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They spent a couple of pleasant days in Turin,
in 1886. Rose added a few precious facts to her sketchy knowledge of architecture.
The boys learnt a lot more, because The Doctor was able to pass huge chunks
of information to them telepathically. He was always careful not to leave
her out, and talked to her and the boys together out loud as often as
possible, but she did envy them that silent, private bond they all
shared. She wished she still had the psychic connection with The Doctor
that she used to have. Even without it, she loved being a part of their
family unit. She smiled whenever people assumed that
she was the mother of the twins and The Doctor their father. When a lady
at a café in the Piazza Carignano said they had her eyes she could
hardly control her laughter.
"But you do have beautiful brown eyes,"
The Doctor said later as they walked in the Giardini Reali, the 16th century
Royal Gardens of Turin. "Just like they do."
"Yes, but they get it from their mum. And SHE gets it from your Julia.
You said she is the image of her."
"That she is," The Doctor sighed. "And I'm the odd one
out in this incarnation. I had brown eyes, too, when I was Julia's husband."
"But you said you have your mother's eyes now," Rose told him.
"That's special."
"Yes," he smiled. "It's a
nice dream - the four of us as a family. But we have to remember it's
NOT true."
"I wish you were our dad," Davie said. The Doctor looked at
him and at Chris, and he knew they both had the thought together.
"No," he said. "That's not fair on your real father. You
owe him your respect and your love first. Before me."
"But he is so…" Davie began.
"He doesn't want us to be Time Lords," Chris said, voicing the
idea they both had.
"He doesn't have a lot of choice. You
two are learning so fast, I think you WILL be Time Lords much faster than
any of us ever before. If you keep practicing your telepathic skills and
work at the theory, you will probably both transcend by the time you're
done with ordinary Earth school. I think… when you're ready, you
might be more skilled than I am. You'll be BETTER Time Lords than I am.
And your dad will have to come to terms with it."
"He says stuff about you sometimes,"
Davie continued. "To mum, when they get cross with each other. He
says that we'd all be better off if you'd never come back."
"He'd be dead if I hadn't come back. He's being silly. Humans get
that way sometimes. They're a very irrational race. I mean, look at Rose…
falling in love with somebody as daft as me. Totally irrational."
He tried to make light of it, but the next thing Chris said made his eyes
glint with anger.
"Humans are so pathetic. Including dad."
"NO!" Chris jumped visibly at the
anger that was turned on him from the grandfather he loved. "NO!
And don't ever let me hear you say or think a thing like that. I never
taught you to think that way."
"Granddad…." Davie stammered nervously and looked at his
brother. They clutched hands together as they looked back at The Doctor
and felt his anger both in his spoken words and in the telepathic signals
he was sending out. Rose saw their faces and put her hand on his shoulder,
speaking quietly to him and his anger softened a little when he spoke
again.
"We…all three of us… have
Human DNA in us," he said. "Along with our Gallifreyan blood.
Our Human side is in many ways the better part of us. It is our compassion,
our empathy, our love, our sense of justice and mercy - all things that
Gallifreyan society valued least while they put intellect, logic, blind
and unquestioning loyalty first. Even when I was your age and I was beaten
every day by other boys because I was a half blood, when I was scorned
by teachers who thought I couldn’t learn with the pureblood sons
of Gallifrey – even then I never denounced my Human traits. I was
always proud of what my mother’s blood had given to me. And to hear
such scorn coming from your lips - Chris, my own flesh and blood, my own
child… NO. No. I cannot. I won’t have it. I don’t even
know where it comes from. I know I have been teaching you to be proud
of where we come from, proud of our Gallifreyan society and its history.
But NOT at exclusion of that other wonderful race that is a part of us.”
There were tears in his eyes when he said
that. The boys had tears, too. "Only half blood Gallifreyans can
shed tears," he said. "That's another gift my mother gave me."
He put his arms around both boys and hugged them tightly. "Never
look down on Humanity. It… it is true their bodies are weaker than
ours, their short lives mean they can never reach their full potential,
but they are incredible all the same. They do so much, they achieve so
much. Your DAD - and a few brave people who fought back - saved Earth
from the Daleks before you were even born. The Daleks thought themselves
a superior race, but the inferior Humans beat them. And they've done the
same countless times. Because above all, even the meanest and poorest
of them has courage - another gift that Gallifreyans don't value, but
which the universe needs as much as it needs compassion."
