Follows this.
When the Doctor woke, he was prepared to feel stiff and uncomfortable. Usually, when reaching that point of exhaustion, he usually found himself on the floor or on the console, in some sort of an awkward position that left him sore for the next day. This morning, however, he was out of his clothes and stretched out on his bed, under the covers with a heating blanket.
A breathing heating blanket.
He raised an eyebrow and looked to where Jack had an arm around him as he slept. The previous day came rushing back. Pearl Harbor, the goodbyes, the return of Gallifrey, being captured by the Shadow Proclamation, and finally nearly killing Jack. They came so very close. Too close.
Without really thinking about it, the Doctor found himself wrapping an arm around Jack's shoulder. Jack, who was ready and willing to die the previous day. And the Doctor was willing to give him that. He had been willing to give him that. Not anmymore.
Where could they go, now?
Onwards, of course. It was the only way they could go.
The TARDIS wasn't moving anymore, and the Doctor slowly extracted himself from Jack's embrace. He grabbed his trousers and shirt and threw them on quickly, heading towards the console, hopefully before Jack woke.
When the Doctor woke, he was prepared to feel stiff and uncomfortable. Usually, when reaching that point of exhaustion, he usually found himself on the floor or on the console, in some sort of an awkward position that left him sore for the next day. This morning, however, he was out of his clothes and stretched out on his bed, under the covers with a heating blanket.
A breathing heating blanket.
He raised an eyebrow and looked to where Jack had an arm around him as he slept. The previous day came rushing back. Pearl Harbor, the goodbyes, the return of Gallifrey, being captured by the Shadow Proclamation, and finally nearly killing Jack. They came so very close. Too close.
Without really thinking about it, the Doctor found himself wrapping an arm around Jack's shoulder. Jack, who was ready and willing to die the previous day. And the Doctor was willing to give him that. He had been willing to give him that. Not anmymore.
Where could they go, now?
Onwards, of course. It was the only way they could go.
The TARDIS wasn't moving anymore, and the Doctor slowly extracted himself from Jack's embrace. He grabbed his trousers and shirt and threw them on quickly, heading towards the console, hopefully before Jack woke.
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But then the response wasn't to him at all, and he noticed the Doctor's attention was elsewhere.
"What?" he asked, lifting his head to look around. "What's wrong?"
There was something of a panic in Jack's tone. He was used to things going wrong, bt not here. Here was safe. Here had to be safe. The creatures always left Boeshane alone until that fateful day, they never knew why, but they did. It was safe.
It had to be.
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Beneath the bright waters was a line of light bursts, followed by larger patches of darkness, like the storm that was raging overtop of the mountains in the distance. And the Doctor had heard some things about the Boeshane Peninsula, but nothing like this.
"Tell me that's something you've seen before," the Doctor asked, looking over to his companion.
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Definitely nothing like this.
"No," Jack said firmly, shaking his head as he looked out to the sea. "Never."
He looked back to the Doctor.
"Looks like we've just found ourselves something to do."
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Jack was ready to die the night before, he reminded himself. It wasn't fair, tossing him back into this, now.
He controlled himself.
"Nah, you know what? I'll take a look into it, you stay here, keep an eye on the TARDIS."
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He stood up then, releasing the Doctor's hand to shift and dust himself down.
"And besides, I know this place like the back of my hand. You don't."
He offered his hand down to help him up.
"And like I said. I make you look good. We go together, Doctor."
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But he would've also been lying if he said it didn't worry him. Jack needed to heal. Hell, they both needed to heal. But maybe this would be like cleaning a wound. Painful, but necessary.
He took Jack's hand and let him pull him up.
"Together," he agreed. "Right, then! We need to have a look at what's going on in that water. Any marine equipment shops nearby?"
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"Okay, yeah," he said thoughtfully, "yeah there should be somewhere. Shouldn't be too hard. But just bear in mind, Boeshane is small. Not too many visitors, and really, we're gonna stick out like two sore thumbs. So we say we're travellers, say we're together on holiday from Badar and nobody will bat an eyelid."
Beat.
"People on Badar are kind of a law unto themselves."
