"Are
you tired?" The Doctor asked her as he powered up the TARDIS and
they left Paris, 1889, behind them. He manoeuvred the TARDIS into a
temporal orbit above the Earth, undetectable by the probes and radars
and sensors of any era of the planet's existence, outside of time, in
what Rose thought of as a sort of neutral gear. The view of Earth and
its bright moon that had shone down on them so romantically a while
ago was spectacular. Rose had never quite gotten over how incredible
it was to be looking at it like that without years of training at NASA
and a shuttle flight, none of which a girl from a London council estate
ever stood a chance of experiencing. It was just one of the beautiful
things The Doctor had done for her.
"No," she said. "I'm not tired. I should be, shouldn't
I? I haven't slept since we were at Sarah's house. And since then I've
been from London to Cumbria to Ireland, vampyre bitten twice, then to
Paris. I ought to be worn out. Don't tell me it's the Time Lord blood."
"Good guess," he grinned. "But I have to warn you, when
it wears off you will probably feel like you've hit a brick wall and
fall asleep on the spot."
"Just as long as you catch me before I hit the ground, I'll risk
it."
"That's my girl." He smiled at her. "I'm not planning
anything too strenuous anyway. But there is one more person from my
past I want you to meet." He turned to the controls and prepared
to come out of temporal orbit and into time travel mode.
"Another of your harem?"
"Yes, but very definitely NOT the way you think."
"I'm only kidding. I know you're a perfect gentleman, whatever
Jack says about the Time Lord sex drive." She ignored his noises
of protest. "You know, Sarah and Jo are terrific. Except for the
vampyres meeting them was great. It was like having a pair of aunts
who I could ask about all the family secrets. Ace… I'm not so
sure about. She's nice, but way too violent." The Doctor laughed
at that.
"Ace is fantastic," he told her. "But you're right about
the violence. And I AM glad I haven't taken you to meet Leela."
"The Xena clone?" Rose remembered. "Is that really your
type?"
"NO!" he assured her quickly. "By the way, hemlines are
up in the early 23rd century, and this collar is driving me nuts. The
TARDIS knows where it's going, so what say we go and change."
He found an exact duplicate of his black pants, jumper and leather jacket
combination quickly enough. When it came to clothes he knew what he
liked and stuck to it. She was a lot longer trying on different outfits.
He was glad to let her have that simple pleasure. He just hoped she
didn't find anything that Leela might have left in there.
His Time Lord libido probably couldn't have taken much
more of a jolt if she had he reflected when she emerged in an outfit
that was very nearly two wide belts. The cropped top and mini skirt,
revealing a lot of shoulder, torso and leg respectively, was a startling
contrast to the formal dress she had changed out of.
When he put his hormones under control he reflected that
the skimpy outfit, accentuating her petite figure, actually made her
look younger than she was. The child molester feeling rose in him again
and he pushed it away in order to smile brightly at her. He noticed
she was still wearing the pendant. He was touched by that. He thought
she might have put it away with the dress.
"So which of your harem owned this little number?" she asked,
standing there with her hands on her hips.
"I have no idea," he said. "I've never
seen that before. I suspect the TARDIS replenishes the wardrobe according
to whoever is looking through it. I seem to recall it once had a lot
of sixties gear. And Sarah used to find some interesting stuff in there.
Which means, my little cockney sparrow, you thought that little number
up for yourself. But that's ok, because you look fantastic. Even Jack
would turn straight for you looking like that." And the thought
made them both laugh out loud until the change in engine tone told them
the TARDIS was materialising.
"Twenty-third century London?" Rose looked
around with undisguised interest. They had landed on the Embankment
opposite the Houses of Parliament, which looked little different to
how they looked in her day - except Big Ben had been repaired since
a Slitheen spacecraft had sliced the top of it in the early 21st century.
"That's just a museum now," the Doctor said. "The government
meets in the New Millennium Dome. Anyway, this way…" He took
her hand and they walked up the embankment to London Bridge. Rose looked
in astonishment at the unfamiliar imposed upon the familiar. Most of
the buildings were as she remembered them, but the cars, lorries and
even the red London buses all hovered a few feet above the road surface
and made almost no noise. She looked up and saw that the sky was clear
blue, and the air that she had grown up with, at least 60% carcinogenic
pollutants, was replaced by fresh, oxygen rich, CLEAN air.
