by Doctor Who
‘I couldn’t resist it. All I knew was that I had to get to the treasure at the bottom of the well.’
‘The stone’s treasure – the Vurosis itself.’
Nigel looked down. ‘I didn’t know that at the time. But the closer I got – the more obvious it became that the treasure wasn’t gold or jewels or anything else. It was something much better. Much more valuable.’
‘Such as?’
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Nigel shrugged. ‘I’m not sure any more. It seemed very clear to me at the time. Power, I suppose. It wanted power. I wanted power.’
‘The closer Nigel got to his target, the more the stone’s own thoughts and feelings affected him,’ explained the Doctor. ‘At the end the two were probably indistinguishable.’
‘But you must have suspected something was wrong.’
insisted
Martha.
Nigel frowned, uncertain. ‘I suppose so. The stone did start to behave very oddly.’
‘You mean more oddly than any other kind of talking stone?’ muttered Gaskin.
‘It became very insistent, impatient. Almost aggressive.’ Nigel’s hands trembled on the table. ‘It started to. . . hurt me.’
‘Deliberately?’ Martha asked.
‘I don’t know. I don’t think so. It just didn’t seem to care,’ he swallowed. ‘How I felt didn’t matter.’
‘And now?’
‘Nothing.’ Nigel shut his eyes. ‘Just nothing.’
They all found themselves looking at the stone on the table. It seemed so innocent and harmless. ‘So what’s it doing now?’ asked Martha.
‘I have no idea,’ replied Nigel sadly.
‘Shall we find out?’ said the Doctor.
A space was quickly cleared on the kitchen table. The Doctor placed the brain carefully in the middle, put on his glasses and fished out his sonic screwdriver.
‘There’s a low-level field of background radiation surrounding it,’
said the Doctor, scanning the brain with the screwdriver. He glanced up at Nigel. ‘That’s what probably killed your granddad in the end, by the way. Prolonged exposure is usually fatal.’
Everyone took a couple of steps back from the kitchen table, leaving the Doctor alone. He looked up and smiled wryly over his spectacles at them. ‘It’s all right. . . a few minutes won’t do anyone any harm.’
‘Perhaps it’s dead,’ suggested Angela hopefully.
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‘Nah,’ said the Doctor. ‘Something like this doesn’t just die. It’s waiting.’
‘Waiting for what?’ asked Martha.
The Doctor brandished his sonic screwdriver. ‘Let’s try asking it.’
‘Is there anything that device can’t do, Doctor?’ asked Angela.
‘Well, it can’t make a decent cup of tea. . . ’
Sadie took the hint and put the kettle on. Everyone else watched the Doctor as he made a series of adjustments to the screwdriver and then pointed it at the brain. The tip glowed and the brain was bathed in a cool blue light. No response. The screwdriver emitted a high-pitched whirr as the Doctor made further alterations to the settings and then tried again.
This time the result was spectacular.
The stone cracked open and a jagged flash of green light jumped straight out at the Doctor. He was hurled backwards, chair and all, to crash onto the kitchen floor.
‘Doctor!’ Martha ran to him but she was too late. The Doctor lay sprawled on his back, eyes closed, skin white. ‘Doctor! Are you OK?
Can you hear me?’
No response.
Martha looked back at the brain. It sat on the table, unchanged. It had sealed itself up and now it looked as dormant as ever. It showed no sign of life at all.
And neither did the Doctor.
‘What’s happened?’ demanded Angela, looking at Nigel ‘What did it do to him?’
Nigel looked shocked. ‘I’ve no idea!’
Sadie had knelt down by Martha and was resting her fingertips against the Doctor’s throat. ‘No pulse,’ she said gravely. ‘I think you’d better call an ambulance!’
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They laid him out on the kitchen floor, more or less where he fell.
Someone found a cushion to put under his head. His skin was bone-white and as cold as marble. He was hardly breathing.
Of course, at first they had all thought he was dead, but Martha knew that the Doctor’s pulse was much slower than a human’s and the best way to check it was to listen to his chest: after she had managed to quieten everyone down, she had detected the faintest beat on the right-hand side.
