Children of the Molecule (DW XO CC, Teen) 28/28 Aug 7 2011

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Chrisken
Obsessed Roswellian
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Children of the Molecule (DW XO CC, Teen) 28/28 Aug 7 2011

Post by Chrisken »

Title: Children of the Molecule
Disclaimer: I don't own the rights to Roswell or anybody to do with Doctor Who. This story is a not for profit fandom venture.
Pairings/Couples/Category: Roswell/Doctor who crossover, time travel stuff. CC classic Roswell pairings, at least some hints of D10/Rose, but not sure how far I'm going to push that.
Summary: Rose wanted to see aliens in Roswell, so the Doctor remembers a little tip a good friend once gave him and aims the TARDIS for 2001. But once he exchanges secrets with the alien kids of Roswell, they realize that a new quest, or more than one, is waiting for them.
Author's Note: You'll have to wait a little to see how this fits into the established continuity of the show and where it doesn't. Trust me.

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Part One

Whoosh, Swoosh, wheeze, groan, vworp vworp.

In an empty alley of a nondescript American town, a small box appeared up against a wall. A british police-call box, actually, very old-fashioned as well as out of place in its new home. But then, this particular box was out of place just about anywhere it went, so much that nobody ever really thought about it much or paid any attention to it. The reason that it looked like a police-call box was because its chameleon disguise circuit had broken a long time ago.

Just how long a time ago would be a difficult question to answer.

The door of the 'box' opened and a blonde girl poked her head out. "Roswell, New Mexico, yah?" She spoke with a London accent, not quite the traditional Cockney but with hints of it. Though she was looking out at the alley, she had spoken to someone who was still 'inside the box' with her.

"Absolutely," her unseen compatriot answered her, also in a British accent, a bit closer to Received Pronunciation than the girl, maybe East-southeast if you thought about it, maybe a hint of a Scottish burr, but you couldn't be sure. "I've never been here before, but the readouts are clear. Intersection of the seventy/route three eighty five east-west, and the two sixty five north-south. Thirty-three point three degrees north of the equator, one hundred and four point five west of your Greenwish observatory. Roswell in the state of New Mexico. Pretty close to the center of town."

"Showoff, doctor," the girl muttered half under her breath, and stepped out into the alley, looking around more. She was wearing an elegant day dress with a long hem, tight about the waist, high heels, and her hair intricately curled. "It looks almost like some parts of town around home."

"It's not a particularly unique town, aside from the little claim to fame regarding the crash," the still-unseen man assured her. "Never has been. It was your idea to come here."

"Okay, okay, I didn't mean to complain," she said. "And you're sure that we can actually find some... some aliens here?"

"I told you I could, didn't I?" He made an appearance in the doorway then, a cheerful man, perhaps in his early thirties, wearing a brown suit that harmonized nicely with his ragged mop of hair, including the lock that fell down in the middle of his forehead. "Surely by now you've learned not to doubt me when I'm feeling confident!"

"Of course not, Doctor." She cocked her head slightly. "That's what you're wearing?"

"Well, yes. What, do you think I need something different?" He looked down at the suit.

"No, I suppose not - I'm so used to seeing you like that, but I suppose it does fit. I got all dressed up for the occasion and all, but... well, never mind. Where from here?"

"We should only be a few blocks from our first Roswell destination, Rose," the Doctor said, offering her his arm. "And I do think that you look fantastic like that, though I was a bit surprised that you went to so much trouble."

"Well, I did want to fit in, didn't I? Not like the time that I ended up in wartime London, with that horrible Union Jack t-shirt..."

He cocked his head. "I liked that T-shirt, and I thought you did too."

"Only before I ended up hanging from a barrage balloon with a big flag on my chest for the German pilots to spot - a BRITISH flag." She sighed. "You cocked your head and smiled a bit, like there's something that you know and you hadn't realized I didn't know. What is it?"

"Umm... well..." Rather than answer Rose in words, the Doctor stepped out of the alley onto the sidewalk of a busy main street, and allowed the scene to speak for itself, taking a slightly tighter hold of Rose's arm.

She looked around at the selection of cars on the road - mostly aerodynamic sleek things. Modern japanese compacts mixed in with minivans and SUVs. A bus happened to stream by, with the billboard on its side advertising a website address. The building across the street had an electronic sign listing upcoming UFO convention events. Several of their fellow pedestrians were speaking on reasonably small cell phones.

"This... this isn't the late forties, or the early fifties," Rose accused the Doctor.

"I didn't say that it was! What gave you the impression that I'd be taking you to that timeframe?"

"Because... because I've done my research," she hissed at him, struggling vainly to free her arm, but feeling constrained not to make a scene in public. "The crash was in 1947. When you told me that you could take me to aliens in Roswell... what decade IS it? Eighties, no, the phones don't fit. Is this the twenty-first bloody century?"

"Yes, actually, but only just," he told her. "November of 2001, assuming that I didn't manage to muff the landing again, but everything seems to fit. My source of information was very clear - if I wanted to meet aliens in Roswell, this was the time to aim for. Actually, I don't have all the details, but I trust my old friend."

"Who was this old friend?" Rose asked, wrinkling her nose a bit.

"Never mind. Let's go on. It's down there." He pointed down the street.

"NO! Come on - I've got to go, change. I can use my clothes from home, better than this..."

"Please don't," he said, softly, and both of them were so surprised that he let go of her arm, and the two of them looked at each other, staying still. "I mean, you can go back, if you really feel you must, but... you look wonderful like this, and nobody seems to really mind. Yes, you're dressed a bit old-fashioned, but so what? Do you really care so much what other people think, Rose?"