The Doctor brought her to a taxi rank and put out his hand. Immediately
a hover cab zoomed towards them and halted. "Fantastic. You never
have to wait for a cab around here." He helped Rose in first then
slid beside her giving the taxi driver the address. The cab moved off
at once, rising up to the taxi lane above that of the private vehicles
and accelerating off.
Rose tried to follow the directions, but beyond the 'preserved'
centre the London she knew was long gone, replaced by something much
cleaner and neater, but somehow disappointingly devoid of character.
She thought they were somewhere around Southwark when the taxi came
to a halt outside a large white house with a clinically neat lawn in
front of it. The cab driver turned to the Doctor and said that the fare
was €79 and that he took cash or credit but not psychic paper.
The Doctor blushed guiltily and took a wallet from his pocket that appeared
to contain currency from every Earth period and country including nineteenth
century France, 21st century Ireland and 23rd century England, as well
as several credit cards with The Doctor as the unlikely cardholder's
name.
"Psychic paper works as a currency on every planet except Earth,"
he complained as they walked up the path. "They seem to have it
figured out here."
"Serves you right, tightwad," Rose laughed. "But are
you going to tell me who we're visiting here?"
"You'll understand in a little while. But… Rose… there
will be things you will find hard to comprehend here. Please don't be
frightened, and please don't think badly of me because I never faced
up to telling you about this part of my life before now. It was…
my own cowardice, not any attempt to deceive you." He looked at
her. She gave him a reassuring smile. He took her hand and squeezed
it and stepped up to ring the doorbell. A minute later the door was
opened by a woman who Rose judged to be in her late 30s, with short
black hair and very pretty dark eyes. Rose felt the psychic connection
between her and the Doctor like a jolt in her head. She knew instantly
that her name was Susan and he…. She had called him…. WHAT?
"Grandfather!" she cried out in ordinary words
and embraced him lovingly. "Oh, it's been so long."
"Too long," he said.
"Way too long," she said and quite unexpectedly she slapped
him in the face so hard he reeled back. "Too long! I thought you
had to be dead… but all this time you could have… and you
never..." Then she embraced him again and kissed the same cheek
she had just hit. Rose felt the emotions of both of them swinging between
anger and joy and beneath it, a deep, unbreakable love. "You could
have come back," she said again. "You said you would."
"I know. I'm sorry for that, my dear, dear Susan." He held
her tightly and returned the kiss she had given him. "My dear child."
"Oh, what am I doing?" Susan said at last. "Come in.
Come in the house, both of you." The Doctor took hold of Rose's
hand again and she was startled to feel it tremble.
The inside of the house did not look as space age as she expected. Susan
seemed to have furnished it with good quality "antiques" of
the twentieth century, two big leather sofas, a glass-topped coffee
table, dressers and sideboards, a clock, pictures, all quite familiar
looking. Only the TV, a wafer thin screen mounted on the wall, and the
music system, equally wafer thin, with a rack of micro-cd's hardly bigger
than Rose's thumbnail, proved that this was the future. Rose took all
this in calmly. The other part of it all she was still trying to work
out.
"Sit down," Susan urged them, and they sat on one of the big
sofas. She picked up a remote control and pressed buttons and a coffee
tray rose up from inside the glass table. She poured coffee for them
all and sat down opposite them, seemingly lost for words now after the
emotions spilled out in their first moments of reunion. The Doctor seemed
equally unable to express himself - a rare thing in itself. The lack
of communication was not just verbal. There seemed an awkward barrier
between them psychically, too. Rose thought there could be no worse
communications breakdown than between two people who could, if they
chose, talk to each other telepathically.
As the silence lengthened Susan calmly got up and went into the next
room. She came back a few moments later holding a small baby, no more
than a few weeks old. The Doctor put down his coffee cup and stared
with eyes that seemed suddenly moist. "Say hello to your great-granddaughter."
