Heather (The Pilot)

Heather was a student at St Luke's University in the 2010s. She had a defect in her left iris in the shape of a star. She befriended and developed a mutual crush with canteen assistant Bill Potts. After having become Sentient oil, she gave Bill her tears before leaving. (TV: The Pilot)

Eventually, Heather was able to track Bill to a colony ship, where she had been converted into a Cyberman. Heather saved Bill from doing the unthinkable and ending her CyberLife. She kissed Bill 'Does that feel Dead to you?' Heather explained to Bill that by changing her, Bill had the same abilities of space and time travel. After telling Bill she could make her human again she said, 'Or you could come with me'. The two decided to see the universe together. (TV: The Doctor Falls)

Life on Earth
Heather hated St Luke's and everywhere else she went, always feeling an indescribable need to leave or go somewhere else. She attended the Twelfth Doctor's lectures on at least one occasion.

Pursuing Bill Potts
Whilst on campus, Heather discovered a strange oil puddle in a service area behind some buildings. Looking into it, she quickly noticed that the puddle's surface did not reflect mirror images like a normal puddle should. She spotted this easily as a result of the defect in her left eye, which made her face visibly asymmetrical. She became fascinated, but also concerned, with the abnormal properties of the dark liquid; when Bill found her distraught and asked what troubled her, Heather was glad of the chance to show someone else. The two investigated the puddle together. Although Heather was attracted to Bill, her constant desire to leave prevailed and she walked off, much to Bill's disappointment. When the two met again the following term, Heather promised not to leave without Bill, but was unexpectedly absorbed by the puddle before Bill could join her to investigate it again. The liquid merged itself with Heather and designated her as its "pilot".

After her transformation, the combination of Heather's desire to leave and her promise not to go without Bill led her to obsessively hunt Bill across time and space. She wished to take Bill with her as a passenger on her travels. When Bill finally freed Heather from her promise, the oil-creature ceased following her. Heather said a personal goodbye to Bill before she let go, and expressed her liking for her. She cried at their parting and left her tears with Bill, so that she would know when Bill was in need.

Bill later voiced regret at having turned down Heather's offer, and glanced at the TARDIS when the Doctor stated that it was unlikely they would ever see Heather again, in the hope that they could find her. Though initially reluctant, the Doctor allowed Bill to join him in his travels, noting that they may one day find Heather again. (TV: The Pilot)

Saving Bill and the Doctor
After the Doctor blew up floor 0507 of the Mondasian colony ship to destroy an army of Cybermen, Heather appeared before a cyber-converted Bill Potts who was standing over the Doctor as he lay dying. She then kissed Bill and turned Bill into the same kind of being as herself. Together, they took the Doctor back to his TARDIS, where Heather piloted it. Bill shed a tear on the Doctor's forehead and kissed him. Heather and Bill then departed together, free to explore the universe; though Heather revealed she had the ability to return Bill to being human if she ever changed her mind. (TV: The Doctor Falls)

Personality
Heather at first came off as a distant and withdrawn girl who had never been satisfied by her simple life on Earth. This was what caused the sentient oil to select her as its "pilot". She was very observant, easily noticing the puddle wasn't reflecting like a normal mirror thanks to the defect in her eye.

She intensely disliked the defect in her eye, and was sensitive to people talking about it. When Bill suggested that it looked nice, Heather irritably responded "I'm getting it fixed."

After having been absorbed by the sentient oil, Heather temporarily lost her human personality, and could not communicate, except to mimic the words of others, in much the same way as the puddle had mimicked what it saw. She obsessively hunted Bill Potts across the universe, as her last human thought was her promise not to leave without Bill. The latter eventually managed to talk Heather out of following her. Heather accepted, albeit tearfully. (TV: The Pilot)

When she finally met Bill again, Heather had regained her old personality and happily kissed her. She also displayed a greater understanding of her abilities and even knew how to pilot the TARDIS. (TV: The Doctor Falls)

Abilities
After merging with a puddle of sentient oil from an alien spaceship, Heather gained the ability to freely travel through time and space. She first followed Bill from St Luke's University to Sydney, then to a distant alien planet, and finally into the middle of a Dalek-Movellan War. She would usually materialize through a reflective surface such as a mirror or a body of water.



Her body also adopted similar properties to the element of water. She could turn into a small puddle of liquid and control its flow in order to travel through pipes or slide under doors. She would then reform into her human appearance, albeit with water trickling from her body. Heather's water form was apparently indestructible. When a Dalek shot her, the blast simply passed through her and her body reformed seconds later. (TV: The Pilot)

Heather could also allow other people to become like her through a similar absorption process. She claimed that she could also restore anyone who had undergone the transformation to their original state and transport them back to their own place and time.

Her transformation also enhanced her intelligence considerably. When she met Bill again, she displayed a far greater understanding of the universe and her abilities, and was able to fully restore her human form, appearing completely dry again. She was able to pilot the TARDIS, explaining to Bill, "I'm the Pilot, I can fly anything." (TV: The Doctor Falls) Heather (The Pilot)