"Well, no, I suppose not," Rose muttered. She stepped down the sidewalk, away from the alley, and then hesitated, irresolute. "Not after the Victorian people, well... never mind. It's a bit different to be less modern than people in a modern time, anyway." She took one more step, and the Doctor hurried to catch up with her, offering his arm again, which she took with a smile. "So, it's what, three and a half years now, before we met among those mannequins?"

"I suppose."

"Oh, lord." Rose rolled her eyes. "Right now, I'm probably out late with Mickey, dressed up in some ridiculous punk getup. Me mum threatened to... well, never mind that. We - we've never gone anywhere this close to when we met, before, have we?"

"No, I suppose not. Just as long as you don't try to contact yourself or cross the Atlantic, we should be fine, though."

"Alright." Rose looked around. "So, I guess the reason I didn't expect Roswell in the twenty-first century, was - well, I didn't figure that there would really be aliens hanging around so long after the crash, without anybody noticing. Or getting found by the boys in black and carted away to Area 51 or wherever. Is Area 51 here in New Mexico? I always think of van Statten's bunker, though I know it isn't the same thing."

"No, it's in Nevada, and I don't think that they ever had any real aliens there, though they did take apart a few pieces of non-human tech," the Doctor said offhandedly.

"I hope we're not going there," Rose said, pointing at another building across the street, proclaiming itself 'The Official Roswell UFO Museum.'

"No, not yet at least. In here." The Doctor pointed at a storefront not far ahead of them, with a giant off-balance flying saucer hanging from its wall above the sidewalk. "The Crashdown Cafe. Perfect place to meet Roswell aliens, and apparently their Eclipse burger is something tasty too."

"Wha?" Rose stared, shook her head, and then looked over at her friend. "You're serious?"

"I never kid about burgers," he quipped, and hurried ahead to the doors underneath the flying saucer.

-------------

"Welcome to the Crashdown Cafe," a dark-haired waitress said, handing the two of them menus. The Doctor had chosen a table in the middle of the small dining room, even though Rose would have picked the only available booth if she'd been asked. He'd complimented her on how she looked in the outfit, so it'd be nice to have a slightly more intimate setting for their lunch - and plus, that way they could talk about certain things more privately. "Are you in town for the convention? Is that a theme outfit?"

"Hmm?" Rose blinked in surprise, not having expected that reaction. "Is it a what? What kind of theme?"

"Yes, in for the convention," the Doctor said calmly, smiling.

"Great," the waitress said. "Well, your clothes, Miss - they look a bit like late forties fashion, or something like that. The time period when the Crash happened - whatever it was that really came down. I didn't know if that was on purpose, or for some special event in particular. Didn't think that anybody was doing a costume ball this year..."

"Um, no, nothing in particular," she muttered. "Just - well, thought it'd be a lark."

"You're from England, right?" the waitress continued. Surprised, Rose nodded, and realized that the Doctor had signalled agreement as well. "Have you been living in the States a while, or flown directly over from there?"

"Err... not either, quite," the Doctor said, as Rose silently floundered. "We - we travel a lot. We only just got to America, this particular trip, but haven't been to the Isles in... um, what, two weeks or so? Please, no questions about just where we've been, though, it'd take a lot of explaining..."

"Oh, no, sorry sir, I didn't mean to bother you. Just - well, I'm interested about where our visitors come from, especially for events like the Convention. It's been a little slow this year, actually, in comparison with - you know."

"I'm sorry to hear that," the Doctor said. "And, I hope you don't mind - might I ask your name?"

"Oh, sure, sir. Liz Parker. My parents own and manage the Cafe, actually." She paused to give either of them a chance to ask something else. "Well, I'll be back in a few minutes for your orders - unless you're ready now?"

"Just a coffee for me, thanks," Rose said.

"You're not ready to take my word on the Eclipse burgers?" the Doctor pressed. Rose shrugged awkwardly. "Alright. Let's see... I will try the lemon herbal tea."

"That's a good one - my friend's mother supplies them," Liz volunteered. "Have you been here before, sir?"

"No, can't say that I have."

"How do you know about our Eclipse burgers, then?"

"A good friend," he said, with a smile and a nod. Liz took the hint and hurried off. Rose rolled her eyes and flicked her eyes over the whimsically named main dishes on he menu. The Doctor didn't look at the menu at all, just set it closed in front of him and looked past her into the middle distance.

"Okay, what's the plan now?" she whispered. "An orbit burger might be tasty, but this isn't why we came here, right?"

"The plan," he told her even more quietly, almost silently, "is that you let me listen, and look around as unobtrusively as I can while we sit here. We've already made one contact, though the situation is a bit awkward."

"Who, the waitress girl?" Rose breathed back.

He nodded. "Liz. One of the ones that I was told about."

"She's an..."

"No, not quite, but she's close to them. Don't tip our hand, unless I'm giving you a completely clear signal."

Rose sighed and returned to the menu, wondering just what a completely clear signal would be in this situation. Perhaps it would be easier just to let the Doctor make his move whenever he was convinced that the time was right. Maybe the Venus Meatloaf platter was more what she felt like than a burger of any description.

After their drinks had been delivered, and their food orders, (the Doctor absolutely would not be deflected from his Eclipse burger, and Rose finally settled on a 'Galaxy melt,') he finally passed a familiar slip over to her - psychic paper, usually used to fool 'the natives' into thinking that they had some kind of appropriate identification or authorization. Who did he want her to use this on? But the writing that appeared on the paper was a note with her name at the top, and she realized with a smile that he was using it to communicate to her without the risk of being overheard or it being noticed that they were constantly hissing at each other.

'Rose. I've been trying hard to match what I remember hearing about Roswell with what I hear and see around us. If I'm right, there are three teenage aliens here. Michael, the cook in the kitchen, Max and Isabel, a brother and sister...' And that was as much as the paper had room to show at once. She looked up, nodded at him to indicate that she'd read to the end, and after a few more seconds the paper wiped out and started again. 'They're sitting together at the booth second from the front door, along with Alex, Isabel's gentleman friend. And Liz and Maria, the waitress with the wavy dark blond hair, are dating Max and Michael respectively.'