Sadie still wanted to send for an ambulance, but Martha had managed to dissuade her; she knew it would only complicate matters.
Eventually, unsettled and strangely embarrassed, everyone else had filed out of the kitchen and left Martha alone with him.
Carefully she folded the Doctor’s glasses up and put them back in his inside pocket, along with the sonic screwdriver. She straightened his collar and brushed the spiky fringe of hair away from his forehead.
Then she sat on a stool and watched him.
Gaskin sought out a quiet corner in the music room and sat down on his own. He felt exhausted, his mind in a whirl. He knew he should be doing something positive, but he couldn’t for the life of him think 131
what. The only person with any idea was the Doctor, and he was KO’d on the kitchen floor.
Jess came in, tail wagging.
‘Hello there, old girl,’ Gaskin said warmly. ‘Tracked me down, have you?’ He stroked her and she sat down by him, looking up with big, liquid brown eyes. ‘Everything’s a bit topsy-turvy at the moment, isn’t it? It wasn’t all that long ago we were wondering how to pay the bills. . . now look at us. Talking about space aliens and brains and tele-what-have-you. Puts things into perspective, I suppose.’
Jess gave a little whine and licked his hand affectionately.
‘And who’d have thought we’d have Angela Hook here at the manor?
I thought she’d given up on me a long time ago. Time was when I’d have turned to her and Roger at a time like this. He’d have known what to do, and Angela would’ve been right behind him.’ Gaskin rubbed his dog’s ears gently, allowing himself a few moments of nos-talgia. ‘I wish Roger was here now. I wish I hadn’t let him climb that blasted mountain. And I wish Angela would forgive me for letting him.’
‘That’s three wishes,’ said a voice from the doorway. ‘You’re only allowed one.’
Gaskin jumped to his feet as Angela walked in. ‘How long have you been out there?’
‘Long enough,’ she said. She stood watching him carefully, her hands deep in the pockets of her camouflage jacket. ‘This was Roger’s coat,’ she said.
‘Yes. I remember him wearing it.’
Angela hunched her shoulders. ‘Makes me feel close to him, somehow. It’s silly, I know. But we all do silly things sometimes.’
‘You mean like talking to a dog?’ Gaskin said ruefully.
‘I mean like climbing a mountain when you’ve got a heart condition.’
Gaskin cleared his throat. ‘Yes, well. We all make mistakes.’ He sighed heavily, his shoulders slumping. Then he looked up at Angela and said, softly, ‘Roger insisted that I went with him, you know. I did everything I could to persuade him not to go. I told him he was being 132
a damned fool. I told him that he wasn’t being fair to you. That he was being selfish.’
Angela swallowed. ‘He said he couldn’t bear the thought of dying in bed. I tried to make a joke out of it. Told him to sit up all night and read a book if he was so worried about it.’
‘He was worried about it.’
‘I know. But he could be very stubborn.’
‘He had to be, married to you.’ Henry reached out and held her hand. ‘I did everything I could to stop him, Angela. I forbade him to go. But Roger knew what he wanted in the end. He said he’d go without me if necessary. That he’d do the climb on his own if he had
to. Well. . . I couldn’t let him do that, could I? If he was going to die, then I didn’t want him to die alone.’
‘He didn’t have to die alone.’ Angela wiped an eye briskly. ‘I could have been with him.’
‘Not halfway up the Jungfrau you couldn’t.’
‘No. But you were there.’
‘Yes.’
‘Thank you.’
Henry didn’t say anything more. He nodded briefly and then stood up. ‘Right. I think it’s about time we did something.’
‘Where are you going?’ Angela asked, following him out of the room. He strode purposefully along the hallway with Jess trotting along at his feet.
‘I’m going to put a stop to this business once and for all.’
He stopped at a large mahogany cabinet and inserted a key into the lock. There was a heavy click and the door swung open. Inside were two shotguns. He selected the Webley & Scott 12-gauge and a box of cartridges.
Angela put a hand on his arm. ‘Henry! Don’t do anything rash!
Nigel Carson’s a broken man. It’s not really his fault. Leave him to the police, for goodness’ sake!’
‘The police can’t do anything here,’ Gaskin said gruffly.
