Captain Jack Harkness (
quitehomoerotic) wrote2009-12-27 03:18 am
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brigadiertardis Ghost in the machine
Torchwood didn't keep hours. Torchwood couldn't keep hours. Not with the sort of work they did. Alien invaders didn't really respect when people might like to have a nice night in in front of the telly, or sleep in late in the morning. They didn't care if you wanted to start at nine and finish at five.
But sometimes, Jack just had to accept that even his staff needed lives of their own. Admittedly, of course, that would often be when Gwen picked up her bag and declared she was going home, without giving Jack option either way. But accept it he did. He knew people needed time to themselves, and times away from the underground confines of the Hub. And so some nights he'd end up there alone, an old record player on echoing out a cracked recording of Gracie Fields and a self made (infinitely worse than Ianto's) cup of coffee in hand.
This was one of those nights.
He sat in his office, listening to the sound of the music as he jotted down notes on paperwork he'd left waiting for weeks. To his side a computer ran a regular nightly scan for any activity in the area. Nothing, just the way he liked it. Cardiff safe.
Nothing strange (which was almost strange in and of itself), nothing out of the ordinary or abnormal. Nothing that was until a little alarm started sounding.
He ought to have known things would never run smoothly.
Pushing aside his papers he leant forward and prodded keys on the keyboard. Strange, he thought, the reading wasn't something he recognised. Some sort of transmission. It seemed to be harnessing the rift, but how? He keyed a little more and then the screen flickered, putting him on edge.
Something wasn't right.
But sometimes, Jack just had to accept that even his staff needed lives of their own. Admittedly, of course, that would often be when Gwen picked up her bag and declared she was going home, without giving Jack option either way. But accept it he did. He knew people needed time to themselves, and times away from the underground confines of the Hub. And so some nights he'd end up there alone, an old record player on echoing out a cracked recording of Gracie Fields and a self made (infinitely worse than Ianto's) cup of coffee in hand.
This was one of those nights.
He sat in his office, listening to the sound of the music as he jotted down notes on paperwork he'd left waiting for weeks. To his side a computer ran a regular nightly scan for any activity in the area. Nothing, just the way he liked it. Cardiff safe.
Nothing strange (which was almost strange in and of itself), nothing out of the ordinary or abnormal. Nothing that was until a little alarm started sounding.
He ought to have known things would never run smoothly.
Pushing aside his papers he leant forward and prodded keys on the keyboard. Strange, he thought, the reading wasn't something he recognised. Some sort of transmission. It seemed to be harnessing the rift, but how? He keyed a little more and then the screen flickered, putting him on edge.
Something wasn't right.
no subject
He was almost flippant with his words, but his intention beneath them was real.
"Yeah?" Jack said, almost surprised that the TARDIS could achieve such a feat without the Doctor's knowledge. But no, the Doctor sometimes didn't notice things right in front of his nose. He supposed it shouldn't surprise him.
"Well don't worry. Your secret's safe with me. I won't tell him. It's not like he calls for regular chats anyway, is it."
Stupid really, but he wished the Doctor did. Wished he'd at least stay in touch, just to let him know he was okay.
"Oh I've got the perfect thing," he grinned. "And something you're used to! Full of time. Vortex manipulator good enough for you?"
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"You want him to, do you not?" she asked, for once catching what wasn't outright spoken. "You miss him." It did not occur to her, however, that he might also have missed her.
The fact he had a vortex manipulator was both disturbing and rather unsurprising. "That could be used, yes," she said. "A communication device through which I could speak and see, as humans see. Very well."
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The question was perhaps a little more forward than he expected. Jack was used to asking direct questions but not giving direct answers, and so he bristled slightly.
"He's busy," Jack said instead. "So am I. Lots to do." He did miss him though, of course. He missed all of it. Travelling in the TARDIS. She'd been his home for what he still thought of as the best time of his life. He had a lot of good memories.
"Was good," he said, almost in spite of himself, "up there, you and the Doctor. You have no idea how good it felt back when I heard your engines again..."
But no. No he stopped himself because he could very nearly get emotional. He wouldn't want that.
"Great!" he said instead with a wide smile, already opening his wrist strap and plugging it into his computer system.
"It should show up on node 482. Just hop over and let me know if it works."
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"What has busy to do with anything when I can be at any time?" she asked. She wasn't advocating the Doctor visiting, no. But she was curious. It wasn't the first time she'd heard that as an excuse -- it was one of the Doctor's favourites when it came to searching for Susan, after all -- but she'd never understood the concept. Not when time was relative. "And for one who was so happy to hear me, you were eager enough to discount my being here."
