watch_is_me (
watch_is_me) wrote2008-11-15 01:24 pm
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RP: Log, "I Never Left You," for stardustflying
He flies around the TARDIS console, piloting with both hands, both feet, his nose, an elbow here, an elbow there, nudge this lever this way, and that one that way, just a touch, a smidgen, there, there, can't she go any faster? Of course, it doesn't matter, faster doesn't matter, not when you're traveling through time, but it feels as though it matters. Human beings always wonder when he fails to explain the complexities of time and this is it, this is why, because time's personal and shared, everyone and no one's, relative and set, and can't she go any faster?
"Come on, old girl, come on, come on... Amps to 11, ludicrous speed, damn the torpedoes, come on."
And he jumps back from the console, bounces on his toes, because he's made all of the adjustments he can, and it's up to her now, the TARDIS. He trusts her, she'll get him where he needs to be, but he can't help the impatience.
First they'd landed in London instead of Edo, and, really, those just weren't the same. Tokugawa Japan and 21st-century London, they both had their merits, but the ukiyo—kabuki and geisha and chonin and samurai—wasn't one of London's. Well, not yet. Give it a few millenia.
So he'd settled down to repairs, and she'd gone off to see the sights and the shops; he'd given her a mobile before she'd taken off, universal roaming enabled, certain she'd be fine. If she could handle the Titanic, disintegration and reintegration, she could take on London.
Halfway through the repairs, the TARDIS had started up, of its own accord. A time scoop, he'd thought, but that was impossible, they were gone, all dead, the ones who could do that to him, summon him at will.
It hadn't been a time scoop. Temporal genetic lock, the Menagerists, an elite group of 7000th-century dilettantes who collected rare...animals of all types, all across time and space, and kept them on an elaborate prison planet. A zoo. And what rarer than the last of the Time Lords?
It had taken him minutes to escape, but months to get the rest of them out. There had been human beings there, future humans, survivors past the destruction of the Earth, and how could he leave them?
But the instant he'd had them all away, out in the Menagerists' hijacked private star-yachts, he'd shot to the TARDIS, because he couldn't leave her, either. Astrid. His Astrid.
The TARDIS sets down, and he thanks her, a mental nod, nothing spoken, as he bolts through the doors, out into an alleyway. The same place. Good. The same time? He's not so sure. Maybe. Has to be. He can't be that far off, can he?
And he fishes his own mobile out of his jacket pocket, dialing her number as he dashes out into the streets proper, eyes scanning over every passerby, every shopfront window. She's here. She's got to be here. He didn't mean to leave, and he won't let this be another parting, another failure, something to remember and regret.
Faster, faster, the phone has to dial faster, ring faster, he has to run faster, through the streets, as though velocity were like gravity, an attractive force. As though faster mattered.
"Come on, old girl, come on, come on... Amps to 11, ludicrous speed, damn the torpedoes, come on."
And he jumps back from the console, bounces on his toes, because he's made all of the adjustments he can, and it's up to her now, the TARDIS. He trusts her, she'll get him where he needs to be, but he can't help the impatience.
First they'd landed in London instead of Edo, and, really, those just weren't the same. Tokugawa Japan and 21st-century London, they both had their merits, but the ukiyo—kabuki and geisha and chonin and samurai—wasn't one of London's. Well, not yet. Give it a few millenia.
So he'd settled down to repairs, and she'd gone off to see the sights and the shops; he'd given her a mobile before she'd taken off, universal roaming enabled, certain she'd be fine. If she could handle the Titanic, disintegration and reintegration, she could take on London.
Halfway through the repairs, the TARDIS had started up, of its own accord. A time scoop, he'd thought, but that was impossible, they were gone, all dead, the ones who could do that to him, summon him at will.
It hadn't been a time scoop. Temporal genetic lock, the Menagerists, an elite group of 7000th-century dilettantes who collected rare...animals of all types, all across time and space, and kept them on an elaborate prison planet. A zoo. And what rarer than the last of the Time Lords?
It had taken him minutes to escape, but months to get the rest of them out. There had been human beings there, future humans, survivors past the destruction of the Earth, and how could he leave them?
