Evening's Empire (comic story)

Evening's Empire was a Seventh Doctor comic story by Andrew Cartmel and featured art by Richard Piers Rayner. It featured Ace and Muriel Frost, the latter of which was included to introduce a supporting cast for the series.

The story went through delays after the first part was published in DWM 180, with John Freeman referring to it as "the Doctor Who Magazine equivlent of Shada", and it was decided that publications of the latter parts would be delayed until all creative parties had caught up with one another. The story was also an attempt to introduce darker and more complex themes, a natural evolution from the final stories featuring Sylvester McCoy, such as the themes of abuse and bullying explored within this story. Howver, due to its delays, the threads introduced in the story were never able to be further explored.

Summary
Arriving in Middlesbrough, the Doctor, Ace aid Colonel Muriel Frost in an investigation into a plane crash during WWII.

Meanwhile, women are being kidnapped, and UNIT is trapped on a strange world of contemporary Earth building, primitive humans bows and arrows and with two suns in the sky.

How are these events connected? The Doctor is about to find out.

Plot
Saturday. In a world with twin suns, in a majestic city unmistakably built by humans, a group of UNIT personnel are fighting a battle against the primative locals. Corporal Ives and Colonel Muriel Frost have located Ace, and they go to rescue her, with Hammond covering them. Despite the primatives being armed with merely bows and arrows, one arrow breaks through Hammond's body armour, severly wounding him. The primatives begin to retreat, and the UNIT personnel mistakenly think that they're winning the fight; they're sorely mistaken, as the primatives' secret weapon starts decamating the soldiers.

Thursday. Forty-eight hours earlier, in the Burroughs Charted Surveyor in Middlesbrough, clerk Alex Evening is broken from his daydreaming of another world by Ace, requesting access to the local records about any crashes in the area from World War 2. Meanwhile, the Seventh Doctor remarks "A man. A plan. A canal. Panama.", to which Muriel Frost rebutts, whilst preparing to dive into the river alongside two other UNIT personnel. They are trying to recover a crashed Nazi plane, and after they dive to the bottom of the river, the crashed plane is found, and Frost gets the marked feeling that it was waiting for her. Back in the Burroughs Charted Surveyor, Alex retrieves a selection of records on local bombings, simultaneously serving Ace a cup of strong coffee and complimenting her looks. Unbeknownst to Ace, the coffee is spiked with chlormezanone, which sends her crashing to the floor, unconscious.

That evening, more UNIT personnel arrive, extricating the plane from the murky depths. Drying herself with a towel, Frost discusses the pilot, who was little more than a child, with the Doctor. That night, Alex lets himself into his mother's shed, and she scolds him for interrupting the hymns. Ace awakes, in a place she is entirely unfamiliar with, a type of experience she is familiar with, though this time is different. Finding herself, alone, in a cell, she shouts for the Doctor, despite knowing he isn't there.

Friday. Early that morning, Alex drives to work, putting the excitement of Ace out of his mind. At the same time, Frost is preparing herself to enter the dead pilot's mind, using scavenged technology the Doctor built. Despite Ives questioning the Doctor's device, Frost is more than willing to use it. Within seconds of activation, Frost slips into the mind of the pilot, a sensation similar to dreaming. Reaching the pilot's mind, which takes the form of a rotting cadaver, she continues towards it despite its gruesome appearance. The pilot addresses her, knowing that she has come seeking answers. He tells her to touch him, and she places her hand on his shoulder, and Frost sees the pilot's final memories, of him flying through the fresh summer air, many years prior, before his crash with a "strange air-craft". He asks her if she would like to stay with him, reading her mind and becoming privy to her troubled relationship. He tells her, that even though love is painful, it is nothing compared to death. He wishes her auf wiedersehen.

Now back in reality, Frost is distraught from the experience, She tells the Doctor that she will happily "dismantle" the machine, with a sledgehammer. She tells the Doctor that he was indeed about there being a UFO, and is troubled that is has gone missing. The Doctor tells her that the UFO isn't the only thing that has gone missing. So has Ace.

Ace's cries for the Doctor haven't gone well. Two guards arrived, and one, Uncle Totwald, tries to force Ace, the "slave of honour", to wear revealing clothing to look beautiful for the emperor. Ace kicks the other guard down, stealing his sword and fleeing. In the corridor, she smells something familiar, but she can't quite place the smell. As she exits through a door, two things happen: Ace recognises the smell as the glue used on model airplanes; and that there is a chasm beyond the door. Clinging to the doorhandle, Uncle Totwald finds her, and she concedes, allowing herself to be dressed for the emperor's pleasure in exchange for being helped from her precarious position.

Later, Ives and Frost remain inside the UNIT Staff Car while the Doctor enters the Burroughs Charted Surveyor, looking for Ace. Ives asks Frost what exactly she meant when she said the pilot read her mind. She tells Ives about her troubled relationship with her boyfriend, Nick. Meanwhile, the Doctor asks a duo of men inside the Burroughs Charted Surveyor, one them being Alex, if they've seen Ace. Alex denies knowing where she is, and again, commenting on her appeaarance after seeing a photograph of her. The Doctor stares at him. Ace also isn't the only girl to have gone missing in the area, as it seems.

Ace is with two other girls, Wendy and Shaz, both being treated as slaves, watching a bloody fight being fought between two warriors. Wendy hopes that the warriors don't do "", an act performed only on Fridays. Unfortunately for them, it is a Friday; one of the warriors uses his sword to slice the top of the head off the other warrior, and Wendy shields her eyes. In Middlesbrough, the Doctor follows Alex home, to his shed. Inside, Alex is letting himself slip away, which he plans to do all night and all of tomorrow, a Saturday. He believes he is alone. He is not.

Ace is told about what day it is, and Uncle Totwald, approaching Ace, tells her that today is the day that the lord returns. Ace looks up, looking past the sights of the beautiful world, to see Alex Evening, laughing.

Ives sits in the UNIT Staff Car, parked outside Frost's home. Ives looks in through the window of the home, whilst sat in the warmth of the car; it is raining outside. Ives imagines how Frost grew up, recalling her childhood, with the constant bullying from a trio of girls, about her weight, her appearance, being pushed face-first into tarmac. She distracts herself, imagining Frost and Nick together. However, for Frost, things aren't quite as idyllic between her and Nick as Ives imagines. He jibes her, and after she tries to get him to talk about not fighting, he tells her that even though she thinks the physical side is still good, he visualises someone else doing it. She gets angry, the emotion fuelling her "like magic", and she holds a gun to his head. He goads her to pull the trigger, and even though a dark part of her inner psyche wants to it, she can't bring herself to go through with it.

Characters
(In order of appearance)
 * Corporal Ives
 * Colonel Muriel Frost
 * Hammond
 * Slayton
 * Alex Evening
 * Ace
 * Seventh Doctor
 * Pilot
 * Janice Evening
 * Uncle Totwald
 * Alison Fox
 * Janet Prince
 * Lucy Pritchard

Referenced only

 * Muriel Frost's mother

Continuity

 * Muriel Frost previously appeared in COMIC: The Mark of Mandragora.