Smith, in which they never recognise each other as people who know the Doctor.

Summary
Walking home from her secretarial job, Dodo Chaplet's mind wanders back to her days in the TARDIS. As she encounters reminders of her mundane existence on the way home, she increasingly castigates herself for having left the Doctor so abruptly. Lost in thought, she turns a corner and runs into a young woman. Their respective armfuls are dumped onto the ground. In the haste to collect their belongings, Dodo accidentally grabs the young woman's diary. It's too late to return it to her, though — she's long gone. Dodo examines it to determine something that might identify the owner. Luckily there's an address — and the name S. J. Smith.

Characters

 * Dodo Chaplet
 * Sarah Jane Smith

Continuity

 * This appears to contradict the novel, Who Killed Kennedy, which kills off Dodo after seeing her institutionalized immediately after her departure in The War Machines. Dodo here is portrayed as being a quite functional member of society — a secretary, with all the normal sorts of concerns of adult life.  She claims to be "older and wiser" and speaks of her TARDIS life being "such a long time ago", which suggests that she's alive long after her death in Kennedy.   However, no actual dates are given.  Because of this, there's also no guarantee that Sarah Jane has even met the Doctor yet, since she claims to be from 1980 at one stage of her televised career.  The story could be set in 1972 just as easily as 1992.
 * Dodo mentions the way in which Cyril died in The Celestial Toymaker and Steven Taylor's departure in The Savages,
 * The collision occurs on the corner of Primrose Avenue and Lowry Close in a "satellite suburb" of London.
 * As her neighbour, Ted Quinn, calls her "Dodo", it can be assumed that she took the youthful appellation into her adult life.