SlideShare una empresa de Scribd logo
1 de 167
Descargar para leer sin conexión
The Runaway Bride Part 2
Seconds later, the TARDIS landed.

Stuart looked at the monitor on the console. “The coast looks to be clear.”

“Why wouldn’t it be?” Elle asked, confused. “It’s Christmas. There’d be maybe one or two soldiers
maximum on duty today.”

“Christmas?” Stuart repeated blankly.

“Maybe it isn’t on whatever planet you’re from,” Tristan cut in, with biting dignity, “but on ours,
yes, it’s Christmas.” Elle shot him a reproachful look.
“Why were you getting married on Christmas?” the brunet asked.

Elle shrugged. The reasons were too numerous to explain, and they had more important things to
worry about. “It was the first day we could get the chapel that Tristan had off work, and Christmas
has never been terribly special around here, anyway. You said you had a theory?”
“Oh, yes.” At least somewhat distracted, Stuart cast a glance about the room. “Your siblings told
me what they saw at the wedding, and what they saw leads me to believe that somehow, you’ve
been dosed with Huon energy, and that’s a problem, since Huon energy hasn’t existed since the
dark times. The only place you’d find Huon energy now is a remnant in the heart of the TARDIS.
Here’s what happened…” He snatched up a pencil and a mug, then bounded up to her. “Say,
that’s the TARDIS,” here he held out first the cup, then the pen, “and that’s you. The Huon
particles inside you activated, the two sets of particles magnetized, and whap—" He dumped the
pencil inside the mug. “You were pulled inside the TARDIS.”
She nodded slowly. “I think I get it. And you think that all this has something to do with the
General?”

“Oh, the energy had to come from somewhere. Since the auton that drove off with you was
headed this way, it’s a reasonable guess. Now then, let’s have a look around.”
The three of them quietly filed out of the TARDIS and into a small, sparsely decorated lobby. As
Elle had predicted, there was no one at the desk. “Strange,” Stuart murmured, looking around
quickly. No one appeared, so he crept over to it. Tristan took her hand as they followed him.
Stuart tapped out a few commands on the keyboard. “All right, look at this,” he said after a
moment, gesturing for the pair to join him so that they could see the screen. “Here’s the official
floor plan: three floors above ground that comply perfectly with the regulations. Nothing
suspicious in the slightest.”

“Did you expect there to be?” Tristan asked, dryly.

“Not on the official plan, necessarily,” said Stuart, “but if we were to look at the lift…”
Here he crossed over to it, opened it, and stepped inside. “There, you see?” He pointed toward
the panel. “There’s a button marked ‘basement.’”

Elle and Tristan peeked in at the panel and discovered this to be the case. “How can that be?”
asked Tristan.

“Quite simple. This place has a whole floor which doesn’t exist on the official plan. So what’s
down there, then?” Stuart grinned. “Let’s find out.”

His contagious excitement had Elle rushing into the lift after him, with Tristan following in a
disgruntled fashion.
The button to the basement required a key to work, but Stuart’s sonic screwdriver took care of
that obstacle, and shortly afterward they arrived on the lower floor. Elle took in the scene with
wide eyes. “I’m pretty sure this is at least seven kinds of illegal,” she said, after a moment.

“I’m fairly certain you made that number up,” Stuart replied lowly. She could hear the smile
without looking at him, and she couldn’t help doing the same, if only briefly.
The hall they stepped into extended further than they could easily see on either side. In the dim
light, Elle could make out doors dotted along the walls. “Yep, definitely not legal.”

“No one’s really above breaking the law,” said Tristan. “Although, it could have been built before
the power plant blew, and they just didn’t see any reason to demolish it.”

Stuart glanced at Elle. “How long ago did you say that happened?”

“Five generations.”
“Then no, it was not here before the disaster.” He stepped up to the walls and examined them
closely. “If this structure were, in fact, that old, it would show more signs of wear. Look here. This
material is fairly new, not more than a couple of seasons old at most.”

Now that she looked at it more closely, she could tell that Stuart was correct. “So someone came
down here recently and built…this. Whatever this is. They definitely couldn’t have done it without
the General knowing.”
“Indeed not. Well, suppose we have a look around. This way!” He began to jog down the hall to
their left.

“Why that way?” she called after him.

He spun around briefly, a confident, almost cocky grin lighting up his features. “I’ve just got a
feeling,” he said lightly, then took off again. Elle giggled, picked up her skirts, and ran after him.
Stuart stopped in front of a door with a caution sign bolted to it. “What did I tell you? This looks
promising.” He listened at the door—to see if anyone might be behind it, she supposed—before
calmly unlocking it with his sonic screwdriver and striding in, nice as you please. With a quick
glance over her shoulder, Elle crept after him.
Beyond the door lay a massive laboratory—at least, by Elle’s definition of massive—with a
spacious workstation that seemed almost as wonderful to her as the inside of Stuart’s TARDIS.
“Oh, I’ve never seen a lab this nice,” she enthused, moving forward into the room.

Stuart stayed close to her side. “Did you read one of the sciences at university?” he asked.
“No, I was a Mathematics major, but I’ve always been good at Science and English too. We
mostly did dry labs for assignments, though—there wasn’t a lot of space for a real lab.” Elle
surveyed the area, careful not to touch anything, but feeling as though she could happily sit down
and work there for hours in any other situation.
“Come and tell me what you think of this, then,” he said, bounding over to another part of the
room, where a tank of bubbling water stood against the wall. She crossed over to have a look,
but the sight of Stuart grinning up at it distracted her. “Oh, this is brilliant.”
“What is it?” she asked. “It just looks like bubbles to me.”

“Particle extrusion,” said Stuart. He looked down at her. “Tell me, is there a large body of water
nearby?”
“Yeah, there’s a lake behind the military base, near where the power plant used to be.” She
couldn’t help a smirk. “We’d have seen it on our way in, but somebody had to go and materialize
their spaceship right inside, like a showoff.”
He chuckled. “What can I say? I take pride in my ship. Regardless, they’ve been manufacturing
Huon particles.” He tapped the glass. “My people got rid of them, you see, unraveled the basic
atomic structure, but this lot have been rebuilding them. They’re using that lake! Extruding the
particles through a flat hydrogen base until—hang on.” He hurried back to table and inspected
the tubes on the racks.
“Your people?” Elle questioned, following him. Stuart waved a dismissive hand. Sighing, she
glanced to the side and frowned in puzzlement. “Stuart, there’s a giant hole in the middle of the
floor—"
“Is there?” He barely glanced over his shoulder. “Odd. I’ll give it a look in a minute, here.” He took
one of the tubes from the rack and held it out to her. “This is what they were trying to make: Huon
particles in liquid form.”

She took it and looked at it, queasiness beginning to bubble up inside her. “Is this what’s inside
me?”
In response, Stuart fiddled a bit with his sonic screwdriver and pointed it at the tube. The liquid
inside it began to glow with a golden light, and as Elle watched, she felt something inside her
react to the activated energy. Her hand, curled around the tube, began to glow as well. She
looked down to see that her whole body gave off the same light. “Oh, my plumbbob,” she said
softly, cold terror freezing her in place.
“Genius,” Stuart said. “Because the particles are inert, so they need something living to catalyze
inside, and that’s you.” He took the tube back and turned his screwdriver off. Elle exhaled heavily
as her body returned to normal. “They saturate the body, and then—oh, of course! The wedding!”
He sprang back in excitement, startling her. “You were getting married! That’s it!”

Still unsettled by his demonstration, Elle frowned. “What’s it?”
“Don’t you see? It’s a big day for you, the best of your life, and while you’re walking down the
aisle, there’s a chemical war going on inside you! Adrenaline, acetylcholine, endorphins—you’re
like a great big pressure cooker! The particles reach their boiling point, and shazam!” He clapped
his hands, startling her. “The particles activate early and pull you into the TARDIS!” He gave her
a triumphant grin, but it quickly fell away from his face. “What’s the matter?”
“Are you enjoying this?” she demanded, every limb of her body shaking with anxiety.
He bit his lip. “A little, I’m sorry. Not your predicament, of course not, but that moment when
everything falls into place—"
Elle knew the feeling, but it was a different matter when they were dealing with something
unnatural that had somehow been catalyzing inside her for plumbbob only knew how long. “I get
it. Look, just tell me…are these particles dangerous? Am I safe?”
Stuart took a step toward her, eyebrows furrowing. “Oh, yes.”

“But your people got rid of Huon particles,” she said, holding up a hand to stop him. “Why did
they do that?”
He sighed and looked her in the eye. “Because they were deadly,” he said quietly.
Elle covered her mouth with her hands, more terrified than she had ever been in her life. Stuart
rushed up to her and took her by the elbows. “Ellie, listen to me. I’ll sort it out; whatever’s been
done to you, I’ll reverse it. Trust me. I am not about to lose someone else.”

“Oh, I don’t think you’ll have any say in the matter.”
Their heads whipped in the direction of the double doors to the side, as they opened to admit two
lines of autons without Santa disguises on. Her breath caught in her throat. There were ten in all,
every one of them armed, and they took up position in a V shape, five on each side of the room.
As they came to a halt, a tall, dark-haired man followed them out and stood calmly in the apex of
the V.
“Raikov,” Elle ground out. They had been right to suspect his involvement.

“Oh, so this is the good general,” murmured Stuart.
“Elle Fitzhugh,” Raikov said, deceptively pleasantly. “How kind of you to join us. I see you’ve
brought a friend.”
He turned his gaze to Stuart, who took a step forward. “Yes, hello. The name is Stuart. I must say
I do like what you have done here. A secret underground base, built in direct contravention of the
by-laws of Sierra Plains, which state that a building must be built to a foot print of only eight units
by eight units. Did a bit of reading while you were being reunited with your family and fiancé.” The
final sentence of his speech was directed over his shoulder to Elle, before he returned his
attention to the General. “Yes, I have to say it is all very neat.”
Raikov gave a humorless smile. “Our work here is far too important to be constrained by
regulations I drew up to preserve building materials.”

“Your work?”

“We keep order here in Sierra Plains, Stuart. I have nothing but the best interest of the people at
heart. Anything else you might have heard is simply not true.”
“And this keeping order, that includes drilling great big holes in the ground does it?” asked Stuart,
wandering to the edge of the huge hole in the centre of the floor, and peering down into it.

“I noticed that before,” said Elle, with a questioning glance at Raikov.
“How very astute of you,” he replied easily.

“Why? What’s down there?”

The satisfaction that lit up his face at being asked made her stomach turn. “‘What’s down there’ is
an artifact I believe to be related to the beginning of the apocalypse.”

“But the power plant caused that.”

“So it did. However, I have scientific records that prove that there were more forces at work than
a mere accident. The records were buried so deep that the public has no knowledge of them, but
I inherited access to them when I was promoted to General.”
“Records of what?” Elle tried to keep her focus on Raikov, but as she asked the question she
realized that Stuart had not spoken in a while and glanced at him briefly. He was still inspecting
the hole, eyebrows knit together in concentration and a little alarm.
The General’s smile widened. “Miss Fitzhugh, if you’re attempting to get me to monologue, you
will be very disappointed. Your involvement in my work doesn’t require your knowing all about it.”
Elle frowned, but before she could press him on the matter, she caught sight of someone
sneaking along the wall behind him.

Tristan.
Her heart leapt, and she knew she had to give him the chance to get behind Raikov without the
General realizing he was there. “All right then, why me?” she asked, trying to avoid looking at
Tristan. “You were the one who had me dosed with these Huon things, weren’t you? Wouldn’t it
have been easier just to use some grunt from the regiment?”
“You hadn’t figured that out on your own? I was led to believe that you were the intelligent one in
the family,” Raikov said, a hint of a sneer tainting his smile. “Your family has been nothing but
trouble to me and everyone who came before me. It is high time a Fitzhugh made herself actually
useful to me.”
Trying to ignore how much his words stung, Elle glanced at Tristan, who was now directly behind
Raikov. What was taking him so long? Raikov’s attention was solely on her, Tristan wouldn’t get
a better chance. She saw him draw back his arm to throw a rock at Raikov’s head. “Now!” she
cried, unable to help it, as Tristan hesitated. Raikov whirled around and stared Tristan straight in
the eye. There was a terrible moment when Tristan seemed stunned and dropped the rock he
had in his hand, and then…
Tristan smiled. “Hello, Dennis.”

“Tristan. I was wondering where you were.” They shook hands.
“I don’t understand,” Elle said, looking between her fiancée and her enemy as her heart began to
pound with dread. “How do you know the General, Tristan?”
Tristan smiled condescendingly. “Why, Elle, the two of us have known each other for a long time.
Didn’t I mention it?”
“But…but…”

As she floundered she became aware of the fact that Stuart was once again at her side. “I am
sorry, Elle,” he said quietly.

She glanced up at him. “Sorry for what?”

He touched her elbow with a light hand. “In order for you to be dosed with Huon particles, you
had to ingest them. That needed to be done by someone whom you trusted to make you drinks
and prepare you food so that they could add the liquid particles to it. That person then needed to
get you here at the right time.”
Realization hit Elle like a sledgehammer. She remembered all the times Tristan had brought her
an instant drink or prepared her a salad. Even the glass of water he had poured for her the day
they met could have been drugged. “He was poisoning me.”
“Well done,” said Raikov, giving him a slow handclap. “When did you work that out, I wonder?”

