Martha
in the
Mirror
JUSTIN RICHARDS
Contents
Cover
Title
Copyright
Dedication
Recent Titles
Introduction
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Acknowledgements
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Published in 2008 by BBC Books, an imprint of Ebury Publishing.
Ebury Publishing is a division of the Random House Group Ltd.
© Justin Richards, 2008
Justin Richards 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.
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Series Consultant: Justin Richards
Editor: Stephen Cole
Project Editor: Steve Tribe
Cover design by Lee Binding © BBC 2008
Typeset in Albertina and Deviant Strain
Printed and bound in Germany by GGP Media GmbH
For Chris – my naughty twin…
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I am the Man in the Mirror.
The castle was haunted by a young girl.
She was small and blonde, and maybe twelve years old. She was called Janna, and she wasn’t a ghost – just a girl left to fend for herself, scavenging and begging and living off the goodwill of others. A shadow glimpsed in the kitchens, a flicker of movement in a corridor, a shape watching from an alcove. Like a ghost.
And Janna, in her turn, was also haunted. By her dead sister.
For a hundred years I have watched events unfold, fortunes rise and fall, lives saved and lost. I have laughed and I have wept. But I have never sought to return to the world of flesh and blood.
Until now.
It started the day the man looked in the mirror.
Janna wondered what was in the crate. She watched Bill and Bott carry it from the main gates across the courtyard. She ran along the battlements, keeping them in sight. Then down the winding stairs of Kaiser’s Tower in time to hear Bill complaining about his latest software patch and Bott telling him to shut up and put his mechanical back into it.
They took the crate to the Great Hall. Janna crept after them, hiding in her favourite spot under a long side table. The faded velvet cloth hung down low and she lay full-stretch, elbows on the stone floor, chin in her cupped hands as she watched.
The crate contained a mirror, which was taller than Bill and wider than Bott. They struggled to lift it up and fix it to the wall. The bottom of the mirror was only just off the floor, and the top of it was higher than the cracked wood panel that Janna could touch if she jumped and stretched.
Bill and Bott stood in front of the mirror and looked at themselves. Bill wiped it over with a cloth. Bott inspected the ornate gilt frame.
‘Nice workmanship, Bill,’ Bott said.
‘You’re not wrong, Bott,’ Bill agreed. ‘You’d think it was really old.’
The mirror looked old to Janna.
‘The real one would be,’ Bott was saying.
‘Well, obviously,’ Bill agreed. ‘Better tell His Nibs it’s here then.’
‘Oil break first,’ Bott said. ‘My joints are seizing up after that. It weighs a tonne.’
‘Obviously oil break first,’ Bill replied as he turned with a whirr of his mechanism and marched from the Great Hall. ‘And you think your joints are playing you up…’ he was saying as his voice faded away.
Janna was about to crawl out from under the table, about to skip across the room and have a proper look at the mirror that seemed old but wasn’t. But someone else came into the hall, and she eased back to be sure she was out of sight.
The man stood in front of the mirror, just where Bill had been standing a few moments before. He stared into it, nodding as if pleased. His reflection nodded back, smiling.
He inspected the frame, tapped at the glass surface. From where she was lying, Janna could see that his expression – his real expression – was slowly changing from a smile to a frown.
‘That can’t be right,’ the man murmured, just loud enough for Janna to hear.
But she wasn’t listening. She was watching his face, his real face, as the frown deepened.
The man stood with his hands behind his back and stared at himself. His reflection stared back. The man tilted his head slightly, and so did the reflection. He took a step towards the mirror. The reflection stepped towards him. They regarded each other through a thin barrier of glass. Then the man brought his hands from behind his back to clasp them in front of him. He sighed.
The man raised a hand – frowning, curious, reaching out towards the mirrored surface. The reflection raised his hand too. Only the man in the mirror was smiling. And he was holding a gun.
The man – the real man – took a startled step backwards.
The sound of the shot echoed round the hall. Janna clasped her hand over her mouth and pulled back into the darkness beneath the table.
The glass bulle
t shattered its way into the man’s heart. His body fell to the floor. His face was turned towards Janna, his eyes wide – staring at her lifelessly. And above and behind, Janna could see the man in the mirror – watching, and smiling, as he stepped through and into the room.
Her dead sister was following her. Janna could hear her feet on the stone floor of the corridor. She caught glimpses of her shadow on the wall, distorted by the flickering torchlight. She heard the girl whispering the name: ‘Janna, Janna, Janna…’
Nowhere was safe. Her sister knew all the places, all the hidey-holes and the darkest shadows.
