The Doctor (
rude_not_ginger) wrote2010-08-08 06:31 pm
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for
quitehomoerotic: Welcome to the Sahara Desert
follows this.
The Doctor woke only a few short hours later and found himself positively disappointed at his lack of dreams. He'd spent years asleep without dreams, and now, when he really wanted them, he still had nothing. No memories, no twisting nightmares, not even a good brain-dump of nonsensical mental garbage. Just nothing. He was asleep next to Jack on the bed, and then he was awake.
He sighed. His memory was still swiss-cheesed with missing parts of the last two hundred years, but there seemed to be more gaps filled in. And that was something, wasn't it? It meant maybe a few more nights of dreamless sleep and he'd be back to himself completely.
He just hoped there weren't more memories like Mars to discover.
He looked over to Jack, asleep next to him. This was what Jack loved the most, he said. Not sleeping alone. Not being alone. In that instant, the Doctor understood it.
The Doctor woke only a few short hours later and found himself positively disappointed at his lack of dreams. He'd spent years asleep without dreams, and now, when he really wanted them, he still had nothing. No memories, no twisting nightmares, not even a good brain-dump of nonsensical mental garbage. Just nothing. He was asleep next to Jack on the bed, and then he was awake.
He sighed. His memory was still swiss-cheesed with missing parts of the last two hundred years, but there seemed to be more gaps filled in. And that was something, wasn't it? It meant maybe a few more nights of dreamless sleep and he'd be back to himself completely.
He just hoped there weren't more memories like Mars to discover.
He looked over to Jack, asleep next to him. This was what Jack loved the most, he said. Not sleeping alone. Not being alone. In that instant, the Doctor understood it.
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Right, fine, maybe she knows me a little bit. he admitted to Jack.
"He," the Doctor said. He sighed, then turned to Jack and nodded to him, then to the screen. "Go on, say 'hello' to our captor, Jack. But not hello."
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He gave the Doctor a slight glare as he was pointed out, and he stepped up a little closer, in sight of the camera, and perched himself down on the bench next to the Doctor.
"Hey," he said, lifting a hand in a half hearted wave at the camera. "Beatrice, I take it. Good to meet you. Hey, don't have any breakfast there, do you?" he spoke flippantly.
But the woman's face looking back was one of shock.
"Did you say Jack? Not the Jack? Jack Harkness?"
"That'd be me."
Her expression was almost unreadable. She looked pleased for him, almost, and then even more angry than before. Like her emotions wouldn't settle.
"You found him then."
Jack turned his head and looked at the Doctor.
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"How do you know about Jack?" the Doctor asked. "Cause...I wasn't actually aware I'd lost him."
There was a sudden boom outside the ship, and the Doctor jumped at the sound.
"What was that?" the woman snapped into an intercom like phone. Whatever the response was didn't settle her expression. "We're in the middle of the desert. That's not possible."
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He pulled his sonic from his pocket and tried it on the door but it was deadlocked, no surprise there.
"Look, whoever you are and whatever your deal is with the Doctor, you've picked a bad time. This is gonna have to wait. And you better open this damn door!"
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"You determined my every move for two years," she snapped. "To the point where I was asking myself what Jack would've done, because that was always better than whatever Bea would've done."
The Doctor opened his mouth to ask who would've compared her to Jack like that, then he realized it must've been him. He did that to Martha, he remembered. Compared her constantly to Rose, considered her by her not-Roseness rather than her Marthaness. And by the time he realized he didn't want her to be Rose, she was gone. Was it the same way with Bea?
"Listen, Bea, it's been lovely catching up, but you should really call me when I've got my whole memory back, eh?" he said.
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He pushed a little more at the door, trying to ease on the hinge and get around the lock that way.
"Don't think he's going to keep you around," Bea said, and Jack realised she was talking to him. "He never does. He gets what he wants and then ditches you. You'd know all about that, wouldn't you, Jack. Sure you sit there while he listens and he takes whatever you'll give him."
He tried not to listen. He tried to ignore her as he worked on the door.
"Is that what it was, Doctor? Did you take enough and realise there was nothing left? Or was I just your drawn out version of a one night stand."
And on that, Jack stopped. He stopped and looked up, over at the Doctor, frowning a little, wondering if she just said what he thought she said.
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He also wanted to say that confronting him about that sort of thing in front of Jack was terribly inappropriate. This was better said in the privacy of a room with just the two of them, so the Doctor could hash out exactly what happened and how they could've possibly ended up in a sexual situation.
He also wanted to inquire if that was exactly what she meant. Maybe one-night-stand was just a metaphor for her time on the TARDIS. That would make a lot of sense. If so, he would tell her that she needed to choose her metaphors more carefully to avoid awkwardness between them.
Instead, of course, all he said was: "What?!"
He realized that his voice came in stereo, the woman on the screen saying the word the exact same time he did, with an irritated look on her face.
"Yeah, thought you'd say something like that."
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He turned his head back to the screen and watched as she looked out at the Doctor.
"You know I half thought you weren't even real, Jack," she said to him. "Thought maybe he'd made you up. Finally got him to talk about you once and this is what I get from it."
He ducked his head slightly, and looked back to the Doctor, but said, nor thought, a thing.
"I told you," she said to the Doctor. "We need to talk."
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The look on her face said that yes, very much, they did.
"When!?" he demanded.
"About five months ago," she said, sounding oddly flat in her irritation.
"I was dead five months ago," he snapped. Then, he relented. "Well, time travel. The TARDIS hasn't done much leaving the vortex in a number of years."
And even if it had, maybe she couldn't track him. Maybe it took her five months and the Doctor all these years to mesh up in timelines. He scratched the back of his head. Awkward didn't begin to cover it.