Rose nodded, then passed the paper back to him, concentrating at it furiously. He shrugged and turned the paper to it - there was a jumble of words and sketch pictures of the people involved. Bloody hell! Rose had actually managed to get the psychic paper to work on other people once or twice, but maybe she wasn't concentrating clearly enough - or maybe getting somebody to see something they were half expecting was easier than conveying a concept of her own. Finally she dug a pencil stub out of the front pocket of her purse, and scribbled on the napkin. 'How do we tell them that we know their secret?'

The doctor just nodded somberly, and continued munching away on his burgers and the skinny chips that had come with it. (French fries, as the Americans called them.) Frustrated, Rose picked at her own food a little bit more, and started looking around. It was easy to spot Maria as the girl went around her business of delivering food, taking orders, and bussing her own tables herself - like Liz, Maria was pretty, but not quite as skinny and a bit more exotic looking. In fact, Rose fancied that there was a slight affinity that she herself shared with Maria, but probably that was just a co-incidence.

It was harder to get a good look at the other people who the Doctor's note had mentioned - there was undoubtedly someone in the kitchen who was responsible for cooking the food, but as long as Rose managed to force herself to stare at the little window arrangement, she never really caught a face from in there - just a brief glimpse of hair as someone came up to talk to Maria, the two of them positioned just so that the back of Maria's head was blocking her view. The booth near the front door was even harder to watch, because it was mostly behind Rose, and she couldn't keep shooting meaningful glances over her shoulder without having other people there wondering if she was worried about something following her.

She could listen, though, in fact, it was hard not to as her sense of concentration grew, and she grew convinced that she had picked out two young men's voices and one young woman's that had to be Max, Alex, and Isabel. It was a bit hard to tell what they were talking about - American accents and cultural details at a breakneck speed, but they certainly didn't seem to be mentioning anything unearthly. Then again, they'd have to be stupid teenage aliens to speak so carelessly in a public venue, Rose suspected. One of them - the girl, Isabel, did refer to something being 'Czechoslovakian', and both of the boys started laughing heartily. What did that mean? It was certainly unusual. Czechoslovakia had broken up in the mid-nineties, hadn't it?

Rose hadn't paid particular attention to someone new coming into the dining room, but she did hear Max and Alex greet the newcomer and invite him to their table - 'Kyle.' Rose itched even more to turn around and get a good look, but managed to fight down the urge, and looked around at the tables near the big front window. And that was when she spotted it.

It was a small creature, about as big as a flattened-out cat or racoon, but shaped more like a cross between an arachnid and a reptile, and faster than all of them put together. It half jumped and half crawled up a table leg and out onto the table-top, waving its slithery mandibles enthusiastically. "Look out," Rose cried. "There's a..."

She was drowned out by the screaming when that started.

The Doctor spun immediately into action, not challenging or attempting to capture the unearthly beastie, but keeping it busy by tossing the end of a small ball of string onto the table and moving it around like it was a living thing, while encouraging any of the diners who wished to exit the premises to do so in an orderly fashion. Nearly everybody took him up on his silent offer.

None of the kids that they had been paying attention to seemed to be interested in leaving either, though. Maria helped to keep the diners moving out quickly, while Liz just watched the thing carefully, trying to figure out what it might do next - and shooting an odd look at the Doctor for his choice of diversionary tactics. The foursome from the table also emerged, and Rose was able to get a slightly better look at them now that she was not expected to be paying full attention to her food and her dining companion - a very tall and striking blonde girl who looked as if she could easily be at home on a catwalk - that would be Isabel. The boys were harder to get a grasp on at once - she noticed the lighter hair and well-built arms of one who might be the new arrival, Kyle, and ears that reminded her of Prince Charles.

Nearly everybody else had left the dining room when Michael, the cook, charged through the door from the back, got a good look at the alien beast for the first time, and reacted with instant hostility. Raising his arm, he shot a small pulse of yellow light to the table, where it scorched one of the creature's legs. Suddenly furious in its turn, the thing took a running leap off the table and shot across the floor towards the back door when it landed on the floor. Apparently the damage had not decreased its agility by one jot. Michael tried to shoot it with a light pulse one more time, but missed, and was starting to look worried.

Just as Beastie had launched itself into the air towards Michael's shin, Rose's view of the teenage cook was suddely much greener and full of wavy ripples. It was - what, it sort of looked like she was looking at him through green jello, but that didn't make sense. Where would that much green jell-o have come from? Whatever it was, Beastie bounced off of it, looking rather put out. Rose looked around again, trying to make sense of this, and noticed that one of the other teenagers from the booth - a dark-haired boy without the big ears, and a face full of quiet power, had pointed out towards his friend. Was this some other sort of alien power? A defense, instead of the built-in laser pulse gun?

Liz yelped softly, and Rose looked around to see that Beastie was now making a bee-line back for the booth and its recently departed occupants. Had the alien creature been intelligent enough to recognize what had blocked it from its attack? The girl, Isabel, also made a hand gesture, and Beastie was flipped over onto its back by an invisible force, its legs waving furiously, but it could not appear to right itself immediately, like a turtle.

"Well, that was very informative," The Doctor said, grabbing several of his chips and heading over to the upended Beastie. "No more alien power antics, I think, there really isn't a need for them. Happy to meet you and all that."

The dark-haired teen who had thrown the defensive wall turned to face the Doctor, and the green-ness instantly vanished - like a light once the switch had been turned out. Had it been a force field of some kind? "We don't have long to talk like this before some people come back in to see what happened - and somebody's probably already called the Sherrif. That - that thing needs to be out of sight, and probably we shouldn't all be here, especially not talking about..."

