Birth of a Renegade (short story)

Birth of a Renegade was a short prose story intended to reveal Susan Foreman's origin. Radio Times published the story on November 1983. The villains of the story were the Master and the Cybermen.

Summary
Tegan is not happy when the Fifth Doctor decides to answer a distress call from Sector 19, in the spiral of Alpha 4, a remote area on the fringe of a supernova. Arriving near the source of the signal, the Doctor is disturbed to find it is coming from an enormous battle cruiser. The cruiser appears undamaged. Unlike other battleships, it doesn’t carry any identifying insignia or identification. The Doctor, Tegan and Turlough are even more alarmed when they find that the TARDIS is being drawn to the cruiser by a tractor beam that is somehow using the TARDIS’ own power against it.

The Doctor, working under the console, shuts off the TARDIS’s power for a moment. There is enough energy left to dematerialise when the break in power releases the TARDIS from the tractor beam. The TARDIS materialises safely onboard the battle cruiser. They explore the vast craft in near total darkness — bar the minuscule light from the Doctor's pen torch. The Doctor, Tegan and Turlough are blinded and disorientated by a bright light when a door opens. A moment later they are prisoners of three Cybermen who appear to be assisting the Master.

The Master reveals that the battle cruiser is his TARDIS, disguised as a battle cruiser (with his working chameleon circuit) to suit the Cybermen. The Master’s plan is to bring the Time Lords to their knees, not by war but by “securing power by legally exploiting the constitution!” As they are marched through the TARDIS corridors, the Master talks of Gallifrey’s past. He recounts the final corrupt days of Lord President Pundat the Third. The Master remembers the Doctor as a crusty, eccentric man, one of the finest TARDIS engineers ever.

The Master remembers more than the Doctor, who realises he has had selective memories wiped – just as the Master had told him. The Master explains that students revolted against Pundat the Third but were ruthlessly put down. The students wanted to replace Pundat's rule (in which the Lord President chose his own successor) with Rassilon’s Law, hereditary rule by a descendant of Rassilon.

The students had tried to recruit the Doctor, but he he had decided to side with the status quo, the constitution and Lord Pundat. When Pundat died of stress soon after the revolt, his chosen successor was the evil Chancellor Slann. The students had found the last of Lord Rassilon’s descendants, Lady Larn, a seven-year old child adopted by Councillor Brolin. They decided on a second coup. Yet in trying to convert the Doctor, the students were overheard. The Doctor, innocent of the students' revolt, was too highly respected to be terminated like the other students. It was decided to wipe parts of his memory.

Bloody reprisals against the students followed, and the Doctor decided to leave Gallifrey in a TARDIS. As it happened, the Lady Larn was hiding in the same TARDIS that the Doctor stole; the Doctor knew her as Susan and she affectionately called him "grandfather".

The Master, Tegan rightly guesses, was behind both student uprisings. Believing the students ready for the second, he assassinated Lord President Slann. However, the students weren’t ready and the Master fled.

Once more, claims the Master, Gallifrey is leaderless and politically unstable, the people are crying out for leadership, for a descendent of Rassilon. The Master plans to return with his army of Cybermen (to whom he has promised the knowledge of time travel) and rule with Susan as his puppet. However, the Master realises that Doctor, his biggest adversary, must be disposed of first.

When Susan is reunited with the Doctor, she refuses to help the Master. She defends the Doctor from the Master and his Tissue Compression Eliminator. As the Cybermen move to separate the Doctor and Susan, the Doctor launches himself at the Master, knocking the Eliminator from his hand. Susan fires as the Cybermen close in. The Master tells the Cybermen not to shoot lest Susan be killed.

In the stalemate the Doctor leads his companions back to the TARDIS. With the Master’s exposed roundels in the corridor draining the energy to maintain the vast battle cruiser, Susan stops and fires the Eliminator. The damage makes the Master's TARDIS "unstable and causes it to break up". The Doctor, Tegan, Turlough and Susan just make the safety of the Doctor’s TARDIS. The Doctor sets the co-ordinates to return Susan home. Outside, the Master is consumed by hate as the walls around him collapse and his TARDIS disintegrates, but the Doctor believes that he hasn't seen the end of him.

Characters

 * Fifth Doctor
 * Tegan Jovanka
 * Turlough
 * Susan Foreman
 * The Master
 * Cybermen

The Doctor

 * The Doctor says “Brave heart Tegan” a phrase often used by the Fifth Doctor.

The Doctor's items

 * The Doctor misses his sonic screwdriver, but carries a pen-torch in his pocket.

Individuals

 * The Master frequently allied himself with others, in this case the Cybermen.

Species

 * Cyberman blood/fluid is green.

TARDISes

 * The rivalry between the Doctor and the Master over their TARDIS models is mentioned, along with chameleon circuit and the Master’s TARDIS being a newer model.

Time Lords

 * Lord Rassilon is the father of the Time Lords, the first Lord President of Gallifrey.

Continuity

 * This story occurs after The Visitation when the Doctor’s sonic screwdriver was destroyed by a Terileptil.
 * TARDIS is spelt ‘Tardis’ throughout this story.
 * The Master is again using his Tissue Compression Eliminator to leave behind his shrunken corpse calling card.
 * The Master, being responsible for the assassination of Lord President Slann, is meant to predate his murder of the Lord President in The Deadly Assassin.
 * When the Doctor asks if Lady Larn escaped the student uprising, the Master replies “…Even you must know they do not kill children on Gallifrey” – they allowed her to escape.
 * The Doctor’s reflection, that although he travels with ‘companions’ he doesn’t know them very well, would seem to be a thought echoed in the series with more back story and insight into the Doctor's current and future companions. Developed over the next few years (most notably with the Seventh Doctor and Ace's relationship), and a central theme of the new series companions.

Timeline

 * Birth of a Renegade takes place after PDA: Deep Blue
 * Birth of a Renegade takes place before DW: The Awakening

External link

 * The BBC's official Radio Times website with an increasing amount of Doctor Who content including archive material