by Doctor Who
The old village well is just a curiosity – something to attract tourists intrigued by stories of lost treasure, or visitors just making a wish.
Unless something alien and terrifying could be lurking inside the well. Something utterly monstrous that causes nothing but death and destruction.
But who knows the real truth about the well? Who wishes to unleash the hideous force it contains? What terrible consequences will follow the search for a legendary treasure hidden at the bottom?
No one wants to believe the Doctor’s warning about the deadly horror lying in wait – but soon they’ll wish they had. . .
Featuring the Doctor and Martha as played by David Tennant and Freema Agyeman in the hit series from BBC Television.
Wishing Well
BY TREVOR BAXENDALE
2 4 6 8 10 9 7 5 3 1
Published in 2007 by BBC Books, an imprint of Ebury Publishing.
Ebury Publishing is a division of the Random House Group Ltd.
© Trevor Baxendale, 2007
Trevor Baxendale has asserted his right to be identified as the author of this Work in accordance with the Copyright, Design and Patents Act 1988.
Doctor Who is a BBC Wales production for BBC One Executive Producers: Russell T Davies and Julie Gardner Series Producer: Phil Collinson
Original series broadcast on BBC Television. Format © BBC 1963.
‘Doctor Who’, TARDIS’ and the Doctor Who logo are trademarks of the British Broadcasting Corporation and are used under licence.
A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior permission of the copyright owner.
The Random House Group Ltd Reg. No. 954009.
Addresses for companies within the Random House Group can be found at www.randomhouse.co.uk.
ISBN 978 1 84607 3489
The Random House Group Limited supports the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC), the leading international forest certification organisation. All our titles that are printed on Greenpeace approved FSC certified paper carry the FSC logo. Our paper procurement. Policy can be found at www.rbooks.co.uk/environment
Series Consultant: Justin Richards
Project Editor: Steve Tribe
Cover design by Lee Binding © BBC 2007
Typeset in Albertina and Deviant Strain
Printed and bound in Germany by GGP Media GmbH
For my Three Wishes –
Martine, Luke and Konnie
and for my Dad, Alan Baxendale,
for still enjoying Doctor Who
Contents
Prologue
1
One
7
Two
11
Three
17
Four
25
Five
31
Six
37
Seven
45
Eight
55
Nine
61
Ten
67
Eleven
71
Twelve
75
Thirteen
81
Fourteen
89
Fifteen
99
Sixteen
105
Seventeen
113
Eighteen
119
Nineteen
125
Twenty
131
Twenty-One
141
Twenty-Two
149
Twenty-Three
159
Twenty-Four
169
Twenty-Five
179
Acknowledgements
183
‘At the end of this tunnel is the treasure,’ said Nigel Carson.
The two men with him started to laugh.
‘What’s so funny?’ he asked. He shone his torch back at I hem so that he could see their faces.
Ben Seddon was a wiry young man with mousy hair and steel-rimmed spectacles. There was just a hint of derision in his thin-lipped smile. ‘Come on, Nigel! Have you listened to yourself?’ He adopted a melodramatic tone. ‘“At the end of this tunnel is the treasure!” Honestly, I feel like a character in a kid’s adventure book.’
‘Get real,’ Nigel said. ‘We’re talking two million quid in gold here.
This is strictly for grown-ups.’
‘Well, I’ve always liked a good secret tunnel,’ said Duncan Goode appreciatively. He was taller, bigger, with untidy blond hair. There was an amused glint in his blue eyes and he spoke with a soft Welsh accent. ‘Especially one that leads to buried treasure.’ He said the last two words with gleeful emphasis.
Both Duncan and Ben started to laugh again, and Nigel swore at them. ‘You weren’t laughing when I showed you the map,’ he snarled.
‘You weren’t laughing when I showed you exactly where the gold was hidden and how we could get it. You weren’t laughing when you both realised how much we’ll all be worth when we find it!’
‘Lottery rollover,’ said Ben, sounding a little more serious. ‘I understood that bit all right.’
‘Sorry, Nigel,’ said Duncan. ‘We’re just a bit, y’know, hyped up.
That’s all.’
‘We don’t have much time,’ said Nigel. ‘Let’s just get on with it.’
Nigel pointed his torch back into the darkness ahead, but the beam just disappeared as if swallowed whole by a huge, black mouth. In this section of the tunnel, there was just enough room for a man to stand up straight and hold his arms out at the sides. His fingertips 1
could just brush the walls. It was cold and damp and claustrophobic, but none of that mattered.
They were, after all, going to be rich. The plans showed the exact position of the tunnel’s end, and the treasure chamber was just beyond that. They weren’t far from it now.
Ben was still smiling. ‘What are you going to spend your share on, Dune?’
Duncan had to stoop slightly to avoid scraping his head on the ceiling. ‘I dunno. A nice car, probably. Nothing too fancy, mind. I don’t want to blow it all at once.’
‘You’ll be able to afford a whole fleet of nice cars,’ snapped Nigel.
‘All right, nice cars, plural. Oh, and a new house for my mum, definitely. And if there’s anything left after that, a Cardiff Blues season ticket. How about you, Ben?’