Stuart ignored the question, saying instead, “I am intrigued, Tristan. What do you get out of it?”
Tristan gave a smart salute. “Colonel Tristan Smith.”

“You did this because you were ordered to?”
“Oh no. Dennis and I are old friends. When I was assigned as his second in command here in
Sierra Plains, he told me that some sort of alien artifact was buried here. We came up with this
plan together.”
“The fact that you would be abusing the trust and love of an innocent woman did not faze you at
all I suppose?”

“Don’t be so naïve. I’m a soldier. My job is to protect the people of this country, and more
specifically at this time, the people of Sierra Plains. I will do whatever it takes to do that.”
Elle looked up at Tristan, and flinched at the contempt etched on his features. “But I love you,”
she whispered.
“That’s what made it so easy.”
“I think we’ve explained enough,” said Raikov shortly, looking toward the autons. “Kill him.”

“Don’t hurt him!” cried Elle, moving in front of Stuart.

He put a hand on her shoulder. “Ellie, it’s all right.”

“No, I won’t let them!”
“Take aim,” Raikov commanded.

They raised their weapons.
“Ah now, hang on,” said Stuart, letting go of Elle. “There is one thing you should know, before you
do that.”

“Please, don’t concern yourself with whether the drones will hit Elle. They are very good shots,”
said Raikov, eerily casual.
“No, it is not that.” Stuart fumbled for something in his pocket. “You see, the Huon particles
activated early, and caused Ellie to be pulled into my ship. By the same reasoning, if I reverse the
polarity,” here he did something to his sonic screwdriver, “then the ship will come to Ellie.” As he
finished speaking, the TARDIS started to materialise around him and Elle.
“Shoot him!” yelled Raikov. The drones opened fire, but their bullets thudded harmlessly against
the outer defenses.
Assured that they were safe, Stuart ran for the console. “This ship could withstand a nuclear
explosion,” he called back to Elle. “They’ll never get in. Oh, do you remember what you said
before, about a time machine? Well, I lied.” A pause. “And now we’re going to use it.”
She heard the switches flip, felt the ship shake as it began to dematerialize, but did not
comprehend any of it. She simply stared unblinkingly at the TARDIS door as tears coursed down
her cheeks.

                                             ***
The TARDIS was still in the process of fading away when Raikov whirled on Tristan in a rage.
“You idiot,” he snarled. “This is your fault. Elle was the only person I asked you to bring here, now
look what’s happened!”
Tristan flinched, but stood his ground. “They were coming on their own,” he said. “I allowed it
because it was less suspicious that way.”

“And in doing that you’ve ruined everything. Give me one reason why I shouldn’t have you shot.”
The autons turned their weapons on Tristan, waiting for the command. He crossed his arms,
forcing himself not to look at them but at his friend. “They’ll be back, Dennis. Stuart intends to
stop us—he’s not the type to hide when things get dangerous.”
“It doesn’t matter whether he comes back or not, Elle’s the one we need!”

“She’ll be with him,” Tristan said, with certainty.

Raikov glared at him. “She’d better be.”
“She will be. And we’ll be ready.” Lifting an eyebrow, Tristan turned away. “Besides,” he added,
as he strode back to the side door he had entered from, “I wasn’t the one who let the interloper
talk instead of just shooting him.”

                                              ***
“Ellie?”

“What?”

Her forcefulness startled Stuart so much that he looked up from the monitor. Elle was sitting with
her back to him, but turned just enough that he could see her fists lying in her lap, clenched so
hard the knuckles had turned white. He cleared his throat. “I know this is a bad time—"
“It’s always a bad time,” she said bitterly, voice thick. “What do you need?”
Heart wrung with sympathy, he left the console and laid a hand on her shoulder in an attempt at
comfort. She stiffened. He felt a pang in his stomach and had to remind himself that this was not
about him, that there were some things he did not have the ability to fix. “We’ve arrived,” he said,
removing his hand. “Do you want to see?”

“All I want to see is my bed,” Elle muttered, but she stood up anyway.
Stuart went back to the console. “Hmm, the scanner’s a bit small. Maybe your way is best.” He
gave her a quick smile and went to the doors. When she had joined him, he opened them.
Elle stepped out of the TARDIS and onto the bare ground below, eyes widening in surprise.
“There’s hardly anything here,” she whispered, echoing his own thoughts. “And look at all this
grass!”

“Sierra Plains in its earliest days,” said Stuart. “Your great-great-grandfather was still at
university, if I’m not mistaken.”
She let her eyes take in the whole scene before she spoke again. “So this is how it all started.
That puts the wedding in perspective, a bit.”

“You’ve every right to feel hurt, Ellie.”

She shrugged. “What are we looking for?”
Stuart walked forward until he was standing just over her shoulder, then gestured below them.
“The power plant accident that began the whole affair is about to happen. I was hoping we would
get a glimpse of what caused it.”

“They said it was an internal mishap,” said Elle, looking bewildered.

“It may well have been, and yet, the good general believes that something else was involved.”
Her expression turned thoughtful, and after a moment, she nodded. “You know, that actually
doesn’t surprise me now that I’m thinking about it. Rhys’ daughter Ursula wrote a bit about the
early days in her memoirs and mentioned that a lot of media coverage had been redacted.
Maybe they didn’t want everyone to panic too much.”

“That may be,” said Stuart, “given that someone had Raikov’s ‘artifact’ buried and the records
hidden. The question is…what was it?”
He was watching Elle, not the surroundings, so it took him off guard when her mouth fell open in
disbelief. “Stuart, look,” she cried, pointing above them with a shaky finger.
He looked upward. Something was falling from the sky in a ribbon of flames. “Get back in the
TARDIS!”
From the doorway, they watched as the projectile crashed into the power plant, creating an
explosion so powerful it turned the sky orange. “Oh, plumbbob,” Elle breathed, her fingers
pressed to her lips. “All those people…”
“Shut the doors,” Stuart murmured. She complied, and he ran back to the console. “This won’t
give us as good a view as I would like,” he added, pulling the scanner back up, “but it’ll keep us
from radiation poisoning, which is what matters. Aha.” He pointed to the screen, and Elle joined
him to look over his shoulder. “You see that?”
Through an alarming amount of smoke and some fire licking at the corners of the image, they
could see a blackened hunk of metal radiating a soft, golden glow. “The artifact,” said Elle.
“Precisely.” Stuart ran a hand through his hair. “It’s part of a spaceship—harmless in itself, but
dosed up with enough Huon energy to cause widespread damage on impact. Sierra Plains was
lucky, all things considered. If that had been a nuclear power plant—"

“It wasn’t?”

“No. If it had been, there would have been nothing left, and a much wider area would have been
decimated.”
She pursed her lips. “They must not know. They must think they can harness the power
somehow…but if the artifact itself isn’t much more than a piece of metal…”
“They must not know that, either.” Stuart left Elle at the monitor and went back to the controls.
“But they wouldn’t need the artifact to cause another disaster. They don’t know how to use Huons
properly. No one does. We’ll have to go back.”
“Of course,” Elle said quietly.

Her tone made him pause. He looked up, hand poised on a lever, and met her eyes. Her fear
was obvious. “I don’t have to bring you with me,” he said. “I could take you home first, if you
wanted.”
She shook her head. “No, I can’t go home until this is over. I’m not safe there and my family’s not
safe with me there.”
“I can’t guarantee your safety if you stay with me, either.” He hated saying this, but after
everything that had happened, the least she deserved was his honesty.

“…I know.”
He looked at her a moment more, taking in her rising determination, and thought, with a pang of
inexplicable sadness, that Bertie would have liked her. Quickly, he crossed over and kissed her
on the forehead. “I will do my best,” he said softly, then turned back to the console so swiftly that
he missed her astonished smile.
A twist of the lever sent them back to present-day Sierra Plains and the underground base.
“We’re about two hundred yards to the right of the lab,” Stuart explained, as the two of them
hurried out of the TARDIS and down the hall.
He stopped in front of a side door and pressed his ear to it, listening carefully. “So, what’s the
plan?” Elle asked breathlessly, skidding to a stop beside him.
“I don’t know,” he admitted. “Honestly, I am making this up as I go. Don’t worry, my track record
is excellent.”

“I’ll take your word for it,” she said dryly, “but I’d at least like to know what the goal here is.”
Stuart frowned a bit. The sounds behind the door were not helping determine much in the way of
an alternate entry to the lab. “Well, ideally I’d very much like to see that no one in Sierra Plains
has a chance of making or using Huon energy ever again, so we would have to get rid of all the
particles made in this lab as well as all records of them. “
“That will not be as hard as it sounds, I don’t think, given that Raikov’s records are so secret he
probably keeps them down here with the rest of this lot. So really, when you think about it, all we
need to do is—" He turned.

“Oh, blast.”

                                                ***
“Let me go!”

Raikov did not even look up from his work. “Relax, Miss Fitzhugh. This would have been over
already if you hadn’t run away. You do want those particles out of your body, don’t you?”
Elle glared at him, trying once more to tug her arms from the uncomfortably tight grips of the
drones holding her. “You can’t use them! You’ll only hurt people!”

“I suppose Stuart was the one who told you that,” said Tristan, with folded arms.

“Maybe he did, but you should’ve been able to figure that out for yourselves anyway! Your
records said—"
“Why don’t you stop parroting your precious Martian’s facts and leave this to us?” Tristan said
coldly. She froze with dread as he stepped up to her. “Unlike you, Dennis and I have done the
research and know what we’re talking about. You’re so trusting you believe everything you’re
told.”
Her stomach twisted at the uncomfortable truth. The Tristan she knew would never have said
such a thing to her, never—yet he had already amply proved that the Tristan she knew did not
exist. She looked away, fighting back fresh tears.

“Tristan, I suggest you move out of the way,” Raikov said idly.

“Certainly,” the redhead replied, stepping aside with a parting smirk.
The odd feeling Elle had had when Stuart showed her the Huons inside her suddenly returned,
and she looked down to see her body glowing again. Once more she tried to struggle away, but it
was useless, and made no difference anyway—the glow began to dim as the particles left her
system and flew down into the hole. The process left her feeling a bit dizzy, but half-relieved. At
least she no longer had to worry what the particles might do to her if they stayed.
“There now,” Tristan said, approaching her again, with a nod to the two drones holding her. They
relaxed their grips. “Was that so bad?” He reached for her face.

Elle recoiled. “Don’t touch me!” She ripped her arms free and ran.
Behind her, she heard him swear, then heavy footsteps…and then a sudden, frightened shout.
She turned back just in time to see Tristan tumble into the hole. “Tristan, no!” she cried, running
forward, but it was too late.

Seconds later, the impact of his body at the bottom reverberated through the room like a cannon.
She stood there, numb, as Raikov left the lab counter and looked down into the hole. “It looks like
he broke his neck,” he said clinically, stepping away.

“He was your friend!” Elle shouted. “Don’t you care?”
“It is a shame,” said Raikov, after a pause, “but he’s done me a favor—this will be easier to clean
up, as it were.” He smiled. “Tristan Smith was so devoted to Sierra Plains that he died for it.
Doesn’t that sound appropriate?” Before she could reply, he turned and fixed her with a
meaningful look. “And speaking of cleaning things up…I’m afraid to say that you’ve now entirely
outlived your usefulness, Miss Fitzhugh. At arms!”
Elle backed a step, looking around wildly at the autons, who raised their guns in unison. She
knew she would not be able to outrun them. Defiantly, she wiped her eyes and raised her chin.
“What about my family?”
“I have no reason to harm them, so long as they do as they’re told, like everyone else,” Raikov
said calmly. “Take aim!”
The guns clicked. Elle closed her eyes.

“And—"
“Relax.”

The drones lowered their weapons with a whirr, and Elle looked up to see Stuart standing on the
catwalk above them, grinning in triumph. “Stuart!” she cried, practically wilting with relief.

Raikov swore. “How the hell did you do that?”
Stuart ignored him, keeping his gaze solely on Elle. “Guess what I’ve got, Ellie?” He brought forth
a remote control device, and winked. “Pockets.”

“How did that fit in there?” she asked.

He smirked. “They’re bigger on the inside.” Here he spared Raikov a brief glance. “You really
ought to hide your toys better—as it happens, manual control overrides voice recognition, luckily
for me.”
The General scowled. “It doesn’t matter. I’ve already activated the particles.”
“Oh, I’m certain you have, but what you haven’t done is activated the artifact. I know what it is,
General, and it will do little more than absorb the energy because it is nothing more than a piece
of scrap metal.” Stuart’s eyes hardened. “But,” he continued softly, “you could still harness it in
other ways, so I have to stop you.” He fiddled with the remote, and the autons turned so that they
faced the walls—and the water mains.
“No,” Raikov growled.

“You may wish to run,” said Stuart, as they opened fire on the pipes.
He did just that, dashing under streams of water that grew thicker as the bullets opened more
holes in the pipes. Elle watched him go, and watched the water begin to flood the room and pour
into the hole…and then she looked up at Stuart, who had not moved. He stared at the double
doors without really seeing them, and his expression had gone very flat, almost dead.
“Stuart!” she yelled. His head snapped to look at her. “We have to get out!”

