Wednesday, 8 March 2023

THE RIPPER AND THE WHONIVERSE, Part 3

Concluding my analysis of Doctor Who:
Matrix by Mike Tucker and Robert Perry

In "a sudden swirl of wind and leaves" the
Doctor now transforms fully into the Ripper
(page 73), an event foreseen in Mark
Michalowski's Relative Dementias (2002).
He attacks 'Dorothy' with a glass shard and
she flees, now cut and bloodied. Ace runs
into horse-slaughterer Henry Tomkins, who presumes that 'Leather Apron' [i] has
attacked her. "They say he's a medical
man" he states, which was a common
assumption from 1888 onwards. Tomkins
[ii] is the only real-life person connected
with the case to apear in Matrix, whilst the
generic Scotland Yard detective who later
questions Ace remains anonymous).
Later Ace takes a room in Whitechapel
Road, but she finds the area so different to
the East End seen in Illegal Alien (also by
 Tucker and Perry, 1997). When Jed retrieves the TARDIS telepathic
circuit he has a vision of the London Blitz, as well as seeing the
"Cheetah girl" Ace (see Survival).
The next day sees Kelly's murder in Miller's Court [5] - the only
one committed indoors - so we can assume that the time-travellers
arrived on Thursday November 8th 1888. Now posing as Dorothy
Gale (the heroine of The Wizard of Oz), Ace finds work in service at
 Treddle's Wharf, and later befriends Peter Ackroyd. Meanwhile, the
amnesiac Doctor is sheltered and christened Johnny by his new
friend, Joseph Liebermann (who claims to be over 1,900 years old
and may be the Wandering Jew of Biblical legend).
The funeral conducted at Christ Church, Spitalfields (p. 173) must
be Kelly's, since she was buried on November 19th [iii]. In attend-
ance at the graveside are the Doctor, Liebermann, and Malacroix,
who remarks that "the Jews will be blamed for this". This echoes
the real 'graffito' chalked on a wall at Goulston Street on the night
of the double event. Recorded thus (and removed on Sir Charles
Warren's orders): "The Juwes are the men That Will not be Blamed
 for nothing" the misspelling is believed to be deliberate. Allegedly
scrawled by the murderer, this message was left on a wall above
another clue, Eddowes' [4] bloody apron, wth an apparent double
meaning. It served as an anti-semitic reference left near Jewish
dwellings, besides containing the Masonic phrase "Juwes".
Malacroix then acquires Nichols' [1] blood-stained dress, adding
that "some people claimed that Martha Tabram had been the first
[victim], nearly a month earlier. They were wrong" (p. 204). He
seems well informed because many contemporaries assumed that
Tabram [iv] (along with at least three other non-canonical victims
[v]) was indeed killed by the Ripper.
When the Doctor eventually discovers the telepathic circuit, he
regains his memory. He recalls his last trial, and even senses his 
future gunshot injuries and consequent eighth incarnation. The 
Time Lord then confronts the Ripper in the crypt of Christ Church.
The killer is revealed as the Valeyard (see The Trial of a Time
Lord), and his lair is in fact the Doctor's warped TARDIS which
now houses the Dark Matrix. They battle on the bell-tower as the 
corrupted time-ship dies, and the Valeyard falls to his death.
As they prepare to leave London, the Doctor tells Ace that "those
particular five women had to die. Simply because that's the way
it happened". This reinforces the belief that there were indeed
five Ripper victims.

TO BE CONTINUED

KEY Canonical Murders:
[1] Mary Ann Nichols - Buck's Row, Friday August 31st 1888
[2] Annie Chapman - Hanbury St. Saturday September 8th
[3] Elizabeth Stride - Berner St. Sunday September 30th
[4] Catherine Eddowes - Mitre Square, also September 30th
[5] Mary Jane Kelly - Miller's Court, Friday November 9th

Notes
[i] Contemporaneous suspect John Pizer (1850-1897) was known in the
East End as Leather Apron and was arrested by Sergeant William Thicke
on September 10th, but was later cleared of all suspicion.
[ii] Tomkins was a witness at the Nichols inquest, and worked in Winthorp
Street at the time of her murder in neighbouring Buck's Row (now Durward
Street).
[iii] Kelly was actually interred at St. Patrick's RC Cemetary, Leytonstone.
[iv] Tabram was slain at 37 George Yard (now Gunthorpe Street) on
Tuesday August 7th.
[v] The eleven homicides known as the Whitechapel Murders (a purely
collective term for the concurrent police files) were committed in or near that district between 1888 and 1891, and is ascribed to an unknown perpetrator.
The first victim in the series was Emma Smith (attacked on Osborne Street on Tuesday April 3rd 1888), whilst Frances Coles was the last (slain at Swallow Gardens on Friday February 13th 1891).

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