Captain Jack Harkness (
quitehomoerotic) wrote2009-12-31 12:15 am
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rude_not_ginger Terra Novus: Outpost 7
Follows this.
Smack.
Jack landed on the marbled floor with an unceremonious fall.
"Yeah, but you missed it," he said finishing the sentiment the Doctor started before he activated the manipulator.
He pulled himself up from the floor and stretched himself out, looking over to the Doctor to make sure he was okay and all in one piece.
"We're about 800 years to the left," he said as he checked his wrist strap. "Set it on random, thought it'd be more fun that way."
He grinned over at him, and stretched his neck out a little more as he looked around.
What he saw, was nothing short of spectacular.
The walls looked to be made of stone and were decorated with gargoyles and elaborate gold filigree flourishes. Ahead of them, up on the wall, was a vast round glass stain window. Small lights illuminated it around the circle, but just about visible through the other side was the vague starlight in the distance. They were still in space, not on a planet surface.
"Well this is new... what is this, some sort of space monastery?"
Smack.
Jack landed on the marbled floor with an unceremonious fall.
"Yeah, but you missed it," he said finishing the sentiment the Doctor started before he activated the manipulator.
He pulled himself up from the floor and stretched himself out, looking over to the Doctor to make sure he was okay and all in one piece.
"We're about 800 years to the left," he said as he checked his wrist strap. "Set it on random, thought it'd be more fun that way."
He grinned over at him, and stretched his neck out a little more as he looked around.
What he saw, was nothing short of spectacular.
The walls looked to be made of stone and were decorated with gargoyles and elaborate gold filigree flourishes. Ahead of them, up on the wall, was a vast round glass stain window. Small lights illuminated it around the circle, but just about visible through the other side was the vague starlight in the distance. They were still in space, not on a planet surface.
"Well this is new... what is this, some sort of space monastery?"
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He felt another embedded soul move closer to him as the TARDIS appeared not far off, a few blast scorches across her side, but generally in a better mood now that she wasn't being chased. The Doctor gave her a small smile, and then turned back to Jack.
"Guess we're stuck with each other. You, me, and the TARDIS."
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He looked over as he heard the engines of the TARDIS and smiled as she appeared a short way off.
"Looks like our ride is here," he smiled, before calling over to the TARDIS, "good to see you!" And frowning back to the Doctor, "I really need to not do that."
He let out a laugh and nodded with a smile. "Yeah, looks that way doesn't it? And good, Doctor. I'm glad."
Before moving to get up, he leant in and pressed a gentle kiss to the Doctor's lips, indulging himself, just for that moment.
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She felt joy when she saw them, when she knew her Doctor was happy. And jealousy, of course, when she saw Jack lean in and kiss him. The Doctor leaned back, deepening the kiss very slightly, if for no other reason than just because he was happy to be alive, in that moment, with Jack.
He broke apart, pressing his forehead to Jack's.
"That question. The one you asked me before." He wasn't even sure if Jack would remember, but the Doctor continued on. "I do. I still---I never stopped."
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It was right, when it was like this. Him, the Doctor and the TARDIS. It made him feel like he had a genuine reason to keep going. Not just because he had to, but because he wanted to. The Doctor made him want to.
The kiss ended and he stroked his fingers gently along the Doctor's cheek, keeping himself close.
Hearing the words meant more than even perhaps he realised they would. He felt warmed from the inside, and he needed that. He'd needed to know that, even if deep down he already did. He needed to hear it.
And he remembered, oh of course he remembered. He remembered the question clear as a bell, and the response that had shot so painfully through him.
"I know," he smiled back, squeezing tighter on his hand, "I always knew," and he pressed his lips down for another kiss, giving more than he could really say with words.
In the distance, the serene calm seemed to change. Barely perceptible, and not at all to those not tuned to it. But a distant sound, like a white noise or a radio transmission. A crackle far away that seemed to fizzle and get closer. And at the same time (though with eyes closed he didn't notice it), the pink sky faded and turned to white.
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Time moved, shifted around them. Something rippled along the timelines, pulling and changing things. The Doctor turned to Jack, but even the fixed man seemed to move, like a pebble rocking through a brook.
"Run." The word came out as a breath, a reaction, an uncertainty. Things were changing, and that was bad. They had to get out, they had to---
They had to--
Time was bending, shifting, changing, far too fast.
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"What's--"
He saw the sky. The sky had gone.