Okay, maybe she was still a bit huffy about that.
"Very well." She navigated to the proper node, checking the subroutines as she went, fixing what broken coding she saw as her own version of thanks for him assisting her. When she arrived, she could all ready feel the difference and it carried in her voice. "I am here."
no subject
"Well what do you expect!" He defended. "You have any idea how many people and things try to infiltrate this place! Last I'd ever expect would be you! And people try and use the weak spots. Mentioning you, well..."
Well that'd be one of his, wouldn't it?
Jack grinned as he heard the voice echo from the little speaker in his wrist strap. Much clearer with better clarity. Perfect.
"Make yourself at home," he said as he stood himself up, and pressed a button or two on his wrist strap. "Hows things looking from in there?"
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She didn't like to dwell on how much he still cared for her. Not when she still shuddered to think of him. Not when his being here saddened her, because it wasn't what she'd had before.
"It is acceptable," she responded eventually, recalibrating his device. It had been tampered with and that made for uncomfortable quarters. And maybe he'd find one day what she had done. Another gift, though she'd never admit it. "I will need to get closer to get any accurate data, however."
no subject
"Like I said," he went on, "weak spot."
He didn't feel as though he needed to elaborate on that.
"Sorry if it's not 5 star quarters. But it's the best I can do." His vortex manipulator was a space hopper, and the TARDIS was a sports car. Though he'd never admit it.
"Bit of a minefield," he admitted, "not sure where to head first. We can head down to the basement. Take a look. One of the central computers is there. Main servers are all off site though."
He started walking from his office and down to the door that lead away and downstairs. "So," he thought he'd attempt to make conversation. "Find anything interesting in my files?"
no subject
She refused to discuss his weak spot any further, if only to avoid her own discomfort with the idea.
"I have been through worse," she replied a little absently, running scans and diagnostics, trying to pinpoint the source of whatever was crippling his system and keeping her here. "And the central computer will have to do. I can attempt a patch network to the main servers, but it may cause power outages throughout the city."
She was in the process of figuring out a method to do just that when he asked her about his files and she paused. Had she found anything interesting? A good deal, really, but she didn't want to admit that. "You have been busy," she offered eventually. "I would almost think you attract the aliens here."
no subject
He continued on down through dank corridors and thin staircases, and he frowned slightly. "Power outages? Yeah well we could do without those. The city would go crazy."
He laughed again, though there was really no amusement in it. "Yeah. Wouldn't be surprised. Seem to attract trouble. Maybe I'm cursed."
Breathing out a heavy breath, he shook his head and seemingly nowhere, he asked, "You don't like me much, do you?"
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She'd been trapped one too many times in her long life to harbour any positive feelings toward it, that was certain.
He chuckled about curses and trouble and she didn't reply immediately, weighing his final question. He at least deserved an honest answer.
"I do not like what you have become," she said finally. "I do not like that you have taken away one who belonged to me."
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He headed down to the level below and kept quiet as she spoke. He kept quiet after too. The words cut. They hurt, but he didn't really want that to show.
"Yeah, well," he said in the end, because he felt he had to say something, "between you and me, not sure I like it much either."
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Whether she noticed his hurt or not, the TARDIS didn't say. She let him speak, considering his words. This wasn't something she was used to, and she wasn't exactly the most sympathetic being in the universe, even after the Time War. Or maybe it was because of the War that Jack's change hurt so much. She'd loved him once and now it was painful to even be around him. To have something taken away so completely after losing so much...
"I would fix you if I could," she offered quietly. "But even I cannot change what you have become. Rose Tyler used me and I cannot fix what she destroyed."
no subject
Ahead of them was a box secured with a key, and he pulled a bunch out from his pocket to unlatch it. Inside was an access panel to the central matrix of the computer system.
"Would you?" he asked with his own voice quiet, concealing emotion as best he could. "Wouldn't be here at all if it wasn't for you, I suppose. You and Rose. I'd have stayed dead on Satellite Five. Funny, you know I don't think I'd ever thought about it like that."
no subject
She went silent, observing their location for a long while, surprised somewhat by how extensive it all was. She hadn't been expecting it.
"What she did was wrong. It would have been better to die than to become what you are. She is a child and she ruined you." Her voice faded and she added: "But if I could change it, yes, I would. I would like to have you back."