Blood Harvest (novel)

Publisher's summary
Doc's peddling bootleg liquor in an illegal speakeasy. You’re carrying a gun for him, Ace - which makes you no better than any other gun-moll.

Dekker is a private eye; an honest one. But when Al Capone hires him to investigate a new joint called ‘Doc’s’, he knows this is one job he can’t refuse. And just why are the Doctor and Ace selling illegal booze in a town full of murderous gangsters?

Meanwhile, Bernice has been abandoned on a vampire-infested planet outside normal space. There she meets a mysterious stranger called Romanadvoratrelundar -- and discovers an ancient and malevolent power, linking 1929 Chicago with a lair of immortal evil.

The consequences of this story are inextricably linked to events in the Doctor’s past.

Characters

 * The Doctor
 * Can play the piano.
 * Brews beer in the TARDIS swimming pool and whiskey in the bath.


 * Ace
 * Sleeps with Dekker.
 * Mobsters call Ace the lady in black.


 * Bernice Summerfield
 * Sets up a government based on the British system on the planet of the vampires.
 * Can sing the blues.
 * Romana
 * Talks about the Doctor's companions like they're amusing pets.


 * Tom Dekker
 * Events on the planet of the vampires doesn't faze him, but the Doctor still erases bits of his memory.


 * Agonal
 * Zargo (clone)
 * Camilla (clone)
 * Aukon (clone)
 * Borusa
 * Freed from imprisonment.

Continuity

 * This is a sequel to DW: State of Decay and in some ways to DW: The Five Doctors.
 * Events in this novel lead to MA: Goth Opera, and was intended to help launch the Virgin Missing Adventures line of original novels featuring past Doctors.
 * The Doctor gives Spandrell back his Gallifreyan Army Knife, mentioned in NA: Timewyrm: Exodus.
 * Dekker reappears in PDA: Players, in which he meets the Sixth Doctor and Peri Brown. He obliquely refers to both the Seventh Doctor and Ace. Peri suggests that he is speaking of one of his future incarnations but the Doctor dismisses it out of hand.
 * In what appears to be a redundancy, Borusa is freed from his prison in this story, but his redemption is later depicted differently in EDA: The Eight Doctors.