"We… we understand," Chris stammered. "But…"
"When we get back," The Doctor
continued. " You
two need to spend some time with your dad. You need to talk to him. He
needs to talk to you, and he needs to know that you ARE still his sons,
no matter what else you are. And that you love him. As for the Time Lord
thing… I'll talk to him about that. There is no choice in it. You
two are BORN to be Time Lords. Your telepathic abilities would be too
dangerous without the disciplines that go with it. You would hurt yourselves
and others. THAT'S the main reason I began this. Not… not just because
I was afraid what would happen if I really was the last Time Lord. Not
because of some mad plan to repopulate our society. That's hardly going
to happen with just three of us, anyway. But…when you two transcend….
When you become fully-fledged Time Lords… I hope your dad will be
as proud as I will be."
"Grandfather," Davie said. "We're
sorry."
"There you are then," he said.
"THAT'S your Humanity talking. I never heard "I'm sorry"
from a Gallifreyan and thought he meant it. But you ought to tell Rose
you're sorry, too. It is HER race you insulted with careless and thoughtless
words."
Both boys turned and went to her and hugged
her tightly. Rose smiled and kissed them. They had some funny ideas in
their heads, and it was probably The Doctor's fault for putting so many
of them in there. But they were also two wonderful children. She loved
them as much as their great-grandfather did and really DID wish they were
her own. For all The Doctor had said, it WAS a nice dream. The only thing
wrong with it was that it made her WANT to have children of her own, and
the only man she wanted them with kept on telling her it wasn't possible
because he was a Time Lord and she was a Human. Sometimes that hurt deeper
than she let on.
"It
hurts me, too," The Doctor whispered to her, his hand on her shoulder.
She was surprised, as she always was, when she realised that he could
read her thoughts. He didn't deliberately intrude on her, but when her
thoughts were especially emotional, and especially when they involved
him - and when didn't they these days - he would catch hold of them somehow.
She turned to him, but his mood had changed
again. He smiled brightly at them all and brought them by the hand to
a large, elaborate fountain. "This is the fountain of the Naiads
and Tritons. It is said to have magical powers. If you walk around it
three times and think about a problem you have a solution will come to
you."
"Do we believe in magic?" Chris
asked. 
"It's worth a try." And they walked
slowly around the beautiful fountain three times. Rose's thoughts were
on that difficult problem of how two people who weren't even of the same
SPECIES could have a REAL relationship. She didn't know what the others
were thinking of, but she hoped there was a solution for them all.
"We could buy dad a present from Turin,"
Davie said. "To tell him we love him."
"There," The Doctor said. "It
DOES work." He turned to Rose and his eyes dimmed even though he
still smiled with his mouth. "Our solution might take a little longer,
but don't give up on the magic." And she knew that his wish had been
the same as hers. That in itself gave her comfort, because as long as
he wanted it too, there was no reason why it might not happen one day.
They returned to the TARDIS and The Doctor
set their next destination. He was in a good mood again and as he worked
at the console Bob Dylan music played softly on the cd player that he
had long ago incorporated into the communications console. He said something
about picking up some new CDs next time they were back on Earth in Rose's
era.
Meanwhile….
"Earth, May 1st, 1598 in the forest of Pendle," The Doctor said.
"Never heard of it," Rose replied.
"That's because you come from London and have never ventured north
of Watford," The Doctor told her. "But to paraphrase myself,
lots of places have a north, and we're in East Lancashire in the late
Elizabethan era, and it's a very interesting period which is the only
reason I'm submitting to having to WEAR the kind of clothes people wore
back then."
When they had found what the TARDIS's apparently limitless clothing supply
had to offer for Elizabethan wear, Rose understood that comment. For her,
there were dresses to die for, her choice being one that was pure white
with the tight fitting bodice adorned with pearls - REAL pearls, she realised.
It must have been worth a fortune in any Earth era. The only problem she
had with it was that it was another dress that required tight, stiff corsetry
underneath. Although, she admitted, for a waistline The Doctor could span
with his hands, it was worth it.
HIS clothes were startling. They did Tudors and Stuarts to death in her
school history, so she knew the technical term for it was a doublet and
hose. But seeing HIM standing before her in one, was another matter. It
was deep mauve colour with silver fleur de lis embroidered onto it, with
a cloak of deep purple lined with the same mauve and silver slung casually
over one shoulder. Despite herself her eyes travelled down from his laughing
eyes, past the distressingly sharp looking sword in a scabbard that went
with the outfit, to his legs encased in the hose - or in modern parlance
- tights. At that point the carefully adopted Elizabethan demeanour broke
down and she shook with laughter until her tightly corseted side hurt.