Ben licked his lips. ‘First off, I’ll pay all my debts. I’ve got a student loan like you wouldn’t believe. If there’s anything left after that, then I might set myself up in business. Computer services, that kind of thing. And the car I’d buy – the first car I’d buy – would be one of those slick Aston Martins, like James Bond has.’
‘Sounds good. What about you, Nigel?’
Nigel’s voice echoed irritably from the shadows ahead. ‘What do you mean?’
‘What are you going to spend the loot on?’
‘I don’t know. Does it matter?’
‘You must have some idea!’
‘There’s more to this than fancy cars and presents for your parents.’
Nigel looked disparagingly at them again and sighed. ‘I sometimes wonder why I brought you two along. You’re like a pair of big kids.’
‘Sorry Nigel,’ they chorused dutifully. ‘Shut up. Here’s the end of the tunnel.’
Nigel’s torch beam flickered across a wall of soil. He played the light all around the area and above t
heir heads. Thin, stringy roots hung down from the ceiling, full of thick cobwebs and tiny, scuttling spiders.
‘Yuck,’ said Ben. ‘Creepy-crawlies.’
2
‘Ignore them and they’ll ignore you,’ advised Duncan softly. ‘Just don’t offer them a share of the loot!’
They chuckled again but Nigel held a hand up for silence. ‘Belt up, you two. This is it. We’re right on top of a pile of eighteenth-century gold that’s going to make us rich beyond belief.’
Duncan moved forward, touching the wall of soil, appraising the job as best he could in the meagre light. ‘Just a few metres beyond this point, you reckon?’
‘That’s right.
According to Ben’s computer model, the treasure chamber’s not much further along the tunnel – ten metres, tops.’
Duncan looked at Ben. ‘Fair bit of digging.’
‘Worth it, though,’ Ben said.
‘Well, whatever happens – it’ll be a laugh, won’t it?’
‘I’m in this for more than laughs.’ Ben was looking serious now, staring at the tunnel end as if he could see through it to the treasure beyond. The proximity of all that gold had dampened his sense of humour. ‘When do we start?’
‘As soon as you can,’ Nigel replied. ‘I’ve arranged for picks, shovels and a wheelbarrow. There are some heavy-duty lamps as well – you’ll need light to work by.’
‘And what about you?’ asked Duncan. ‘What are you going to do while we’re digging?’
‘Maintain our cover, of course. As far as the people up there are concerned,’ Nigel gestured upwards, through the roof of the tunnel,
‘we’re assessing the area for the tourist board. I’ve booked us into three rooms at the local pub.’
‘Hiding in plain view, eh?’
‘Exactly.’
‘Well, come on then,’ said Ben Seddon. ‘What are we waiting for?’
Nigel told them where the equipment was and the two men set off back up the tunnel to fetch it.
After a while, when he was absolutely certain he was alone, Nigel took a small object wrapped in chamois leather out of his jacket pocket.
Carefully, almost lovingly, he unwrapped the little parcel.
3
Inside was the stone.
He honestly didn’t know what else to call it. To him, it was always just the stone.
It wasn’t very big; about the size of a man’s heart. It was smooth and dark, like a large pebble, but unlike any other stone it was warm to the touch. Always.
‘How close?’ Nigel asked in a whisper. ‘How close am I now?’
The stone didn’t always respond to direct questions. But if Nigel relaxed, if he emptied his mind of all thoughts except for those the stone needed, he could often sense some kind of reply. He rested the fingers of his right hand on the stone and closed his eyes. After a few moments he could feel the heat spreading through his hand and arm, as if thin tendrils of fire were working their way upwards, slowly and inexorably, towards his brain.
It still frightened him when he did this, when he tried to commu-nicate with this lifeless lump of rock. He could feel his pulse quick-ening, his breath growing shallow, his skin prickling with sweat. It always felt as if he shouldn’t be doing this, as if he was attempting something that was strictly forbidden and incredibly dangerous. But, unfortunately for Nigel Carson, that was exactly the kind of feeling that spurred him on.
Slowly, slowly, the warmth entered his mind and, without warning, suddenly gave way to a piercing coldness, as if a steel blade was being inserted into his brain.
–very close–
Nigel opened his eyes. ‘It’s here, isn’t it?’
–just a little further–
‘What will I find? What is it?’
–treasure–
‘Yes, I know, but. . . ’ Nigel swallowed. ‘There has to be more, doesn’t there?’
–there is more–
A smile began to spread across Nigel’s lips. But it wasn’t his smile.
It was the smile of the stone.
–much more–
4
‘It won’t be long now,’ Nigel assured it.
–the rising is near–
Nigel didn’t understand half of what the stone said to him, but it didn’t seem to matter. Yes, it scared him. Yes, it sometimes felt as though he was going mad and there was nothing he could do to stop it.
But no, he wouldn’t have stopped even if he could.
Not even when the stone forced its way deep inside his mind and made him fill the empty tunnel with a dark, desperate scream of pain.
5
‘I wish every day could be like this,’ said Martha Jones.