Susan placed the child in his arms. Rose looked at her Doctor with new
eyes as she saw him cuddle the baby. There WERE tears in his eyes. And
when the twin boys, aged, Rose guessed, about eight, ran in from the
garden he gasped out loud. "Boys," Susan said, as they looked
at the two visitors curiously. "This is your great grandfather.
Go give him a hug." She took the baby from him as the two boys
shyly approached him. He held out his arms and hugged them, letting
them climb on his knee. Rose, looking at him, felt a sudden aching need
for the father she had never known. She wasn't sure if that was something
psychic radiating from him as emotions she never knew he had spilled
out in huge, hot tears of joy, sorrow and regret all at once. After
a while, Susan sent the boys back out to play again in the back garden
that could be seen through big French doors and sat at her grandfather's
side. He took her hands in his.
Rose realised that, for the moment, she was not part
of this equation and moved away. She went over to the dresser and looked
at the ordinary family photos there. There were pictures of Susan and
a man whom she assumed was her husband, pictures of the two boys and
a new one of the baby girl. There were other pictures too. One was of
Susan as a young girl, standing next to a familiar blue police box with
a white haired elderly man. She looked at Susan and HER Doctor. He was
breaking the news about the death of their home planet to her, and now
she, also, was crying and saying the names of people she knew who must
have died in the disaster.
Susan was Gallifreyan too. That much she understood.
And the old man in that picture was the Doctor in yet another version
of himself. Rose understood. At some point in the life of that elderly
man he HAD done domestic. He had been a husband, a father, a grandfather.
That was the bit he had not been able to tell her about himself. And
it was a whopper of a secret, she thought. But she had nothing to blame
him for. He had not lied to her. She knew from early on that he was
much older than he appeared to be. And why wouldn't he have had a different
life once. She looked at the pictures again, trying to take it all in.
Then she saw something that REALLY startled her. Not Susan or her grandfather,
but a framed autographed picture of…
"Cliff Richard!!!" She laughed out loud. Susan
and the Doctor looked up from their quiet conversation. "But he's
so GAY!!!" The Doctor laughed at the confused and slightly off-put
expression on his granddaughter's face.
"I have still not worked out whether GAY means
the same thing in the 2000's as it used to do in the 1960s," he
said. To his granddaughter he explained that Rose was born in the 1980s,
and to Rose he explained that he and Susan had lived for quite some
time in 1960s London. Cliff Richard spanned that generation gap, but
Rose's perception of him and Susan's were clearly very different. Susan
laughed and admitted that these things DID get confusing. The Doctor
looked at her, then back at Rose. And he made a decision. "I'm
going to go kick the ball about with the boys outside. I once had a
trial for Preston North End you know… I dare say there is something
I can teach them… You girls can have an old chin-wag like you
do when us men are out of the way…" And he slipped out through
the French doors. Susan came beside Rose and they both watched him playing
football with his two great-grandsons.
"Can you believe him?" Susan said with a smile.
"Not about the Preston North End thing," Rose answered. "But
most of the time… yes." She looked at Susan. She looked strained.
"Are you ok?"
"Hearing about Gallifrey was a shock," she said. "David
and I don't have anything to do with the space programmes or anything,
and I haven't time travelled since I stopped going around with Grandfather.
So I never heard about it. There were a lot of people I used to care
about there."
"I'm sorry, I really am."
"Thank you." Susan paused a moment, looking
at Rose, trying to take her in. "So, grandfather tells me he met
you in 2005," she added, turning the conversation away from that
painful one.
"Yes. He blew up my job and rescued me from an
attack of living plastic creatures."
"That's grandfather for you. He does that."
"Its weird you calling him grandfather." Rose said, cutting
to the main issue. "Him looking like he does."
"Yes. I know. If it's any consolation it feels a bit strange for
me, too. But I felt his telepathic pattern. That hasn't changed. He
IS my grandfather as well as your…" Susan paused uncertainly
mid sentence and looked at Rose.
"What he is to me is kind of hard to pin down," Rose said.
"He's my Doctor, and that's the one thing I am sure of."
"That's enough to be going on with. He suggested
I show you the family album… so that you understand." She
took a thick leather bound book from the sideboard. On its cover was
an inlaid ornate circular design that Rose has seen in the TARDIS.