"It's harmless," The Doctor said, feeding a chip into Beastie's maw and flipping it back upright on the back of his left hand. Liz and Maria both exclaimed, and Michael and Isabel both went into pointing postures, but the thing was contented and didn't make any sudden moves. "I mean, no, if you got it upset enough, it might have bitten, and the venom isn't fun for anybody, really. But if we can keep it fed and contented until it's out of town, it'll do alright in the desert. Wander around hunting small prey until it dies at a lonely old age, never finding a mate of its kind." He cocked his head. "Or it just might be unlikely enough to get killed by an armadillo. Circle of life, either way."

The shielding boy looked up to the ceiling for guidance, and then tried to assess the situation. "Okay. Those of us working here can't leave, and I should get back to the museum before anybody notices that I stayed in here. That leaves... Isabel, Alex, you okay with giving this guy a ride out past the city limits?"

"Yeah, sure, Max," Isabel said, her brown eyes flashing with a certain muted fire. "I think that a trip like that might give him a chance to answer some questions."

"I'm going too," Rose insisted, not wanting to get seperated from The Doctor in a situation like this.

"Well enough," Max said, already picking up his jacket. "Um, Kyle - you can go with them, though it might be a tight squeeze in the car, or head off, but you probably shouldn't..."

"Yeah, I got it." Kyle was the one with the lighter brown hair and the athlete's build, as Rose had already guessed from the voices. "Think that my dad might want to know about what happened here."

Rose shot a slightly alarmed look at The Doctor, but he didn't even seem to react to this news. So she thought about what they would need to take the now passive creature out of town - and picked up the Doctor's plate, moving the tiny scrap of burger over to her own plate of uneaten Galaxy melt. There was a lot of unfinished meals around the room, so hers shouldn't attract any attention.

"Umm, let me get you a takeout container quickly for those," Liz volunteered.

"Well - thanks I guess."

"Better than letting you take the plate," Maria put in, with a slight roll of her own eyes.

-----------

They'd only driven a few blocks in a four-door American sedan before Isabel turned to stare back at The Doctor and Rose. Alex was doing the driving, and he was the one with the big ears, but also a friendly face and manner that helped Rose feel at ease. "Okay, so - so are you guys aliens too?" She asked. "I mean, you realized what was going on with us quick - not that it was hard to tell that something strange was going on. Sheesh, how stupid of Max and Michael to use their powers in front of - and just what is that thing, anyway?"

"I believe it's a Gemalian Waytre," The Doctor said calmly, waiting for the creature to look like it had finished some stage of primary digestion before holding his hand out for another chip. "We just went by the Festival of Sweet Sounds on Gemalia, and it probably snuck into the TARDIS when neither of us were looking. It's actually more used to catching live prey, but these processed vegeform carbohydrates appear to be filling a craving and also tranquilizing it, which is all to the good."

There was a short pause. "Okay, so that's one question answered," Alex said, while Isabel just kept at it with the glare. "And about yourselves?"

The Doctor just shrugged. "He's an alien," Rose explained, feeling sympathetic to their curiosity. "Gallifreyan, I suppose you could say." She was used to The Doctor introducing himself as a Time Lord to people on other planets - sometimes, but she didn't want to necessarily introduce that concept here on Earth. The word derived from his home planet would work better for now - and she thought she'd actually pronounced it correctly. "As for myself, no, I'm definitely the Earthling. Ran into him in London, and - well, I hitched a lift." And there was no need to go into exactly WHEN that had happened.

"Cool," Alex decided. "I don't suppose you use an Electronic Thumb and a sub-etha-sensomatic?"

Rose just stared at him slightly, but The Doctor laughed heartily. "Another Douglas Adams fan - good. No, I actually know of similar gear that's used by hard-core hitchhikers, but they aren't called the same things, more's the pity. Rose just travels with me, so she doesn't need them."

"Alright." Alex sighed slightly as they passed a long industrial building. "Any other questions, dear?"

"Why did you come to Roswell?" Isabel asked. "Were you looking for - for people like us?"

"Yes, but I'd rather not get into all of the details - not until we can meet up with some of your friends again. Assuming that would be possible. And I do have one question of my own."

"Let me guess," Isabel suggested. "You want to know what alien planet we come from?"

"Actually, yes, that's pretty much it."

"Big surprise." Isabel took a deep breath. "We've had a lot of people asking us that question, I suppose, and for a long time we didn't really know anything much about it. Max, Michael, and I - we're all orphans, raised by humans after the Roswell crash, more or less. Now we do have a few more answers - but what if our people are at war with Gallifreyans? Is it safe to tell you anything like that?"

"As far as I know," Rose put in, hoping that this would be helpful, "the Gallifreyans have only been in one great war, and you don't look at all like the Daleks - those are ugly, hateful little creatures who ride around in tin metal cans. Aside from Daleks - The Doctor respects all life. He's done what he can to expose wrongdoers and stop dirty schemes, but he doesn't have it in for anybody just because of who they're born as."

"Why, careful dear, you make me out as some superman or something," The Doctor stage-whispered, holding his hand out for another chip.

"Okay, then - our home planet is Antar," Isabel said after a moment. "Something like two-hundred-fifty parsecs away from here, near a Red Supergiant."

"Antar, Antar, Antar," The Doctor muttered, cocking his head slightly. "I know I've heard of that, but can't quite place it."

"Is this a good enough place to let out the Waytre?" Alex asked, distracting The Doctor. He looked out the window at the terrain, a mix of sandy ground, low grasses and shrubs, a few stands of short trees, and rocky little peaks.

"Yes, that should do well enough, as long as he doesn't find his way back into the town." Alex pulled off onto the shoulder and stopped the car. The Doctor got out of the car and sniffed the air. "Ooh, no, not likely to go back there. Lovely aroma of toluene from that last factory. Our friend will make tracks in exactly the opposite way, and I don't blame him."