But the instant he'd had them all away, out in the Menagerists' hijacked private star-yachts, he'd shot to the TARDIS, because he couldn't leave her, either. Astrid. His Astrid.
The TARDIS sets down, and he thanks her, a mental nod, nothing spoken, as he bolts through the doors, out into an alleyway. The same place. Good. The same time? He's not so sure. Maybe. Has to be. He can't be that far off, can he?
And he fishes his own mobile out of his jacket pocket, dialing her number as he dashes out into the streets proper, eyes scanning over every passerby, every shopfront window. She's here. She's got to be here. He didn't mean to leave, and he won't let this be another parting, another failure, something to remember and regret.
Faster, faster, the phone has to dial faster, ring faster, he has to run faster, through the streets, as though velocity were like gravity, an attractive force. As though faster mattered.
no subject
She floats, ever gaining momentum and strength, she's not tired anymore and she's so close she can feel the warmth there, in her hand. She can reach out and touch it if she just opens her eyes.
And then she does, eyelashes heavy at first as the crack of light filters through. Maybe, just maybe, she made it there after all this time.
no subject
When her eyes open, he's not ready. He'll never be ready, because the choices begin again, now, and he's so tired of choices.
"'Lo," he says, smiling, warm, his voice pitched quiet. "Feeling better?"
no subject
Her hand squeezes his gently, "Much". It's a reassurance for him, as much as it's relief and welcomed lucidity on her part.
"Are you alright? I was worried about you."
no subject
"Oh, me? Don't worry about me. I'm fine." He stands up with a hop, jamming his hands into his pockets and freewheeling over to make a show of checking the instruments, spinning from one to the another as he talks, bespectacled and wild-haired. "Had some chaps interrupt my repairs. They really wanted to meet me, burning desire, wouldn't take no for an answer. So it was hi-ho-the-dairy-o, upsy-daisy, me and the TARDIS, time-napped, off to this planet, beautiful planet, really, we should go, I should take you—no, I—he should take you, that'd be better, for the best, it..."
He trails off, finding no right way to end the sentence he's lost control of. Rubbing the bridge of his nose under his glasses, he looks over at Astrid.
"It wasn't my choice. I didn't mean to go. I'm sorry."
no subject
Then it changes, no warning, his awe inspiring babble changes so fast into something far more reticent. He's rejecting her again, and it hurts. She can't even bring herself to question him, why doesn't she belong with him, it's so simple, so meant to be. Why can't he see that?
"I know Doctor, I know it wasn't your fault, you don't need to say sorry."
She's crushed, so she's responding to the part that doesn't matter, because it's easier than asking him why, it's easier than giving him chance to reject her again, it's easier to leave it hanging, not confront it.
no subject
"I do, Astrid." And he's not just apologizing for leaving, that's secondary now, tertiary, so far away from the heart of things. He's apologizing for something greater, less definable, for what he's let grow between them, since her reconstruction.
no subject
"Did you know that humans think they're it, the only lifeform in the universe. Can you imagine that?" She lifts her brow in surprise, an amused grin of disbelief allowing her to release the tension from the awkwardness. "Not knowing there's anything out there waiting to be discovered?"
no subject
"Oh, they know there's something out there. They've always been looking for it. Myths and legends and constellations, they've turned their eyes to the night sky and tried to look past it, you know, through all of that dark between the stars. Always wishing for someone to come and visit them, tell them it's all true. Every word of it, every vision, every hope." He's warm, now, sincere, a man speaking on his pet subject, a true love, a source of strength. "Some of them want to be the center of the universe, star of the show, yeah, but...They're not the dreamers, Astrid. They're not the ones who'll come out and join you someday."
He pauses, and for the first time since he's seen her again, there's nothing hidden in his expression—he's happy, gratefully, unbelievingly happy. "They do, you know. I didn't think—but they were there. Year 700,000, and, well, they aren't many, wouldn't have been in the Garden if they were, bit of a rarity, an oddity, but they survive."
One of the instruments beeps and flashes a pulse of lights, demanding his attention, but he's swept up in what he learned in his months away, and he only frowns and smacks it, before turning back to Astrid. Irregular readings, must be a glitch in the system, he'd have to look at that later.