Life returned to his eyes. “Come on!” he cried, running down the steps to meet her.
Once he had parked the TARDIS safely above ground, Stuart dashed right back out the doors.
“We’ve got to make sure the job’s done,” he called back to Elle, who tried to keep up as best she
could.
At the edge of the cliff, he skidded to a halt, and Elle grasped his wrist to keep from
overbalancing as she did the same. “Have we…” she trailed off, looking at the scene. “Stuart,
have we drained the lake?”
A slow, exhausted smile crept over his face. “Well,” he said, turning to her, “if that hasn’t
destroyed the laboratory, I am honestly not sure what would!”

                                             ***
“Well, all the Huon particles have gone. You should be fine now.” Stuart pocketed his screwdriver
and gave what he hoped was a reassuring smile.
Elle smiled slightly in return, folding her arms against the evening chill. Even though her lovely
updo had disintegrated into a scraggly mess, and her dress would never be the same again, she
retained the beauty that had thrown him off guard when he first saw her. “Good to know.” She
looked over her shoulder. “I should probably get inside,” she said, looking reluctant. “My family
will be worried.”
He grinned. “Seeing you safe would be the best Christmas present they could have. Oh, I
forgot…you don’t care for Christmas much, do you?”

She shook her head. “No, like I said, we’ve never put any special value in it. Things are…well,
different, in my family. And now…now it’s the day my fiancé fell to his death after betraying me in
one of the worst ways possible.”
“I’m sorry.”

Elle tried to smile, but her eyes were bright with tears. “At least I didn’t actually marry him, right?”
Stuart could not bear seeing her so upset. “The fact remains,” he said jovially, retrieving his
screwdriver once more, “that it is Christmas, and as such, it isn’t quite right without snow.”
Here he pointed to the light fixture atop the TARDIS roof and clicked a button, sending a little ball
of light high into the air. It dissipated into a thousand tiny sparkles, which began to fall again,
bringing little flakes of snow with them.

The demonstration had the desired effect. With a delighted laugh, Elle spun around in a circle. “I
can’t believe you did that!”

“It was only a little atmospheric excitation,” he said, unable to help grinning as he watched her.
She turned to look at him with an honest smile on her face. “Merry Christmas.”

“And you.” He leaned against the corner of the blue box, regarding her thoughtfully. “So…what
will you do with yourself now?”
“Continue on with the work, I suppose,” she said, after a moment. “I’ll find some job. We’ve still
got Politics to contend with, and that definitely won’t be me…but something else will be, I just
have to look for it.”
“Well, you could always…” He hesitated, wondering if he dared finish the idea.

“What?”

“Come with me.”
Excitement flashed in her eyes, but it was immediately quelled by an expression of deep regret,
and he knew the answer would be no. “I can’t. It isn’t that I don’t want to, but—"

“No, that’s fine—"

“I have a job to do,” she said insistently, and he made himself look at her. “There’s no one else,
I…I can’t disappoint my parents again.”
“Disappoint them? Elle, if your parents are disappointed that you didn’t marry a man who didn’t
love you, they’re wrong. I don’t care how good his connections were.”
She laughed slightly. “That’s very sweet of you to say, Stuart.” Suddenly, she closed the distance
between them and threw her arms around his neck. Though it surprised him, he was quick to
return the embrace. “Thank you,” she whispered. “You saved my life, and my home, and I’m not
going to forget that. Or you.”
“Likewise.” He pulled back enough to grin at her. “I won’t forget you, either.”

Elle bit her lip. “I do hope you’ll find someone, though. I’d hate to think of you traveling on your
own.”
“I don’t need anyone,” Stuart replied, hiding the lie with a relaxed smile.

“Yeah, you do,” she said, with conviction.

He maintained a calm face with difficulty. “Right, then. Thank you, Ellie. Give your family my
best.”
“Will I ever see you again?” she asked.

“If I’m lucky.”
With a quick smile, he darted into the TARDIS, shut the door, and leaned against it, trying not to
let sadness overcome him.
Elle turned away before temptation could get the better of her and plodded downstairs into the
house. On the second floor, she ran into her siblings, and the sight of them relieved her so much
that she forgot to be morose.
“Ellie!” Azula grabbed her in a tight hug, and Billy wrapped his arms around both of them. Elle
clung to them in silence until she heard the creak of the departing spaceship above them, then
pushed away.
“You’re dripping,” Billy said, laying a hand on her shoulder. “What happened?”

“We had no idea where you’d gone,” Azula added. “Tristan said he’d get you but we swung back
to pick you up and you were gone. Where is he, by the way, and that Stuart person?”
Elle sighed heavily. “Let me change, and I’ll explain.”

                                                 ***
Elle carried on with her duties as heir, just as she said she would. She found a job in the Slacker
track and rose to the top without much difficulty, relaxing Sierra Plains’ strict labor laws in the
process. Raikov had been arrested and deposed shortly after the debacle at the military base,
allowing one of Elle’s cousins to rise to leadership in his place, so martial law presented no
obstacle for once.
Everything seemed all right, except for the fact that Elle had no prospects of marrying again any
time soon.

“You really ought to be considering it, at least,” Mya argued, late one afternoon after Billy arrived
home from college. “It’s been long enough.”
She had been saying things like that the entire season, and Elle was just about at the end of her
rope. “It’s not that simple, Mother! It’s not like I have potential husbands just dropping into my lap
like Tristan did!”
“Well, maybe if you’d just go out and meet people, they wouldn’t need to—"
Elle ignored the uncomfortably sensible statement and held up a hand in defense. “And who are
you to decide how long is ‘long enough?’ It’s still too soon for me, okay? I’m doing my best, I
really am, but you can’t rush things like this!”
With that, she began to leave the room, in order to end the conversation before she gave in to
the urge to scream.

“You can’t mourn him forever!” her mother called after her. Elle ignored her, clattering down the
steps and out to the street.
Once safely outside, she leaned against the building and pressed her hands to her face. Contrary
to what she let Mya think, Tristan was not the problem. She regretted that their relationship had
ended the way it had, but she was not sorry it was over. He hadn’t been any good for her, she
knew.

No, the problem was that she could not even begin to consider giving her heart to someone new
without thinking of him. She knew she would never be able to banish his face from her mind,
would never forget his flashing green eyes or confident smile. More than a season had passed
since she had seen him, but she still thought of him every day.
A squad car pulled up to the curb in front of her. Her brother leaped out almost before it had
parked, waved a goodbye to the driver, and turned to her with a grin. “Hello, dearest of sisters!”

Elle forced a smile on her face. “Hi, Billy.”
“Everything all right?” he asked, gathering her up in a tight hug.

“No,” she said miserably. “Mom’s been trying to talk to me about a husband again. I couldn’t just
sit around and listen to it.”
“Sorry, Ellie.”

“Oh, don’t apologize. You’re not the one hounding me about it.”
Billy looked at her for a moment, as if he were trying to make a decision. “Maybe you should get
out of town for a while,” he said seriously. “Take a vacation, get away from Mom and Dad for a
while and focus on you.”
The memory of listening to the TARDIS dematerialize flashed behind her eyes. She shook her
head rapidly to get rid of it. “Yeah, maybe.”

He hesitated. “You know, Elle—"
His words were cut off by a sudden whoosh of air and a strange, yet familiar wheeze sounding
above them. Startled, Elle looked up toward the roof and caught a glimpse of a flashing light and
a faint trace of blue wood rapidly solidifying.

“It can’t be,” her brother murmured.

A surprised, delighted laugh escaped her. “It is!” She dashed up the stairs, Billy at her heels, and
made it to the roof just in time to see the TARDIS fully materialize.
For a moment, all she could do was stand there with a large grin on her face, which only widened
when the doors opened and a brunet head poked out. “Oh, hello!” said Stuart, smiling as he
locked eyes with her. “Fancy seeing you here. I was tracking a…thing. Space and timey thing.”
He pulled out his sonic screwdriver and began to scan the area.
“Liar,” said Elle, the grin never leaving her face.

He looked at her. “You believe I have just told you an untruth?”
“I think so. What are the chances that Sierra Plains is at the center of another…thing you need to
save us from? Pretty slim, I’m guessing.”
Stuart put his sonic screwdriver away. “I did not fool you, then. Very well, I came to see how the
relief has been progressing. And…I wanted to see if you had changed your mind, if you wanted
to travel with me after all.” His voice became more intense and excited. “There is a planet called
Callabian which has rivers of freezing fire and forests of crystals miles high that stretch further
than the eyes can see. I have never been there before, but I was wondering if you would like to
join me while I visit.”
“Stuart,” Elle began, her smile finally slipping. He looked so hopeful that she hated to say no, and
yet… “I would love to, you know I would, but…if I go with you, I’ll never come back.”
“You don’t have to,” said Billy.

She whirled toward him. “Billy!”

“Ellie, you don’t have to stay here,” he said, looking her in the eye.
“But I’m the heir—"

“Not if you don’t want to be. I’m more than capable of taking over for you, and unlike you, I
actually have a fiancée ready and waiting to marry me.” He smiled a little. “There’s no reason you
have to stay if you don’t want to.”
“I can’t ask you to do that,” she said.

“You’re not. I’m offering.”
She stared up at him, the full meaning of his words beginning to sink in. She had done her part.
She could go, if she wanted. Her family wouldn’t be left in the lurch if she did. Billy, and probably
even Azula, would be there to make sure the next generation carried on their work. “Thank you,
Billy,” she said, hugging him tightly.
He grinned. “I’ll tell our parents for you. Get going.” Looking at Stuart, he added, “Take care of
her.”
Stuart laughed. “I will do my best, but…I rather think she’ll be the one taking care of me.” With a
wink, he offered her his hand, and she took it.
Once they were inside with the doors shut, he turned to her. “So, Callabian? Or would you rather
start elsewhere? We do have the whole of space and time at our disposal.”
She smiled. “Callabian actually sounds fantastic. You mentioned freezing fire?”
Cast

Stuart Legacy as The Doctor
Elle Fitzhugh as Donna Noble
Tristan Smith as Lance
Dennis Raikov as Empress of the Racnoss
With
Albert Legacy as Rose Tyler
Sophia Sartor as Pete Tyler




                                 Azula Fitzhugh as Nerys
                              Billy Fitzhugh as Wilfred Mott
Mya Fitzhugh as Sylvia Noble
Harry Fitzhugh as Geoffrey Noble




                                   Gabriel the Servo as Himself
William Legacy as The Autons




                               Extras: Snow Bohemian (The Bohemian Legacy), Dominic Doran (The
                               Boolpropian Round Robin Legacy), Ezra Howard (The Regacy), Andrew,
                               Peter, and Celestia Harrison, Bethany and David Smith (A Victorian Legacy),
                               Riku Fox, Michael Holm, Edith Pitts (A Villainous Apocalypse), Derrial Book
                               Whedonberry (Whedonberry)
Written by Russell T. Davies
Adapted for The Sims 2 by smoothiequeen87 and Dicreasy

Más contenido relacionado

La actualidad más candente

Abducted by Aliens (Chuck - Weiss)
Abducted by Aliens (Chuck - Weiss)Abducted by Aliens (Chuck - Weiss)
Abducted by Aliens (Chuck - Weiss)De Widiani
 
Chapter 25: People of The Past
Chapter 25: People of The PastChapter 25: People of The Past
Chapter 25: People of The PastMysteryMusic7
 
Shadow of the Wolf Ch 05
Shadow of the Wolf Ch 05
Shadow of the Wolf Ch 05
Shadow of the Wolf Ch 05 orangehangover493
 
Essay 1 final draft
Essay 1 final draftEssay 1 final draft
Essay 1 final draftjk_welder
 
Best Stories of Fiction park
Best Stories of Fiction parkBest Stories of Fiction park
Best Stories of Fiction parkparikshitchalise
 
Cyoas Brea Ppt
Cyoas Brea PptCyoas Brea Ppt
Cyoas Brea PptNMTCS
 
Krystal leigh word
Krystal leigh wordKrystal leigh word
Krystal leigh wordlelowind
 
DDRR Chapter Two
DDRR Chapter TwoDDRR Chapter Two
DDRR Chapter Twoholleyberry
 
The Empty Queen: Chapter 4, Pt. 1
The Empty Queen: Chapter 4, Pt. 1The Empty Queen: Chapter 4, Pt. 1
The Empty Queen: Chapter 4, Pt. 1animeangel1983
 
Misconception draft 1
Misconception draft 1Misconception draft 1
Misconception draft 1cocoplum
 
EVOLVE PAKISTAN
EVOLVE PAKISTAN EVOLVE PAKISTAN
EVOLVE PAKISTAN MirzaUmer10
 
JonBenet Ramsey
JonBenet RamseyJonBenet Ramsey
JonBenet Ramseympattani
 

La actualidad más candente (20)

Abducted by Aliens (Chuck - Weiss)
Abducted by Aliens (Chuck - Weiss)Abducted by Aliens (Chuck - Weiss)
Abducted by Aliens (Chuck - Weiss)
 
Chapter 25: People of The Past
Chapter 25: People of The PastChapter 25: People of The Past
Chapter 25: People of The Past
 