He took a deep breath and started forward (and he hadn't let go of the Doctor's hand from helping him up. He continued to hold it).
"So then, anything you want to know about the place. You know, while we're here and all?"
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His step had a little excited spring to it as he walked alongside Jack, like a kid on his way to a candy store.
"Well, I don't know much about the Boeshane culture," he said. "Go on, then! Holidays? Traditions? Favorite things to do on a Saturday after tea?"
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He let out a slight laugh.
"Okay, well first things first it's a pretty tight knit sort of place. Most families know most families and they're pretty protective of each other. It's a small place, think a little village sort of attitude. There aren't many holidays, no christmas or anything than that. Harvest festival is in summer and there's a monthly celebration when the third moon sets in the east."
And then, he added, flippant and teasing, "oh and everyone greets each other by a kiss, you need to put a lot of effort into that, sign of respect and all that. You can practise on me if you want."
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He loved exploring. He loved this, the role-reversal where he was the wide-eyed companion being shown about by Jack. It was little wonder his companions enjoyed it.
"Pity we didn't land during harvest," he said. "Well, maybe not, considering what might be down in that water. Is there fishing? Should we alert anyone?"
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And it's true, he was. Known everywhere, but as a good young boy, always did well by his family. Well respected when he got into the agency. It all felt so very far away from now.
"Oh you'd like harvest," Jack said, "there's stalls full of food and produce. A dancing show and a clockwork fair. It goes on for three weeks every year. I used to love it."
He shook his head though, glancing back to the sea. "Not at this time of day. The sea doesn't support wildlife. The rocks underneath kill off anything that tries to live in it. Which actually makes that all the more worrying. But no, nobody should be out there. People stay in the city after dark and it shouldn't be too long now."
He smiled again, "So, Doctor, I hope you've been listening to me closely enough, how's your language?"
And he knew the Doctor didn't need to speak it, of course, but it was fun to pretend.
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"Now, there has to be some sort of shipping vessels for the water," he inferred. "Even if they don't fish, there have to be...traders, that sort of thing?"
The closer to the city they came, the more the water flattened out on the horizon, until the under-the-surface lightning storm became almost invisible. He wondered if the city even knew it was going on.
"What comes out at night?" he asked. "Why are they afraid?"
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He let out a slight laugh and looked back to the water and then again to the Doctor. It looked calm from here, and what had been so obvious up close was barely a shimmer on the surface.
"It's not always doom and gloom, Doctor, sometimes it's just this. They're not afraid. Not of anything here, at least. Boeshane is safe, at least now. They're just inside because that's the way of the city, and fine there are some jackals that come out after dark. Now there might be the odd trader boat out, sure, but they should have all birthed up by now. And I don't see anything out there, do you?"
As they reached the city it was more obvious that it was contained. The large mass of zig zag buildings were actually even bigger than they looked from a distance, and they formed a surrounding wall with the majority of the city within it, like a huge atrium. Ahead there were gates and they'd have to pass those before they could get in at all.
"Psychic paper," Jack said to the Doctor. "You'll need it."
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"One step ahead of you," the Doctor said, holding the paper up to Jack. Dangerous Waters Research Bureau, it read, along with a line about being very important and discreet and all that good nonsense. Important to have about, psychic paper. He wasn't entirely certain how he'd survived traveling the universe without it for so long.
"Now! Once in, where do we go?" he asked.
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He shot him a quick wink and nodded over to the gates ahead. There were a group of people milling around outside, talking and laughing. Jack wondered if he'd recognise them when he got close. He wondered if they'd recognise him. But no, that thought was fleeting, they wouldn't.
"Straight ahead, shopping district is to the left. Can't miss it," he told him. "Should be able to get something from the stores there, just behind the market. Bet there's lots of trinkets you'd like if you're into the whole clockwork thing too. Maybe you could treat yourself. I'd say you deserve it."
They got closer and the group of people turned to look at them.
"Gentlemen!" Jack said with a wide grin. He stepped ahead and greeted each man with a handshake and a kiss to the back of each of their hands, as was the way.
"May we enter?"
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Now, was the Doctor supposed to do the same? Or should he just hold up his psychic paper and try to be cheery? His accent wasn't as perfect as Jack's, so being the foreigner on business with the native would be best (it was, after all, the closest to the truth).