Rose circled around the car, and by the time she got there the Doctor had put the waytre onto the sandy slope near the shoulder of the road, but it wasn't moving yet. "Did you give him too many chips?"

"Seems so," The Doctor admitted ruefully. "Rather thoroughly tranquilized. I'm not sure if we should just leave it here and hope that it'll recover before something else comes along to take a bite out of it, or - or find a stick and start gently poking."

"Allow me to try," Isabel decided, stepping around the car. After considering for just a second, she circled around so that she was standing behind the waytre, from the way that they had come, and once again extended her finger. Rose nearly exclaimed an objection, but she wasn't really quick enough, and what emerged from the tip of that manicured digit was only a medium-sized spark, hard to even see in the daylight. When it struck the waytre, the creature appeared to be jolted back into awareness, and after turning around to glare reproachfully at Isabel once, it scuttered off, away from town and bearing left away from the road.

"Not badly done," The Doctor admitted to Isabel. "Antarians! Children of the molecule. Now I remember!"

"Remember what?" Isabel said, wrinkling her nose. "Our parents were molecules??"

"No, no." The Doctor stepped back to the car, where he'd left his door open. "It - it was a reference made in poetry by one of the Antarians' neighbor species, the Klenthorr, in reference to the versatility of your powers, especially the ability to selectively reshape the molecular structure of matter."

"Oh, yeah, they can do that all right," Alex agreed. "Even if technically they're only half Antarian - genetically engineered hybrids sent to Earth."

"Alex!" Isabel exclaimed unhappily.

"Really, how fascinating," The Doctor said, as the last of them took their seats in the car. He looked out into the desert for any trace of waytre before they left, but the little creature was long gone.

"Okay," Isabel said as Alex carefully made a wide U-turn. "If you know so much about our people, then it's my turn again I think. What about Gallifreyans? I don't care so much about enemies - what can you do? Do you have powers, like us, or special technology? How do your people, generally, spend their time?"

Rose gasped, realizing the impact of all of these questions, a second before The Doctor sighed. "My people, generally, do not do much, because there isn't much of a generality," he said, a trace of bitterness coming into his voice. "The great Time War, which Rose referred to - nearly wiped us out. I am the only surviving Gallifreyan that I know of, though I do keep looking for any other refugees from the fighting. The Daleks were also nearly eliminated, but because of their nature they have rebuilt their numbers and been beaten back down at least once since." He shot a look over at Rose. "I do not have any truly inherent powers such as yours, though I am in possession of - let us see, a rather prodigious intellect, I suppose, and a very useful little sonic screwdriver." He held up the little shiny tool and made it hum at a satisfying pitch. "And - my ship, the TARDIS, which can travel from world to world without having to pass through outer space, though it is also capable of operating in a vacuum."

There was a long, silent moment as Alex and Isabel absorbed this much, and Rose wondered if he would say anything more. Surely he would keep the last bit secret, wouldn't he? But no... "And also, the TARDIS will travel through time. I am indeed, a Gallifreyan, but my people, in their ascendance, were more commonly known as the Time Lords."

------------

"Hello?" The front door of the Crashdown opened once again, and a tall, dark-haired man in a uniform looked in.

"Hello, Mister Hanson - your usual coffee?" Liz asked, a little too brightly. Darnit.

"Maybe in a minute," he said, "but first, I've got some business. There were a few witnesses who told me that they were attacked by a six-legged, two foot long lizard in here - and were so scared for their lives that they all left in mid-meal." He stepped further into the dining room and looked around. "And it certainly seems like you might have had a number of dine-and-dashers, from the looks of things here."

"Don't worry about the money," Liz said. "We know most of them, and..."

"What about the lizard, Miss Parker?"

"There was no lizard," Liz told him, feeling reasonably safe in her honesty thus far. "More like a spider - admittedly a rather large and creepy looking spider, but still, I admit I was a little surprised at the mob panic reaction to it."

"A spider? Is it still around?"

"Are you volunteering to swat it for us?" Maria asked from behind the counter. "I kid, I kid. It - um, Michael got it to walk on a paper towel and took it out the back way."

Hanson looked around. "I didn't figure Michael for a lover of all of earth's creatures."

Maria tried to stifle a series of laughs. "Um, uhh - no, I was a bit surprised by it too," Liz admitted, and turned around. Yes, Michael had just come into the room. "Michael - what happened to - to the spider once you took it out back?"

"I tripped, and it fell - into the Dumpster," he blurted out. There was a moment's long silence.

"Okay, umm - I'll call this into animal control, they might want to know about this," Hanson said after a long moment. "Once I've finished my coffee."

"They're not going to shut down the cafe, will they?" Liz asked.

"I don't think so - not if the, the spider doesn't seem to still be in here," Hanson told her.

About fifteen minutes later, animal control had been and gone, shooting the kids dirty looks like they had made the thing up, but since they couldn't explain why all the customers had flet the Cafe there was apparently going to be some attempt to warn people in other buildings downtown about the giant spider that had been spotted.

"I wonder when they're going to get back," Maria muttered to Michael as Liz took the orders of the first few new people to come in after the incident. "Isabel, Alex, and the British people."

"Back here, or back to town?" Michael asked her.

"Oh - I didn't think that there would be a difference - but they might not come back here right away, huh? Even if they knew that it had mostly blown over, it might not be that smart."

"Yeah," Michael agreed. "Oh, come on, I think that Missus Purple sweater might be expecting that we replace the chicken burger that she let get cold."

"Oh, great." Maria headed off, taking a deep breath to prepare herself for another confrontation with this particular Convention attendee, who had pretty much made her regret her job choice at least once on each of the past few days.