Susan opened it out. The first picture she looked at
was of a man a little younger than her Doctor, but she guessed was the
elderly man looking much younger. With him was a woman who was the image
of Susan and a boy of about 10. "My grandmother," she said.
"Her name was Julia. And my father as a boy." She turned the
page, and the same man, the boy about sixteen, and the woman now looking
older. Another page and the boy was a young man. His father looked just
a little older, but his mother was extremely elderly. Rose looked at
Susan. "My grandmother was Human. We age differently. 60 or 80
years is nothing to us. It's a lifetime to you."
She turned the page, and the young man and his father
were photographed alone. The father looked more tired, and very sad.
"I have the same problem," Susan explained. "It is actually
forty-one years since I stayed here and married David. I am fifty-eight
years old. David is sixty five. I know there will be a time when I will
have to go on without him. And our children - the boys share my genes
- they are Gallifreyan. But our little girl is Human. She'll die long
before me or her brothers. We make hard choices for the sake of love."
Rose looked at the picture again, then at her Doctor,
outside, rough-tumbling with the boys.
"So his wife died." She turned the pages back
and looked at the woman as she was when young. "He must have loved
her a lot." As she looked, something caught her eye. Her hand touched
the pendant he had given her for her birthday as she saw the Doctor's
long dead wife was wearing the same jewel around her neck. Susan noticed
it for the first time then.
"He said it was a family heirloom. I knew it was special. I didn't
realise quite HOW special."
"He must care a very great deal about you," Susan said. "To
have given you that."
"He does. Mind you… I think he felt guilty about me getting
bitten twice by alien vampyres yesterday. That might have a lot to do
with it."
"No," Susan smiled. "Alien vampyres… Daleks…
they're all in a days work for him. That was something else."
"You've met Daleks too?" Rose said. "Those things sure
get about."
"They're the reason we were on Earth in 2164," Susan explained.
"We joined the fight against a Dalek invasion. My David was part
of the local resistance. When it was over, I chose to stay here. It
was a hard choice. I loved my grandfather. I loved the life we shared
since we went away from Gallifrey. But I loved David, too, and if I
lived as a Gallifreyan with Grandfather, he'd treat me like a child
till I was 180 - that's our coming of age. I wanted to live like a Human.
Maybe I'd been on Earth too long. I wanted to be a grown up by Earth
standards not a child by our own. Apart from missing grandfather a whole
lot, I've been happy."
"And he never visited you before this?" Rose asked, remembering
her extreme reaction to him on the doorstep. And how thoroughly gobsacked
he was by the children.
"No. That's the thing. Forty-one years, and he
turns up at the door… and the strangest thing… he's lived
so much more in that time. I gave up time travelling. I have lived in
the here antd now. He… has spent nearly 400 years travelling since
then. He's got so many experiences, so many burdens, so many sorrows.
No wonder coming here… seeing this…this…."
"Domestic…" Rose supplied the word.
"Yes… domestic. A life that he used to have
with my grandmother and my father. A life he might have had if he'd
settled here with us instead of going off into space again…. Yes…
it was a shock to him. Nearly as much as me finding out that we are
the last of our kind."
"That I don't get. I thought he said he was the last Time Lord.
But you…"
"I'm not a Time Lord. That takes over a hundred years of training.
I'm a Gallifreyan. We left when I was five. I never even began the disciplines.
I have the physiology - two hearts, all of that, and some of the psychic
powers. But no training."
"Oh. I see," Rose said. "So he is the last."
"Yes."
Rose seemed about to say something else, but suddenly her face went
pale. The same moment, the Doctor stopped playing with the boys. He
looked around and then ran to the house. He had felt the psychic shock
as her metabolism finally reverted to Human. And as he promised, he
was there to catch her when she fell.
"What happened?" Susan asked as he carried
her to the sofa and laid her down. She was in a deep, deep sleep, as
he expected. He briefly filled his granddaughter in on the happenings
of the past few days.
"That explains it." She looked at Rose, curled up in a near
foetal position on the sofa as the Doctor gently caressed her face.
"She looks so young… a baby…"
"She's 21," the Doctor assured her. "She's not a child.