"Doctor!" he called as he sat up sharply. "Doctor's that's..." he felt a tug inside and it hurt. It was as though something was trying to change but he couldn't change. It was forcing the impossible and somehow achieving it.
He swung his head around to look at the Doctor, but he saw nothing there, he saw nothing at all. No rich green grass or bright pink sky.
In a desperate attempt to stop this, he pulled himself to standing on whatever surface he was on, and he ran. He thought for a moment that there was someone he shouldn't be leaving behind, but the thought was short. He couldn't remember who.
He ran. Ran and ran until...
He fell.
His foot tripped and he fell down. Down and down and down until he landed.
And when he opened his eyes, the grass was a thick rich green and the sky was a bright pink.
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Then, he was racing across the grass to where the other man had fallen. It had to be the sky. It had to be whatever changed.
"You all right?" The Doctor asked, placing a hand on the unfamiliar man's arm.
Time bent around him, like a fixed point in time. Like Adelaide Brooke or Charley Pollard, except stronger. It was nauseating, and the Doctor recoiled unconsiously.
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"Fine," he said sharply, a quick and automatic reaction followed by, almost as an afterthought, "Thanks."
Must have just tripped. He'd been taking a walk in the field after arriving here from the Dama cluster where he'd been helping someone out with a small infestation problem. He was taking a day off.
He kept his face straight and unreadable as he regarded the man next to him, looking him up and down in his suit and long coat. Trying to learn something about him by just looking at him. Sometimes it worked.
He saw him shift back, but he didn't know why. He stored the information though, and raised an eyebrow in the man's direction. "Problem?" he asked as he picked a blade of grass from his sleeve and threw it back down to the ground.
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"Thought I saw--" he looked back to the sky, and then shook his head.
No, no. He was here on holiday, coming back from his latest adventure on Christmas Planet with...no one. Just himself. Why did he think he was with someone?
"Anyway, I'm the Doctor."
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"Nice to meet you 'The Doctor'. Captain Jack Harkness."
He offered his hand out towards the man for him to shake, and in the back of his head he wondered why the name sounded familiar. Why it struck a chord and... no, no it didn't, it was just his mind playing tricks.
Glancing sideways, it struck him too that he wasn't entirely sure where he was. Must have taken a wrong turn somewhere.
"You a local?"
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"Nah," the Doctor said. "Just a freelancer."
Funny, though, that name meant something to him. It tugged somewhere in his hearts. Maybe an old piece of history, a fixed point somewhere.
"Well! But if you're going towards town, I'll follow along."
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Though, looking at him, he wouldn't mind spending time with him.
"A freelancer?" Jack questioned with a smirk. Well he could get behind that idea at least.
He turned his head and glanced over to the ridge where he assumed the town would be beyond. He nodded before looking back to the Doctor.
"Why not," he said. After all company for a short while wasn't a bad thing.
"So what brings you this way?" He asked as they started to walk. He attempted to sound casual but beneath that air he was probing. Trying to learn about this 'freelancer'.
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Running from the knocking, from the Ood. That had to be it, of course. It didn't feel right, like the fear for himself had faded, but there was fear. It had to be for himself. He didn't have anyone else.
"Traveling. Causing a bit of trouble, you know how it is." The Doctor didn't imagine Captain Jack did (he only barely accepted the fact that the man was a captain at all). But time felt different, and it moved differently around him.
Best to stay close. He led the way, only half aware of the fact that he didn't really know where the nearest town was.
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As they walked, Jack reached down to discreetly check his wrist strap. Where exactly was he? It could be the manipulator, after all it was old and temperamental, but that didn't really explain the utter confusion.
"Here alone, I take it?" he asked, continuing the small talk, continuing his probing.
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"Yeah, well, figured I might take in a few sights without anyone to hold me back. Getting a bit too old for companions." He sniffed loudly, and nodded out to the horizon.
"Don't often see a pink-light horizon, not unless you're in the Retrestria sector. It's the referberations of light along the outer core of the sunsphere." A rather random bit of trivia, but it was nice to have someone around to say it to.
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"Oh 's that so?" he asked, looking at him again. "You don't look so old to me." But Jack knew age wasn't always visible on the surface. He knew that more than most. He'd lived more than most. He'd have bet much more than this man.
His head turned to him as he spoke. And oh, well that was interesting. He knew his stuff, at least, or some stuff.