-------------

"Okay, now that's our errand done," Rose said brightly as Alex drove back into the town of Roswell. "Umm, this might sound [pushy?] or something, but now that the Waytre's been dealt with, can we - can we still hang out with you, and your friends? I mean, you don't have to obviously, but - I've met a lot of aliens, but none quite like you - who grew up on Earth, and among humans. Makes me feel like you'd sort of understand what it's been like for me, tagging along with the Doctor on his travels through space and time - and occasionally other dimensions, but only by accident because that's VERY dangerous."

Alex and Isabel exchanged glances. It was easy to see that they were both a little nervous and suspicious, but didn't really want to turn down Rose's appeal. "Okay, but - well, we shouldn't go back to the Crashdown," Isabel pointed out. "And anybody's house where parents might show up would also be 'not a good idea' - they'd ask why we were being so friendly to a pair of Convention attendees we just met, or something like that."

"Okay, so where's left?" Rose asked.

"Michael's?" Alex asked, and Isabel nodded.

"Michael's parents won't be home?" Rose asked.

"Michael doesn't really have parents," Isabel pointed out. "Max and I got adopted when we were little, but Michael - well, he grew up in the foster care system, and didn't do so well with it. Nearly two years ago my father helped him get legally emancipated, so he's got his own place, and he's used to having the whole gang over for discussions that need privacy. I've got a spare key, and probably he'll be around soon, when his shift at the Crash is over."

"Sorry to upset the plans," the Doctor suddenly said, breaking a reasonably long silence, "but I'd really like to check out the UFO museum - by my lonesome, if you don't want to accompany me for this particular outing. There's probably going to be lots there that will be terribly interesting to a fellow like me."

Isabel and Alex remained silence, while Rose oriented on her companion. "You must remember that Max works at the museum," she pointed out. "NO pestering him while he's at his work."

"Of course, I wouldn't dream of pestering. In fact, I'll hardly say a word to him. Maybe a casual hello, if the circumstances seem auspicious for such a greeting. Aside from that, my attention will be focused on the exhibits - and perhaps making small talk with other 'convention attendees.' Nothing that'll cause trouble, I inisist."

Rose hesitated, still uncertain. "Okay, go on and have your fun. I'll stick with Isabel and Alex."

The Doctor nodded, and actually Isabel and Alex seemed fairly well satisfied with that arrangement as well. The Doctor was left out downtown, about two blocks away from the museum, and told the directions from there to Michael's apartment, in case he couldn't get a lift with anybody else who knew the way.

The flat, when they finally got to it, didn't too different from a few that Rose had been in near the estate housing back home. There was some inevitable quality about flats where young men lived on their own or in small groups - a slightly carefree spirit, a casual attitude towards elements of higeiyne and good housekeeping, and an undeniable sense of mixed fun and angst. When she realized that this place was so familiar, Rose rather thought that she'd like Michael when they spent more time together. Even the fact that he was half alien didn't affect these lifestyle details, she realized with a little start. Some things never change.

"So, time travelling, huh?" Alex asked as Isabel settled herself on one side of the loveseat. Rose considered the sofa, and then chose to sit on a pretty wooden stool, hoping that she wasn't seeming too picky.

"Yes, and we're not looking for more long-term travellers," Rose said quickly. Alex and Isabel raised opposite eyebrows in so much unison that she had to wonder if that was a practiced gesture. "Sorry - I agreed to go with the Doctor at first when I heard about that, and - and my reasons weren't the best, although I'm glad in retrospect that I made that choice."

"That's alright," Isabel said. "I'm just casually curious. What sort of times have you been to see?"

"Well - wow." Rose struggled with trying to express the breadth of what she'd seen with the Doctor in terms that these kids, (not that she was much older than they,) could understand. "I've been - ohh, millions and millions of years in the future, at least - seen the planet Earth die in the fires of the swelling red Sun..." Isabel squeaked and pulled Alex next to her - he was sitting down next to her in the loveseat by this point. "AND also been to visit the New Earth that humans found for themselves shortly after." No need to go into the details of them not being 'pure' human by that point. "I've met Queen Victoria in the Scottish highlands and Charles Dickens in Wales. I went to watch the opening ceremonies of the 2012 Olympics."

There was a moment of silence, and then Alex got it. "It's a bit early, I don't think that they've even got a short list yet, but - London?" Rose nodded. "Okay. Out of all that - what was the most incredible memory? The moment that'll stay with you until the day you die?"

It took Rose a moment, and she actually ruled one thing out as being way too much information to share - the moment she thought that she WOULD die, when she assumed the powers of the Time Vortex and eradicated the Dalek army. But the second place finisher surprised her a little. She couldn't deny the truth of it though. "Hanging from a balloon while the Germans were blitzing London. Wearing, I might add, a Union Jack target on my t-shirt." She looked down at the old-fashioned blue dress. "That was one of the experiences that made me decide to go a bit more cautious with my dress other times."

"Wait, why couldn't you wear a fun t-shirt..." Isabel started, then trailed off, another realization hitting her. "You thought your Doctor would be taking you to the late forties, or early fifties, soon after the Crash, right?"

Rose just nodded slowly, knowing what was next.

"Which means that you were coming to find aliens - and that he knew to find them in the year 2001," Alex said, putting it together quickly.

"To find US," Isabel agreed. "About that alien creature, the Waytre--"

"He might have let it sneak into the TARDIS on purpose," Rose admitted. "I didn't even know it was there, but - it wouldn't be the first time I had no clue of what he was planning. And - and I'm sorry for all of this, if it's a bother to you. Travelling with the Doctor has made me a bit too used to seeing miracles, perhaps. I wanted to see Roswell aliens, but it's not like you're an exhibit in a zoo. You're real people with your own private lives that we barged into, and..."

"No, it's..." Alex started, and then hesitated, shooting Isabel a meaningful look.