She's a Human adult." But the same guilty feeling had risen in
him again as Susan pointed it out and he couldn't pretend it hadn't.
"You gave her grandmother's pendant," Susan said. "You
never even let ME wear that. But you gave it to her. You wouldn't have
done that unless…."
"I want to marry her," he said.
"Does she know that?" Susan asked.
"No," he said. "I don't think she even really knows how
deeply I love her."
"Good. Because you KNOW it's a bad idea, don't you."
"Susan…" His expression was pained. "I knew it
would be hard for you to understand that I want to start again…"
"No. It's not that. I understand that. It's a natural feeling.
I suppose it's a lot like I felt when I left you for David. But grandfather,
NO. You can't."
"I've thought it through," he said. "I've
thought about nothing else for days. No, I haven't asked her, because
she needed to know about you… about what we really are and what
she'd be letting herself in for. But I'm going to. I hoped I would have
your blessing, Susan. I hoped we could all be one happy family - you
and me - Rose and her mother in her world… it could work."
"No."
"Please…" He began again. "Susan… please
understand."
"I DO understand," she answered him. "It's you that isn't
seeing things straight."
"You don't need to be jealous, you know."
"Jealous?" Susan laughed hollowly. "Of
what? I grew up… But you still feel the need for teenage company…
I am not even going to get into how that looks…"
"Good," he said stubbornly. "Because how it looks isn't
how it is."
"Grandfather…" She stopped and giggled hysterically.
"Are we the only race in the universe where granddaughters have
to tell their grandfathers the facts of life?" She looked at him.
She looked at Rose, sleeping in his arms, unaware of the dilemma surrounding
her. Susan took a deep long breath…..
"Chrístõdavõreendiamondhærtmallõupdracœfiredelúnmiancuimhne
de Lœngbærrow…" She said in a commanding voice.
"What…"
"That's your name, stupid," she told him.
"If you won't take notice of me as your granddaughter, then listen
to me as the only person in the universe who REALLY knows who you are."
The Doctor stared at her, lost for words.
"I believe my grandmother just called you Christo," she said
a little kinder. "But of course I never saw her. She was dead before
I was born. And that's the point. You KNOW how fragile Human women are.
And… look at her. Your Rose… she is beautiful, I can understand
how much you love her. But… even for a Human she is so small.
She couldn't bear you children. You KNOW how much it takes out of Human
women. Carrying a Time Lord's child would kill her. You know it would.
And… that would be murdering her. And…. And whatever else
you are, you're NOT a murderer."
The Doctor said nothing for a long time. But her words had hit home.
He continued to caress Rose's face, running his fingers through her
hair.
"It doesn't have to be that way. I… I don't need children.
I have you… and your children. At least… if you want me
to be around from time to time… like a real grandfather ought
to be…"
"You may not need children… but SHE might one day. And if
you can't…."
"I hadn't thought of that," he answered, knowing that was
a lame and pathetic response to her very important point.
"Well, now you have to think about it."
"I know I want Rose in my life," he said with absolute certainty
in his tone. "I want her to be a part of what little family we
have. I want HER family to accept ME as part of her life, and I want
to take care of her until her dying day."
"Then find a way to do that, but not THAT way." Susan told
him. "And… and yes…"
"Yes, what?"
"Yes, I'd like you to be a 'real' grandfather. And incidentally
you ALWAYS were. And I'd like my children to know you. And yes, I'd
like to get to know Rose under less stressed out circumstances."
Susan felt for a moment as if the past forty-one years
had never happened. She remembered only too well how it was possible
to be angry at her grandfather, to want to rage against him, and yet
at the same time love him so much she could forgive him anything.
The Doctor felt those conflicting feelings deep in his psyche. He too,
had found it strange to be so angry at somebody he loved so much, and
he was glad she had given him the opportunity to mend the fences.
“Mending fences is a good idea.” Susan looked
at Rose. “Let her sleep a little longer. You go and play with
the boys again. They seem to like you. And we’ll all have dinner
when David gets in. then maybe we can make a start in that direction.”
"Dinner sounds fine - as long as you cook better than Rose's mum."
