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Dr. Who - BBC New Series 29

Page 18

by The Eyeless # Lance Parkin


  ‘It’s called Dance of Days. They must have moved it from the city this morning. Is this what you were going to show me?’

  ‘No. Look around.’

  There were people everywhere. All ages, plenty of kids.

  The distant buildings of Arcopolis were covered in ivy, most of them. Others had tarnished, become brick red.

  There was a gap in the skyline where the Fortress had been, like the city was missing a tooth.

  A crowd was gathering around the TARDIS.

  ‘It took us weeks to get it here,’ a man said.

  Alsa wouldn’t have recognised him if he hadn’t had his hands in his pockets. He wore a tool belt, and his hair was starting to thin a little.

  ‘Gar?’

  He nodded.

  Alsa turned, drank it all in. ‘This is the future.’

  ‘Yup,’ the Doctor said. He was also looking around.

  Everyone clearly knew who he was. Many of them had been there twenty years before. The others must have heard stories about him. An older woman stepped out from the group.

  ‘This is your time machine?’ Dela asked. Her hair was extraordinarily, vividly white, now. She looked radiant.

  ‘Yes.’

  ‘It doesn’t look like a time machine, it looks like…’

  She wasn’t sure what it looked like.

  ‘There’s a reason,’ the Doctor assured her. ‘A really good one.’

  ‘You don’t look a day older.’

  ‘I’m not. Not quite.’

  She ran a hand along his temple. ‘You still have the bruise.’

  ‘You must have scores more children by now,’ the

  Doctor said lightly.

  ‘Only one more. Lios. A boy. Well, a man now. It’s all grandchildren these days.’

  The Doctor beamed. ‘Hang on. Almost forgot. Brought you a present.’

  He nipped back into the TARDIS.

  ‘And the weapon?’ Dela asked.

  Alsa held out a small, charred piece of metal for Dela and Gar to inspect. ‘We went to an asteroid – like a little planet. It didn’t have any air, so we had to wear spacesuits. There was a plasma vent, like a pit of energy.

  We dropped it in there and the weapon just opened up. We couldn’t look at what was inside, but once it was out, it couldn’t survive in our universe. Then we went to another planet and ate weird stuff called “burgers”.’

  The Doctor emerged from the TARDIS holding a birdcage. Inside were two birds that would have fitted in the palm of his hand. Their feathers were a rainbow, from their red caps to their violet wingtips.

  ‘Kegronian Halcyons,’ the Doctor said. ‘A breeding pair. Widely regarded as having the most beautiful plumage and song of any bird in the universe. Very adaptable. Not much meat on them, but… well, that’s good news for the Kegronian Halcyon, isn’t it, all things considered?’

  The Doctor opened a small door on the side of the cage, and the two birds pushed their way out, then spread their colourful wings and they were off, swooping around each other, darting towards the city and so many potential roosts.

  The others watched the birds, but the Doctor was staring at the necklace Dela wore – a glass pendant.

  She glanced over at him. ‘They’re all over the city, get washed up in the streams. The water wears them smooth.’

  Gar was handing the Doctor one, but he held up his hand. ‘Won’t work on me. Alsa?’

  Alsa took one. ‘Oh…’

  ‘Memories?’ the Doctor asked.

  ‘Yes,’ Gar said. ‘Some from the Eyeless, some from the ghosts.’

  ‘A source of technical knowledge?’

  ‘And a way of broadening our horizons.’

  Dela smiled. ‘Gyll,’ she said, touching her stone. ‘At least… I like to think so.’

  ‘So you go into the City, now?’ Alsa asked.

  ‘Yes,’ Dela said. ‘We choose to. We have choices, now.

  There are so many of us, we’ve actually lost count. Which is silly, there aren’t all that many. Thousands.’

  Alsa smiled.

  ‘It makes everything a lot easier.’

  The Doctor was grinning. ‘Who says there are no second chances, eh? What wally ever said that? See, Alsa, it all works out.’

  ‘Yes…’

  ‘So now you’ve seen this, I can take you back, safe in the knowledge that it all turns out for the best and—’

  ‘Doctor,’ Dela cut in, ‘it didn’t happen that way.’

  ‘It doesn’t what?’

  ‘This is the first time we’ve seen either of you for twenty years. You said before that if it isn’t what happened, it can’t happen.’

  ‘I…’ The Doctor was lost for words. ‘We must have…

  no. It’s the plan, you see. A bit of Ghost of Christmas Future, just enough to make Alsa mend her ways – that was what that McDuck reference was all about. I really liked the McDuck reference.’

  ‘You never came back. Is that bad?’

  ‘It means…’ the Doctor began, ‘we must have got sidetracked. Or… worse.’

