Avatars of the Intelligence (novel)

 was the first novel published in The Lucy Wilson Mysteries series. The series was created by Shaun Russell and Andy Frankham-Allen as a spin-off of the Lethbridge-Stewart series of books.

Publisher's summary
Lucy Wilson doesn't want to move from London to sleepy South Wales. But when she arrives at her new seaside home, it doesn't appear to be as boring as she expected.

Ogmore-by-Sea seems to be under the control of a mysterious and powerful force. But why is Lucy its target? And why, when students at her new school start to disappear, does no one seem to care?

With the help of her new friend Hobo, Lucy Wilson must assume the mantle of her grandfather, the legendary Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart, and defeat an invisible enemy before it's too late.

Plot
to be added

Characters

 * Lucy Wilson
 * Hobo Kostinen
 * Albert Wilson
 * Tamara Wilson
 * Nick Wilson
 * Conall Lethbridge-Stewart
 * Mel
 * Dame Anne Bishop
 * Sacha Kostinen

Worldbuilding

 * Nick goes to Nottingham University.
 * Lucy talks to Nick on Skype.
 * Albert listens to Where is the Love? by the Black Eyed Peas on BBC Radio 2.
 * At the celebration of the Brigadier's life, a trailer shows him with several men: a man with the white hair of a wizard, one with a long scarf, another with a bow tie, one wearing a cricket pullover, and one with a recorder. In addition to the men he is also pictured with a beautiful woman with shoulder-length blonde hair.

Continuity

 * Lucy remembers the story her grandfather told her of monsters in the London Underground. (TV: The Web of Fear)
 * Anne Bishop tells Lucy that the Great Intelligence once used rats in its plans. (PROSE: Times Squared)
 * Lucy is given a 'time ring' by Anne Bishop, which enables her to travel in time. It contains a gem, which is in fact a kontron crystal, and was a family heirloom which once belonged to both Edward and Lyndon Travers. (PROSE: Night of the Intelligence, Travers & Wells)
 * The picture Lucy finds of her and Hobo meeting Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart is recalled by Owain Vine in PROSE: Night of the Intelligence.
 * In exactly 92 years, an indirect descendant of Lucy also manages to get a time machine, (PROSE: Transit) but she builds it instead. (PROSE: Transit, Set Piece, The Also People)