Jingle Bells
Jingle BellsJingle Bells
Jingle Bells
 
Shadow of the Wolf Ch 05
Shadow of the Wolf Ch 05
Shadow of the Wolf Ch 05
Shadow of the Wolf Ch 05
 
Essay 1 final draft
Essay 1 final draftEssay 1 final draft
Essay 1 final draft
 
Best Stories of Fiction park
Best Stories of Fiction parkBest Stories of Fiction park
Best Stories of Fiction park
 
Cyoas Brea Ppt
Cyoas Brea PptCyoas Brea Ppt
Cyoas Brea Ppt
 
Heart on a Sleeve
Heart on a SleeveHeart on a Sleeve
Heart on a Sleeve
 
Chapter01
Chapter01Chapter01
Chapter01
 
Arabellas Secrets
Arabellas SecretsArabellas Secrets
Arabellas Secrets
 
Krystal leigh word
Krystal leigh wordKrystal leigh word
Krystal leigh word
 
DDRR Chapter Two
DDRR Chapter TwoDDRR Chapter Two
DDRR Chapter Two
 
Snowstorm
SnowstormSnowstorm
Snowstorm
 
The Empty Queen: Chapter 4, Pt. 1
The Empty Queen: Chapter 4, Pt. 1The Empty Queen: Chapter 4, Pt. 1
The Empty Queen: Chapter 4, Pt. 1
 
Misconception draft 1
Misconception draft 1Misconception draft 1
Misconception draft 1
 
EVOLVE PAKISTAN
EVOLVE PAKISTAN EVOLVE PAKISTAN
EVOLVE PAKISTAN
 
JonBenet Ramsey
JonBenet RamseyJonBenet Ramsey
JonBenet Ramsey
 
Chapter1
Chapter1Chapter1
Chapter1
 
Chapter 23
Chapter 23Chapter 23
Chapter 23
 
Tina
TinaTina
Tina
 

Similar a Runaway Bride Part Two

A Corporate Conspiracy Chpt 1.2 When Life Gives You Lemons...
A Corporate Conspiracy Chpt 1.2 When Life Gives You Lemons...A Corporate Conspiracy Chpt 1.2 When Life Gives You Lemons...
A Corporate Conspiracy Chpt 1.2 When Life Gives You Lemons...Stephanie Sahr
 
A Corporate Conspiracy Part 1.3
A Corporate Conspiracy Part 1.3A Corporate Conspiracy Part 1.3
A Corporate Conspiracy Part 1.3Stephanie Sahr
 
The Science of a Legacy: Chapter 26
The Science of a Legacy: Chapter 26The Science of a Legacy: Chapter 26
The Science of a Legacy: Chapter 26gintasticnecat
 
The Marmite Alphabetacy 38
The Marmite Alphabetacy 38The Marmite Alphabetacy 38
The Marmite Alphabetacy 38nimbusnought
 
Abducted! Part 1 - Chapter 2
Abducted! Part 1 - Chapter 2Abducted! Part 1 - Chapter 2
Abducted! Part 1 - Chapter 2Gen lisae
 
Allainces
AllaincesAllainces
Allaincestalaie
 
Xenobia Legacy The Years Of Jubilee Prologue
Xenobia Legacy The Years Of Jubilee PrologueXenobia Legacy The Years Of Jubilee Prologue
Xenobia Legacy The Years Of Jubilee PrologueLauriEmpress
 
Just Ask Trixie - An Interactive Story
Just Ask Trixie - An Interactive StoryJust Ask Trixie - An Interactive Story
Just Ask Trixie - An Interactive StoryWolvesCryToo
 
The Lightning Legacy: Chapter 5
The Lightning Legacy: Chapter 5The Lightning Legacy: Chapter 5
The Lightning Legacy: Chapter 5clarinetplayer15
 
Just Ask Trixie - An Interactive Story
Just Ask Trixie - An Interactive StoryJust Ask Trixie - An Interactive Story
Just Ask Trixie - An Interactive StoryWolvesCryToo
 
Monstrosity Legacy - Chapter 11.25
Monstrosity Legacy - Chapter 11.25Monstrosity Legacy - Chapter 11.25
Monstrosity Legacy - Chapter 11.25Teh Shrimp
 
Love-in-an-Undead-Age.pdf
Love-in-an-Undead-Age.pdfLove-in-an-Undead-Age.pdf
Love-in-an-Undead-Age.pdfTayeDosane
 
1.14 ehl 14 senioritis
1.14 ehl 14 senioritis1.14 ehl 14 senioritis
1.14 ehl 14 senioritisScribalGoddess
 
The Time Of Jeso Final
The Time Of Jeso FinalThe Time Of Jeso Final
The Time Of Jeso Finalguest625fbb
 
The Time Of Jeso Final
The Time Of Jeso FinalThe Time Of Jeso Final
The Time Of Jeso Finalguest625fbb
 
Generation Eight Part Three
Generation Eight Part ThreeGeneration Eight Part Three
Generation Eight Part ThreeRose Fyre
 
Keep on dreaming part 1 [aff]
Keep on dreaming part 1 [aff]Keep on dreaming part 1 [aff]
Keep on dreaming part 1 [aff]Sakura-Angel
 
Familiar faces chapter 36 2
Familiar faces chapter 36 2Familiar faces chapter 36 2
Familiar faces chapter 36 2ndainye
 

Similar a Runaway Bride Part Two (20)

A Corporate Conspiracy Chpt 1.2 When Life Gives You Lemons...
A Corporate Conspiracy Chpt 1.2 When Life Gives You Lemons...A Corporate Conspiracy Chpt 1.2 When Life Gives You Lemons...
A Corporate Conspiracy Chpt 1.2 When Life Gives You Lemons...
 
A Corporate Conspiracy Part 1.3
A Corporate Conspiracy Part 1.3A Corporate Conspiracy Part 1.3
A Corporate Conspiracy Part 1.3
 
The Science of a Legacy: Chapter 26
The Science of a Legacy: Chapter 26The Science of a Legacy: Chapter 26
The Science of a Legacy: Chapter 26
 
The Marmite Alphabetacy 38
The Marmite Alphabetacy 38The Marmite Alphabetacy 38
The Marmite Alphabetacy 38
 
marmite legacy 38
marmite legacy 38marmite legacy 38
marmite legacy 38
 
Abducted! Part 1 - Chapter 2
Abducted! Part 1 - Chapter 2Abducted! Part 1 - Chapter 2
Abducted! Part 1 - Chapter 2
 
Allainces
AllaincesAllainces
Allainces
 
Xenobia Legacy The Years Of Jubilee Prologue
Xenobia Legacy The Years Of Jubilee PrologueXenobia Legacy The Years Of Jubilee Prologue
Xenobia Legacy The Years Of Jubilee Prologue
 
Just Ask Trixie - An Interactive Story
Just Ask Trixie - An Interactive StoryJust Ask Trixie - An Interactive Story
Just Ask Trixie - An Interactive Story
 
The Lightning Legacy: Chapter 5
The Lightning Legacy: Chapter 5The Lightning Legacy: Chapter 5
The Lightning Legacy: Chapter 5
 
Just Ask Trixie - An Interactive Story
Just Ask Trixie - An Interactive StoryJust Ask Trixie - An Interactive Story
Just Ask Trixie - An Interactive Story
 
Monstrosity Legacy - Chapter 11.25
Monstrosity Legacy - Chapter 11.25Monstrosity Legacy - Chapter 11.25
Monstrosity Legacy - Chapter 11.25
 
Love-in-an-Undead-Age.pdf
Love-in-an-Undead-Age.pdfLove-in-an-Undead-Age.pdf
Love-in-an-Undead-Age.pdf
 
1.14 ehl 14 senioritis
1.14 ehl 14 senioritis1.14 ehl 14 senioritis
1.14 ehl 14 senioritis
 
The Time Of Jeso Final
The Time Of Jeso FinalThe Time Of Jeso Final
The Time Of Jeso Final
 
The Time Of Jeso Final
The Time Of Jeso FinalThe Time Of Jeso Final
The Time Of Jeso Final
 
Generation Eight Part Three
Generation Eight Part ThreeGeneration Eight Part Three
Generation Eight Part Three
 
Keep on dreaming part 1 [aff]
Keep on dreaming part 1 [aff]Keep on dreaming part 1 [aff]
Keep on dreaming part 1 [aff]
 
Familiar faces chapter 36 2
Familiar faces chapter 36 2Familiar faces chapter 36 2
Familiar faces chapter 36 2
 
Genesis star excerpt 2
Genesis star excerpt 2Genesis star excerpt 2
Genesis star excerpt 2
 

Más de Di Meeeee

Chapter 24.4 A Question of Matrimony
Chapter 24.4 A Question of MatrimonyChapter 24.4 A Question of Matrimony
Chapter 24.4 A Question of MatrimonyDi Meeeee
 
A Victorian Legacy - Chapter 24.3 Truths
A Victorian Legacy - Chapter 24.3 TruthsA Victorian Legacy - Chapter 24.3 Truths
A Victorian Legacy - Chapter 24.3 TruthsDi Meeeee
 
A Tour of Regalton
A Tour of RegaltonA Tour of Regalton
A Tour of RegaltonDi Meeeee
 
Gadwin picture test
Gadwin picture testGadwin picture test
Gadwin picture testDi Meeeee
 
A Victorian Legacy - Chapter 24.2b First Impressions
A Victorian Legacy - Chapter 24.2b First ImpressionsA Victorian Legacy - Chapter 24.2b First Impressions
A Victorian Legacy - Chapter 24.2b First ImpressionsDi Meeeee
 
A Victorian Legacy - Chapter 24.2a First Impressions
A Victorian Legacy - Chapter 24.2a First ImpressionsA Victorian Legacy - Chapter 24.2a First Impressions
A Victorian Legacy - Chapter 24.2a First ImpressionsDi Meeeee
 
A Victorian Legacy - Chapter 24.1 University Days are Here Again
A Victorian Legacy - Chapter 24.1 University Days are Here AgainA Victorian Legacy - Chapter 24.1 University Days are Here Again
A Victorian Legacy - Chapter 24.1 University Days are Here AgainDi Meeeee
 
A Victorian Legacy - Chapter 23.2 Time Marches On
A Victorian Legacy - Chapter 23.2 Time Marches OnA Victorian Legacy - Chapter 23.2 Time Marches On
A Victorian Legacy - Chapter 23.2 Time Marches OnDi Meeeee
 
A Victorian Legacy - Chapter 23.1 End of an Era
A Victorian Legacy - Chapter 23.1 End of an EraA Victorian Legacy - Chapter 23.1 End of an Era
A Victorian Legacy - Chapter 23.1 End of an EraDi Meeeee
 
Rosalind & Lysander's Story - part 3
Rosalind & Lysander's Story - part 3Rosalind & Lysander's Story - part 3
Rosalind & Lysander's Story - part 3Di Meeeee
 
Rosalind & Lysander's Story - Part 2
Rosalind & Lysander's Story - Part 2Rosalind & Lysander's Story - Part 2
Rosalind & Lysander's Story - Part 2Di Meeeee
 
Rosalind & Lysander's Story - Part 1
Rosalind & Lysander's Story - Part 1Rosalind & Lysander's Story - Part 1
Rosalind & Lysander's Story - Part 1Di Meeeee
 
A Victorian Legacy - Chapter 22 2 Cake
A Victorian Legacy - Chapter 22 2 CakeA Victorian Legacy - Chapter 22 2 Cake
A Victorian Legacy - Chapter 22 2 CakeDi Meeeee
 
A Victorian Legacy - Chapter 22.1 Happiness
A Victorian Legacy - Chapter 22.1 HappinessA Victorian Legacy - Chapter 22.1 Happiness
A Victorian Legacy - Chapter 22.1 HappinessDi Meeeee
 
V. & R. Legacy Investigate the Case of the Viridian Child - Part 2
V. & R. Legacy Investigate the Case of the Viridian Child - Part 2V. & R. Legacy Investigate the Case of the Viridian Child - Part 2
V. & R. Legacy Investigate the Case of the Viridian Child - Part 2Di Meeeee
 
V. & R. Legacy Investigate the Case of the Viridian Child - Part 1
V. & R. Legacy Investigate the Case of the Viridian Child - Part 1V. & R. Legacy Investigate the Case of the Viridian Child - Part 1
V. & R. Legacy Investigate the Case of the Viridian Child - Part 1Di Meeeee
 
A Very Victorian Asylum Challenge - Part 4
A Very Victorian Asylum Challenge - Part 4A Very Victorian Asylum Challenge - Part 4
A Very Victorian Asylum Challenge - Part 4Di Meeeee
 
A Very Victorian Asylum Challenge - Part 3
A Very Victorian Asylum Challenge - Part 3A Very Victorian Asylum Challenge - Part 3
A Very Victorian Asylum Challenge - Part 3Di Meeeee
 
Jamie Test 2
Jamie Test 2Jamie Test 2
Jamie Test 2Di Meeeee
 

Más de Di Meeeee (20)

Chapter 24.4 A Question of Matrimony
Chapter 24.4 A Question of MatrimonyChapter 24.4 A Question of Matrimony
Chapter 24.4 A Question of Matrimony
 
A Victorian Legacy - Chapter 24.3 Truths
A Victorian Legacy - Chapter 24.3 TruthsA Victorian Legacy - Chapter 24.3 Truths
A Victorian Legacy - Chapter 24.3 Truths
 
