This site is best viewed in
Firefox, Chrome or Safari
 
 

 
 
 
 

 
 
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
If you would like a link to your
website from inferno-fiction.co.uk
then please contact us via email at:
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
hite light: a strange kind of darkness, yet here, in a world devoid of comparatives, black could be any colour he chose to imagine.
 
And imagination was a friend once, but even that had left him now. Only a sterile residue of thoughts remained. Hazy conceptions of right and wrong, of good and evil, of love and war and of life and death still languished in what he believed to be his head, falling to develop beyond rudimentary synaptic functions.
 
The elementary biological circuitry remained, as ever, intact. What failed to coagulate was the rich heritage of notions and beliefs and memories of actual experience that all sentient beings possess. That his mind - completely deprived of sensory input, blinded by the light that was darkness - failed him again, delivered fresh urgency to his plight. Fighting to distinguish himself from the light that engulfed this world and enslaved his spirit, he had long since forgotten how to invent monsters that weren't really there, or how to create sounds from silence, or touch that which had no form.
 
 
Here in the silent, blinding solitude, without so much as a landscape or even a whisper of air for company, he could feel his body - such as he perceived it - rotting from within. Cell pulling from cell; the Self reduced to a nebulous assemblence of what might be. And, perhaps for the first time - for he had no recollection of such an experience, or indeed any experience - he glimpsed what it was to be afraid. And fear conspired with the light to consume him. He thought hard. The choice was simple: find someone who could provide a will, a context, a purpose, a form. Or else...
 
No. It would be too easy to curl-up and not exist, and become part of the void. There was no choice. He must think hard, reveal himself to a suitable host, a willing surrogate.
 
It tool a long time - perhaps forever - but at last his shapeless body began to solidify in to an idea.
 
 
 
'And does this idea of yours have a name?' inquired Verity Lambert.
 
'I call him the Doctor, and his time vessel TARDIS,' enthused Sydney Newman.
 
'So let me get this right. You are proposing a six-week mini-series about a...man, who travels through space-time in a police call box. What on Earth gave you that idea?' Lambert's tone of voice was a strange amalgam of incredulity and awe...
 
'Shall we say...divine inspiration, hmmm?' Sydney Newman spoke the words, but somehow he knew he had no choice in the matter; he was talking out of compulsion.
 
Winning his freedom the Doctor stared at the board, carefully appraising all possible moves with machine-like efficiency. Hmmm, Neanderthal Man, and then a little peace-making on Skaro, he thought to himself.
 
He knew the game wouldn't end there; perhaps it would never end. The idea, you see, now had a mind - and body - of his own.
 
written by
STEPHEN J THOMAS

copyright 2009
 
For Marnie and Sasha, because something's never end.
SJT
 
 
 
Welcome to inferno-fiction.co.uk.
 
Inferno Fiction is an on-line Doctor Who Fiction Fanzine. First created in the 80's when fanzines in the printed form were the norm, the fanzine has now leapt onto the world wide web and is enjoyed by many across the world!
 
The stories featured are from the original pages of the printed fanzine and now include a collection of new material.
If you would like to contribute then please email them to: infernofiction@gmail.com

 
    
 
 
 
This site is best viewed in
Firefox, Chrome or Safari
 
 
ISSUE THIRTEEN
 
by Francis Cave
 by Meg MacDonald

AN UNEARTHLY MAN
by Thomas Ahearn

ANAGRAM OF THE DALEKS
by Nic Ford

THE SHADOW MAKERS
PART ONE
by Joe Ford

THE COMING OF THE DALEKS
by Nathan Mullins

'LA CHANSON DE TRISTESSE'
by Julie Kay

PARK JUNCTION
by Colin John
 
ISSUE TWELVE
 
by Meg MacDonald
by Thomas Ahearn
by Shams Uddin
by Francis Cave
by Nathan Mullins
 
by Julie kay

ISSUE ELEVEN

by the bunny in the tardis
 
by Jonathan Whitelaw
 
by Shams Uddin
 
by Alasdair I. Shaw
 
by Stellar Explorer
 
by Will Barber
 
ISSUE TEN
 
by Colin John
 
by Darren Field
 
by Huw Llewellyn-Davies
 
by Nathan Mullins
 
by Martin Day

ISSUE NINE

by David Hankinson
 
by Ian McPherson
 
by Colin John
 
by Darren Field
 
by Michael Stevens
 
by Nathan Mullins

ISSUE EIGHT

by Simon Cogan
 
by Neil Hunter
 
by Nathan Mullins
 
by Robert Hammond
 
by Huw Llewellyn Davies
 
by Colin John

ISSUE SEVEN

by Simon Cogan
 
by Darren Field
 
by Stephen Lyons
 
by Robert Hammond
 
by James D. Quinton
 
by Neil Hunter

ISSUE SIX

by Robert Hammond
 
by Darren Field
 
by Neil Hunter
 
by Darren Field
 
by Colin John

ISSUE FIVE

by Martin Day
 
by Darren Field
 
by Ian McPherson
 
by Colin John
 
by Robert hammond
 
by Stuart Brown

ISSUE FOUR

by David Agnew
 
by Stuart Brown
 
by Ian McPherson
 
by Darren Hitchings
 
by Robert Hammond
 
by Ian McPherson

ISSUE THREE

by Ian McPherson
 
by Stephen J Thomas
 
by Colin John
 
by Chris Orton
 
by Andrew Lane
 
by Ian McPherson
 
by Robert Hammond

ISSUE TWO

by Chris Orton
 
by Robert Hammond
 
by Colin John
 
by James Watts
 
by Ian McPherson

ISSUE ONE

by Francis Cave
 
by Ian McPherson
 
by Colin John
 
by Ian McPherson

 
Inferno Fiction and Inferno Productions are copyright to Colin-John Rodgers 2009-2013.
All written material and artwork is copyright to their respective authors, artists and to Inferno Productions 2013.
Inferno Fiction and Inferno Productions are non-profit making projects.
Doctor Who is copyright to the BBC. No infringement intended.