The Taking of Chelsea 426

Home > Other > The Taking of Chelsea 426 > Page 7
The Taking of Chelsea 426 Page 7

by Doctor Who


  'Yep,' replied the Doctor. That's me.'

  It was then that the Sontaran did something the Doctor clearly hadn't expected.

  He smiled.

  'Well,' said Kade, still beaming. That really is quite something, is it not?'

  'Oh,' said the Doctor, shifting awkwardly. 'Is it?'

  'We have travelled so far for this mission, and here you are... the Doctor.'

  Kade now began pacing around the room, looking up at the Doctor as if he were a specimen in a museum.

  'Fascinating,' he said. 'Absolutely fascinating.' He turned to Sarg. 'Colonel Sarg... Do you know who this is?'

  'No, sir,' replied Sarg. 'I hadn't seen him before his arrest, sir.'

  This,' said Kade, 'is the Doctor. A face-changer who travels through time. Our race have encountered him 99

  DOCTOR WHO

  many times, usually within this system, and he has, without fail, bested us. So far. Quite remarkable. Quite, quite remarkable.'

  'Right,' said the Doctor. 'Well... Now that we've got the introductory chitchat over and done with, what are you doing here?

  Kade suddenly lashed out with his baton, hitting the Doctor in the arm.

  'Ow!' the Doctor yelled.

  'Please understand,' said Kade, 'that my respect for you as an adversary does not allow you to address me as you would a subordinate or a small child.'

  'Understood,' said the Doctor, still holding his arm and wincing.

  'We are here,' Kade continued, 'because our enemy, the Rutan Host, is using this facility as a staging post for a counter-attack upon Sontar.'

  The Rutans!' said the Doctor, his face lighting up. 'I knew it! I knew it was the Rutans. It was the carbon levels. Far too high for a Krynoid. And then the speech thing, with the words... "That will be agreeable." Pure Rutan slip-up, that one. Pure, good old-fash—'

  'Be quiet!' shouted Kade, lifting up the baton but holding back from hitting the Doctor a second time. 'As I was saying... The Rutans are using this facility as a staging post for a counter-attack upon Sontar.

  'Permission to speak?' said the Doctor, holding up his hand.

  100

  THE TAKING OF CHELSEA 426

  'Permission granted.'

  'A counter-attack? What have you done to them lately? I mean... Apart from a war spanning fifty millennia and all the rest of it.'

  'Our attempt,' said Kade, 'to utilise the Earth as a breeding centre for further armies. When the Rutans discovered that Earth was to become a cloning facility for the Sontaran Empire they planted a trap on a neighbouring world - this world. A sentient spore that, when brought into a habitable environment, would grow into plants, producing further spores. These spores, Doctor, are the Rutans themselves.'

  'OK,' said the Doctor. 'I think I'm with you so far, but can't the Rutans shape-shift? Why go to all this bother to get breathed in by humans, or Sontarans, or whoever, when they could have just turned themselves into humans or Sontarans?'

  'We are not as primitive as you think, Doctor. Their technology was crude and often fallible. We have the technology to tell Sontaran from Rutan, regardless of shape and size. The Rutans are a breed of parasites, Doctor... For them it was far more fitting to exploit a host. In their plan those hosts would have been Sontarans from the nearby clone world that was once Earth. In the event, the birthing planet was not to happen, and the humans got here first.'

  The Doctor allowed himself a moment's thought.

  'OK, OK...' he said, 'but that means you're unable to 101

  DOCTOR WHO

  scan for anyone who might have breathed in the Rutan spore, doesn't it?'

  'Quite right, Doctor.'

  'So then,' said the Doctor, 'how are you going to...

  well, you know... root out the Rutans? Ha... I quite like that. Root out the Rutans. Sounds like a board game, or something, doesn't it?'

  Colonel Sarg now stepped forward and, in a hushed voice, said, 'General... What he says is true. Would it not be wise, if we are unable to tell the difference between human and Rutan, to simply destroy the whole colony? It would eliminate any possibility of the Rutans escaping, sir.'

  'Oh no,' said the Doctor. 'I heard that. No. No no no no no. You can't do that. I know there are Rutans here.

  I saw what they did, and we need to sort this out, but no... No. I won't let you kill people.'