‘All right,’ she shouted into the gloom at the end of the passageway. ‘It should have been me that died. I know that. I’m sorry. I can’t change it – if I could, I would.’ She sank to her knees. ‘I’m so sorry. So sorry.’
The lights flickered impossibly as a breeze ruffled Janna’s hair. The torches looked like real flame but they were run by the same fusion generators that powered everything in the castle. They wouldn’t suffer in a breeze.
Still kneeling, Janna looked round. How could there be a breeze, here, deep under the castle? It was getting stronger, blowing her hair round her pale, grubby face. An unholy noise echoed off the stonework, growing and fading with the breeze – a rasping grating sound. The walls and floor were bathed with a blue light. Shadows in the nearest alcove deepened as the noise grew.
‘Stop it,’ Janna yelled into the fury. ‘Stop this. I’m sorry!’
And it did stop. The wind died, the light faded, the noise was gone.
In its place a large blue box stood solid and confident in the alcove. Janna backed into the shadows and watched as a door in the front of the box opened and a man stepped out.
He was tall and thin with spiky hair and eyes that were wide with interest and amusement. Eyes that fixed unerringly on Janna despite the dark shadows that enfolded her.
‘Hello,’ the man said cheerfully. ‘What’s your name, then?’ He took a step towards her, allowing the silhouette of a woman to step out of the box behind him, her face hidden behind the man’s shoulder.
But Janna didn’t wait to see the woman’s face. She turned and ran. She could hear her sister’s ghost running after her.
‘It doesn’t look like the most brilliant theme park in this part of the cosmos,’ Martha said. ‘It looks like a damp, gloomy tunnel.’ She sniffed. ‘And it smells.’
‘It’s not damp,’ the Doctor said. He plunged his hands into his coat pocket and sniffed as well. ‘Well, not really. Not damp damp. Doesn’t smell too bad, either.’ He peered into semi-darkness. ‘I’ll give you gloomy, though. Lots of gloom. Looming gloom. A real gloom loom, assuming gloom can loom.’
‘So where are we really?’
‘Really? Outside the TARDIS. In a smelly, gloomy, not-really-damp-damp tunnel, I should think. Pity that girl ran off, we could have asked her.’
‘What girl?’
‘The one that ran off. When she saw you.’
Martha’s eyes widened. ‘Excuse me, but it was you that frightened her off. I didn’t even see her.’
The Doctor wasn’t listening. He pulled the TARDIS door closed, then marched off down the gloomy passageway. ‘Maybe we’re a bit early,’ he said. ‘Maybe they just haven’t opened yet.’
He hesitated as he reached a junction, pointing first one way then the other. ‘Eeny meeny miny mo,’ he murmured. He set off along the left-hand passageway. His delighted voice echoed back to Martha. ‘Oh, it’s mo!’
‘Early as in, they’re still having breakfast?’ Martha wondered, catching him up.
‘Or early as in the place is still a frontier fort under almost constant siege from either Anthium or Zerugma, and they haven’t actually sorted out the peace treaty and built it yet.’
Martha ran to catch him up. ‘You said guided tours and coffee shops,’ she accused. ‘Not frontier fort and constant siege. You said exhibitions and historical reenactments.’
‘Yeah,’ the Doctor conceded. ‘But so much better when you arrive in the middle of the real thing. I mean, just think about it.’
‘I am thinking about it.’
‘Real siege warfare. Real people in real situations. Real history.’
‘Real blood, real death, real destruction and real danger.’
The Doctor paused to inspect one of the torches flickering on the wall. He seemed to be rolling the idea round his mouth. ‘That too,’ he decided eventually. ‘You know, this isn’t real though. Look at it – that’s clever.’
Before Martha could stop him, he stuck his hand into the flames. ‘It’s all right,’ he said, seeing her expression. ‘Like I said. Not real. Brilliant, clever, real-istic. But not real. They must have a fusion generator somewhere. Means we can’t be far off. War’s probably been over for years.’
‘Probably?’
He was off again. ‘Well, possibly. Maybe.’ He spun round and continued walking backwards so he could look at Martha behind him. ‘I don’t know – let’s find out. We need to find someone to ask really. Like that little girl.’
Martha stopped.
The Doctor stopped too. ‘What?’ he asked, not turning to see what she was looking at.