"Oh, shut up," he said, as through her laughter he heard something
like "nice legs."
The boys also had a version of the adult
costume, though simpler in style. They, too, had to suffer the indignity
of the 'hose' but it looked less silly on boys, Rose thought. She noticed
that they had smaller versions of the sword as well. The Doctor assured
her they were just 'toys' that could hurt nobody, least of all themselves.

"I bet Susan won't say so," Rose
said as they stepped out of the TARDIS and walked away from it.
"Susan needs to relax a bit and not
worry so much. We got into a lot more trouble when she was their age."
"Yes, I think that's her point."
She noticed him looking back at the TARDIS and frowning. "What's
wrong?"
"When we're in these pre-industrial
time
periods I always worry about the TARDIS. These are suspicious times when
anything unusual was seen as the work of the Devil. I do wish sometimes
the chameleon circuit DID work. If it just looked like a woodsman's hut
or a cave it would be ok." He turned and looked at Rose. "I
love that you always wear the pendant. But they might see it as an astrological
sign and that kind of thing was suspect - witchcraft and all that. Tuck
it inside the dress where it won't be seen." Rose did as he said.
"The thing about places like this is to look like you have a perfect
right to be there."
Rose knew that he did that almost everywhere.
From her first trip with him to the end of the world, when, with a little
help from psychic paper he got them accepted as guests of honour at the
party, to the other day in Turin when they were treated royally at the
opera he made people believe he was not only meant to be there, but that
it was important that he should be there. And it worked even when he was
in that scruffy leather jacket as well as when he was dressed up like
now.
"You can also get away with it if you
look like a servant or a person of no account that nobody takes any notice
of," he added. "But I think its more fun being aristocracy,
don't you."
"Except in the French Revolution," Rose reminded him, and he
grinned and was about to come up with a riposte when they heard a noise
as of someone or some thing crashing through the undergrowth somewhere
off the forest path. The Doctor reached for his sword and Rose saw that
he handled it like he knew what he was doing. He drew her and the boys
close to him and waited, eyes alert.
What emerged onto the path in front of them, stumbling, bruised and bleeding,
was a man. He was about The Doctor's height and apparent age, with blue
eyes and dark hair and was dressed in a black cloak over black jerkin
and leggings. He fell at their feet and it was Chris who bent to try to
help him.
"Chris… be careful," The
Doctor said, turning his sword towards the stranger. “You, be still.”
"He's
a good man, granddad," Chris said, touching the man's hand. "And
he needs our help to escape capture."
The Doctor blinked in astonishment and looked
at his great grandson and the panting, nervous man whose face was, nevertheless,
kindly and open. He looked around. There was a clump of thorn bushes nearby.
"It's a painful hiding place," he said, jerking his head towards
it, "But less painful than what awaits you if you are taken. We'll
try to head off your pursuers." The man scrambled to his feet and
pressed himself into the thorn bush. Rose winced. It must have been VERY
painful. But even as he concealed himself they heard horses on the path
and alarmed shouts. The Doctor drew them all forward away from the bushes
and told them to keep their eyes ahead.
Moments later several horsemen appeared. All
were dressed in leather jerkins and hard-wearing cloth and carried plain
steel swords. The Doctor stepped forward as the men reined in their horses.
"Sire," the leader of them said."I
am constable of the watch here in the forest, and we are pursuing a knave.
Have you seen such a one?"
"A black-visaged rogue passed us in that direction some quarter of
the hour ago," The Doctor answered. "But he would be long gone.
He had a swift horse."
"Horse?" The constable frowned. "From whence did he get
that? When he was sprung from his bolthole he was on foot."
"I know not," The Doctor said,
"being a stranger to these parts. But it seems that horse thievery
is common. An hour past as we rested by a stream to the west of here our
horses were taken by a gang of thieves who spoke most roughly to my lady
wife."
"You are unscathed, Sire?" the constable asked, suddenly concerned.
"I defended myself and my lady's honour,"
he replied. "But being one alone I could not prevent the horses being
taken. Our scurvy knave of a body-servant ran off in fear and is doubtless
lost in the forest by now," he added. "I am the Marquess de
Lœngbærrow," he continued. "Lately come with my Lady
and my children as a guest of Sir Richard Assheton of Whalley, and thus
far not assured of much welcome in this cold northern shire!"