"John Smith," he said. "Dangerous Waters Research Bureau."
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"Mr. Smith, Mr...?"
"Harkness."
"Harkness! We are only too welcome to invite you in."
Jack didn't even think to use a fake name. After all, he already was, wasn't he? He did know this men, this man in front of him, the gatekeeper who used to chide him and his friends from playing on the beaches too late. He remembered him looking taller than this.
"Dangerous waters though?" the man questioned, "nothing bad, I should hope?"
"Just routine," Jack said, stepping in. "Nothing at all to worry about."
The man opened the gates to usher them through and Jack gave him a lingering look before looking back to the Doctor and gesturing an arm out in his direction for him to join him. And when he was close, he whispered, "Okay, this is weird."
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The Doctor turned to Jack. Wait, no. No, that look Jack was giving him wasn't on the same wavelength.
"You mean being back here is weird," he said. "Right, no, I knew that."
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"That guy?" he said, "The one that opened the door? I know him. I mean, I knew him. And he's got no idea who I am. None at all."
Ahead of them the city opened up and where it had been quiet outside it was suddenly quite the opposite. People milled around, back and forth with their bags and their trading. It was almost primitive as well as advanced; the hints of the century in the computer panels that sat in the cream walls. Everything was clockwork. It was almost steampunk in design. And Jack loved it.
"See," Jack said, taking a step forward and gesturing to the world around them. "Places like this? Come on, Doctor, this is why it's good, isn't it? All of it, the travel?
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He turned to Jack and grinned madly. "Oh, yes."
No two places were ever alike, no two adventures ending exactly the same way. And the best part was that Jack understood. It wasn't hard to find an enthusiastic traveler, but it was impossible to find someone who could truly get it.
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"I remember the first time I went to Earth," he said, "I was amazed! It was 1975 and it was nothing, just an errand I had to run in New York City. And it was amazing! I'd never seen anything like it. I mean, I had but that was Earth, and all those people, all those humans, they have no idea at all what they're starting just by living. How much of the universe out here is because of what they did there. Oh it gets the blood flowing!"
He nudged the Doctor by the shoulder and ducked his head down as he smiled. But then he was distracted yet again, a voice that made him look straight up again. Immediately he reached his hand out and grabbed the Doctor by the arm, pulling him to the side and out of the way, hiding.
He didn't explain why.
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"I had just landed the TARDIS on a pile of snow and---oof!" He half-fell towards Jack when the other man pulled his arm. He was never one to question Jack's instincts, of course. He peered over, trying to figure out what, exactly, sparked his fear.
"What is it?" he hissed.
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What he saw made his heart swell.
There was a woman, so very well known to Jack. She was milling around a few stalls away, talking to the owner, collecting items to purchase. And in front, a young boy of about 10 years old, his arm in a cast and a small ball in his other, which he bounced back and forth against the floor.
"Remember that kid I was telling you about?" he said quietly, looking only briefly at the Doctor. "Well, see him for yourself."
Because that little boy, was Jack.
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He wondered what the little boy had planned for his future, how he expected his life to turn out.
"Ah, little Skye," the Doctor cooed to Jack. "Little ball and all. One day, the fact that'll alter the universe." Though, even now, he could see the future moving and rippling around the boy as he moved, Jack's fixed state drifting back along his own timeline.
He raised his eyebrow at the woman. "That your mum?"
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He spoke about the child that was himself in an almost idealistic way, as though it were someone else, not him, not referring to himself, even when he was.
It wasn't a day he could remember, in the market with his mother, it was so standard. And now to know, just a few feet away once stood himself and the Doctor, it was dizzying.
At the same time, though, he'd made a conscious effort not to look at his mother. It had been a long time since he'd seen her. He missed her.
But he looked again.
"Yeah," he said softly, a fond and private smile on his face. "Yeah that's her. Beautiful, isn't she? Oh she was brilliant, Doctor."
And just ahead, almost on cue, she called ahead.
"Skye get back here, stop running off. What have I told you about running off? Plenty of time for that. And where did you get that ball?"
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