"So we were...what, exactly?" he asked.
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That jealously was still there too. He wasn't a jealous man, or at least he never thought he was, and really what was the point. He noticed the ring on his finger, the Doctor was wearing his still. Biodampers, Jack reminded himself. He also reminded himself of the man who used to say he loved him and that the Doctor remembered that only peripherally.
He felt, suddenly, like he was very much in the way.
She shook her head. "What, like you're ever anything with anyone?"
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He looked over to Jack and wanted to tell him that everything she was saying wasn't true at all. Well, apart from him missing Jack, which he remembered. It felt like they were taking those steps back.
She sighed. "And I thought, that night, that you saw, but you didn't. And I know that, now."
"I'm seeing you," the Doctor snapped, gesturing at the screen. "I'm looking at you. You're right there. What do you want from me? We what? Got lonely together, did something we regretted? Left on bad terms? I couldn't give you what you needed? What could I possibly give you now?"
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He looked at the Doctor, his head ducked just a little, and he shrugged. "Maybe she needs to. Maybe you owe her that much."
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To Jack, he passed the mental note. This could all be a lie, Jack. You just have to trust me.
The woman on the screen looked hesitant, then reached down and opened one of the interior doors.
"Don't try anything."
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I'll find the TARDIS, he thought to the Doctor. You be careful.
And on that, he looked to the screen and took a deep breath before leaving though the swung open door. It lead to a small ramp and then straight out to a balcony with direct access to the desert outside. He walked out and stared at the rich blue sky. Concentrating, he tried to locate the TARDIS.
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"Don't blame him for anything I've done," he said. "Neither of us know what went on between you and me."
He turned back to the woman and tried, desperately, to pull her into his memory. There were so many big, gaping holes during the two hundred years he was away from Jack. She must've fit somewhere in there, like a peg into a children's toy.
"Tell me what happened," he said.
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But then it all changed.
The sky, like a dimmer switch had been turned, seemed to grow darker. Darker and darker still. It was almost as though the sun was being covered with a filter. He turned his head up to the sky and there, there where mere moments ago there'd been nothing, there was a big black and foreboding looking cloud.
Jack took a step back, standing tall and shocked. The cloud cracked loud with a shudder of thunder, and it started to rain.
As fast as he could, Jack took himself back inside the ship and banged his hand hard on the door to the room.
"Doctor. Doctor get out of there now. We have to leave. We have to go!"
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The memory of that slowly started to fill in. He remembered her, an adventuress nearly caught in a rock fall that he saved. She was awestruck by him and he knew it, but he didn't feel the same. He liked her, but he couldn't love her back. But she wanted him to talk, she wanted him to open up. To him, it was almost like therapy. To her, it was like she was finally becoming someone important to him. And one night in her room, she leaned over and kissed him. It was against his morals to take advantage of her, but he did. He told himself he was moving on from Jack. That 150 years without him was a long enough celibacy. And it was good, it was just...not what he wanted. He led her on, and within a month, she was leaving in an angry fit. He didn't want her to pine for him, so he blocked her number and stayed away.
Until now.
"I'm sorry," he said. "Bea, I'm so sorry."
"Aren't you just?" she said. "I wanted to know if he was worth it, Doc. Was he worth all those years of waiting?"
There was suddenly a bang at the door, and the Doctor spun around. "What is it, Jack?"
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The commotion alerted two of the guards that were around earlier, and before he knew it Jack had two of them attaching themselves to his arms and attempting to drag him away.
"No," he said. "You don't understand I have to get out of here. We have to leave."
They pulled his arms behind his back and he felt some sort of laser cuffs being attached. "Oh great so you notice me now."
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"No, you don't understand, something is following us," he said. "Something big, something terrible, and something that can't be stopped."
"Yeah," Bea snapped. "Me." Fed up with it all, she picked up the intercom and pushed a button. "Get the Doctor and his companion down to the cells."
"No, Bea, you don't understand," the Doctor implored as the door opened and two more guards came in with laser cuffs ready for the Doctor.
"No," she replied. "You don't understand." With an irritated sigh, she moved her chair back and stood up, revealing the rest of her body to the Doctor. She turned to the side. Her apparent svelte figure didn't extend to her belly. Then, she reached over and shut the screen off.
He stared at the screen in shock, not even bothering to fight as the handcuffs went on him and he was dragged back down the hallway towards Jack.
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"You're going to the brig," one of the guards unhelpfully informed him.
He tugged again but just then the door was opened, and the Doctor was there but there was something wrong. He panicked. The Doctor looked distant, detached, and Jack worried what was wrong.
"Doctor what is it? What did she do? Talk to me."
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The guards pressed a pad on the wall and a dark room with a cot opened up. They were shoved inside, and the door was promptly resealed.
"She wasn't lying," he said. "I remember now. I remember everything."
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He tried the cuffs again but no look, and so there was little more he could do but sit down and remember the fact he was actually quite considerably discomforted by dark and enclosed spaces. It really wasn't time for that.
He took long and controlled breaths, measuring himself not to panic.
"What, so you slept with her?" he asked quietly, the jealously still there over that too. Ridiculous.
"Wait what do you mean everything?"
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"Everything," he repeated. "The holes in my memory, Jack. They're gone. Filled in. It was like the last push I needed to remember."
He gave a small, cynical laugh. "A shock to the system to wake everything up."
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But the revelation made his head turn again. His heart sped slightly, and though he wanted to feel elated, it was almost like something was blocking that.
"So what does that mean?" he asked, feeling foolish and small, and having no idea whatsoever that there were bigger revelations to be had. "With us."
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"Don't think in that tone of voice, Jack, it's not like you waited around for me. Three days, remember?"
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