A Tour of Regalton
A Tour of RegaltonA Tour of Regalton
A Tour of Regalton
 
Gadwin picture test
Gadwin picture testGadwin picture test
Gadwin picture test
 
A Victorian Legacy - Chapter 24.2b First Impressions
A Victorian Legacy - Chapter 24.2b First ImpressionsA Victorian Legacy - Chapter 24.2b First Impressions
A Victorian Legacy - Chapter 24.2b First Impressions
 
A Victorian Legacy - Chapter 24.2a First Impressions
A Victorian Legacy - Chapter 24.2a First ImpressionsA Victorian Legacy - Chapter 24.2a First Impressions
A Victorian Legacy - Chapter 24.2a First Impressions
 
A Victorian Legacy - Chapter 24.1 University Days are Here Again
A Victorian Legacy - Chapter 24.1 University Days are Here AgainA Victorian Legacy - Chapter 24.1 University Days are Here Again
A Victorian Legacy - Chapter 24.1 University Days are Here Again
 
A Victorian Legacy - Chapter 23.2 Time Marches On
A Victorian Legacy - Chapter 23.2 Time Marches OnA Victorian Legacy - Chapter 23.2 Time Marches On
A Victorian Legacy - Chapter 23.2 Time Marches On
 
Flickbook
FlickbookFlickbook
Flickbook
 
A Victorian Legacy - Chapter 23.1 End of an Era
A Victorian Legacy - Chapter 23.1 End of an EraA Victorian Legacy - Chapter 23.1 End of an Era
A Victorian Legacy - Chapter 23.1 End of an Era
 
Rosalind & Lysander's Story - part 3
Rosalind & Lysander's Story - part 3Rosalind & Lysander's Story - part 3
Rosalind & Lysander's Story - part 3
 
Rosalind & Lysander's Story - Part 2
Rosalind & Lysander's Story - Part 2Rosalind & Lysander's Story - Part 2
Rosalind & Lysander's Story - Part 2
 
Rosalind & Lysander's Story - Part 1
Rosalind & Lysander's Story - Part 1Rosalind & Lysander's Story - Part 1
Rosalind & Lysander's Story - Part 1
 
A Victorian Legacy - Chapter 22 2 Cake
A Victorian Legacy - Chapter 22 2 CakeA Victorian Legacy - Chapter 22 2 Cake
A Victorian Legacy - Chapter 22 2 Cake
 
A Victorian Legacy - Chapter 22.1 Happiness
A Victorian Legacy - Chapter 22.1 HappinessA Victorian Legacy - Chapter 22.1 Happiness
A Victorian Legacy - Chapter 22.1 Happiness
 
V. & R. Legacy Investigate the Case of the Viridian Child - Part 2
V. & R. Legacy Investigate the Case of the Viridian Child - Part 2V. & R. Legacy Investigate the Case of the Viridian Child - Part 2
V. & R. Legacy Investigate the Case of the Viridian Child - Part 2
 
V. & R. Legacy Investigate the Case of the Viridian Child - Part 1
V. & R. Legacy Investigate the Case of the Viridian Child - Part 1V. & R. Legacy Investigate the Case of the Viridian Child - Part 1
V. & R. Legacy Investigate the Case of the Viridian Child - Part 1
 
A Very Victorian Asylum Challenge - Part 4
A Very Victorian Asylum Challenge - Part 4A Very Victorian Asylum Challenge - Part 4
A Very Victorian Asylum Challenge - Part 4
 
A Very Victorian Asylum Challenge - Part 3
A Very Victorian Asylum Challenge - Part 3A Very Victorian Asylum Challenge - Part 3
A Very Victorian Asylum Challenge - Part 3
 
Jamie Test 2
Jamie Test 2Jamie Test 2
Jamie Test 2
 

Último

My Hashitalk Indonesia April 2024 Presentation
My Hashitalk Indonesia April 2024 PresentationMy Hashitalk Indonesia April 2024 Presentation
My Hashitalk Indonesia April 2024 PresentationRidwan Fadjar
 
Maximizing Board Effectiveness 2024 Webinar.pptx
Maximizing Board Effectiveness 2024 Webinar.pptxMaximizing Board Effectiveness 2024 Webinar.pptx
Maximizing Board Effectiveness 2024 Webinar.pptxOnBoard
 
Presentation on how to chat with PDF using ChatGPT code interpreter
Presentation on how to chat with PDF using ChatGPT code interpreterPresentation on how to chat with PDF using ChatGPT code interpreter
Presentation on how to chat with PDF using ChatGPT code interpreternaman860154
 
SQL Database Design For Developers at php[tek] 2024
SQL Database Design For Developers at php[tek] 2024SQL Database Design For Developers at php[tek] 2024
SQL Database Design For Developers at php[tek] 2024Scott Keck-Warren
 
The Role of Taxonomy and Ontology in Semantic Layers - Heather Hedden.pdf
The Role of Taxonomy and Ontology in Semantic Layers - Heather Hedden.pdfThe Role of Taxonomy and Ontology in Semantic Layers - Heather Hedden.pdf
The Role of Taxonomy and Ontology in Semantic Layers - Heather Hedden.pdfEnterprise Knowledge
 
Swan(sea) Song – personal research during my six years at Swansea ... and bey...
Swan(sea) Song – personal research during my six years at Swansea ... and bey...Swan(sea) Song – personal research during my six years at Swansea ... and bey...
Swan(sea) Song – personal research during my six years at Swansea ... and bey...Alan Dix
 
A Domino Admins Adventures (Engage 2024)
A Domino Admins Adventures (Engage 2024)A Domino Admins Adventures (Engage 2024)
A Domino Admins Adventures (Engage 2024)Gabriella Davis
 
Finology Group – Insurtech Innovation Award 2024
Finology Group – Insurtech Innovation Award 2024Finology Group – Insurtech Innovation Award 2024
Finology Group – Insurtech Innovation Award 2024The Digital Insurer
 
08448380779 Call Girls In Diplomatic Enclave Women Seeking Men
08448380779 Call Girls In Diplomatic Enclave Women Seeking Men08448380779 Call Girls In Diplomatic Enclave Women Seeking Men
08448380779 Call Girls In Diplomatic Enclave Women Seeking MenDelhi Call girls
 
Neo4j - How KGs are shaping the future of Generative AI at AWS Summit London ...
Neo4j - How KGs are shaping the future of Generative AI at AWS Summit London ...Neo4j - How KGs are shaping the future of Generative AI at AWS Summit London ...
Neo4j - How KGs are shaping the future of Generative AI at AWS Summit London ...Neo4j
 
Automating Business Process via MuleSoft Composer | Bangalore MuleSoft Meetup...
Automating Business Process via MuleSoft Composer | Bangalore MuleSoft Meetup...Automating Business Process via MuleSoft Composer | Bangalore MuleSoft Meetup...
Automating Business Process via MuleSoft Composer | Bangalore MuleSoft Meetup...shyamraj55
 
Slack Application Development 101 Slides
Slack Application Development 101 SlidesSlack Application Development 101 Slides
Slack Application Development 101 Slidespraypatel2
 
08448380779 Call Girls In Civil Lines Women Seeking Men
08448380779 Call Girls In Civil Lines Women Seeking Men08448380779 Call Girls In Civil Lines Women Seeking Men
08448380779 Call Girls In Civil Lines Women Seeking MenDelhi Call girls
 
From Event to Action: Accelerate Your Decision Making with Real-Time Automation
From Event to Action: Accelerate Your Decision Making with Real-Time AutomationFrom Event to Action: Accelerate Your Decision Making with Real-Time Automation
From Event to Action: Accelerate Your Decision Making with Real-Time AutomationSafe Software
 
Tech-Forward - Achieving Business Readiness For Copilot in Microsoft 365
Tech-Forward - Achieving Business Readiness For Copilot in Microsoft 365Tech-Forward - Achieving Business Readiness For Copilot in Microsoft 365
Tech-Forward - Achieving Business Readiness For Copilot in Microsoft 3652toLead Limited
 
08448380779 Call Girls In Greater Kailash - I Women Seeking Men
08448380779 Call Girls In Greater Kailash - I Women Seeking Men08448380779 Call Girls In Greater Kailash - I Women Seeking Men
08448380779 Call Girls In Greater Kailash - I Women Seeking MenDelhi Call girls
 
Injustice - Developers Among Us (SciFiDevCon 2024)
Injustice - Developers Among Us (SciFiDevCon 2024)Injustice - Developers Among Us (SciFiDevCon 2024)
Injustice - Developers Among Us (SciFiDevCon 2024)Allon Mureinik
 
CNv6 Instructor Chapter 6 Quality of Service
CNv6 Instructor Chapter 6 Quality of ServiceCNv6 Instructor Chapter 6 Quality of Service
CNv6 Instructor Chapter 6 Quality of Servicegiselly40
 
Google AI Hackathon: LLM based Evaluator for RAG
Google AI Hackathon: LLM based Evaluator for RAGGoogle AI Hackathon: LLM based Evaluator for RAG
Google AI Hackathon: LLM based Evaluator for RAGSujit Pal
 
The Codex of Business Writing Software for Real-World Solutions 2.pptx
The Codex of Business Writing Software for Real-World Solutions 2.pptxThe Codex of Business Writing Software for Real-World Solutions 2.pptx
The Codex of Business Writing Software for Real-World Solutions 2.pptxMalak Abu Hammad
 

Último (20)

My Hashitalk Indonesia April 2024 Presentation
My Hashitalk Indonesia April 2024 PresentationMy Hashitalk Indonesia April 2024 Presentation
My Hashitalk Indonesia April 2024 Presentation
 
Maximizing Board Effectiveness 2024 Webinar.pptx
Maximizing Board Effectiveness 2024 Webinar.pptxMaximizing Board Effectiveness 2024 Webinar.pptx
Maximizing Board Effectiveness 2024 Webinar.pptx
 
Presentation on how to chat with PDF using ChatGPT code interpreter
Presentation on how to chat with PDF using ChatGPT code interpreterPresentation on how to chat with PDF using ChatGPT code interpreter
Presentation on how to chat with PDF using ChatGPT code interpreter
 
SQL Database Design For Developers at php[tek] 2024
SQL Database Design For Developers at php[tek] 2024SQL Database Design For Developers at php[tek] 2024
SQL Database Design For Developers at php[tek] 2024
 
The Role of Taxonomy and Ontology in Semantic Layers - Heather Hedden.pdf
The Role of Taxonomy and Ontology in Semantic Layers - Heather Hedden.pdfThe Role of Taxonomy and Ontology in Semantic Layers - Heather Hedden.pdf
The Role of Taxonomy and Ontology in Semantic Layers - Heather Hedden.pdf
 
Swan(sea) Song – personal research during my six years at Swansea ... and bey...
Swan(sea) Song – personal research during my six years at Swansea ... and bey...Swan(sea) Song – personal research during my six years at Swansea ... and bey...
Swan(sea) Song – personal research during my six years at Swansea ... and bey...
 
A Domino Admins Adventures (Engage 2024)
A Domino Admins Adventures (Engage 2024)A Domino Admins Adventures (Engage 2024)
A Domino Admins Adventures (Engage 2024)
 
Finology Group – Insurtech Innovation Award 2024
Finology Group – Insurtech Innovation Award 2024Finology Group – Insurtech Innovation Award 2024
Finology Group – Insurtech Innovation Award 2024
 
08448380779 Call Girls In Diplomatic Enclave Women Seeking Men
08448380779 Call Girls In Diplomatic Enclave Women Seeking Men08448380779 Call Girls In Diplomatic Enclave Women Seeking Men
08448380779 Call Girls In Diplomatic Enclave Women Seeking Men
 
Neo4j - How KGs are shaping the future of Generative AI at AWS Summit London ...
Neo4j - How KGs are shaping the future of Generative AI at AWS Summit London ...Neo4j - How KGs are shaping the future of Generative AI at AWS Summit London ...
Neo4j - How KGs are shaping the future of Generative AI at AWS Summit London ...
 
Automating Business Process via MuleSoft Composer | Bangalore MuleSoft Meetup...
Automating Business Process via MuleSoft Composer | Bangalore MuleSoft Meetup...Automating Business Process via MuleSoft Composer | Bangalore MuleSoft Meetup...
Automating Business Process via MuleSoft Composer | Bangalore MuleSoft Meetup...
 