The mention of his own title and that of the
local lord of the manor settled any other questions the constable might
have and he became animated in his efforts to please his betters.
"Sire, I shall send the lad here back
to fetch horses for you." He promptly dismissed one of the riders.
"Meantime - the rogue who passed you - I beg your pardon, and your
leave sire, but he is a dangerous criminal - a seminary of Douai banned
from these shores on pain of death and I must continue the pursuit."
And at that the man and his followers were off, riding in the direction
The Doctor had pointed them.
"What the heck is a seminary of doowhatsit and why is it pain of
death to be one?" Rose asked as The Doctor pulled out his sonic screwdriver
from inside his doublet and used it to break through the thorns and extract
the hidden man.
"He is a Catholic priest," Davie told Rose quietly. "And
at this time in England that was illegal."
"Sire," the man said standing before The Doctor. "I owe
you my life - incredible as it seems if you are, indeed, a friend of the
Asshetons of Whalley." He shook his hand gratefully and then bent
to address Chris. "Little gentleman, I owe you for your intercession
on my behalf. May I ask your name?"
"Christopher Campbell," he answered, and the man's eyes flashed
in apparent understanding.
"Ah," he said. "Then you are
of the old faith despite acquaintance with heretics such as those who
now reside at the Abbey. There are, of course, many noble houses who hide
such a secret." He clasped Chris's hand and straightened up. "With
your leave, I shall be upon my way. You have gained me time enough to
reach a nearby safe place before nightfall. My blessings and the blessings
of Christ and Saint Christopher upon your own journey." And the man
made a sigil in the air before them and turned and ran into the forest.

"They killed people in this time for
being priests?" Rose asked in astonishment. "I never knew that."
And she blushed and looked at Davie, who HAD known that. "My school
was such rubbish. Ten year olds know more than I do."
"You know now," The Doctor said.
"So don't worry. Chris, what's that he gave you?" Chris held
up a silver crucifix on a thin chain that the man pressed into his hand
when he held it. "You'd best hide that away, too, son. Crucifixes
were very much out of fashion in these times." Chris put it around
his neck but hid it inside his clothes. Then something else struck him.
"Chris, how long have you been able
to read people's timelines by touch?"
"About a year. Since you started training us we can do it better.
Davie can, too."
"Your psychic abilities are fantastic,"
The Doctor said. "You're both way better than me. And I'm totally
useless at telekinesis."
"Davie's best at that," Chris said. "I'm best at image
projection. I do the chess boards."
"You're both fantastic," he said again with obvious pride. "But
none of our tricks here, boys. They definitely fall into the witchcraft
category."
"That man…" Chris spoke sadly,
tears pricking his eyes. "He's going to die in ten years. They'll
catch him and…."
"I know," The Doctor said. "I felt it too. We can't help
that. It's his destiny. At least he lives for today. And for a man in
his position that's enough to be going on with."
The
'lad' arrived back just then with three spare horses, one large gelding
and two smaller ponies. Rose looked nervous suddenly and pointed out that
she could not ride.
“You don’t have to,” The
Doctor said as he fixed the travel bag they had with them to the saddle
of the stallion. “Ladies rode pillion in these times.” And
after seeing the two boys onto the ponies he lifted her sideways onto
the back of the gelding and mounted it in front of her in a swift movement.
If she lived to be 100 in his company he would
never cease to amaze her, Rose thought. WHEN in his colourful life did
he learn to ride a horse as if he was BORN in the saddle? He told her
to hold on to him, and she put her arms about his waist and her head against
his cloaked back as he urged his horse on at a walk. The 'lad' stayed
with them as guide as they came out of the forest and descended along
a better made road to a village that they saw ahead of them at the bottom
of a rounded hill. The boy said it was Whalley, their destination.
"Do you actually know this Assheton guy?" she asked him in a
low voice only he would hear.
"No," he answered. "I'm going
to use Power of Suggestion and brazen it out. But how are you enjoying
your Elizabethan adventure so far?"
"These people… They're suspicious
of anything strange, they hate Catholics and hang priests, and they believe
in witchcraft. They're not very nice, are they?"
The Doctor wondered if he ought to mention
that the penalty for being a seminary in Elizabethan England was actually
to be hung, drawn and quartered, the second part happening while the condemned
man was not fully dead. He decided not.
"I've had some good times in this period," The Doctor said.
