"You wanted an ocean, have I got an ocean for you."
The Doctor darted around the console and scooped his jacket up from where it hung on one of the TARDIS pillars. He absolutely loved this bit. The first trip to an alien world with someone who didn't even believe in other worlds until now. Very little was more exciting.
"Now! We've got breathable atmosphere, low radiation, and a beautiful summer day. The waters of the Greeio Malgoon are purple in the summer, which is when they're the warmest and the safest. I'd have taken you to them in the winter when they're blue, but the water's acid content gets a bit high and ends up spewing out strange creatures with eyes that shoot lasers. Green lasers, they disintegrate you without much warning. Very technicolor world, the Greeo Malgoon."
He shrugged. "Still! In the summer, peak of tourist season, it's the most brilliant place for a visit."
The Doctor darted around the console and scooped his jacket up from where it hung on one of the TARDIS pillars. He absolutely loved this bit. The first trip to an alien world with someone who didn't even believe in other worlds until now. Very little was more exciting.
"Now! We've got breathable atmosphere, low radiation, and a beautiful summer day. The waters of the Greeio Malgoon are purple in the summer, which is when they're the warmest and the safest. I'd have taken you to them in the winter when they're blue, but the water's acid content gets a bit high and ends up spewing out strange creatures with eyes that shoot lasers. Green lasers, they disintegrate you without much warning. Very technicolor world, the Greeo Malgoon."
He shrugged. "Still! In the summer, peak of tourist season, it's the most brilliant place for a visit."
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The only advantage, is that there are not too many, as of yet. From what she is hearing, there are two outside the door -- and one -- perhaps two at the back. Whatever the program is doing, it hasn't had enough to time to go into full effect, yet.
The corpse of the one creature is pulled away by something outside, when the door finally springs open. She ducks when something is fired, and takes a swing - this one aimed firmly for its chest.
The problem is, there are two creatures.
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He glances over his head and sees the second creature coming for Morgana. He looks at the button and grins.
"Well, Babe Ruth, 'bout time I made you proud," he says. He holds the button like a baseball, and throws it, knocking the creature firmly in the head. It topples and collapses into the pit.
"Home run!" he calls, grinning.
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She says nothing until after the requisite splash is finished echoing. "I could have managed that on my own," Oddly, she's almost smiling, and then adds, "You have your duty, and I have mine."
There are footsteps from the other side of the shed. Whatever mixture of technology and biology these creatures are, one of them has figured out that three of them have met an unfortunate demise.
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"Just another two minutes!" he calls over to Morgana. "That's all I need!"
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Thus far, she's been on the defensive, and that would work, if there wasn't a chance the creatures could adapt. One of the most important skills, she's learned, is the ability to surprise one's opponent.
So, while the Doctor's focus is back to the machine, Morgana takes a quick look, steps over the corpse of one creature, and slides the through the slender entrance to the door.
All the Doctor might hear is the sound of a sword piercing the skin and mechanics of a creature, as Morgana's managed to take out another one.
He also might hear the sound of a body hitting the wall of the shed. (What he might not see: this time, it is Morgana, as another creature has managed to get in a lucky blow.)
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The wires come together, but he realizes there are two wires that are too far apart to connect.
"I can't do it!" he calls. "I need a long strip of metal to bind these two wires!"
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Bracing herself against the wall for leverage, she swings the sword with as much might as she can muster, literally taking out the creature at the knees.
Then she hears the Doctor call. She puts her hand to the back of her head, she's bleeding, but although the wound is not severe, head wounds have a nasty habit of bleeding profusely, but she's figuring the Doctor won't see it. Sliding back in through the crack in the door, Morgana has an idea.
Taking a second to put the corpse of the first creature closer to the door, creating more of a barrier, Morgana then crouches down in front of the Doctor, holding out the sword. It is covered with the mixture of synthetic and organic fluid the creatures bleed.
"Would this do?"
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"Perfect," he says, snatching it from her. He takes it swiftly, and pushes it into the mass of wires, touching the one from the top to the one on the bottom.
There's a fizzle and a crackle, and suddenly all of the screens go dead. The fresh arrival creatures slump forward, puppets with their strings cut.
The Doctor freezes for a moment, waiting for something to go wrong. Nothing does.
He turns to her and beams.
"Oh, you were brilliant!" he says, and he reaches over to hug her.
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She only speaks when she's sure the current crisis has passed. "We did need the sword, after all, Doctor." It is supposed to be teasing, but Morgana's tone does not quite get past the seriousness of it all.
Wrapping her arms around his neck, this time without abandon, she's relieved neither of them have been killed, and hugs him, tightly. "Next time, you do not get to judge my decision to carry such things."
This time, she is teasing.
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After all, she's just said there will be a next time.
After a moment, he finally backs up and gives her another grin.
"Shall we inform the tourists that they can return?"
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"What about all the regular inhabitants? Should they not be told their home is safe again." Morgana is hoping they cannot all be dead.
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"When we get back to the TARDIS, I'll send them a message that we've cleaned this place up. Considering they've been looking for me for a while, they won't waste their time coming here, and then the locals can get back to enjoying their city, and the people who love it can come back."
He nods to the computer. "And we'll keep the recording here. Then they can see what happened. Make sure it never happens again."
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When the Doctor speaks of the recording, it reminds her of something else. "We have to return something, before we leave. It would not be right to take it."
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"I'll leave it here. To complete the story."
And avoid going back into that place. Not that he'd admit that part, of course.
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She also needs something else. "Do you have a pen?"
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"What're you writing?" he asks.
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"No one could find her. They did not know where to look when she needed to hide."
Once finished, she gets to her feet and takes something out of her own pocket -- which contains only one thing. Morgana holds out her sonic screwdriver.
"Could you repair this while I return the book to its proper place?"
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And he doesn't understand human psychology. He knows this. She may need the moment, and he should let her have it.
"Of course," he says, taking the sonic. "I'll wait for you outside the building."
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She does spare a moment to look about the city, and the creatures -- all looking like they were traveling towards the Doctor and Morgana's locations -- are slumped throughout the streets.
Once at the building, she gingerly reaches out to touch the door handle. She can't quite feel as confident after the shock earlier.
She still does not look at him when she pulls open the door. "I will just be a moment."
Morgana is, of course, assuming he's behind her.
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"I'll be here."
He immediately begins to work on her sonic. Battery's gone low. He should've given her a more powerful one, but he didn't think about it. A little rifling through his pockets and he produces something with more power, replacing it for her. It'll last a little bit longer this time, and he'll teach her about recharging it on the console.
He looks up to the building. He hopes she's all right.
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The stairs have become stairs again. and the hallways are silent. There are not any voices, sirens, creatures, or odd precipitation.
Respectfully, she opens the door to the the little girl's room, and places the diary on the bed. She opens it to the last page. To keep it propped open, she takes one of the dolls to weigh it down.
There is little else she can do, but the thought of the little girl being lost, and the father unable to find her is distressing.
And it does not matter if things like this happen long ago. She knows as much as anyone, that time does not always make such things better.
Much longer than she intended, she gently shuts the door, and heads down the hallway towards the Doctor, lost in her thoughts.
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As she approaches, he offers her his arm.
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She does though, see and take, the arm.
She spares a glance for the building. "That is a lot of carnage to keep people from seeing the ocean."
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He leads her away from the city, now silent and desolate. But not for long, he reminds himself. Soon it'll be full again. People will live here, happy.
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"It is pleasant to think people will be able to return to their homes." She's thinking about hers, at the moment.
But she's trying to pull herself out of feeling maudlin. "Are you all right?" They're both a little worse for wear.
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