He broke open the box and shook out a handful of cartridges. ‘Besides, I’m not going to shoot Nigel Carson, I’m going to shoot that 133
brain thing.’
He concentrated on loading the shotgun with two of the cartridges and put the rest in his jacket pocket. ‘Jess, we may need a lookout,’ he told the dog. ‘Guard duty. Think you’re up to it?’
The Collie wagged her tail eagerly as Gaskin opened the front door and let her out.
‘Expecting trouble?’ Angela asked.
‘The Doctor thought so. Best be prepared.’
‘What’s going on?’ Sadie asked as she met them in the hallway. She looked uncertainly at Gaskin and his shotgun.
‘Henry’s going to shoot the brain thing,’ said Angela.
Martha stood up when they came into the kitchen, alarmed at the sight of the firearm. The Doctor still lay prostrate on the floor. He looked more like a corpse than ever.
Gaskin ignored the Doctor, stepping over him as he headed for the kitchen table.
‘What are you doing?’ asked Martha.
Gaskin nodded at the stone. ‘I’m going to take that damned thing outside and blast it to Kingdom Come.’
‘What? Are you sure?’
‘Absolutely. It’s caused nothing but trouble. I don’t want it in my house for a moment longer.’ Gaskin moved to pick it up and then, at the last second, hesitated. ‘Is it safe to touch?’
‘I have no idea,’ Martha said. ‘It was all right before. But since the Doctor did what he did. . . ’ she glanced at his unconscious form and shrugged. ‘I’m not so sure.’
‘Why don’t you get something to pick it up with?’ suggested Sadie.
‘Like tongs, you mean?’
‘A shovel or a dustpan would do.’
‘Good idea,’ Angela found a dustpan behind the door and went to hand it to Gaskin, but he was already holding the shotgun. ‘Oh.’
‘Here, I’ll do it,’ offered Sadie.
‘No, no; it’s all right,’ Angela said. ‘I can manage it.’
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‘Wait a minute,’ Martha said, getting to her feet. ‘Do you think this is the right thing to do?’
‘I’m not having it here any longer,’ Gaskin insisted.
‘No, but. . . shooting it? That can’t be the answer.’
‘Can you think of anything else?’
Martha looked at the Doctor again. ‘Well, er, no. . . ’
‘Then we get rid of it – permanently.’
‘But you don’t know what will happen. It may not be possible to destroy it like that.’
‘No harm in trying.’
‘But what if something happens? What if it opens up again like it did before?’
Gaskin shrugged. ‘Let it try! This is a 12-gauge, my dear. Double-barrelled. At close range it could lop off the branch of a tree. I don’t think it’ll have any trouble with. . . with whatever that is.’
Angela moved in with the dustpan.
‘I really think we should wait,’ Martha said.
Angela put the pan down next to the brain, the edge just beneath it so that she could pick it up cleanly. ‘I need something to push it on with, I think.’
‘Here’s the brush,’ said Sadie, coming over.
‘Just wait!’ Martha said.
‘Carry on,’ said Gaskin firmly.
Sadie brought the brush alongside the brain. She only had to push it along the table and it would roll into the dustpan. She hesitated.
‘Are you sure it’s safe?’
‘No!’ said Martha.
‘Just do it,’ said Gaskin.
‘ Marmalade!’ yelled the Doctor suddenly.
Everyone jumped.
‘Doctor!’ screeched Martha.
‘Great Scott!’ said Gaskin. ‘I nearly gave it both barrels!’
The Doctor had sat bolt upright. His hair and eyes were both wild.
‘Thick cut!’ he shouted, holding a hand out towards Gaskin.
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Suddenly he was on his feet taking the shotgun out of Gaskin’s hands. Gaskin stared stupidly at him. The Doctor passed the gun to Martha. ‘The most perfect marmalade I’ve ever tasted,’ he announced.
Sadie smiled happily. ‘Oh, thank you! I call it my Thick-Cut Tawny.’
‘Loved it!’
‘I know. You ate the whole jar in one go.’
‘Doctor!’ Martha said, relieved to see the Doctor well again but also rather irritated. She put the heavy shotgun down carefully on top of a chest of drawers. ‘What happened to you?’