"Maybe I should have taken you to Stratford to meet my old mate Will
Shakespeare instead, but I thought after Puccini you'd think I was just
showing off."
"William Shakespeare is your friend?"
"Yes. So was Christopher Marlowe and Thomas Middleton at various
times. It's a good thing alcohol has no effect on me, though. All three
of them were in the habit of trying to get me drunk and married off to
women they knew."
"And these are people you would think of introducing your great grandchildren
to?"
"Shakespeare isn't such a bad lad. He'd behave himself in mixed company
at least."
"Well, I'd sure like to tell him how bored I was by the Merchant
of Venice at school."
"Not a good idea. They didn't teach Shakespeare in school for at
least another century and girls didn't go to school anyway."
She lapsed into silence then and just enjoyed the rare treat of riding
side saddle behind her own beloved man. She expected to be scared, but
she actually felt perfectly safe there, holding onto him. And it was nice
to be that close up to him for so long, like a very extended hug.
It
was dusk when they arrived at the aforementioned Abbey. There at least
her sketchy history came together. She knew that Henry VIII had dissolved
all the abbeys and monasteries and sold the buildings to nobles who could
afford to buy them as private houses. The Abbey at Whalley had gone that
way and now belonged to Sir Richard Assheton, a man in his fifties who
seemed friendly enough for one the priest had regarded as an enemy. With
a little help from 'power of suggestion' he recognised The Doctor as an
old friend and they were conducted to chambers to rest before the banquet
they were apparently expected at.
Rose was not a girl who was used to being
waited upon, but she was grateful to be helped by a maid out of the elaborate
dress which was feeling less comfortable now. She lay down on the big
bed in a 'shift' of white fabric that she was helped into before she dismissed
all the servants from the room.
The Doctor came in after making sure the boys
were napping. He was wearing a sort of loose velvet robe that she supposed
men of this time wore when they relaxed.
"The trouble with people thinking we
are married," he said, "is that they ALWAYS provide us with
rooms with double beds in them." He laid down on it beside her even
so.
"You look like you have something on
your mind other than sleeping arrangements," Rose said to him as
she snuggled close. A cuddle was a cuddle no matter what century it was
in.
"Thinking about the boys… Chris knows how to read a timeline
already. It took me years to get the hang of that. Even now I need to
concentrate. He only has to touch their hands. I should teach him to block
it though. It's not always a good thing."
"Why?"
"Would you really like to know exactly
when, where and how anyone will die the moment you touch them? If…
if I'd known the day my son was given into my arms newborn… if I'd
known he was destined to die and leave me alone…" His eyes
dimmed at the thought before he shook his head and freed himself of the
thought. "No, we learn to block it to protect ourselves as well as
others."
"Seems like once you start this Time Lord training there's one thing
after the other to teach them."
"Yes. But that's ok. I'm proud of them both. They WILL transcend
much sooner than anyone on Gallifrey ever did. I am giving them centuries
of theory in a matter of years and their skills are progressing exponentially.
I really DO need to teach them to pilot the TARDIS next. I think I should
teach you, as well. It's your home. You're a part of it. If anything happened
to me, you ought to have it, and be able to use it properly."
"I thought only Time Lords could operate a TARDIS."
"So did I. But I never expected the TARDIS to be so empathic with
you. I think you could."
Rose had a brief vision of being alone in the TARDIS, getting it to take
her places she could only dream of. But then she realised that, without
him, there was nowhere she wanted to go. And he had said - "if anything
happened to me."
"Nothing is going to happen to you. But I WOULD like to learn along
with the boys." She paused and came to something else that was on
her mind.
"Did you read my timeline?" Rose asked. "The first time
we met… you grabbed my hand…"
"Not the first time. I was more interested in getting you away from
the Autons and out of a building I intended to blow up. The second time.
When you asked me who I was and I told you a load of nonsense about the
world turning… I read as far as you stepping into the TARDIS to
come with me… after that… there was no point. Time travel
introduces so many uncertainties. And once you'd actually begun travelling
with me it was too late."
"So you have no more idea than I have what the future holds for us?"
“No.”
Later, Rose banished him from the room again while she
dressed for the banquet. The travel bag had concealed a dress she just
HAD to wear at least once, and she submitted to being squeezed into the
tightest of corsetry before putting it on. It was pure white, embroidered
over with a silver-white thread and covered in pearls. REAL pearls. In
any era it must have been worth a fortune.
And the smile on The Doctor’s face when he saw her
was worth it.