"It's okay," she insisted after just a moment's pause. "You're friendly and fun yourselves, and as much as I hate to admit it, things were getting a bit boring on the Czechoslovakian front."

"What does that word mean for you?" Rose asked suddenly. "I heard you use it, back at the Crashdown, but there aren't..."

"It's an old code word," Alex put in. "I don't think that Maria picked it because there aren't any Czechoslovakians anymore, but it sort of fits."

"Hey, what are you guys doing here?" Michael called from the door. "Do you really think you own the place?"

"No, but you don't either," Isabel shot back. "Now come on in and sit down quietly. Rose is telling us about the Battle of Britain."

Rose lifted an eyebrow, but when Michael and Maria made their way into the living room, they waved hi without words and took their places on the couch, Maria playfully slipping off her shoes and resting her legs in Michaels lap. So Rose started to tell them about the medical ship and the nanogenes, and the little boy in the gas mask who just wanted his Mummy.

TO BE CONTINUED...
Last edited by Chrisken on Sun Aug 07, 2011 6:47 am, edited 30 times in total.
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"A man does not make his destiny: he accepts it or denies it. If the Rowan tree's roots are shallow, it bears no crown." From 'the farthest shore', Ursula LeGuin.

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Chrisken
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Re: Children of the Molecule (DW XO CC, Teen) Part 1 May 8 2009

Post by Chrisken »

Part Two

Liz had only just managed to get half way up the stairs to her family's apartment, above the Crashdown cafe itself, when the phone started ringing. She considered just letting it ring in order to change out of her waitress uniform more quickly, and then decided to take the call. "Hello?"

"Liz?" She immediately recognized her best friend Maria's voice, even if it was a bit hushed and whisper-ey. "Are - are you coming over here? To Michael's place, I mean?"

"Huh?" Liz grunted as she at least whipped the antennae barrette out of her hair. She was way too old for that stuff - they needed new uniforms for the Cafe. "No, I mean - I guess I thought that you and Michael would be wanting some privacy there tonight, though - though you didn't really say so, I admit. But we didn't have plans to hang together, did you? Max was saying something this morning about wanting to actually go out on a movie date, so..."

"Sorry, yeah, you couldn't have known," Maria continued to hiss. Liz sat down on her bed, feeling more and more confused. She couldn't have known WHAT? "That - that British chick, the one with the guy who you know... she and Isabel and Alex came here after they finished letting it out beyond the city limits. And - and they've been talking about lots of stuff, and she's been telling stories about her travels, and... and they travel in TIME. Her and the British - British czecho... no, I can't even finish saying it. THAT British guy."

"Ohh." Liz struggled to get her thoughts in order. "Where is HE then, if he's not with his friend, because she stayed with Alex and Isabel?"

"Said something about going to the UFO museum - just to look at the exhibits, not to pester Max. But - have you heard anything from him lately?"

"No," Liz said, starting to feel nervous now even though she really had no firm reason to. "So - so, did you ever tell ANYONE else in the gang about - about what I told you about thanksgiving, not this past fall but the year before?"

It took just a few seconds for Maria to trace that back through. "No, Liz, of course not, you swore me to secrecy. Even after Tess..."

"Yeah, alright, I just wanted to be sure. Not even Michael?"

"I promise on every sacred bond of sisterhood, and the departed soul of my Breepa..."

"Alright, alright, I believe you!" Finally Liz started to contort her slender body enough that she could begin to strip off the uniform dress without taking the telephone handset away from her face.

"What about you, did you tell Max?"

"Yes - not long after Tess left, and I told him to keep it a secret too, though I couldn't really come up with any reason why that was important anymore. Pretty sure that he hasn't told Isabel or Michael. But now - now maybe all of the gang will need to know the truth."

"And Rose and her friend the Doctor?" Maria pressed. "Are you going to tell them too? We - we don't even really know that much about them yet."

"Take that as it comes, I guess - but if they're experienced time travellers, maybe they can make more sense out of what's happened than any of us could. Has anybody told Rose much about us?"

"Not really that much, at least not since Michael and I got here. Rose is a talker, and I think she feels bad that the Doctor pulled that stunt with the creepy crawly on purpose to break the ice with us."

"Ahh." Liz had had her own suspicions about that scene being at least partly staged, and it made her feel a little better that somebody else was acknowledging that much, even if it was implicit. "Okay, umm - give me a minute to get changed, and then I'll head across the street to see what the score is. No matter what - Max and I will get there, kay?"

"Sure. Oh, I should get off the phone now. Michael's started talking about how much pizza we'll need." Liz snickered at that thought. "Bye Lizzie."

"Bye Maria..." She didn't get much of her friend's name out before hearing a definite 'click' on the phone line.

Around two minutes later, Liz was still belting her blue jeans and looking around for sneakers when she heard footsteps on the stairs and Max's voice tentatively calling to ask if anyone was home. "Yeah, I'm in my room," she called back. "Is our Doctor friend about?"

"Huh? Which doctor friend?"

Liz didn't answer until she was all ready to emerge, though she wondered if Max would actually come into her bedroom - it seemed to be a threshold that he would only pass uninvited when he was at his most - affectionate, no matter how much she told him that he should feel free to come join her when she was getting dressed - or undressed. "The english guy," she said, "who was in the diner this afternoon when..."

"Oh, him. He's a doctor?"

"Apparently that's what he calls himself - just 'the doctor.' Doctor who, do not ask me." Liz chuckled to herself as she stepped up to Max and gave him a kiss hello that was more 'brief' than serious. "And the rumor was that he was going to be spending some time at the museum. I wondered if he would have waited until you were leaving and then tried to come along."

"Ohh - yeah, I did spot him among the other Convention fans, said hi, but that was about it," Max said. "Which is probably a good thing, since we were so busy with the mini-panels. And - and I don't think I spotted him in the past half hour or so, though that's not conclusive considering how hard it would be to see one particular person in the partition layout and with the crowds."