Slack Application Development 101 Slides
Slack Application Development 101 SlidesSlack Application Development 101 Slides
Slack Application Development 101 Slides
 
08448380779 Call Girls In Civil Lines Women Seeking Men
08448380779 Call Girls In Civil Lines Women Seeking Men08448380779 Call Girls In Civil Lines Women Seeking Men
08448380779 Call Girls In Civil Lines Women Seeking Men
 
From Event to Action: Accelerate Your Decision Making with Real-Time Automation
From Event to Action: Accelerate Your Decision Making with Real-Time AutomationFrom Event to Action: Accelerate Your Decision Making with Real-Time Automation
From Event to Action: Accelerate Your Decision Making with Real-Time Automation
 
Tech-Forward - Achieving Business Readiness For Copilot in Microsoft 365
Tech-Forward - Achieving Business Readiness For Copilot in Microsoft 365Tech-Forward - Achieving Business Readiness For Copilot in Microsoft 365
Tech-Forward - Achieving Business Readiness For Copilot in Microsoft 365
 
08448380779 Call Girls In Greater Kailash - I Women Seeking Men
08448380779 Call Girls In Greater Kailash - I Women Seeking Men08448380779 Call Girls In Greater Kailash - I Women Seeking Men
08448380779 Call Girls In Greater Kailash - I Women Seeking Men
 
Injustice - Developers Among Us (SciFiDevCon 2024)
Injustice - Developers Among Us (SciFiDevCon 2024)Injustice - Developers Among Us (SciFiDevCon 2024)
Injustice - Developers Among Us (SciFiDevCon 2024)
 
CNv6 Instructor Chapter 6 Quality of Service
CNv6 Instructor Chapter 6 Quality of ServiceCNv6 Instructor Chapter 6 Quality of Service
CNv6 Instructor Chapter 6 Quality of Service
 
Google AI Hackathon: LLM based Evaluator for RAG
Google AI Hackathon: LLM based Evaluator for RAGGoogle AI Hackathon: LLM based Evaluator for RAG
Google AI Hackathon: LLM based Evaluator for RAG
 
The Codex of Business Writing Software for Real-World Solutions 2.pptx
The Codex of Business Writing Software for Real-World Solutions 2.pptxThe Codex of Business Writing Software for Real-World Solutions 2.pptx
The Codex of Business Writing Software for Real-World Solutions 2.pptx
 

