Greyhound (short story)

Greyhound, subtitled "A memoir by Brigadier Sir Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart", was a short story released in The Doctor: His Lives and Times.

Summary
Lethbridge-Stewart is writing his memoirs, and has come to the chapter about working with the Doctor. He knows this will be removed from any publication by D Notice but feels if he doesn't write it, he "couldn't look him in the face".

Characters

 * Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart

Worldbuilding

 * The Brigadier's notes include
 * the Doctor's patient record from the cottage hospital.
 * a transcript of John Wakefield's report about Mars Probe 7.
 * an informational leaflet for investing in Stahlman gas.
 * the St. Cedd's College Newsletter reporting Elizabeth Shaw has "returned from sabbatical".
 * a product recall warning for the Auton's plastic flowers.
 * a report by Pentagon's "Department X12 Axonite Task Force", which reveals the US still has some traces of Axonite.
 * a memo to Lethbridge-Stewart reporting the suspected Master was actually the Spanish ambassador.
 * a TV listing for BBC3: The Clangers, Harold Chorley's show, and The Passing Parade reporting "live from Devil's End.
 * television listings for Attenborough in the Amazon.
 * a letter from Lethbridge-Stewart to Reginald Styles, apologising for the destruction of Auderly House.

Continuity

 * The Brigadier refers to Jo Grant getting her job via her uncle as a bit of office politics.
 * He's learned that Harold Saxon was the Master in disguise.
 * The Doctor's hobnobbing at an exclusive Mayfair club, with one contact being Tubby Rowlands first mentioned in TV: Terror of the Autons. The Doctor uses these contacts to ensure UNIT get the supplies they need.
 * The Doctor once namedropped knowing Mao's favourite dishes; the two knew each other in TV: The Mind of Evil.
 * The US has Axonite (TV: The Claws of Axos) retained at Area 52 behind the dwarf star alloy from TV: Day of the Moon.
 * The Brigadier lies that he never said "I'm fairly sure that's Cromer", saying it's just a longstanding joke by Benton. (TV: The Three Doctors)