  Kade turned to the Doctor and raised one hairless eyebrow quizzically.

  'Won't let me?' he said. 'As I see it, Doctor, you have no say in the matter. Soldiers... Take him away.'

  'Wait!' said the Doctor, as two of the Sontarans held him by the arms and dragged him toward the door.

  'Where are they taking me?'

  'Wherever you wish to go,' said General Kade. 'Our quarrel is not with you. You have been our adversary in the past and, as I have said, you have bested us. On this occasion that is not an option available to you. I would

  102

  THE TAKING OF CHELSEA 426

  strongly recommend you leave this colony as quickly as you arrived. You are, after all, the only one who can.'

  'You can't kill them!' said the Doctor. They're unarmed. Where is the honour in that, General? Didn't you say you were the Intelligence Division?'

  Kade gestured at the guards to stop dragging him away.

  'I did, sir.'

  'Well... Not very intelligent, just blowing this place up, is it?' said the Doctor. 'I mean... You are meant to be intelligence, after all. Surely it would be much more intelligent to find out who the Rutans are first before you make any rash decisions?'

  Kade looked from the Doctor to Colonel Sarg and then back to the Doctor.

  "You may be right,' he said, and then, turning back to Sarg, 'Order all Rutan suspects to be placed into custody immediately.'

  Sensing a moment's pause, Mayor Sedgefield held up his hand like a schoolboy and leaned into Kade's field of view.

  'Er, hello... Yes... Er, we have visitors,' he said,

  'Newcomers. They were guests for the Flower Show.

  From what you were saying... It sounds as if the Flower Show is where these friends of yours... the, er, Rutans, wasn't it?'

  The Rutans are no friends of Sontar!' barked General Kade.

  103

  DOCTOR WHO

  'No... Well, er, quite... But what I was going to say was... If anyone here on Chelsea 426 is a Rutan, it will be them. The Newcomers, I mean. The people on the ships. The ones who were at the Flower Show.'

  'Splendid!' said Kade, slamming one hand on the desk. 'You have been most cooperative! Guards, take the Doctor away. We have no further need of him.'

  The entrance to the office opened with a mechanical hum, and the Sontarans clutched the Doctor by the arms once again, pulling him away from the Mayor and General Kade. He could have fought against them, but there was no point. He had to get back to the Grand Hotel, and quickly.

  104

  NINE

  Yougavemequiteafrightthere,’saidMrCarstairs, gently placing one hand on his wife's shoulder. She had been gazing out of the window of the hotel bar at the Western Docks for an age, silent and expressionless.

  The Doctor's words echoed in Mr Carstairs' mind, about her not being his wife. He didn't believe a word of it. What did this Doctor know, anyway? Whatever had happened at the Flower Show, the Doctor's explanation seemed so far-fetched, so ridiculous. There had to be a rational explanation, and one that did not involve his wife being a creature from another planet. He had a good mind to turf the Doctor out the moment he returned. The colony had been a perfectly peaceful place until his arrival.

  105

  DOCTOR WHO

  'Bess?' said Mr Carstairs, taking his hand away.

  Mrs Carstairs turned to face him and smiled.

  'Yes, dear?'

  'I said you gave me quite a fright, there.'

  'Did I, dear?'

  'Yes. Yes, you did. You were out cold.'

  She smiled again.

  'Well I'm feeling much bet
ter now,' she said. 'Just a little tired, that's all.'

  'I see,' said Mr Carstairs. 'Well just so long as you're OK.'

  'And where are the children?'

  They're out in the lobby with the Major. He's holding the fort. He reckoned he was going to get his gun and show those... those people a thing or two, but I talked him out of it.'

  'Good,' said Mrs Carstairs. 'Good.'

  Mr Carstairs heard footsteps from the other side of the room and turned to see the Doctor.

  'You...' hissed Mr Carstairs. 'I'm only surprised you've got the nerve to show your face here. After those things turned up. Who are they, anyway?'

  The Doctor walked across the bar slowly and sat next to Mr Carstairs.

  They're Sontarans,' he said. 'A clone race from the planet Sontar. Bred for war. A whole race of soldiers.'

  'Nonsense!'