She was walking through the woods, occasionally feeling the heat of the sun on her skin as it dropped down through the bright green leaves above, listening to the sound of the birds singing from the branches and the soft buzz of insects in the undergrowth. It was a lovely day to be on Earth.
Martha Jones had visited the past and the future and alien worlds in distant galaxies. She loved her life, she loved seeing new times and places, but she never minded when the TARDIS brought her back home, as it sometimes did, to England in the early twenty-first century.
And that was because Martha knew that it didn’t really matter where –or when – you found yourself; what mattered was who you were with.
The Doctor and Martha had already dropped in on the Italian Re-naissance, hopped from world to world across the Vega Opsis system, and then visited the Frozen Castles of the Ice Warriors before finally deciding that the day could best be rounded off by a traditional English cream tea.
‘With scones,’ the Doctor had announced with his customary enthu-siasm. ‘We must have scones, with strawberry jam and clotted cream!
7
I know just the place.’ And so he’d sent the TARDIS hurtling through the Time Vortex to materialise in this very spot.
And it was, as Martha had already commented, absolutely perfect.
At the moment, she simply couldn’t wish for anything better.
‘Be careful what you wish for,’ the Doctor commented.
His hands were stuffed in the trouser pockets of his pinstriped suit as he strolled along.
‘Why?’
He shrugged. ‘Well, I can’t imagine ever wanting every day to be the same.’
Smiling in agreement, Martha took him by the arm and pulled him closer. ‘Come on, you, I’m hungry. It’s nearly teatime and I need clotted cream.’
They were walking down a slope of woody earth that led to a narrow road. A short wade through some ferns brought them to a cross-roads. There was a signpost.
‘Creighton Mere one mile that way,’ read Martha, pointing down the road, ‘Ickley five miles that way.’
‘Which d’you think?’ the Doctor asked her. ‘I quite like the sound of Ickley.’
‘Nearer the better as far as I’m concerned. Let’s try Creighton Mere.’
‘I’d keep away from that one if I were you,’ said an old, dry voice from the roadside.
There was a man sitting on a stile, half hidden by the hedgerow. He was wearing filthy old boots and a worn-out parka. He was old, with weathered brown skin and matted hair, and sharp eyes peering out from beneath bushy grey eyebrows.
‘I beg your pardon?’ Martha said politely.
‘Creighton Mere,’ the old man said. ‘Wouldn’t bother with it if I were you.’ At least, that’s what she thought he said. It was difficult to tell, because the huge, tangled beard which surrounded his mouth muffled half of what he was saying.
‘Why not?’ asked the Doctor.
The old man pulled a face, his lips shining wetly. ‘It’s not a very nice place to live.’
8
‘We don’t want to live there,’ said Martha. ‘We’re only visiting.’
‘Hmph,’ said the man.
‘Besides, it’s too far to Ickley,’ Martha added. ‘And we’re walking.’
> ‘You’re not walkers,’ the old man noted. ‘You’re not dressed for walkin’, either of you.’ He pointed an old stick at their feet. ‘You got nice shoes on, an’ he’s got trainers. So you must have a car somewhere.’
‘We don’t have a car,’ Martha said.
‘We have a police box,’ the Doctor added.
The man’s eyebrows drew together. ‘Police box?’
‘Yep. Big blue one, parked back there. It’s better for the environment than a car.’
The old man’s eyes twinkled at this. ‘You could have a point there.’
‘So what’s wrong with Creighton Mere, anyway?’
The lips pursed inside the beard. ‘Nothing much, I suppose,’ he said slowly. ‘To look at.’
The Doctor raised an eyebrow. ‘Well, we’re probably not going to do much more than look at it, are we, Martha?’ Martha was about to say that a cup of tea and a slice of cake wouldn’t go amiss, but then thought that might sound a bit unfair to a vagrant.
‘Please yourselves, then,’ the old man said. ‘Don’t say I didn’t warn you.’
‘Warn us?’ Martha repeated. ‘About what?’
‘About Creighton Mere.’
‘You haven’t actually warned us about anything specific.’
‘Well, there ain’t anything specific I can warn you about. It’s more of a feelin’.’
‘Ah!’ the Doctor nodded as if he understood perfectly.
‘What I’m feeling at the moment is hungry,’ Martha said. She turned to the Doctor. ‘Let’s carry on.’
‘Just take care of yourselves,’ the old man said, not unkindly. ‘In Creighton Mere.’
‘Thanks, anyway,’ Martha said. She gave the man a little wave, and he nodded at her as they turned to go.
9
‘What was all that about?’ Martha demanded when they were out of earshot.
‘Oh, take no notice,’ the Doctor said airily. ‘He’s probably been moved on by the locals or something and he’s got a grudge against the village.’
Martha shivered, remembering the man’s sharp little eyes. They had seemed to look right through her at the end, almost as if he was committing every detail of her to memory.
10
They had walked another mile or so when a Land-Rover roared around the corner behind them and gave a blast on its horn. The Doctor and Martha jumped out of the way as the battered old vehicle skidded to a halt beside them. In the driver’s seat was a beaky-nosed old woman in a bush hat and camouflage jacket.