‘Maybe,’ Martha said slowly, ‘we could ask a sinister cloaked figure who looks like he’s enrolled as Chief Frightener at the Monastery of Doom?’
The Doctor’s eyes narrowed. ‘Behind me?’ he whispered, pointing over his own shoulder without looking.
Martha nodded.
‘Sinister monk? Easy!’ He spun round again. ‘Hello brother, can you spare a… No, hang on, that’s not it. I wonder if you can help us? Yes – that’s right. Help – any chance?’
The monk was standing several metres further along the passageway. His head was slightly bowed so only darkness was visible under the hood of his black cloak. His hands were clasped in front of him, each folded into the opposite sleeve. As the Doctor spoke, the monk raised his head slightly. He lifted one hand – a pale, gnarled claw – and silently beckoned.
‘Guided tour, you see?’ The Doctor was off after the monk. ‘Come on, Martha. Told you – historical re-enactment.’
‘Yeah, but re-enacting what – the Black Death?’
‘Could be. What did you expect?’ the Doctor said as they followed the cloaked figure. ‘The Spanish Inquisition?’
The monk led the Doctor and Martha up a flight of twisting stone stairs into a wider, better-lit corridor. There were paintings on the walls and the slight smell of damp and decay faded.
They passed several other people – another monk, a soldier in armour that was clearly plastic, as if part of a child’s dressing-up set, and a crocodile man. For a moment, when he first stepped out of a doorway, Martha thought he really was a crocodile man – scaly skin covered by strips of dark leather; clawed, reptilian feet and hands to match; a jutting snout that was full of teeth. Small dark eyes gleamed in the flickering light. Nostrils at the end of the snout seemed about to flare.
But then, they didn’t. They sort of squashed inwards. And now Martha could see that the teeth were obviously painted on the mask. The claws on the feet bent like rubber as they caught on the paved floor. The reptilian skin was drawn onto the costume, not even moulded. Up close, it all looked a bit cheap. The gleaming eyes were staring through holes cut out of the mask.
The crocodile man raised his hand in greeting, and nodded. The mask shifted and looked in danger of falling off. Martha heard a sigh of irritation from inside. She smiled and waved back.
‘What is this – fancy dress weekend?’ Martha hissed at the Doctor.
‘That was a Zerugian,’ the Doctor said, apparently impressed.
‘It was a costume. It was a man dressed up.’
‘In full ceremonial battle armour.’
‘In a cheap mask.’
They had stopped, and the monk was beckoning impatiently again. Martha frowned as she watched the withered hand with its talon finger curling. She reached out and grabbed the
hand. It was squishy and the long nail on the end was bendy like the crocodile man’s claws. It came off – a glove. Embarrassed now, Martha held it out for the monk to take back.
Under the hood, in the better light, Martha could see a young man – a very ordinary young man – staring back at her in surprise.
‘Who are you? Where are we going?’ Martha demanded.
The man shook his head slightly and put his finger to his lips as he pulled his glove back on.
‘Silent order,’ the Doctor said.
‘He isn’t even a real monk,’ Martha said as they continued on their way.
‘I didn’t mean he belongs to a silent order of monks. I meant, he’s been ordered to be silent.’
‘But – why?’
‘Been to Disneyland?’ the Doctor asked.
‘What’s Disneyland got to do with it?’
‘Does Mickey Mouse speak?’
‘Sort of squeaks.’
The Doctor didn’t reply, but followed the ‘monk’ through a doorway into a huge and impressive room. ‘Now this is more like it. Thanks, Friar Tuck,’ he said to the monk. ‘Mickey Monk – what a nasty thought,’ he murmured as the monk bowed and left. ‘And you’d never get a hood to fit over the ears.’
Martha hardly noticed. She was looking round the room. It was enormous, like the banqueting hall of a huge medieval castle. A long table ran down the middle of the room, with other smaller tables off to each side. All were covered with the same faded, thinning velvet material. There were several figures in alcoves – knights in advanced armour like the costume she’d seen earlier, but more robust and made of heavy, dull metal – the real thing.
Paintings, darkened with age, hung on the walls. The far end of the great room was dominated by an ornate mirror that reached up from just above the floor to well above Martha’s head. Two large futuristic guns, like rifles with battery packs added, were fixed in a cross over a round shield.
‘Parallax rifles,’ the Doctor said, seeing where Martha was looking. ‘Nasty. They wobble your insides into a different place from your outsides. Then back again, which at least stops it getting messy. But the trauma’s enough to kill even a Zerugian.’
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