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eri glanced around her room for what she had decided would be the last time. The perfectly smooth and white walls were still as inviting, and the strange mixture of ages and civilizations which was conjured up by the scattering of furniture still held its mysterious and exciting quality which Peri found so appealing. Yet she realised, it was time to go.

As she walked along the gleaming white corridors to reach the exit, Peri thought about the whole concept of the place, and how she was probably throwing away a million chances; throwing away the chance to visit a million planets, times and places like toys which had become bored with, with a few simple steps from an ageless blue box and back into the life she once led. She said to herself, that in this situation it was easy for her to leave home and return here. Yet, that fact would remain forever, and she could not. She also thought of one major obstacle, one thing she had to do soon which she was not going to like one bit. She had to tell the Doctor.

The Doctor was happy. The Doctor was cheerful. The Doctor was excited. The TARDIS was not. with tender fingertips and a warm smile he tried to coax her into going where he wanted her to, yet somehow she knew the dangers and perils of Sector Seventy-seven, and in particular the one jungle planet of Gestrex, upon whose soils the Doctor hoped to run about taking samples of the plant life nobody had previously dared to interfere with. Therefore, every time the Doctor tried to surprise the console by suddenly ramming a certain string of co-ordinates into the computer bank the room buckled and swayed madly, and tried to make him give up his quest.

'I will not give up!' the Doctor roared as Peri entered, two suitcases in her hands and a shoulder bag in the appropriate place.

'Doctor...'

The Doctor clung on to the console and tapped the numbers into the controls once more. 'Hold tight, Peri!' he ordered reprovingly when she had been thrown to the floor a few times. 'The TARDIS is being awkward.'

Peri didn't really want to listen to more of the Doctor's babbling, that wild and crazy talk of far and distant lands which might persuade her to take her luggage back to her room. 'Doctor, don't make this more awkward than it already is...'

'I assure you, I'm trying not to, my girl.' he said heftily and tried once again. 'I want to get there as much as you do.'

'To Earth?'

The Doctor tried to make his sigh as loud as possible, 'No, Peri. Not to Earth. We've had far too much of that planet for now. I mean, look what it was like at Longleat...'
'Sorry?'

'Oh, nothing...'

'Doctor...'

'Yes?'

'I want to go home.'

~~~

he TARDIS materialised on a busy New York street, inside its occupants stared at the scanner screen showing the busy scene.

'You realise of course, that once you walk from this door, there'll be no coming back. Not ever?' said the Doctor. The TARDIS materialised on a busy New York street and the doors opened. Two suitcases forced themselves through the open doorway and were unceremoniously dumped on the pavement. The Doctor looked up and waited for Peri to follow him out. When she did came out, there was a trickle of watery eye, make-up down one of her cheeks.

'Well, I would have thought you'd have been just a little more nice about the whole thing.'

'Nice?' shouted the Doctor to a passing dog. 'Nice? What do you want me to do, bake a cake or something?'

A fresh tear ran down Peri's cheek and she picked up the heavy luggage. If the Doctor wasn't going to be emotional, then she wasn't going to make a spectacle of herself in public. She tried to hold out her right hand. 'Well, Doctor, thanks for looking after me and all that...see you around.'

The Doctor looked down at the hand as if not knowing that he should shake it. With an ungracious sniff he turned his back and went into the TARDIS. The doors slammed shut and Peri stood looking in wonderment at the rapidly fading police box shell.

Within, the Doctor turned disconsolately from the controls and wondered what he had just done, and why. Peri had been a part of his life for quite a few years, and like a coward he had shunned all farewells when it was time for her to go. He found an armchair and sank despairingly into it. He tried to recall the past few days, searching for the reason why see had suddenly left. But it wasn't as if she'd been distinctly unhappy, or that they'd had an argument. In fact, they'd been getting along quite well...

He found himself getting up from the chair and leaving the console room, delving deeper into the TARDIS and then suddenly stopping at the end of one of the corridors, in front of a door marked 'Peri's Room - Time Lord and limeys keep out!'. He smiled slightly and turned the brass door knob. 

 
 
 
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

 
    
 
 

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ISSUE FOURTEEN
 
by Ashley Myles
 
by Al Dickerson
 
coming soon RULER OF THE FOURTH DIMENSION
by Sean Bassett
 
coming soon SILENCING THE BEAST
by Meg MacDonald
 
coming soon THE COMING OF THE DALEKS
by Nathan Mullins
 
coming soon THE GIFT
by Michael Falino
 
coming soon THE SHADOW MAKERS
PART TWO
by Joe Ford
 
coming soon WHAT PLANET
by Michael Baxter
 
ISSUE THIRTEEN
 
by Francis Cave
 by Meg MacDonald
by Thomas Ahearn
by Nic Ford
by Andy Weston
by Julie Kay
 
by Nick Wheeler
by Ashley Myles
 
ISSUE TWELVE
 
by Meg MacDonald
by Thomas Ahearn
by Shams Uddin
by Francis Cave
by Nathan Mullins
 
by Julie kay

ISSUE ELEVEN

bY Meg MacDonald

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.