‘Telekinetic shock,’ the Doctor said, stretching as if he’d just woken from a long, relaxing sleep. ‘Numbed every synapse in my head, and believe me, that’s a lot of synapses.’ He began running on the spot.
‘Now what are you doing?’
‘Getting my heart rates back to normal.’ He speeded up. ‘Oh yes!
Now we’re cooking!’ He slowed to a stop and then began to touch his toes. ‘One, two, three, four. . . ’
‘It’s OK,’ Martha assured them all. Gaskin, Angela and Sadie were all staring at the Doctor as if they had preferred it when he was lying unconscious on the kitchen floor.
‘Are you sure he’s all right?’ asked Gaskin.
‘. . . ten, eleven, twelve. . . ’
‘Doctor,’ said Martha through gritted teeth.
He stopped where he was, bent double, his fingers touching the tips of his trainers. He looked up at her from his knees. ‘What?’
‘We have a situation here.’
He straightened up, looking blank.
Martha felt it necessary to
prompt him. ‘The brain?’
‘What? Oh, fine now, thanks.’ He grinned brightly at her. ‘How’s yours?’
She closed her eyes and pointed at the kitchen table. ‘I mean that one.’
‘Oh! Yes! That one!’ The Doctor pulled up a chair and sat down, studying the brain intently. Then he took out his sonic screwdriver and everybody tensed.
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Slowly, without taking his eyes off the brain, the Doctor returned the screwdriver to his pocket. ‘Perhaps not,’ he said to himself. ‘Been there, done that, didn’t like it.’
‘Listen,’ began Gaskin. ‘Now that you’re back in the land of the living, perhaps we can get on? I still think we should take the blessed thing outside and blast it into smithereens.’
‘Hear, hear,’ said Angela.
‘I agree,’ said Sadie.
The Doctor shook his head. ‘That would be the most foolish and irresponsible thing you could possibly think of doing.’ He slouched back in the chair and put his hands behind his head. ‘But then again, you are only human, I suppose. Total destruction is always the preferred method of dealing with a problem for you lot. Goes right ba
ck to prehistoric times, when the first caveman picked up a whopping great bone and bashed his mate on the head with it.’
‘What are you blithering about, man?’
‘Oh, it was the usual stuff: his mate had been fancying his girlfriend, all that kind of thing. Solution: whack ’im on the head and be done with it. Problem solved.’ He looked up at the fuming Gaskin with a puzzled frown. ‘Sorry – that’s not what you meant, is it?’
‘No, it is not.’
‘Let me spell it out, then.’ The Doctor pointed at the brain. ‘This thing is totally alien to the Earth, and horribly dangerous. It’s destructive and highly intelligent. Its one and only purpose is to propagate and kill. A single Vurosis is more than capable of spreading over this entire planet if given the opportunity. This one has been growing slowly underneath the village for hundreds of years and is now fully matured and ready to strike. All it needs is that.’ The Doctor pointed at the stone. When he spoke again, his voice was very quiet. ‘For a second back there my mind touched the mind of the Vurosis, and I can assure you that, as dangerous as that stone is now, it will be a hundred times worse if it’s reunited with its host body at the bottom of the well.’
‘What can we do?’
asked Martha.
Everyone else seemed too
shocked to say anything.
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The Doctor’s eyebrows shot up. ‘Well, you saw what it did to me when I gave it a poke with the sonic screwdriver. I’d hate to think what it would do if you started shooting at it.’
‘We have to do something,’ insisted Gaskin. ‘It can’t stay on my kitchen table for evermore.’
‘It seems pretty inert now,’ commented Martha. ‘Can we move it?’
‘Where to?’ wondered Angela.
‘An asteroid field. A star. A black hole. Anywhere,’ said the Doctor, never taking his eyes off the thing. ‘We’ve got to get it away from Earth.’
Gaskin turned to Martha. ‘I’m sorry, my dear, but do you have any idea what he’s talking about?’
‘I’m afraid so. It may sound odd, but the Doctor knows all about this sort of thing.’
‘Mr Gaskin,’ said the Doctor, ‘do you have something I could put it in?’