The Thousand Worlds (audio story)

 was the second audio story in the anthology Only the Monstrous, produced by Big Finish Productions. It was written by Nicholas Briggs and featured John Hurt as the War Doctor, Lucy Briggs-Owen as Rejoice and Jacqueline Pearce as Cardinal Ollistra.

Publisher's summary
With the high-ranking Time Lord Seratrix behind enemy lines, the War Doctor finds himself assigned to a rescue mission. But any room for manoeuvre is severely restricted by an area of space known as the Null Zone.

Times have changed on Keska, and a countdown to destruction is beginning.

But who are the Taalyens and what is their part in the great and terrifying Dalek plan?

Plot
After the Doctor's extraction from Keska, Rejoice meets with her father, Thran, and tells him that the Doctor is gone, snatched away by his own people against his will. She mourns his loss, but her father is glad she was left behind.

Meanwhile, the Doctor meets with Cardinal Ollistra, who orders him onto a strike team led by Veklin, the agent who came for him on Keska. Also on the team are Bennus and Arverton, the two agents whom the Doctor rescued from the Time Destructor before landing on Keska. Ollistra wants them to go behind enemy lines, into an area of space called the Null Zone, which is held by the Daleks. The area is so called because time travel is impossible inside it; only spaceflight can be completed. They will be looking for a missing Time Lord strategist named Seratrix. The Doctor, who still declines to be called by that name, furiously refuses to comply, insults Ollistra and Veklin before remotely summoning his TARDIS with his sonic screwdriver and escaping, refusing to be part of any team. Veklin, Bennus, and Arverton follow him in a Battle TARDIS. Meanwhile, the Daleks are preparing to execute their plan.

The Doctor hits the border of the Null Zone, and is forced to land on a nearby planet, although he doesn't know where he is. He finds himself in a Dalek slave camp and meets a man named Garv, who informs him of the planet's identity. They are operating on Keska, leaving him stunned and horrified. The Taalyens have conquered the planet since the Doctor removal and a massive drilling machine is being built for the Daleks. Moreover, the Doctor learns there are a thousand worlds in the Null Zone and all of them have received the same treatment. Meanwhile, Veklin's team also lands, though not nearby and finds numerous life signs: Keskan, Taalyen, Gallifreyan and Dalek.

The Doctor promises Garv that he has fought the Daleks before, and will defeat them here. When asked for a name, he calls himself John Smith, giving Garv and the other slaves a name to give them hope. He is separated from Garv's slave group, who are sent down to the drill level, escaping through a ventilation shaft. The Daleks mention a pre-launch sequence, sparking the Doctor's curiosity. Veklin and her team pursue the Doctor into the machinery, carrying demolition packs in the hopes of finding Seratrix.

The Doctor meets a Taalyen guard and passes himself off as a slave elite. The guard challenges him, but he is saved by a real slave elite, the woman in charge of that group of slaves. Once free of the guard, she becomes emotional because she recognises the Doctor; though he does not recognise her at first, he eventually identifies her as Rejoice, many years after his departure for her but a mere hour for him. They bring each other up to date, but Rejoice thinks he cannot save the planet this time, as the Daleks are supporting the Taalyens - in fact, it was the Daleks who helped them get inside the planetary shield. The Doctor assures her that there is a connection between the situation here in the thousand worlds and the greater Time War and he intends to figure it out.

Veklin's team infiltrates via the fuel-pumping tunnels of the machinery where, periodically, fuel is purged through the tunnels, and would kill them. They are detected by the Daleks, who send a Taalyen squad in after them. They defeat the squad, but are caught by a fuel purge; Arverton sacrifices himself to get them to safety. He refers to Bennus in his last moments as "brother"; this piques Veklin's curiosity. Bennus attributes it to a sign of appreciation and affection in a unit in which they both served under Seratrix and Ollistra. Elsewhere, the Daleks think they were all killed in the purge.

The Doctor and Rejoice infiltrate the centre of operations by pretending to help serve food at a celebratory feast for the Taalyen leadership; the Prime Dalek, Taalyen commander Traanus and Seratrix are also there. The Doctor learns, to his horror, that Seratrix is working with Traanus and the Prime Dalek. He is outed as a Gallifreyan but Seratrix vouches for him and saves his life, knowing that if the Daleks recognise him as the Doctor, they will kill him.

The drilling machine is launched, and the Prime Dalek announced that it will drill into the planet's core and destroy the core, a plan the Doctor has seen before. Seratrix insists that he is working for the greater good and that their plan will lead to a peace with the Daleks, who will rule the Null Zone. The Doctor is shocked to silence, as the Daleks repeatedly chant, "Peace in our time!".

Cast

 * The War Doctor - John Hurt
 * Cardinal Ollistra - Jacqueline Pearce
 * The Nursemaid - Lucy Briggs-Owen
 * The Slave - Carolyn Seymour
 * Veklin - Beth Chalmers
 * Seratrix - Alex Wyndham
 * Bennus - Kieran Hodgson
 * Arverton - Barnaby Edwards
 * Traanus - Mark McDonnell
 * Garv - John Banks
 * The Daleks - Nicholas Briggs

Continuity

 * Rejoice discusses meeting the Doctor on Keska with her father. (AUDIO: The Innocent)
 * The Doctor recalls setting off a Dalek Time Destructor at Omega One. (AUDIO: The Innocent)
 * Ollistra states that the Doctor has defeated the Daleks many times, and that they fear him. (TV: The Parting of the Ways)
 * For the Doctor, he met the younger Rejoice very recently, but for her it has been decades. (AUDIO: The Innocent)
 * The Daleks are drilling through Keska's core in order to destroy the planet. The Doctor says the plan sounds "depressingly familiar". (TV: The Dalek Invasion of Earth)