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 caught Jack's shoulder. It had been a long time since anyone had caught him, since anyone had cared to catch him. Not since---
Bess, wasn't it?
Another wave hit him, and he clung to Jack a little tighter. Where was this coming from? What was he doing that was triggering it?
"Yeah, sit down, might not be such a bad idea."
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Jack was determined to find out what this was. Whatever was attacking the Doctor. Jack was fiercely protective over the people that mattered to him and-- well it wasn't that the Doctor mattered to him, but he liked him. No he didn't like him as such but-- no, no maybe he did.
Either way, he wanted to see him okay. He really knew that.
With a tight grip he supported the Doctor and manoeuvred the pair of them over to the building. But as they reached it, he saw that apart from the scrolling newsplate outside, the lights were off, and the building was in darkness.
"Great," he said. "Closed. Well there's got to be someone inside. Just you hold on, okay?"
He raised his hand and knocked his fist against the door.
Knocked his fist four times.
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The Doctor reached out, blocking the last knock with the flat of his hand. It stung, but the knock was prevented. He leaned against the door, breathing heavily.
"Don't knock. Three is enough. It's all right, I just need to catch my breath." It was hard, and he couldn't figure out why. Something drastic must've changed. Something serious.
"Time is compensating for something," he said. "I don't know what, but I'm too time sensitive to handle its change."
Why was he telling Jack this? He couldn't trust him, he didn't even know him!
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"It's okay," he said, putting a hand to the Doctor's arm. "We'll work it out, okay? Trust me, I'm an old dab hand at this stuff. Just hold onto me and you'll be fine, I promise. Time sort of... works a little differently around me, it might help, I don't know." Or maybe it was causing it? He hoped not.
And that was strange. His being different wasn't something he discussed. It wasn't something he told people, and certainly not strangers.
He turned his head and caught sight of a bench a few feet away. "Come on," he nodded and supported him to move over to sit down.
"That's better," he said as he lowered him to sitting. "I need to check for distortions. If time is changing something, I won't feel it, I can't feel it, so I need you to help me here, okay? You got that?" He didn't think he'd feel it. As he said, time worked differently around him. It didn't tend to react in the usual fashion.
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But he couldn't figure out what. It was like everything that might've told him what to expect was suddenly no longer in his mind. And a Time Lord without his memories was nothing.
He watched Jack for a moment before he spoke.
"You're fixed," he said. "That's impossible."
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"Yep," he said in response, ducking down squatting in front of the Doctor, so he was the same height, his hands still out holding the Doctor's arms. He knew he was fixed, of course. A fact he'd been called by that specialist. By that doctor.
"A fixed point in space and time, that's me," he grinned at him, recalling what he'd been told "And I specialise in impossible."
He reached one hand and touched it to the Doctor's forehead to check for a temperature. Nothing, in fact a little cool. But that was normal, or he supposed it might be normal.
As he moved his arm again, the little chip in his wrist strap started to bleep. It made him frown, but he'd deal with that later. He needed to look after the Doctor now.
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He cringed back from Jack's touch. He was so utterly wrong. It was so nauseating, so disgusting. Fixed people didn't work, they didn't make sense, they weren't natural.
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He was vague on the details of how and why, and if asked he'd have said that was because it was none of his business, but in truth he was... not quite sure. Stupid, really, completely stupid considering it was one of the most important things to have happened to him. But it was just... hazy.
"You know you could hurt a guy's feelings doing that," he said, remarking on the Doctor's shifting from him. He moved up and sat himself on the bench beside the Doctor.
"How can you tell?" he asked. "Nobody can ever tell. I've never met anyone who could."
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He shook his head and tried to get back to his feet. His legs were a little wobbly, but he managed to stand all right. "Temporal distortion effects are starting to fade. Whatever's been changed in the universe must've been a doozy."
Oh, he hoped it wasn't Time Agents again. He hated dealing with the Agency. Or maybe the Eternals, he hated the Eternals. Or the---the---
He knew there was a newer time sensitive species out and about, but he couldn't remember for the life of him what it was.
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But no. No, he supposed this man was right. He was unique, and Jack was sure of that. Sure of it but not entirely sure why he was so sure.
"Careful," Jack said, slightly warily as the Doctor stood. He looked up at him with a slight frown.
"If things are changing in the universe, that can't be good. They don't change themselves, not for any reason, so that means someone did something to change them."
He wiped a hand up over his face and shook his head. "Okay. Well. Guess I'd better find out what. You just... get back to your box."
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If he could find it at all. Something like that would be all but impossible to find on a good day, much less a day where he was losing his memory and stumbling to keep track of himself. And whatever he found might not be there moments later.
"Tell you what," he said. "You can help me out, we'll figure out where this started, eh?"
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Jack protested to the Doctor as he stood up and stood tall, attempting to make his presence known and act with some sort of authority.
But it wasn't quite right either, was it? He did feel muddled. Or at least off. Something wasn't right. Something was missing.
"How about you help me, and we'll work it out that way."
It was perhaps childish, and most definitely stubborn, but he didn't really care.