It was very late when The Doctor summoned the TARDIS
from the Embankment and re-materialised it on the front lawn of Susan's
home. They had all talked long into the evening after dinner, remembering
times long past, sharing news of what had happened to them since. For
The Doctor and Susan the parting was a long one. Rose left them alone
to say their goodbyes. At last he came inside and shut the door. He
dematerialised the TARDIS and put it in temporal orbit above the Earth.
He still had so many thoughts in his head. Most of them
concerned Rose, but some concerned the family he had there on 23rd century
Earth. He still didn't do 'domestic' but there was a really good reason
to break that rule occasionally. And Rose was another. He turned to
her and smiled.
"That was unexpected," she said in answer to a question he
hadn't even asked yet. "Susan is nice - although Cliff Richard?
But it's so weird… you're her grandfather. You are a GREAT grandfather.
And you're so good at it. I saw you with the kids. But… but it's
weird."
"Is it too weird?" he asked, the anxiety for her to answer
that all important question telling in his voice. "Does it change
how you feel about me?"
"No," she said to his immediate relief. "It
should, I suppose. That's the crazy bit. You are all of that, and at
the same time, you are still MY Doctor. And… I still love you.
In fact… I think I love you more now that I know so much more
about you. I know that you're a kind, sweet, loving man who cares for
his family - who has lost so much and keeps the pain inside him and
won't let anyone touch that part of him… though I think he desperately
wants somebody to do that… And I love you… "
"Oh Rose!" She moved close to him. He let her. For all the
harsh realities Susan had made him face up to, at that moment he could
no more stop what was about to happen than throw himself at the mercy
of a Dalek extermination squad.
"My Doctor…. I love you." She put her arms around his
neck and pressed her face into his chest so that she could feel those
two hearts beating.
"Rose," he murmured softly. "My Rose. I have so wanted
you to say that. Except… Tell me again… and call me by my
name."
"I don't know your name," she said. "And nor do you."
"Chrístõ."
"Chrístõ?" Rose looked at him. Yes, it fitted
him. "Ok… Chrístõ… I love you…"
The Doctor smiled. A long buried memory came back to
him of another sweet, beautiful Human woman who had called him by that
name and loved him by it. But it was Rose who was telling him it now.
It was Rose who now lifted her face to his and kissed him on the lips.
He closed his arms around her and returned the kiss with all the passion
that was in his soul. It felt good. It felt right, just as it had done
so many centuries ago when he last risked his hearts on such a gamble.
And he wished, as he had never wished before, that he could stop time
and live forever in that wonderful moment. He knew he COULD make it
last as long as possible. He could - and did - slow the moment down,
stretch it like an elastic band and make it last as long as possible,
but he couldn't stop time altogether. At last he had to return to natural
time. And when he did he was shocked to see tears on her cheeks.
"Rose…"
"I had to know," she said. "I had to find out if it would
feel as good as I wanted it to feel. But…"
"There's a 'but' in this?" He asked with a sinking feeling.
"Rose… please…" From feeling on top of the world,
suddenly he felt as if the ground had been ripped from under him.
"Lois and Clarke."
"What?"
"Lois and Clarke. It worked great when she thought he was just
a geek in the newspaper office and was in love with Superman. But then
the stupid scriptwriters decided that Lois would find out who he was,
and they would get married, and have a super-baby - and the show went
downhill after that."
"I thought it was pretty much at the bottom of the hill to begin
with," The Doctor said bitterly. He didn't need any powers of premonition
to know where she was going. And the gut-wrenching thing was that she
was right. The things he wanted, to make her his wife, to have her with
him, like this, for all of her life, they couldn't happen. He had known
it all along. The warning signs had been there. But he had been too
stubborn to see.
"We… me and you… we're the same…." Rose
went on, tearfully. We're Lois and Clarke…. And…. And it's
all downhill from here. We can't. You… you have a universe of
bad guys and weird entities and Daleks to fight…. And you can't
do that and come home for tea with the little wife. And I can't be with
you. Because you would risk your life every time to make sure I was
safe, instead of doing what you ought to be doing to make things right."
"We could try," he pleaded, but he knew he was clutching at
straws. He wondered why it was that she saw the future prospect so clearly.
