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Author of 54 Stories |
That tends to happen.
, doesn't it? If I knew exactly what you were going to say and what I was going to say back, and -- what do you mean, what's that thing on the console? That's the gravitic anomaliser, it -- oh. That thing. That's the kettle."
The Doctor, most annoyingly, is humming.
"You've been locked up lots before, then."
"Loads of times." He grins. "Insane dictators, evil empires, cops of all sorts, ordinary run-of-the-mill madmen. I get around."
"What about this one, then?"
"Ah--" he grimaces slightly, and waves his hands around a bit to suggest eloquence; "Just grumpy palace guards. With a spot of existential angst. Incurable halitosis. The universe isn't falling to bits around our ears, so I've been in worse."
She makes a small noise of disgust, that is not so much to do with the eventual heat death of the universe as it is to do with the fact that something ominously slimy has just crawled over her foot.
See, what she doesn't want to admit to herself is that sometimes the Doctor's eyes look like that. And she hates the comparison, but it's true.
(People don't win wars. Wars win wars.)
"I always am."
"You always say that."
"Then it's probably true, don't you think?"
"Yes I can. For minutes at a time. Managed a couple of hours, even. Once. Somewhere." He's on the other side of the console banging on things which should probably not actually be banged upon, which naturally means that he's hidden behind a gigantic rotor and she can't tell what he looks like, but she has a horrible suspicion that he's grinning his head off.
"Doctor."
"Yes. Yes, Martha, we have just arrived on the planet of the lizard-librarians. This is me being serious." He ducks out from behind bits of console and gives her a pleased glance. "Look, not smiling. Much."
"Should I even ask what the lizards want it for?"
" Martha, a little species tolerance here?"
" It's just -- when you imagine the wonders of the universe, giant lizards with a taste for Kafka don't really come to mind."
He frowns. She's missing the point, he informs her, though he doesn't elaborate.
--And here they are in a library-- the library, the Doctor explains, wild-eyed and alien in the diffuse light-- and bizarrely enough no-one's trying to kill them or tie them up or do any sort of nasty thing at all, which makes a nice change. So then they're wandering around rooms of books with vaulted ceilings and ornate doors with the sort of strange handles that were never really made to be used by a humanoid hand, and Martha's just drifting about trying to take it all in; the Doctor's already settled down in a corner with a towering stack of books and a vague mumble about how terribly charming it is not to be at the receiving end of any death threats for a change, and he's whistling tunelessly: a song he can't forget but doesn't quite remember.
(And what she doesn't ask him is what his people, his vanished people, what they measured their time by, though she wants to know; she imagines the turn of a galaxy (and do galaxies turn? Do they spin and whirl about some greater centre?) or the shift of a continent or the beat of a butterfly's wing. And she wonders whether they measured time at all; perhaps they didn't need to. Perhaps. Perhaps a lot of things.)
How many miles to Gallifrey? Can I get there by candlelight? Starlight? Moonlight?
--it's night, and the Doctor's there in the shadows, shadows which are also the orange skies that he dreams about, and when he looks at her it's a little bit like burning (except that his eyes look exactly the same), and: "A pair of ragged claws," he says, out of nowhere. "Claws. Scuttling across the floor of silent seas." There's a look on his face that's old and terrified and terrifying and she doesn't know what it is, doesn't know anything except that she never wants to see it again (silver trees, he says, and she says -- what? what?) and then she wakes up--
It doesn't make sense and nothing makes sense and she's butchering Eliot anyway. And so she forgets about it. Forgets about it. Easy when you know how. (But see, the problem is, you hear about a war, and you don't forget about that, not even when it was a million light-years away and a universe ago. It's just not done -- no, not that. You just can't do it. And it lingers, lingers, malingers.)
And he takes her to the Eye of Orion, which is, perhaps, also the eye of the storm: peaceful and gentle and existing only to let everything else roil around it like angry thunderclouds. It hangs still, quiet, caught in what might be a neverending moment.
And he takes her to a planet which has no name because it has never needed one, and the sky is dark and boiling green, and the tempest is all around them singing strange songs about the universe and howling with ceaseless ferocity, and the dark oceans are roaring, waves capped with white foam. At the heart of it all she can see a single seagull flying into the heart of the thunder.
And--
She dreams that she stayed at home, dreams of exams and a cup of tea and the positioning -- the allure of ordinary things. She dreams that she left him on a space-station a million light years and five thousand chronological ones from where she was born: and that she didn't regret it, not for an instant. She dreams that she's flying, flying, falling. She dreams that everything's burning.
Sometimes she can't tell the nightmares from the rest, and that frightens her.
She runs into the Doctor just as she's beginning to find the heat and light oppressive; he's grinning, and almost drags her into the open to show her an armoury of coloured silks (or something softer than silk, airy and translucent and featherlight) stretched onto elaborate frames. "Look," he says, delighted, "kites." They swoop and dive and pirouette in the frost-clear air, tugging at the light strings that tether them to the ground, and Martha wants for a moment to be among them: suspended in the sky.
"Only when the wind's north-north-west."
end
Note: near the end, in 'Universe. Reverse. Just verse. Freeverse. Rhymingverse.' & etc., the Doctor is taking off on himself, specifically himself in the Eighth Doctor novel 'City of the Dead' (which is fantastic and which you might want to read). Context and phrasing are, I fancy, sufficiently different, though -- the ramblings are only alike in general direction (and rhyme).