  'It's not. Trust me, it's not.' The Doctor turned to 106

  THE TAKING OF CHELSEA 426

  Mrs Carstairs. 'You know what I'm talking about, don't you?'

  Mrs Carstairs frowned and then smiled politely.

  'I'm afraid I don't have the slightest idea what you mean, Doctor,' she said.

  'Of course you don't,' said the Doctor, and then, more coldly, The people on this colony are going to die unless you meet the Sontarans head-on.'

  She frowned again and laughed dismissively.

  'I'm sorry, Doctor, but what do you mean?"

  'Stop using them,' the Doctor snapped. This isn't their war. They didn't ask to be used like this. The Sontarans are out there, right now, rounding up the visitors from their ships and holding them captive.

  Goodness knows what they'll do to them.'

  'Newcomers?' said Mr Carstairs. They're rounding up the Newcomers?'

  The Doctor nodded.

  'Well it's a good thing they are,' Mr Carstairs continued. 'If you ask me it's the Newcomers who've caused all this fuss and bother. We had no trouble here until they turned up. Or until you turned up, for that matter, Doctor.'

  'It's not the Newcomers,' said the Doctor, gritting his teeth. 'It's an alien species. They're called the Rutan Host. They've been at war with the Sontarans for tens of thousands of years, and they're using the spores, the ones found by Professor Wilberforce, to take over the 107

  DOCTOR WHO

  people here. Visitors and residents alike.'

  Mr Carstairs laughed, shaking his head. 'And you expect us to believe that? You're accusing my wife of being one of these... these... what did you call them?'

  'Rutans,' said the Doctor.

  'Do you hear that, Bess?' said Mr Carstairs. 'You're a Rutan. Have you ever heard anything so preposterous in your life?'

  Mrs Carstairs said nothing.

  'If they round up the Newcomers and take them away, we'll just be rid of a lot of unwanted company,'

  Mr Carstairs went on, 'and there'll hardly be a person on the colony who disagrees with me.'

  Just then Jake and Vienna ran into the bar. They stopped a short distance from their parents and the Doctor, as if sensing the icy tension between the three adults.

  'Mum, Dad,' said Jake. 'Come out here... There's something on TV. About what's happening.'

  The Doctor was the first to stand, running out into the lobby with the children. They were joined eventually by Mr and Mrs Carstairs.

  From the video screen above the seating area in the lobby, the face of Riley Smalls sneered down on them.

  'So,' said the presenter, one eyebrow raised in a laconic arch, 'I hate to say "I told you so", but.

  He paused, sitting back in his large leather chair with folded arms.

  108

  THE TAKING OF CHELSEA 426

  'Our visitors say that we have been invaded,' Smalls continued. 'And have I not said this all along? Right now the Sontaran army, for that is their name, are out there rounding up the Newcomers. Are any of us surprised? Here on Chelsea 426 we have enjoyed years of peace and prosperity, and the moment any Newcomers turn up, en masse, we have this! Scenes of chaos and disruption on the streets of our tranquil home. Residents running for their lives.

  'It seems quite clear to me now that the Sontarans are not our enemies. The Sontarans are our allies in this, our darkest hour. Unlike the Newcomers who, it transpires, are vicious and conniving aliens... Yes, you heard me correctly... aliens... The Sontarans are a proud and noble race who mean us no harm.

  'I say we should help them and assist them in their work. If you, or anyone you know, have Newcomers staying with you, you must report them immediately.

  They may have come with smiles and good manners, but that does not mean they are to be trusted. The good citizens of Chelsea 426 have nothing to hide and therefore nothing to fear from the Sontarans. Only if we allow them to investigate this matter properly will we ever enjoy the happy and contented lives to which we were formerly accustomed.'

  The Doctor clapped his hand to his forehead and groaned.

  'Do you see?' said Mr Carstairs. 'I was right. They're 109

  DOCTOR WHO

  saying so on the television now, Doctor. It's the Newcomers who have brought this on us.'

  'You're going to listen to him?' said the Doctor. 'Riley Smallbrain? Oh, please... The man has the IQ of an amoeba.'

  'He happens to be a very intelligent man,' said Mr Carstairs. 'But I can't say I'm surprised that you doubt him. After all, you happen to be a Newcomer yourself.'

  'Intelligent?' said the Doctor. 'Him? But he's a Cryogen.'