“The prettiest woman in the room,” he told
her as he took her arm. She smiled because she knew he meant it.
The
banquet involved an unbelievable array of food and they all made a pretence
of eating their fill like their companions. But they were all too well
aware that the village they passed through had its share of beggars and
people who looked as if they never had their fair share of the food the
land gave up. It was hard to truly enjoy this bounty in that knowledge.
Rose tried to join in the chatter of the women around the
table, but they were too empty-headed. Nothing but dress fabrics and the
size of ruffs and their hopes of being presented at court.
Strange, she thought, but before The Doctor took her hand
and changed her life, she probably COULD have talked to them perfectly
easily. It was a shock to realise how much she had changed. She thought
about the last time she'd been back home and had met up with Shireen and
some of the other girls she grew up with, and how empty their conversations
had seemed.
Of course the fact that she couldn't really
tell them what SHE had been doing made it harder. Shireen and the others
had the idea that The Doctor was some kind of international traveller
and that she went along with him for the laugh, and for - well, the SEX.
They couldn't imagine any other reason to be with a man but that. In a
million years she couldn't explain to them that what they had went beyond
physical attraction, that just being with The Doctor was enough for her,
without BEING with him, that the touch of his hand on hers still thrilled
her as much as the first time, that the rare kisses he gave to her were
enough to know that the desire was there without needing it to be a reality.
She couldn't explain that in a million years, and neither could she explain
that she didn't care about clothes and boys and pop music.
Nor could she explain the thrill of seeing her first opera, of listening
to Bob Dylan while flying through the time vortex. She couldn't even tell
them how beautiful Turin was, even though that was a perfectly plausible
place for her to have visited.
And did she MIND that she had changed so much? If she met another version
of herself that had not met The Doctor, that other self would probably
think she was a snob who thought she was too good now for her old friends.
But it wasn't that. Her life had been stretched, her expectations raised,
her hopes for the future solidified. Even when she WAS a shopgirl she
had wanted more. Now she knew WHAT she wanted. To be a time and space
travelling defender of justice alongside the man she loved. It wasn't
in the careers booklet they gave her at school. But it WAS what she wanted.
The Doctor was not finding the conversation entirely stimulating, either.
He had NEVER in his life taken part in a hunt and he was entirely winging
it in the conversation until it turned to more specifics.
"I understand you encountered some of our local rogues today,"
Sir Richard Assheton said to him.
"Aye," he replied. "Our horses
were stolen. A damnable nuisance."
"The forest roads can be treacherous that way. You should have sent
a servant ahead and we could have arranged an escort for you and your
good lady and your fine children."
"Alas, in hindsight…"
"I understand you crossed paths with another rogue, also," Assheton
continued, and The Doctor immediately paid attention. "A dangerous
renegade - a seminary preaching sedition among the weaker of mind."
"He didn't look so much when he came past us," The Doctor said.
"Another rogue."
"Maybe so. But those who influence the minds of the people are far
more dangerous than mere thieves."
"That much is certainly true. I take it the rogue has evaded you?"
He was aware that the boys were paying attention to this part of the conversation.
He could feel Chris in his head asking him to find out more.
"He cannot be far away. Somebody will have given him succour. There
is a manhunt even as we sit at meat. He will be taken, I am sure. And
once taken he will be swiftly removed to Lancaster. And there, the gibbet
awaits him, as befits one of his sort."
"Indeed," The Doctor said non-commitedly. "Yet thus far
he is not taken?"
"Not yet, but it will not be long."
"I rejoice that the Queen's law is so
well attended in these parts," he said and took up his wine goblet
and drank as a distraction from the conversation.
"I don't know," he told Chris who
was asking questions still. "I think he's safe. This man is all blather.
But, I feel for our seminarian, hunted in the dark."
When
the banquet was over there was dancing. And Rose REALLY panicked because
this was a different kind of dancing than she had ever known before. But
The Doctor grinned at her and led her out onto the floor amongst the crowd.
HE appeared to be an expert in it. He held her hand up at shoulder level,
barely touching, as was the custom apparently and placed his feet expertly.
She did her best to keep up with him in a formal dance called the Galliard
in which there was a great deal of bowing and curtsying and courtly actions
involved, and then a more informal one called the Branle which was a little
easier to handle, though she never stopped being nervous about it. Still,
dancing with The Doctor was always an experience, no matter what kind
of dancing it was, and she smiled through it all.