  ‘You’re so thick,’ Alsa said.

  ‘I’m not,’ the Doctor objected. ‘I’m great.’

  ‘Don’t you get it?’

  The Doctor looked around, nonplussed.

  ‘I get off here,’ Alsa explained. ‘I stay in the future.

  Can I come back, Dela? I know all about obstetrics.’

  Dela raised an eyebrow.

  ‘You don’t have to,’ the Doctor said. It wasn’t clear if he meant that Alsa didn’t have to stay or that Dela didn’t have to take her. ‘Although, come to think of it, that would work.’

  ‘I just told you it would…’ Alsa pointed out.

  ‘I was talking in terms of the timeline,’ the Doctor said airily.

  ‘You can be a child here, Alsa,’ Dela said. ‘There are plenty of other children now. You can be grown up. Only if you want to, only when you’re ready.’

  The Doctor was beaming. ‘There are choices here for you, now. Yes. The perfect solution. If anyone asks, this was the plan all along. What a great idea this was of mine.’

  ‘You could stay, too, Doctor,’ Dela said.

  ‘Well,’ he said, smile flashing, ‘it wouldn’t be fair on the rest of the universe, you having me all to yourself, would it?’

  ‘Life’s not fair,’ Alsa noted.

  The Doctor sniffed the air, turned on his heel, drank in the scene. He was lost in thought for a moment, then realised he’d placed his hand on the side of the TARDIS.

  There was a big, wide universe out there and he had his second chance, too.

  ‘Life’s not fair?’ he echoed. ‘Well… I’ll have to see what I can do about that.’

  Acknowledgements

  Thanks to Jon Blum, Graeme Burk, Mark Clapham, Mark

  Jones, Danielle Labbate, Philip Purser-Hallard, Kate Orman, Lars Pearson, Lloyd Rose, Jim Smith and Robert Smith. Thanks to the many and various behind the scenes people, including, but no doubt not limited to, Lee Binding, Albert DePetrillo, Caroline Newbury, Nicholas Payne, Gary Russell and Steve Tribe. Special thanks to Justin Richards and to Russell T Davies.

  David Tennant reads Pest Control

  Written by Peter Anghelides

  Launching a new series of audio exclusive stories from BBC Audiobooks Also available from BBC Audiobooks Abridged readings of the Doctor Who novels by cast members from the BBC TV series, with bonus author interviews The Stone Rose

  The Feast of the

  The Resurrection Casket

  by Jacqueline Rayner

  Drowned

  by Justin Richards

  Read by

  by Stephen Cole

  Read by

  David Tennant

  Read by

  David Tennant

  David Tennant

  The Nightmare of

  The Art of

  The Price of Paradise

  Black Island

  Destruction

  by C
olin Brake

  by Mike Tucker

  by Stephen Cole

  Read by

  Read by

  Read by

  Shaun Dingwall

  Anthony Head

  Don Warrington

  Sting of the Zygons

  The Last Dodo

  Wooden Heart

  by Stephen Cole

  by Jacqueline Rayner

  by Martin Day

  Read by

  Read by

  Read by

  Reggie Yates

  Freema Agyeman

  Adjoa Andoh

  Wetworld

  Forever Autumn

  Sick Building

  By Mark Michalowski

  By Mark Morris

  By Paul Magrs

  Read by

  Read by

  Read by

  Freema Agyeman

  Will Thorp

  Will Thorp

  Peacemaker

  The Pirate Loop

  Wishing Well

  By James Swallow

  By Simon Guerrier

  By Trevor Baxendale

  Read by

  Read by

  Read by

  Will Thorp

  Freema Agyeman

  Debbie Chazen

  Available on CD or as a digital download AUDIO – BOOKS ON THE GO

  Also available from BBC Books

  featuring the Doctor and Martha

  as played by David Tennant and Freema Agyeman:

  Beautiful Chaos

  by Gary Russell

  ISBN 978 1 846 07563 6

  UK £6.99 US $11.99/$14.99 CDN

  Donna Noble is back home in London, catching up with her family and generally giving them all the gossip about her journeys. Her grandfather is especially overjoyed –he’s discovered a new star and had it named after him. He takes the Doctor, as his special guest, to the naming ceremony.

  But the Doctor is suspicious about some of the other changes he can see in Earth’s heavens. Particularly that bright star, right there. No, not that one, that one, there, on the left…

  The world’s population is slowly being converted to a new path, a new way of thinking. Something is coming to Earth, an ancient force from the Dark Times. Something powerful, angry, and all-consuming…

  Document Outline

  Also available from BBC Audiobooks

  Table of Contents

  PART ONE

  PART TWO

  Also available from BBC Audiobooks

 

 

 


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