Discreetly, he poked again at his wrist strap, glancing down at it for confirmation. "Yup!" he said with a nod, "Retrestria Two, to be precise." And he got a year too, 6860. Further than he thought. Why had he come out this far? Oh it was that explosion he was escaping, wasn't it?
"Like the aurora borealis," he added. He knew quite well of course what an 'Earth' concept that was, but then old habits died hard. He'd been on Earth too long.
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Aurora Borealis didn't translate well with the TARDIS circuits. Meant the man he stood next to spoke English at some point. Which meant he'd been to Earth. He felt himself relax a little. People from Earth could be ruthless, but it was good, being around someone who knew what his other-home was like.
"There's actually a fantastic chip shop on Retrestria Two," the Doctor said. "If you like Earth food which, well, I have to admit I'm fond of. Best chips on this section of galaxy. Which isn't saying much, but it's better than the clob-hobble they sell to eat on this world."
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It warmed him to him a little, despite his preposition not to trust people. And he didn't trust him, of course, but that didn't matter. He didn't have to.
"Oh see now you're talking!" Jack said, piping up with more enthusiasm than the situation really warranted. He smirked a little, looking at the man walking beside him. "Asking me to lunch already? Don't waste much time, do you."
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Oh. Bit of a flirt, this one. The Doctor didn't trust flirts. Still! No real harm in it. He'd been a bit of a flirt himself, once. A few years ago. Same regeneration, but it felt like a lifetime had passed.
"Well, you'll know I'm being terribly serious if I buy you a drink," he promised. "And it'll take you more than a smile to earn that from me."
"We should be---" he pulled out the sonic and checked for alien tech. The action felt strangely familiar, especially around this Captain Jack. They were heading in the right direction, at least.
"Allons-y."
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He frowned when he saw the screwdriver. It looked familiar. Maybe he'd seen one somewhere before. "What's that?" he asked, pulling a slight face and gesturing a hand out towards the device.
"Wait is that French?" He found himself following behind the Doctor at a quicker pace. It's a good job he didn't notice it. Jack Harkness didn't do the following.
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As for the sonic, he was getting fairly tired of explaining what it was and how it worked, especially to people he didn't know particularly well. This young man, well, he'd figure out the sonic through practical observation, or he wouldn't. Right now, the Doctor had---
He had---
He felt like he had something to do, beyond going out for dinner and drinks with some strange man. He was running from something. Running from something very bad.
"Did something happen here?" he asked aloud. "Something...to run from."
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"How should I know?" he added, waving his hands slightly. "He wasn't used to being spoken to as though someone was a superior, demanding information. He didn't want to become used to it either.
"I just got here," he said, "you saw that."
He let out a huff though, as if it was a great effort to assist at all. But despite the show of it, assist he did. He lifted his wrist strap and opened it up, looking at it.
"It looks like there's no-- No, wait..." he frowned as he looked at it, that was odd, why hadn't he picked up on it before? "There is something. Some sort of temporal distortion, and not very long ago. Right here."
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The Doctor waved a hand. "No, that was me. My ship, coming through, she tears little holes in space for a very brief amount of time. Probably leaking time radiation. No, no, this is something different. Something's changed."
What was it? What altered?
He leaned forward, putting his hands to his knees. He felt oddly nauseated, like he'd been traveling without a capsule recently. Idiotic idea, of course. He never flew by any means other than TARDIS, unless absolutely necessary.
"How did you get here?" he asked, straightening.
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But that'd be a ridiculous idea, wouldn't it? He was sure it would, even though he wasn't sure why. He was sure too, that his words were vaguely insulting, though that was never the intention, and he couldn't really for the life of him think why they would be.
"None of your business," he said, straightening up his back a little and crossing his arms over his chest. Why in the universe should he tell some guy he doesn't know that he's got a... "vortex manipulator."
Okay, that's a bit odd. He was quite sure he hadn't intended to tell him. It was almost as though telling him was more natural than not.
He tapped his wrist strap as if for emphasis and nodded, "top of the range."
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And that's what it felt like. Like he'd just been pulled inside out through a vortex of time. Like he'd stood too long at the doors of the TARDIS in flight.
"And my ship happens to be a brilliant piece of technology," he added, defensively. "Time radiation only leaks during dire emergencies, but it could explain the temporal distortion."
Unless...unless there was something the Doctor was missing.
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