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Now it was the Doctor being both childish and stubborn. Not that he minded too much. He was a genius, after all. And perfectly capable of taking care of himself, even in a situation like this.
He was...better off on his own, really. Mistakes would always be made, but he was the only one who could get hurt in this case.
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He huffed out a long breath. He didn't like being judged. Well no, that wasn't quite right; people made opinions about him all the time and he didn't give a damn what they thought. But the idea of the Doctor forming incorrect opinions about him just rubbed him up the wrong way.
"Look, are we gonna do this or are we just gonna stand around talking about it. Because really if there's work to be done I'd rather just do it. So, Doctor if you think you should be in charge, go for it. Take the stage."
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"Fine then, I will," he said. He reached into his pocket and pulled out the sonic. With a little flair, he turned and aimed it towards Jack's vortex manipulator. The tiny attachment fizzled and sparked, breaking instantly.
"Driving me mad, that thing."
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"Oh you did not just do that," he said, seeing red and trying not to show it.
Inside he felt a completely unwarranted panic try and bubble up. He had no real idea why. He didn't even know what the chip was, let alone why it should worry him for it to be gone. But he was worried. Very worried.
"Do you see me going up to your stuff and damaging it? Do you see me going up to that stupid box of yours and setting it on fire? No!" As he spoke his voice got louder, and he stepped forward, into the Doctor's personal space, pointing in his face.
"I don't know who you think you are, but I know one thing, you don't deserve another minute of my time. So Doctor, it's been fun, really, I mean really great. But I've got better things to be doing, like oh I don't know, my job!"
And what job that would be, he wasn't quite sure. But he had a job, in Torchwood. Helping people. Stopping things. And he wasn't going to do any of that with this idiot.
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"So you did do this," he said, shaking his head. "Whatever that was attached to, you were using it to calculate time around yourself, change what I know about you. That's why I've got your things in my pocket, is that it?"
That had to be the answer, didn't it? Of course it did! "You've done something, and now you're removing yourself from my memory. But what you're doing is causing holes in the fabric of reality, you're killing the timeline."
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"Oh sure right because you're really that important, aren't you?" he scoffed. "You know you really seem to think a lot of yourself, but between you and me, I really couldn't care less. So by all means, you go right ahead and think you matter enough for someone to change time, but trust me, you don't."
He laughed again, and shifted his hands to his hips. Utterly incredulous and somewhat amused at just how ridiculous it was.
"And anyway!" he went on, adding justification even though he was sure he didn't need it. "If I was wasting my time messing with your memory, you really think I'd mess with my own too?"
Hmm. He hadn't quite meant to say that.
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That had to be it. Sure, the low-scale time alteration probably wouldn't hit the Doctor at all, but this man must've been clever, to catch the Doctor so off-guard.
He pointed at Jack, unimpressed with his attitude. "You're trying to play with me, and I'm not the sort of man to be played with."
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Jack shouted at the Doctor, fumed at him. How dare he make assumptions and jump to conclusions like that. He'd come a long way from the Agency, a very long way.
"Oh don't flatter yourself," Jack said, unamused. "You should be so lucky, and really, you're not. Now why don't you take your stupid sonic toys and go wherever it is you were going, because you're wasting my time. Because if something is happening here, someone has to stop it, and I don't think that someone is you, Doctor."
He got even closer to him, shouting in his authoritative tone, right in the Doctor's face.
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He held up the sonic and said. "I don't think I told you this was sonic. So, if you don't know who I am or anything about me, how did you know, hmm?"
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But he recovered as quickly as he fell and he retuned a patronising smile of his own.
"Oh come on. You think I'm that stupid? I've been around a while. I've seen a lot of things. I can recognise sonic technology when I see it."
But no that really wasn't it, was it? He knew that device was sonic. How did he know? Did they salvage one at Torchwood? Oh that must have been it. It must have been some alien tech that fell through the rift.
"And I've seen one before," he added in a scoff.
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He sighed, looking back at the new sonic. He hadn't perfected the red settings yet, and part of him didn't want to. Red settings meant truly giving in to what the future was telling him he'd have to experience.
"So! Tell me who you really are," he said with a note of finality, stuffing the sonic back into his pocket.
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But as he looked at the sonic, he smirked. It was as though something was in his head that just hadn't been there before. And it wasn't a remarkable change, just an obvious one.
"And really, if you think it's unique, you might want to go back to the hack that sold it to you."
From his pocket, where he knew it had always been (or did he?), he pulled his own sonic pointer (because that's what it was called, wasn't it), and he held it up..
"Doesn't look too unique to me."
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How was that possible? It wasn't, that was for certain. It was not possible that the man had his sonic, he---he---what did he do with his old sonic?
He felt that stabbing in his gut as his mind tried to compensate for the missing data. He melted it down and put it into the TARDIS. That was right, wasn't it? Because he--he had to---
He collapsed forward again and grasped Jack's arm for support. He cried out in pain, equally for the time distortion and for the wrong feeling of Jack.
"What are you doing to me?" he demanded.
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