Suddenly the doors to the great hall opened with a crash. The musicians
stopped playing and people stopped dancing as the constable and his men
came in, a bound prisoner thrust in front of them. The Doctor heard Chris's
anguished cry in his head and sent a warning message to him. The boys
both came to his side through the crowd and he put his arms around them
and Rose and held them all tightly. But there was nothing they could do
for the prisoner. The crowd parted and he was manhandled towards Assheton
who looked him up and down.
"Who was sheltering him?" Assheton demanded and the constable
said he was taken alone hiding in a disused mill by the Downham road.
Assheton seemed almost disappointed there were no other prisoners taken.
Obviously he had hoped to flush out supporters of the 'old faith'. He
contented himself with ordering that the Seminarian be secured in the
dungeon beneath the house until the morning when he would be taken under
guard to Lancaster. The man was turned and again manhandled out. He passed
close by The Doctor and Rose and the boys and there was a flicker of recognition
in his eyes, but of course he said nothing. As the doors closed again
The Doctor whispered to Rose.
"I want to get out of here. Faint…
as dramatically as you can… now…" She looked at him and
obeyed. She raised her arm to her brow and gave a loud sigh and fell backwards
in a swoon worthy of a silent movie heroine. The Doctor was there to catch
her, of course, he shouting for help, that his lady was taken ill. Not
that he needed help. He lifted her into his arms and, with the boys following
he swept quickly out of the room. A servant ran ahead with a lantern up
to their chambers, but after that he dismissed him and the chambermaid
who was waiting there.
"Granddad," Chris said out loud as soon as they were alone.
"We have to help him."
"Yes," Rose said. "We DO.
And don't give me any of the stuff about not changing timelines and whatever.
You can't. We saved him once. We have to save him again."
All three of them clamoured loudly at him
until he hushed them. "Somebody is coming. Rose… lie down on
the bed. You're meant to be ill. Boys… Sit quietly by her."
And he waited for the knock at the big oak door. He opened it to see the
mistress of the house, Lady Assheton, looking anxious.
"My wife was shocked to see again the
same rogue who startled us this afternoon," The Doctor told her in
explanation. "She took fright and swooned. But she is well now."
But Lady Assheton tutted and said that a man never knew what ailed women
and swept by him. Rose, he thought with warm feelings, acted her part
well as she pretended to be coming around dizzily from a faint. The boys
did a grand job of seeming upset that their mother was ill. Command performances
from all three. Lady Assheton was soon satisfied that it WAS no more than
a faint and after speaking a few words to Rose she left again. The Doctor
bolted the door behind her and then he came and sat on the bed as Rose
pulled herself upright and leaned against the fat pillow roll. The boys
came and climbed on the bed too, either side of The Doctor, and he put
his arms around them.
"Of course we're going to do something," he said. "I don't
think we have any choice. Chris, you read his timeline. He is meant to
live another ten years. That means we MUST be intended to rescue him.
But we can do nothing yet. We're going to wait, calmly, until the house
is quiet." Below in the hall, he knew, the revels were still going
on. It would be a time yet.
"Renegade Seminarian!" he said.
"Renegade… I hate that word!" Rose looked at
him and understood. It was, he had told her once, the worst thing you
could call a Time Lord. And HE had been called it for centuries. Apart
from a sense of natural justice, Rose thought there was another reason
why he wanted to help this man. Did he see something of himself in him?
"Let's pass the time our own way,"
he said, taking the hands of the boys and they, in turn, taking Rose's
hands so that they formed a circle. "Chris, you said you were best
at thought projection. Show me your favourite place in the whole universe."
Chris concentrated and easily produced an image in the air in the middle
of their circle. It was the garden of their home on Earth. The image was
perfect, right down to his father's rose bushes. Then Davie came in with
his favourite place, the old Millenium Wheel that still stood in the 23rd
century as a tourist attraction. Then The Doctor conjured Mount Lœng
with its beautiful waterfall. And then they all looked at Rose.
"I can't do that," she protested. "I'm not like you."
"You can with our help," The Doctor told her, and she felt the
boys both squeeze her hands. "Think of your favourite place in the
universe. Concentrate on it. And between the three of us I think projecting
it for you will be no difficulty."
Rose thought. There was one place above all
in the universe that she loved, where she always felt safe. And she smiled
as she pictured it in her head. The Doctor smiled, too, glad that of all
places THAT was her favourite. The boys were delighted, too, as they watched
the image of the slowly revolving TARDIS.