Runaway Bride Part Two

  • 2. Seconds later, the TARDIS landed. Stuart looked at the monitor on the console. “The coast looks to be clear.” “Why wouldn’t it be?” Elle asked, confused. “It’s Christmas. There’d be maybe one or two soldiers maximum on duty today.” “Christmas?” Stuart repeated blankly. “Maybe it isn’t on whatever planet you’re from,” Tristan cut in, with biting dignity, “but on ours, yes, it’s Christmas.” Elle shot him a reproachful look.
  • 3. “Why were you getting married on Christmas?” the brunet asked. Elle shrugged. The reasons were too numerous to explain, and they had more important things to worry about. “It was the first day we could get the chapel that Tristan had off work, and Christmas has never been terribly special around here, anyway. You said you had a theory?”
  • 4. “Oh, yes.” At least somewhat distracted, Stuart cast a glance about the room. “Your siblings told me what they saw at the wedding, and what they saw leads me to believe that somehow, you’ve been dosed with Huon energy, and that’s a problem, since Huon energy hasn’t existed since the dark times. The only place you’d find Huon energy now is a remnant in the heart of the TARDIS. Here’s what happened…” He snatched up a pencil and a mug, then bounded up to her. “Say, that’s the TARDIS,” here he held out first the cup, then the pen, “and that’s you. The Huon particles inside you activated, the two sets of particles magnetized, and whap—" He dumped the pencil inside the mug. “You were pulled inside the TARDIS.”
  • 5. She nodded slowly. “I think I get it. And you think that all this has something to do with the General?” “Oh, the energy had to come from somewhere. Since the auton that drove off with you was headed this way, it’s a reasonable guess. Now then, let’s have a look around.”
  • 6. The three of them quietly filed out of the TARDIS and into a small, sparsely decorated lobby. As Elle had predicted, there was no one at the desk. “Strange,” Stuart murmured, looking around quickly. No one appeared, so he crept over to it. Tristan took her hand as they followed him.
  • 7. Stuart tapped out a few commands on the keyboard. “All right, look at this,” he said after a moment, gesturing for the pair to join him so that they could see the screen. “Here’s the official floor plan: three floors above ground that comply perfectly with the regulations. Nothing suspicious in the slightest.” “Did you expect there to be?” Tristan asked, dryly. “Not on the official plan, necessarily,” said Stuart, “but if we were to look at the lift…”
  • 8. Here he crossed over to it, opened it, and stepped inside. “There, you see?” He pointed toward the panel. “There’s a button marked ‘basement.’” Elle and Tristan peeked in at the panel and discovered this to be the case. “How can that be?” asked Tristan. “Quite simple. This place has a whole floor which doesn’t exist on the official plan. So what’s down there, then?” Stuart grinned. “Let’s find out.” His contagious excitement had Elle rushing into the lift after him, with Tristan following in a disgruntled fashion.
  • 9. The button to the basement required a key to work, but Stuart’s sonic screwdriver took care of that obstacle, and shortly afterward they arrived on the lower floor. Elle took in the scene with wide eyes. “I’m pretty sure this is at least seven kinds of illegal,” she said, after a moment. “I’m fairly certain you made that number up,” Stuart replied lowly. She could hear the smile without looking at him, and she couldn’t help doing the same, if only briefly.
  • 10. The hall they stepped into extended further than they could easily see on either side. In the dim light, Elle could make out doors dotted along the walls. “Yep, definitely not legal.” “No one’s really above breaking the law,” said Tristan. “Although, it could have been built before the power plant blew, and they just didn’t see any reason to demolish it.” Stuart glanced at Elle. “How long ago did you say that happened?” “Five generations.”
  • 11. “Then no, it was not here before the disaster.” He stepped up to the walls and examined them closely. “If this structure were, in fact, that old, it would show more signs of wear. Look here. This material is fairly new, not more than a couple of seasons old at most.” Now that she looked at it more closely, she could tell that Stuart was correct. “So someone came down here recently and built…this. Whatever this is. They definitely couldn’t have done it without the General knowing.”
  • 12. “Indeed not. Well, suppose we have a look around. This way!” He began to jog down the hall to their left. “Why that way?” she called after him. He spun around briefly, a confident, almost cocky grin lighting up his features. “I’ve just got a feeling,” he said lightly, then took off again. Elle giggled, picked up her skirts, and ran after him.
  • 13. Stuart stopped in front of a door with a caution sign bolted to it. “What did I tell you? This looks promising.” He listened at the door—to see if anyone might be behind it, she supposed—before calmly unlocking it with his sonic screwdriver and striding in, nice as you please. With a quick glance over her shoulder, Elle crept after him.
  • 14. Beyond the door lay a massive laboratory—at least, by Elle’s definition of massive—with a spacious workstation that seemed almost as wonderful to her as the inside of Stuart’s TARDIS. “Oh, I’ve never seen a lab this nice,” she enthused, moving forward into the room. Stuart stayed close to her side. “Did you read one of the sciences at university?” he asked.
  • 15. “No, I was a Mathematics major, but I’ve always been good at Science and English too. We mostly did dry labs for assignments, though—there wasn’t a lot of space for a real lab.” Elle surveyed the area, careful not to touch anything, but feeling as though she could happily sit down and work there for hours in any other situation.
  • 16. “Come and tell me what you think of this, then,” he said, bounding over to another part of the room, where a tank of bubbling water stood against the wall. She crossed over to have a look, but the sight of Stuart grinning up at it distracted her. “Oh, this is brilliant.”
  • 17. “What is it?” she asked. “It just looks like bubbles to me.” “Particle extrusion,” said Stuart. He looked down at her. “Tell me, is there a large body of water nearby?”
  • 18. “Yeah, there’s a lake behind the military base, near where the power plant used to be.” She couldn’t help a smirk. “We’d have seen it on our way in, but somebody had to go and materialize their spaceship right inside, like a showoff.”
  • 19. He chuckled. “What can I say? I take pride in my ship. Regardless, they’ve been manufacturing Huon particles.” He tapped the glass. “My people got rid of them, you see, unraveled the basic atomic structure, but this lot have been rebuilding them. They’re using that lake! Extruding the particles through a flat hydrogen base until—hang on.” He hurried back to table and inspected the tubes on the racks.
  • 20. “Your people?” Elle questioned, following him. Stuart waved a dismissive hand. Sighing, she glanced to the side and frowned in puzzlement. “Stuart, there’s a giant hole in the middle of the floor—"
  • 21. “Is there?” He barely glanced over his shoulder. “Odd. I’ll give it a look in a minute, here.” He took one of the tubes from the rack and held it out to her. “This is what they were trying to make: Huon particles in liquid form.” She took it and looked at it, queasiness beginning to bubble up inside her. “Is this what’s inside me?”
  • 22. In response, Stuart fiddled a bit with his sonic screwdriver and pointed it at the tube. The liquid inside it began to glow with a golden light, and as Elle watched, she felt something inside her react to the activated energy. Her hand, curled around the tube, began to glow as well. She looked down to see that her whole body gave off the same light. “Oh, my plumbbob,” she said softly, cold terror freezing her in place.
  • 23. “Genius,” Stuart said. “Because the particles are inert, so they need something living to catalyze inside, and that’s you.” He took the tube back and turned his screwdriver off. Elle exhaled heavily as her body returned to normal. “They saturate the body, and then—oh, of course! The wedding!” He sprang back in excitement, startling her. “You were getting married! That’s it!” Still unsettled by his demonstration, Elle frowned. “What’s it?”
  • 24. “Don’t you see? It’s a big day for you, the best of your life, and while you’re walking down the aisle, there’s a chemical war going on inside you! Adrenaline, acetylcholine, endorphins—you’re like a great big pressure cooker! The particles reach their boiling point, and shazam!” He clapped his hands, startling her. “The particles activate early and pull you into the TARDIS!” He gave her a triumphant grin, but it quickly fell away from his face. “What’s the matter?”
  • 25. “Are you enjoying this?” she demanded, every limb of her body shaking with anxiety.
  • 26. He bit his lip. “A little, I’m sorry. Not your predicament, of course not, but that moment when everything falls into place—"
  • 27. Elle knew the feeling, but it was a different matter when they were dealing with something unnatural that had somehow been catalyzing inside her for plumbbob only knew how long. “I get it. Look, just tell me…are these particles dangerous? Am I safe?”
  • 28. Stuart took a step toward her, eyebrows furrowing. “Oh, yes.” “But your people got rid of Huon particles,” she said, holding up a hand to stop him. “Why did they do that?”
  • 29. He sighed and looked her in the eye. “Because they were deadly,” he said quietly.
  • 30. Elle covered her mouth with her hands, more terrified than she had ever been in her life. Stuart rushed up to her and took her by the elbows. “Ellie, listen to me. I’ll sort it out; whatever’s been done to you, I’ll reverse it. Trust me. I am not about to lose someone else.” “Oh, I don’t think you’ll have any say in the matter.”
  • 31. Their heads whipped in the direction of the double doors to the side, as they opened to admit two lines of autons without Santa disguises on. Her breath caught in her throat. There were ten in all, every one of them armed, and they took up position in a V shape, five on each side of the room. As they came to a halt, a tall, dark-haired man followed them out and stood calmly in the apex of the V.
  • 32. “Raikov,” Elle ground out. They had been right to suspect his involvement. “Oh, so this is the good general,” murmured Stuart.
  • 33. “Elle Fitzhugh,” Raikov said, deceptively pleasantly. “How kind of you to join us. I see you’ve brought a friend.”
  • 34. He turned his gaze to Stuart, who took a step forward. “Yes, hello. The name is Stuart. I must say I do like what you have done here. A secret underground base, built in direct contravention of the by-laws of Sierra Plains, which state that a building must be built to a foot print of only eight units by eight units. Did a bit of reading while you were being reunited with your family and fiancé.” The final sentence of his speech was directed over his shoulder to Elle, before he returned his attention to the General. “Yes, I have to say it is all very neat.”
  • 35. Raikov gave a humorless smile. “Our work here is far too important to be constrained by regulations I drew up to preserve building materials.” “Your work?” “We keep order here in Sierra Plains, Stuart. I have nothing but the best interest of the people at heart. Anything else you might have heard is simply not true.”
  • 36. “And this keeping order, that includes drilling great big holes in the ground does it?” asked Stuart, wandering to the edge of the huge hole in the centre of the floor, and peering down into it. “I noticed that before,” said Elle, with a questioning glance at Raikov.
  • 37. “How very astute of you,” he replied easily. “Why? What’s down there?” The satisfaction that lit up his face at being asked made her stomach turn. “‘What’s down there’ is an artifact I believe to be related to the beginning of the apocalypse.” “But the power plant caused that.” “So it did. However, I have scientific records that prove that there were more forces at work than a mere accident. The records were buried so deep that the public has no knowledge of them, but I inherited access to them when I was promoted to General.”
  • 38. “Records of what?” Elle tried to keep her focus on Raikov, but as she asked the question she realized that Stuart had not spoken in a while and glanced at him briefly. He was still inspecting the hole, eyebrows knit together in concentration and a little alarm.
  • 39. The General’s smile widened. “Miss Fitzhugh, if you’re attempting to get me to monologue, you will be very disappointed. Your involvement in my work doesn’t require your knowing all about it.”
  • 40. Elle frowned, but before she could press him on the matter, she caught sight of someone sneaking along the wall behind him. Tristan.
  • 41. Her heart leapt, and she knew she had to give him the chance to get behind Raikov without the General realizing he was there. “All right then, why me?” she asked, trying to avoid looking at Tristan. “You were the one who had me dosed with these Huon things, weren’t you? Wouldn’t it have been easier just to use some grunt from the regiment?”
  • 42. “You hadn’t figured that out on your own? I was led to believe that you were the intelligent one in the family,” Raikov said, a hint of a sneer tainting his smile. “Your family has been nothing but trouble to me and everyone who came before me. It is high time a Fitzhugh made herself actually useful to me.”
  • 43. Trying to ignore how much his words stung, Elle glanced at Tristan, who was now directly behind Raikov. What was taking him so long? Raikov’s attention was solely on her, Tristan wouldn’t get a better chance. She saw him draw back his arm to throw a rock at Raikov’s head. “Now!” she cried, unable to help it, as Tristan hesitated. Raikov whirled around and stared Tristan straight in the eye. There was a terrible moment when Tristan seemed stunned and dropped the rock he had in his hand, and then…
  • 44. Tristan smiled. “Hello, Dennis.” “Tristan. I was wondering where you were.” They shook hands.
  • 45. “I don’t understand,” Elle said, looking between her fiancée and her enemy as her heart began to pound with dread. “How do you know the General, Tristan?”
  • 46. Tristan smiled condescendingly. “Why, Elle, the two of us have known each other for a long time. Didn’t I mention it?”
  • 47. “But…but…” As she floundered she became aware of the fact that Stuart was once again at her side. “I am sorry, Elle,” he said quietly. She glanced up at him. “Sorry for what?” He touched her elbow with a light hand. “In order for you to be dosed with Huon particles, you had to ingest them. That needed to be done by someone whom you trusted to make you drinks and prepare you food so that they could add the liquid particles to it. That person then needed to get you here at the right time.”
  • 48. Realization hit Elle like a sledgehammer. She remembered all the times Tristan had brought her an instant drink or prepared her a salad. Even the glass of water he had poured for her the day they met could have been drugged. “He was poisoning me.”
  • 49. “Well done,” said Raikov, giving him a slow handclap. “When did you work that out, I wonder?” Stuart ignored the question, saying instead, “I am intrigued, Tristan. What do you get out of it?”
  • 50. Tristan gave a smart salute. “Colonel Tristan Smith.” “You did this because you were ordered to?”
  • 51. “Oh no. Dennis and I are old friends. When I was assigned as his second in command here in Sierra Plains, he told me that some sort of alien artifact was buried here. We came up with this plan together.”
  • 52. “The fact that you would be abusing the trust and love of an innocent woman did not faze you at all I suppose?” “Don’t be so naïve. I’m a soldier. My job is to protect the people of this country, and more specifically at this time, the people of Sierra Plains. I will do whatever it takes to do that.”
  • 53. Elle looked up at Tristan, and flinched at the contempt etched on his features. “But I love you,” she whispered.
  • 54. “That’s what made it so easy.”
  • 55. “I think we’ve explained enough,” said Raikov shortly, looking toward the autons. “Kill him.” “Don’t hurt him!” cried Elle, moving in front of Stuart. He put a hand on her shoulder. “Ellie, it’s all right.” “No, I won’t let them!”
  • 56. “Take aim,” Raikov commanded. They raised their weapons.
  • 57. “Ah now, hang on,” said Stuart, letting go of Elle. “There is one thing you should know, before you do that.” “Please, don’t concern yourself with whether the drones will hit Elle. They are very good shots,” said Raikov, eerily casual.
  • 58. “No, it is not that.” Stuart fumbled for something in his pocket. “You see, the Huon particles activated early, and caused Ellie to be pulled into my ship. By the same reasoning, if I reverse the polarity,” here he did something to his sonic screwdriver, “then the ship will come to Ellie.” As he finished speaking, the TARDIS started to materialise around him and Elle.
  • 59. “Shoot him!” yelled Raikov. The drones opened fire, but their bullets thudded harmlessly against the outer defenses.
  • 60. Assured that they were safe, Stuart ran for the console. “This ship could withstand a nuclear explosion,” he called back to Elle. “They’ll never get in. Oh, do you remember what you said before, about a time machine? Well, I lied.” A pause. “And now we’re going to use it.”
  • 61. She heard the switches flip, felt the ship shake as it began to dematerialize, but did not comprehend any of it. She simply stared unblinkingly at the TARDIS door as tears coursed down her cheeks. ***
  • 62. The TARDIS was still in the process of fading away when Raikov whirled on Tristan in a rage. “You idiot,” he snarled. “This is your fault. Elle was the only person I asked you to bring here, now look what’s happened!”
  • 63. Tristan flinched, but stood his ground. “They were coming on their own,” he said. “I allowed it because it was less suspicious that way.” “And in doing that you’ve ruined everything. Give me one reason why I shouldn’t have you shot.”
  • 64. The autons turned their weapons on Tristan, waiting for the command. He crossed his arms, forcing himself not to look at them but at his friend. “They’ll be back, Dennis. Stuart intends to stop us—he’s not the type to hide when things get dangerous.”
  • 65. “It doesn’t matter whether he comes back or not, Elle’s the one we need!” “She’ll be with him,” Tristan said, with certainty. Raikov glared at him. “She’d better be.”
  • 66. “She will be. And we’ll be ready.” Lifting an eyebrow, Tristan turned away. “Besides,” he added, as he strode back to the side door he had entered from, “I wasn’t the one who let the interloper talk instead of just shooting him.” ***
  • 67. “Ellie?” “What?” Her forcefulness startled Stuart so much that he looked up from the monitor. Elle was sitting with her back to him, but turned just enough that he could see her fists lying in her lap, clenched so hard the knuckles had turned white. He cleared his throat. “I know this is a bad time—"
  • 68. “It’s always a bad time,” she said bitterly, voice thick. “What do you need?”
  • 69. Heart wrung with sympathy, he left the console and laid a hand on her shoulder in an attempt at comfort. She stiffened. He felt a pang in his stomach and had to remind himself that this was not about him, that there were some things he did not have the ability to fix. “We’ve arrived,” he said, removing his hand. “Do you want to see?” “All I want to see is my bed,” Elle muttered, but she stood up anyway.
  • 70. Stuart went back to the console. “Hmm, the scanner’s a bit small. Maybe your way is best.” He gave her a quick smile and went to the doors. When she had joined him, he opened them.
  • 71. Elle stepped out of the TARDIS and onto the bare ground below, eyes widening in surprise. “There’s hardly anything here,” she whispered, echoing his own thoughts. “And look at all this grass!” “Sierra Plains in its earliest days,” said Stuart. “Your great-great-grandfather was still at university, if I’m not mistaken.”
  • 72. She let her eyes take in the whole scene before she spoke again. “So this is how it all started. That puts the wedding in perspective, a bit.” “You’ve every right to feel hurt, Ellie.” She shrugged. “What are we looking for?”
  • 73. Stuart walked forward until he was standing just over her shoulder, then gestured below them. “The power plant accident that began the whole affair is about to happen. I was hoping we would get a glimpse of what caused it.” “They said it was an internal mishap,” said Elle, looking bewildered. “It may well have been, and yet, the good general believes that something else was involved.”
  • 74. Her expression turned thoughtful, and after a moment, she nodded. “You know, that actually doesn’t surprise me now that I’m thinking about it. Rhys’ daughter Ursula wrote a bit about the early days in her memoirs and mentioned that a lot of media coverage had been redacted. Maybe they didn’t want everyone to panic too much.” “That may be,” said Stuart, “given that someone had Raikov’s ‘artifact’ buried and the records hidden. The question is…what was it?”