  'Oh, I see,' said Mr Carstairs. 'Full of empathy and understanding, except when it comes to Cryogens.

  Well... I certainly didn't realise we had a Cryophobe staying with us...'

  'It's not... Wait. Cryophobe? Is that even a real word?

  No, Mr Carstairs... I'm quite serious. Riley Smalls is an early twenty-first-century Cryogen. The process they used in those days was flawed. The people they brought out of cryogenic suspension suffered massive, irreversible brain damage. Which perhaps makes my Smallbrain joke a bit tasteless, but that doesn't alter the fact... You can't take his word for it. Cryogens are renowned for having poor judgement. They're hasty, bad-tempered and most of all they're very, very confused. The poor man must have come here before the people on Earth realised. Most of the Cryogens there live in nursing homes.'

  'Well,' said Mr Carstairs, 'Whatever you may think 110

  THE TAKING OF CHELSEA 426

  of Mr Smalls and his views, the fact remains, we have nothing to hide so we have nothing to fear. Those Sontarans aren't coming for us, are they?' 'No,' said the Doctor gravely. 'Not yet.'

  111

  TEN

  'If you could all please remain calm,' said Captain Thomas, walking among the passengers on the deck, his voice as calm and reassuring as it could be, given the circumstances. 'I'm sure there is nothing for us to worry about.'

  It was Zack and Jenny's honeymoon. They had saved up for almost a year to pay for their tickets and even then, even when they had received an 'extra bit of help' from their parents, they had only been able to afford a cabin in the lower decks of the Pride of Deimos.

  Still, that had been enough for Jenny.

  Their journey to the sky dock near 588 Achilles seemed a very distant memory now. They had held hands practically the whole way and, as they'd landed 113

  DOCTOR WHO

  and the great silver cruise ship came into view, Jenny had thought she might burst with joy. Zack had done a good job of keeping his emotions to himself, as he always did, but she was sure she saw the slightest flicker of a boyish grin and the budding of tears in his eyes when they first saw it.

  The Pride of Deimos was, in every sense, a billion miles away from home. Zack worked on the T-Rails, programming destinations from the central hub, and Jenny worked in an AlphaMart on the outskirts of the city. People like them didn't normally get to set foot on a ship like the Pride of Deimos, let alone sail on her.

  As they passed through the air-locked bridge and into the ship,
all Jenny could say was, 'I can't believe it.

  I just can't believe it.'

  The ship itself was like a fairy tale: twinkling chandeliers and ornate fountains at every turn. The other passengers spoke in clipped colony accents, the kind Jenny had only ever heard in films or on television. They were nothing like the people back home. Zack, meanwhile, acted as if he were only mildly impressed, though Jenny could tell that deep down he was as excited and as awestruck as she was.

  From the Trojan Asteroids the ship had taken them out past Jupiter, where they flew over the tumultuous carmine vortex of the Great Red Spot at a distance of just a few hundred thousand kilometres. They had passed the Galilean Moons, watched volcanoes erupt 114

  THE TAKING OF CHELSEA 426

  on lo, and had gazed down upon the scarred ice fields of Europa as they glistened in the sunlight like a endless ocean of crystal.

  Even the intervals of empty space, black and seemingly limitless, that lay between the asteroids, planets and moons had a strange beauty about them.

  It was humbling to think of their home back on Earth, floating in this vast and infinite wasteland.

  When the Captain had announced they were making an unscheduled stop on Saturn, the passengers were elated. There had been talk back on Earth of the plants discovered there, a rare thing these days. It wasn't often that news from the colonies made much of a splash back home, but this had stirred the imaginations of many. Jenny had never thought she and Zack might be among the privileged few to actually be there to find out what all the fuss was about. Now their excitement and their joy seemed like little more than the set-up to a cruel joke with a savage punchline.

  The passengers were gathered on the deck of the Pride of Deimos, beneath the almost invisible protection of the force fields, but hardly anybody spoke, and when they did it was with hushed concern.

  'What do you think's happening?' Jenny asked, gripping Zack's hand as tightly as she could.

  Zack shrugged.

  'Your guess is as good as mine,' he said. 'Maybe it's a fire alarm or something.'

 

‹ Prev