Was there still a vestige of psychic power left in her from yesterday
or was it just that she was, as he had so often noted, a lot quicker
on the uptake than him sometimes. Either way, as much as he wanted it
to be different, she was right.
"It's all right," she said, finally. "I can live with
it. I… I just wanted to know if we COULD be… if you could
be my…. But it's ok…."
"Oh, Rose!" He was crying too, now. "Oh,
my sweetheart. Just… let me kiss you one more time." She
moved closer. He reached out his left arm and curled it around her and
pulled her close as he kissed her again. Again he slowed time and let
the moment last as long as he could. But as the stretched moment reached
the maximum possible limit and he released it slowly, his right hand
went to his pocket. He fingered the sonic screwdriver's controls delicately.
He knew the kindest thing would be to take it all back. Erase the memory
of it. The easiest would be to go right back to before Jackie's lasagne
- and this time just drink the coffee and not let melancholic thoughts
get the better of him. Or before Paris. No, he told himself. She deserved
to have Paris. That was her special birthday. And he NEEDED her to know
the part Susan played in his past. The point of no return was when they
stepped on board the TARDIS half an hour ago. He fine tuned the memory
eraser and aimed the beam at her head. Her beautiful blonde hair seemed
to glow and he felt her slipping into a gentle sleep. He lifted her
in his arms and kicked at a panel in the TARDIS wall until a cabin bed
slid out. He laid her down on it and held her hand for a long moment.
Then he bent over her and kissed her one more time.
“Sleep well, my Rose,” he whispered. He stood
up. He walked over to the TARDIS console and pressed buttons to set
the time and space co-ordinates for tea at Jackie's house, back in the
21st century. Twice he had to brush away tears that were blurring his
vision. Pull yourself together, he told himself. He debated using the
memory eraser on himself. He actually pointed it at his forehead, but
he was afraid of losing more than half an hour. He wanted to remember
the beautiful parts of it, dancing the night away with her in his arms,
the touch of her hands on his face, the feel of her body pressed against
him, the smell of her hair, the joy of being in love, if only for a
brief dream of a moment. He wanted all of that. He just didn't want
the pain of turning all of that down in order to be her friend and companion
and no more.
He held onto the console tightly, took a deep breath and closed his
eyes. He let his two hearts slow right down, his brain to clear of all
thoughts, all feelings, all desires and wants, his muscles to relax
so that, if somebody had touched him at that moment he would probably
have collapsed like jelly. It was like a spiritual bath, washing away
the cares of the past few days, not erasing them from his memory, but
making them feel more distant, less sharp, less painful. Yet another
experience he had learnt to live with.
Rose stirred on the bunk. He opened his eyes. He felt his heart and
lungs kick back into action on the instant. Hello, sleepyhead. You fell
asleep the moment we got in here. I guess your body clock just had to
readjust itself. Anyway, you woke just in time. We'll be at your mum's
house in a few minutes.
"Why are we going to mum's?" she asked. It was
only a few days since they were last there and usually they stayed away
at LEAST a month before she could persuade him to let her touch base
with all the familiar things he took her away from.
"For your birthday," he said. "Doesn't seem fair that
your mum should miss your 21st. So you get two birthdays for the price
of one. But I'm going to use one of those credit cards and take you
both out. It's only three days since we had Jackie's lasagne. I'm not
a bad enough person to deserve a replay of that so soon."
"You're doing that, for me?" She stood on her tiptoes and
kissed him on the cheek. "Thank you." He smiled and tried
not to remember the passionate kiss she had given him before. "But
if we're going out with my mum, just you behave. I know what she's like
- ALWAYS flirting with my boyfriends."
"Lucky for us I'm NOT your boyfriend then," he said with a
grin.
"You are NOT," she told him firmly. "I repeat... NOT….
Going to cop off with my mum. You may not be my boyfriend, but I'm definitely
not having you as my stepdad."
"Don't worry," he grinned. "Despite the evidence of the
past few days, the occasional inedible lasagne is as domestic as I get.
Go on, get your coat. Even June in Britain is a bit too cold for that
outfit." He watched her as she turned to the cloakroom. He sighed
wistfully. It WAS the right thing to do. When his hearts stopped hurting
he might even come to believe that.