  • 75. He was watching Elle, not the surroundings, so it took him off guard when her mouth fell open in disbelief. “Stuart, look,” she cried, pointing above them with a shaky finger.
  • 76. He looked upward. Something was falling from the sky in a ribbon of flames. “Get back in the TARDIS!”
  • 77. From the doorway, they watched as the projectile crashed into the power plant, creating an explosion so powerful it turned the sky orange. “Oh, plumbbob,” Elle breathed, her fingers pressed to her lips. “All those people…”
  • 78. “Shut the doors,” Stuart murmured. She complied, and he ran back to the console. “This won’t give us as good a view as I would like,” he added, pulling the scanner back up, “but it’ll keep us from radiation poisoning, which is what matters. Aha.” He pointed to the screen, and Elle joined him to look over his shoulder. “You see that?”
  • 79. Through an alarming amount of smoke and some fire licking at the corners of the image, they could see a blackened hunk of metal radiating a soft, golden glow. “The artifact,” said Elle.
  • 80. “Precisely.” Stuart ran a hand through his hair. “It’s part of a spaceship—harmless in itself, but dosed up with enough Huon energy to cause widespread damage on impact. Sierra Plains was lucky, all things considered. If that had been a nuclear power plant—" “It wasn’t?” “No. If it had been, there would have been nothing left, and a much wider area would have been decimated.”
  • 81. She pursed her lips. “They must not know. They must think they can harness the power somehow…but if the artifact itself isn’t much more than a piece of metal…”
  • 82. “They must not know that, either.” Stuart left Elle at the monitor and went back to the controls. “But they wouldn’t need the artifact to cause another disaster. They don’t know how to use Huons properly. No one does. We’ll have to go back.”
  • 83. “Of course,” Elle said quietly. Her tone made him pause. He looked up, hand poised on a lever, and met her eyes. Her fear was obvious. “I don’t have to bring you with me,” he said. “I could take you home first, if you wanted.”
  • 84. She shook her head. “No, I can’t go home until this is over. I’m not safe there and my family’s not safe with me there.”
  • 85. “I can’t guarantee your safety if you stay with me, either.” He hated saying this, but after everything that had happened, the least she deserved was his honesty. “…I know.”
  • 86. He looked at her a moment more, taking in her rising determination, and thought, with a pang of inexplicable sadness, that Bertie would have liked her. Quickly, he crossed over and kissed her on the forehead. “I will do my best,” he said softly, then turned back to the console so swiftly that he missed her astonished smile.
  • 87. A twist of the lever sent them back to present-day Sierra Plains and the underground base. “We’re about two hundred yards to the right of the lab,” Stuart explained, as the two of them hurried out of the TARDIS and down the hall.
  • 88. He stopped in front of a side door and pressed his ear to it, listening carefully. “So, what’s the plan?” Elle asked breathlessly, skidding to a stop beside him.
  • 89. “I don’t know,” he admitted. “Honestly, I am making this up as I go. Don’t worry, my track record is excellent.” “I’ll take your word for it,” she said dryly, “but I’d at least like to know what the goal here is.”
  • 90. Stuart frowned a bit. The sounds behind the door were not helping determine much in the way of an alternate entry to the lab. “Well, ideally I’d very much like to see that no one in Sierra Plains has a chance of making or using Huon energy ever again, so we would have to get rid of all the particles made in this lab as well as all records of them. “
  • 91. “That will not be as hard as it sounds, I don’t think, given that Raikov’s records are so secret he probably keeps them down here with the rest of this lot. So really, when you think about it, all we need to do is—" He turned. “Oh, blast.” ***
  • 92. “Let me go!” Raikov did not even look up from his work. “Relax, Miss Fitzhugh. This would have been over already if you hadn’t run away. You do want those particles out of your body, don’t you?”
  • 93. Elle glared at him, trying once more to tug her arms from the uncomfortably tight grips of the drones holding her. “You can’t use them! You’ll only hurt people!” “I suppose Stuart was the one who told you that,” said Tristan, with folded arms. “Maybe he did, but you should’ve been able to figure that out for yourselves anyway! Your records said—"
  • 94. “Why don’t you stop parroting your precious Martian’s facts and leave this to us?” Tristan said coldly. She froze with dread as he stepped up to her. “Unlike you, Dennis and I have done the research and know what we’re talking about. You’re so trusting you believe everything you’re told.”
  • 95. Her stomach twisted at the uncomfortable truth. The Tristan she knew would never have said such a thing to her, never—yet he had already amply proved that the Tristan she knew did not exist. She looked away, fighting back fresh tears. “Tristan, I suggest you move out of the way,” Raikov said idly. “Certainly,” the redhead replied, stepping aside with a parting smirk.
  • 96. The odd feeling Elle had had when Stuart showed her the Huons inside her suddenly returned, and she looked down to see her body glowing again. Once more she tried to struggle away, but it was useless, and made no difference anyway—the glow began to dim as the particles left her system and flew down into the hole. The process left her feeling a bit dizzy, but half-relieved. At least she no longer had to worry what the particles might do to her if they stayed.
  • 97. “There now,” Tristan said, approaching her again, with a nod to the two drones holding her. They relaxed their grips. “Was that so bad?” He reached for her face. Elle recoiled. “Don’t touch me!” She ripped her arms free and ran.
  • 98. Behind her, she heard him swear, then heavy footsteps…and then a sudden, frightened shout. She turned back just in time to see Tristan tumble into the hole. “Tristan, no!” she cried, running forward, but it was too late. Seconds later, the impact of his body at the bottom reverberated through the room like a cannon.
  • 99. She stood there, numb, as Raikov left the lab counter and looked down into the hole. “It looks like he broke his neck,” he said clinically, stepping away. “He was your friend!” Elle shouted. “Don’t you care?”
  • 100. “It is a shame,” said Raikov, after a pause, “but he’s done me a favor—this will be easier to clean up, as it were.” He smiled. “Tristan Smith was so devoted to Sierra Plains that he died for it. Doesn’t that sound appropriate?” Before she could reply, he turned and fixed her with a meaningful look. “And speaking of cleaning things up…I’m afraid to say that you’ve now entirely outlived your usefulness, Miss Fitzhugh. At arms!”
  • 101. Elle backed a step, looking around wildly at the autons, who raised their guns in unison. She knew she would not be able to outrun them. Defiantly, she wiped her eyes and raised her chin. “What about my family?”
  • 102. “I have no reason to harm them, so long as they do as they’re told, like everyone else,” Raikov said calmly. “Take aim!”
  • 103. The guns clicked. Elle closed her eyes. “And—"
  • 104. “Relax.” The drones lowered their weapons with a whirr, and Elle looked up to see Stuart standing on the catwalk above them, grinning in triumph. “Stuart!” she cried, practically wilting with relief. Raikov swore. “How the hell did you do that?”
  • 105. Stuart ignored him, keeping his gaze solely on Elle. “Guess what I’ve got, Ellie?” He brought forth a remote control device, and winked. “Pockets.” “How did that fit in there?” she asked. He smirked. “They’re bigger on the inside.” Here he spared Raikov a brief glance. “You really ought to hide your toys better—as it happens, manual control overrides voice recognition, luckily for me.”
  • 106. The General scowled. “It doesn’t matter. I’ve already activated the particles.”
  • 107. “Oh, I’m certain you have, but what you haven’t done is activated the artifact. I know what it is, General, and it will do little more than absorb the energy because it is nothing more than a piece of scrap metal.” Stuart’s eyes hardened. “But,” he continued softly, “you could still harness it in other ways, so I have to stop you.” He fiddled with the remote, and the autons turned so that they faced the walls—and the water mains.
  • 108. “No,” Raikov growled. “You may wish to run,” said Stuart, as they opened fire on the pipes.
  • 109. He did just that, dashing under streams of water that grew thicker as the bullets opened more holes in the pipes. Elle watched him go, and watched the water begin to flood the room and pour into the hole…and then she looked up at Stuart, who had not moved. He stared at the double doors without really seeing them, and his expression had gone very flat, almost dead.
  • 110. “Stuart!” she yelled. His head snapped to look at her. “We have to get out!” Life returned to his eyes. “Come on!” he cried, running down the steps to meet her.
  • 111.
  • 112. Once he had parked the TARDIS safely above ground, Stuart dashed right back out the doors. “We’ve got to make sure the job’s done,” he called back to Elle, who tried to keep up as best she could.
  • 113. At the edge of the cliff, he skidded to a halt, and Elle grasped his wrist to keep from overbalancing as she did the same. “Have we…” she trailed off, looking at the scene. “Stuart, have we drained the lake?”
  • 114. A slow, exhausted smile crept over his face. “Well,” he said, turning to her, “if that hasn’t destroyed the laboratory, I am honestly not sure what would!” ***
  • 115. “Well, all the Huon particles have gone. You should be fine now.” Stuart pocketed his screwdriver and gave what he hoped was a reassuring smile.
  • 116. Elle smiled slightly in return, folding her arms against the evening chill. Even though her lovely updo had disintegrated into a scraggly mess, and her dress would never be the same again, she retained the beauty that had thrown him off guard when he first saw her. “Good to know.” She looked over her shoulder. “I should probably get inside,” she said, looking reluctant. “My family will be worried.”
  • 117. He grinned. “Seeing you safe would be the best Christmas present they could have. Oh, I forgot…you don’t care for Christmas much, do you?” She shook her head. “No, like I said, we’ve never put any special value in it. Things are…well, different, in my family. And now…now it’s the day my fiancé fell to his death after betraying me in one of the worst ways possible.”
  • 118. “I’m sorry.” Elle tried to smile, but her eyes were bright with tears. “At least I didn’t actually marry him, right?”
  • 119. Stuart could not bear seeing her so upset. “The fact remains,” he said jovially, retrieving his screwdriver once more, “that it is Christmas, and as such, it isn’t quite right without snow.”
  • 120. Here he pointed to the light fixture atop the TARDIS roof and clicked a button, sending a little ball of light high into the air. It dissipated into a thousand tiny sparkles, which began to fall again, bringing little flakes of snow with them. The demonstration had the desired effect. With a delighted laugh, Elle spun around in a circle. “I can’t believe you did that!” “It was only a little atmospheric excitation,” he said, unable to help grinning as he watched her.
  • 121. She turned to look at him with an honest smile on her face. “Merry Christmas.” “And you.” He leaned against the corner of the blue box, regarding her thoughtfully. “So…what will you do with yourself now?”
  • 122. “Continue on with the work, I suppose,” she said, after a moment. “I’ll find some job. We’ve still got Politics to contend with, and that definitely won’t be me…but something else will be, I just have to look for it.”
  • 123. “Well, you could always…” He hesitated, wondering if he dared finish the idea. “What?” “Come with me.”
  • 124. Excitement flashed in her eyes, but it was immediately quelled by an expression of deep regret, and he knew the answer would be no. “I can’t. It isn’t that I don’t want to, but—" “No, that’s fine—" “I have a job to do,” she said insistently, and he made himself look at her. “There’s no one else, I…I can’t disappoint my parents again.”
  • 125. “Disappoint them? Elle, if your parents are disappointed that you didn’t marry a man who didn’t love you, they’re wrong. I don’t care how good his connections were.”
  • 126. She laughed slightly. “That’s very sweet of you to say, Stuart.” Suddenly, she closed the distance between them and threw her arms around his neck. Though it surprised him, he was quick to return the embrace. “Thank you,” she whispered. “You saved my life, and my home, and I’m not going to forget that. Or you.”
  • 127. “Likewise.” He pulled back enough to grin at her. “I won’t forget you, either.” Elle bit her lip. “I do hope you’ll find someone, though. I’d hate to think of you traveling on your own.”
  • 128. “I don’t need anyone,” Stuart replied, hiding the lie with a relaxed smile. “Yeah, you do,” she said, with conviction. He maintained a calm face with difficulty. “Right, then. Thank you, Ellie. Give your family my best.”
  • 129. “Will I ever see you again?” she asked. “If I’m lucky.”
  • 130. With a quick smile, he darted into the TARDIS, shut the door, and leaned against it, trying not to let sadness overcome him.
  • 131. Elle turned away before temptation could get the better of her and plodded downstairs into the house. On the second floor, she ran into her siblings, and the sight of them relieved her so much that she forgot to be morose.
  • 132. “Ellie!” Azula grabbed her in a tight hug, and Billy wrapped his arms around both of them. Elle clung to them in silence until she heard the creak of the departing spaceship above them, then pushed away.
  • 133. “You’re dripping,” Billy said, laying a hand on her shoulder. “What happened?” “We had no idea where you’d gone,” Azula added. “Tristan said he’d get you but we swung back to pick you up and you were gone. Where is he, by the way, and that Stuart person?”
  • 134. Elle sighed heavily. “Let me change, and I’ll explain.” ***
  • 135. Elle carried on with her duties as heir, just as she said she would. She found a job in the Slacker track and rose to the top without much difficulty, relaxing Sierra Plains’ strict labor laws in the process. Raikov had been arrested and deposed shortly after the debacle at the military base, allowing one of Elle’s cousins to rise to leadership in his place, so martial law presented no obstacle for once.
  • 136. Everything seemed all right, except for the fact that Elle had no prospects of marrying again any time soon. “You really ought to be considering it, at least,” Mya argued, late one afternoon after Billy arrived home from college. “It’s been long enough.”
  • 137. She had been saying things like that the entire season, and Elle was just about at the end of her rope. “It’s not that simple, Mother! It’s not like I have potential husbands just dropping into my lap like Tristan did!”
  • 138. “Well, maybe if you’d just go out and meet people, they wouldn’t need to—"
  • 139. Elle ignored the uncomfortably sensible statement and held up a hand in defense. “And who are you to decide how long is ‘long enough?’ It’s still too soon for me, okay? I’m doing my best, I really am, but you can’t rush things like this!”
  • 140. With that, she began to leave the room, in order to end the conversation before she gave in to the urge to scream. “You can’t mourn him forever!” her mother called after her. Elle ignored her, clattering down the steps and out to the street.
  • 141. Once safely outside, she leaned against the building and pressed her hands to her face. Contrary to what she let Mya think, Tristan was not the problem. She regretted that their relationship had ended the way it had, but she was not sorry it was over. He hadn’t been any good for her, she knew. No, the problem was that she could not even begin to consider giving her heart to someone new without thinking of him. She knew she would never be able to banish his face from her mind, would never forget his flashing green eyes or confident smile. More than a season had passed since she had seen him, but she still thought of him every day.
  • 142. A squad car pulled up to the curb in front of her. Her brother leaped out almost before it had parked, waved a goodbye to the driver, and turned to her with a grin. “Hello, dearest of sisters!” Elle forced a smile on her face. “Hi, Billy.”
  • 143. “Everything all right?” he asked, gathering her up in a tight hug. “No,” she said miserably. “Mom’s been trying to talk to me about a husband again. I couldn’t just sit around and listen to it.”
  • 144. “Sorry, Ellie.” “Oh, don’t apologize. You’re not the one hounding me about it.”
  • 145. Billy looked at her for a moment, as if he were trying to make a decision. “Maybe you should get out of town for a while,” he said seriously. “Take a vacation, get away from Mom and Dad for a while and focus on you.”
  • 146. The memory of listening to the TARDIS dematerialize flashed behind her eyes. She shook her head rapidly to get rid of it. “Yeah, maybe.” He hesitated. “You know, Elle—"
  • 147. His words were cut off by a sudden whoosh of air and a strange, yet familiar wheeze sounding above them. Startled, Elle looked up toward the roof and caught a glimpse of a flashing light and a faint trace of blue wood rapidly solidifying. “It can’t be,” her brother murmured. A surprised, delighted laugh escaped her. “It is!” She dashed up the stairs, Billy at her heels, and made it to the roof just in time to see the TARDIS fully materialize.
  • 148. For a moment, all she could do was stand there with a large grin on her face, which only widened when the doors opened and a brunet head poked out. “Oh, hello!” said Stuart, smiling as he locked eyes with her. “Fancy seeing you here. I was tracking a…thing. Space and timey thing.” He pulled out his sonic screwdriver and began to scan the area.
  • 149. “Liar,” said Elle, the grin never leaving her face. He looked at her. “You believe I have just told you an untruth?”
  • 150. “I think so. What are the chances that Sierra Plains is at the center of another…thing you need to save us from? Pretty slim, I’m guessing.”
  • 151. Stuart put his sonic screwdriver away. “I did not fool you, then. Very well, I came to see how the relief has been progressing. And…I wanted to see if you had changed your mind, if you wanted to travel with me after all.” His voice became more intense and excited. “There is a planet called Callabian which has rivers of freezing fire and forests of crystals miles high that stretch further than the eyes can see. I have never been there before, but I was wondering if you would like to join me while I visit.”
  • 152. “Stuart,” Elle began, her smile finally slipping. He looked so hopeful that she hated to say no, and yet… “I would love to, you know I would, but…if I go with you, I’ll never come back.”
  • 153. “You don’t have to,” said Billy. She whirled toward him. “Billy!” “Ellie, you don’t have to stay here,” he said, looking her in the eye.
  • 154. “But I’m the heir—" “Not if you don’t want to be. I’m more than capable of taking over for you, and unlike you, I actually have a fiancée ready and waiting to marry me.” He smiled a little. “There’s no reason you have to stay if you don’t want to.”
  • 155. “I can’t ask you to do that,” she said. “You’re not. I’m offering.”
  • 156. She stared up at him, the full meaning of his words beginning to sink in. She had done her part. She could go, if she wanted. Her family wouldn’t be left in the lurch if she did. Billy, and probably even Azula, would be there to make sure the next generation carried on their work. “Thank you, Billy,” she said, hugging him tightly.
  • 157. He grinned. “I’ll tell our parents for you. Get going.” Looking at Stuart, he added, “Take care of her.”
  • 158. Stuart laughed. “I will do my best, but…I rather think she’ll be the one taking care of me.” With a wink, he offered her his hand, and she took it.
  • 159. Once they were inside with the doors shut, he turned to her. “So, Callabian? Or would you rather start elsewhere? We do have the whole of space and time at our disposal.”
  • 160. She smiled. “Callabian actually sounds fantastic. You mentioned freezing fire?”
  • 161.
  • 162. Cast Stuart Legacy as The Doctor Elle Fitzhugh as Donna Noble
  • 163. Tristan Smith as Lance Dennis Raikov as Empress of the Racnoss
  • 164. With Albert Legacy as Rose Tyler Sophia Sartor as Pete Tyler Azula Fitzhugh as Nerys Billy Fitzhugh as Wilfred Mott
  • 165. Mya Fitzhugh as Sylvia Noble Harry Fitzhugh as Geoffrey Noble Gabriel the Servo as Himself
  • 166. William Legacy as The Autons Extras: Snow Bohemian (The Bohemian Legacy), Dominic Doran (The Boolpropian Round Robin Legacy), Ezra Howard (The Regacy), Andrew, Peter, and Celestia Harrison, Bethany and David Smith (A Victorian Legacy), Riku Fox, Michael Holm, Edith Pitts (A Villainous Apocalypse), Derrial Book Whedonberry (Whedonberry)
  • 167. Written by Russell T. Davies Adapted for The Sims 2 by smoothiequeen87 and Dicreasy