"Home…" Rose breathed, hardly daring to move.
"Yes," The Doctor agreed. "Our home."
They played that game, almost silently, for hour after hour. Midnight
came and went and then the first hour of the morning. A little after that
and The Doctor said it should be safe now. He looked at Rose, and he looked
at the boys. He was leading them all into a mortal danger. Lancaster and
a gibbet was the penalty for aiding and abetting a seminarian, too. But
he would not leave any of them alone right now, and besides, when he had
seen the prisoner free he fully intended to summon the TARDIS and leave
this time and place. But that dress… Rose could not even walk without
it rustling and the tightness of the bodice and the fullness of the skirt
meant that she could hardly walk quickly.
“Take it off,” he said. And she
did. Beneath the elaborate dress were three layers of petticoats and the
corset. She threw off all but a plain white linen “shift”
that reached to her ankles. It was loose fitting but she tied it at the
waist with the cord from the bed post and put her outdoor cloak of black
over it. She regretted leaving the beautiful dress, but she DID, indeed,
feel freer without it. She left off the tight shoes, meant for show not
comfort, too. In her bare feet the stone flagged floors were cold but
at least she was unhindered.
The house WAS quiet. In the hall there was
a sleepy servant who slept more soundly when The Doctor approached him
from behind and rendered him unconscious with a hold to the back of the
neck. He rolled his eyes as Rose made a comment about the 'Vulcan death
grip' and said he knew how to do that 700 years before Mr Spock. But now
as they entered the lower floors of the house they stopped talking. The
Doctor took Rose's hand, the boys followed behind. He spoke to the boys
telepathically, but Rose he had to signal to through the pressure of his
hand on hers.
It was not exactly a dungeon as such, this
being a not especially old house, but it WAS a secure place with windowless
rooms that could be locked. The one the seminarian was in was guarded
by three men of the watch. They were alert and on their guard, though
not so "on guard" as to notice four people approach. Chris and
Davie grinned as they saw the stout sticks the men carried as weapons.
They both concentrated and two of the sticks began to rise up and come
down on the heads of two of the men, rendering them unconscious.
At the same moment, Rose, without any prompting,
took out the third with a well executed Judo throw. Unfortunately for
the guard he was not an expert and he landed hard and lay unconscious
with his comrades. The Doctor would have been proud of her if he was not
too busy stepping over unconscious guards to get to the locked door.
The sonic screwdriver dealt with the lock
and the bolts were no problem. He pulled open the door and the Seminarian,
knelt on the floor in earnest prayer looked up at him. He held out his
hand and the man sprang to his feet and reached for it.
"This is the second time you have come
to my aid, sir. The first might be called generous - kindness to a stranger
by the wayside. This second is an act of bravery. I commend you."
"Let's
talk when we are safe," The Doctor said as they hurried back up the
stairs and quickly through the silent hall. Outside The Doctor quietly
dispatched two more members of the watch who were thus the first people
in England ever to find themselves on the receiving end of the Shaolin
Way, though they were too busy falling unconscious to appreciate the honour.
Soon they were slipping quietly through the
sleeping village. They stopped for breath in a dark alleyway by the village
inn.
“Do you know of a place within a short
distance where you would be safe?” The Doctor asked the Seminarian.
“I don’t know how long it will be before the hue and cry goes
up for your escape.”
"Not long, I fear," he replied. "But yes, I know a place."
"Then you go to it. You are less likely to be seen alone, and can
move faster. We slow you down."
"What of yourselves? You will be hunted, too."
"We won't be here to be hunted," The Doctor told him. "Go
now."
"Christ, His Holy Mother and Saint Christopher
guide your journey," the man said, as he had said to them before,
and as before making a sigil. "I shall remember your kindness."
And then he turned and ran. He seemed to know the area and was soon gon e
from sight and sound.
"Time we were away, too," The Doctor
said as he pressed the TARDIS key. "Let them search high and low
for the Marquess de Lœngbærrow and family tomorrow. Especially
if it keeps them from the trail of the good priest."
"We never knew his name," Rose
said as they stepped into the TARDIS and the doors closed behind them.
"We didn't need to know it, only that
he was a good man," The Doctor said. "Any more than he needed
to know ours to know that he could trust us." He set them in temporal
orbit and then turned to the boys with a smile. "When you tell your
mother that we visited the Elizabethan era, best if you stick to the funny
clothes and banqueting and dancing and horse riding and leave out the
aiding and abetting of seditious prisoners."
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