
had to die anyway. Why not this way, in the unusual manner that Bax proposed?
'Very well. Arrange it, Chief. I will ask the people for their verdict.'
The Chief saluted. Eager to activate a vote-in, Bax turned back to his monitors and control
panel while the Governor started with faltering steps what seemed to him to be a long trek
back to his domain. Half-way across the communications room he paused and turned to Bax who
had just alerted the viewers of Varos to attend their screens.
'Thanks for the suggestion, Bax.' 'My pleasure, sir.' Bax next pressed the override button
that allowed him into the communications system of the guards of the Punishment Dome.
'End random pulses. Conserve c/b, inform prison control centre, prepare viewer warnings of
imminent public execution.'
With a judder and a jar the TARDIS tried to reach the time and destination decreed by her
co-ordinates. Anxiously, the Doctor and Peri watched the driving column rise and fall, then
hesitate and almost stop.
'Come on!' the Doctor urged. 'If we stop now Varos won't even have been colonised as a
prison planet!'
As if responding to her master's voice the TARDIS found a last plunge of energy from her
failing power circuits and teetered onwards towards the latter part of the twenty-third
century and the mining era of the planet Varos.
Jondar raised his head as the words heralding his death were spoken over him.
'For sedition, thought-rebellion and incitement of others to unionise and terrorise, the
vote of the people of Varos was for your death to take place by laser obliteration!'
Jondar tried to focus his thoughts. He heard the death sentence but the acute realisation
of it was yet to sweep over him.
'The Governor was to consider my appeal for clemency . . .'he faltered.
'Our Governor bows to the will of his people.' The Chief turned slightly so that the
watching camera could take in his left profile. He raised the proclamation document
dramatically and spoke with ominous finality. 'As System Arbiter and Chief Officer I
confirm that conditions of our constitution have been complied with. I therefore permit the
execution to proceed.'
'When?' was all Jondar could say hopelessly.
'At eight o'clock. Prime viewing time. You have enough time to compose yourself.' The Chief
paused slightly then added mockingly, 'All of five short minutes.'
All there was to do then was to flick the controlling
Q-switch on the RLBE and to withdraw with his guards. With a dramatic flourish, the Chief
rolled up the proclamation and turned away from the laser grille that already was beginning
to build up the power that, all too soon for Jondar, would bypass its control circuits and
hurl a beam of such immense force that it would obliterate Jondar and drive far into the
protective ceramic casing that protected the structure of the Punishment Dome.
Out of earshot of the microphones and with his back to the ever-watchful cameras above, the
Chief took a young guard, Maldak, aside. 'It's not certain when obliteration will take
place. Stay clear of the execution site. You have your anti-hallucination helmet?' Maldak
nodded, hoping the nervousness he felt would not be apparent to such a powerful authority
as the Chief. 'Switched on?' 'Yes, sir.'
'I wouldn't wish one of my guards to succumb to the phantoms of the Punishment Dome, not
with all of Varos watching.' 'No, sir.'
'Good.' The Chief glanced back at the condemned man in his chains and the pulsing,
throbbing Laser Obliteration Unit before him. Motioning his guards to him, the Chief and
his cohorts withdrew, marching away with robot-like precision.
Left with the lone guard, Jondar could feel the last minutes of his life thudding away. The
green pulse of the laser unit before him seemed to grow ever more intense, and now an
accompanying ominous whine began to grow, the pitch of which seemed to echo around the
chamber as if an elephant had been mortally wounded and had decided to share its death
throes with the unfortunate Jondar.
To Maldak, too, the sound seemed as much to come from behind him as from the designated
instrument of
execution. Nervously he risked a glance behind and saw-the blue blur of the TARDIS in its
first stage of materialisation. What Maldak had feared had begun to come true. He reached
upwards to check if the anti-hallucin switch was on. It was, but not working. Maldak
decided he couldn't disgrace the corps of guards by succumbing to imaginary dangers, not
with all of Varos watching. He decided to ignore the trumpetings and concentrate instead in