Liz considered. "So he might still be there - or he might have left already?"

"Yeah," Max agreed, taking Liz's hand in his own. "Did you hear anything from Isabel and Alex about their trip out of town together?"

"Not directly - but Maria called from Michael's, and apparently Isabel, Alex, and the Doctor's friend Rose are all over there now," Liz told him. "They've been talking a bit, more hearing Rose's stories than the other way around, which is probably good for a start. I - I told her that we'd probably be heading over there. Michael's ordering pizza."

"Hmm." Max considered that as Liz led the way back to the stairs and got out her keys, possibly considering whether to press for movie night, or just allowing a tiny part of himself to grieve for an opportunity that would not be. "What have they been hearing so far, a lot of interesting stuff?"

"Hmm, well..." Liz pretended to be mulling that over until they were down the stairs, (with the door locked,) out of the building, and even buckled into the seats of Max's jeep, which he usually parked in the Crashdown lot all day when the UFO museum was going to be busy with its own customers. Liz parents never really minded, especially as Max was always heading across the street to visit Liz on his breaks anyway - and spending money too. "I don't really know much about it, except for one detail that Maria thought was important enough to be sure to mention. Max - HE'S A TIME TRAVELLER." That last part had been timed so that it was partly muffled by the sound of the ignition roaring to life, and nobody further away could have overheard the words, she hoped.

"Oh, I see. And you think - your own little experience with - um, I don't even know what euphemism I can use that wouldn't be..."

"Don't bother, then," Liz advised him. "I don't know if I'm going to tell Rose or the Doctor - though I do think that the time has come to talk to the rest of our friends about it, one way or another. And I'm sorry I made you hold out Isabel and Michael for so long."

"Actually..." Max trailed off as he made the first turning off Main street South for Michael's place.

"Oh, come on, don't tell me that you spilled," Liz said, perversely frustrated even though she'd been feeling bad the opposite way before Max had let that one word slip out.

"I - I didn't say it straight out," Max insisted in his own defense. "But with Isabel - I've let a few hints slip, and she suspects something, though I'm not sure how much. She hasn't pushed for any explanations, though. And Michael - I didn't say anything to him, but he's said some things to ME. I - I guess I assumed that Maria had told him, since you said that she knew."

"No - I just asked her on the phone, she promised on - on big things, Max. If Michael knows, it's not from Maria."

"Maybe - maybe it was from her, but Maria didn't realize or mean for Michael to know," Max said thoughtfully. "Michael could have gotten a flash of what Maria knows, when they were making out or whatever."

"Yeah, I guess that's true," Liz admitted. "It's hard to keep secrets from an Antarian significant other."

"I can't exactly hide my heart from you either, my darling," Max breathed, and pulled into a parking spot half a block away from Michael's apartment. "Well, come on, let's go and see what..." He stumbled to a stop trying to think of what to end that sentence with.

"What kinds of pizza Michael has saddled us with," Liz put in with a giggle. Max nodded appreciatively at that, and hugged her before they started to head over.

------------

"Okay, let's see, what else," Rose said after a momentary lull in the discussion of the strange 'Torchwood' references that she'd been noticing in her travels lately, and what they might mean. "There was the mining station with the Ood, that's sort of a funny story, though it was a bit creepy to be going through at the time..."

"Rose, don't take this the wrong way, but most of your stories are IMMENSELY creepy at some point or another," Isabel pointed out to her. "Nearly every alien you come across has horrible designs on planet Earth or unfortunate feeding habits - or at least one for every trip that you take."

"Not every trip," Rose insisted. "But - but most of the ones that make compelling stories, yeah... I guess I can see how you would thing that. There *are* a lot of scary beings and races out there, and the Doctor is - well, he always says that he's a magnet for intergalactic trouble, and I'm starting to think that he's right. He's also the guy you'd want to SOLVE an alien problem too, though, so it works out rather nicely."

"Almost as if those situations start to gravitate towards him because somebody or something WANTS him to take care of them?" Alex suggested. "Or like it's his function in the universe?"

"Okay, this is starting to get a bit too philosophical for me," Michael said, finally putting the phone down after what had seemed a very intricate series of instructions to the pizza place. "And you've told us enough stories, really - don't you want to know something about us too?"

"Well, I didn't want to push," Rose admitted quietly. "And I'd sort of rather the Doctor was around for that, though I'm not sure why. He obviously knows something about you, to find you all. I'm not sure how much." She smiled. "And I love having an audience for my stories, without HIM around to tell them his way. Even Mickey never really wanted to hear about my travels, before he came along too, because they made him feel inadequate or something. And when he did hitch a lift of his own, it was only a few hops we took before - before the Cybermen world, and he - and he never came back."

There was a moment's pause, and then Michael plopped noisily down onto the couch, (there was a sort of a creak and another thing not quite the same that was between a crack and a moan,) and considered for just a moment before opening his own mouth. "Around - around the time that Liz found out about us, which is a story we'll save for later because the Doctor SHOULD hear it if possible - well, Kyle's father, Jim Valenti, was an amateur UFO chaser in those days. Not that he was really chasing for aliens in the skies - that's just an expression, but he was obsessed with finding anything like us. And - and he figured out that Liz had found a lead, or found one of us, because Kyle - Kyle saw a silver handprint on her stomach, near where the gunshot had gone in, and Jim had seen similar handprints near - well, near other alien phenomena, and..."

"Wait a second," Rose said. "What gunshot?"

"I guess that's part of the story he wasn't going to go into," Isabel said dryly, shooting a fond smile over at Michael. "Liz was - she was shot, in the Cafe, because of an argument that had nothing to do with her, and Max used his healing powers to save her life." Rose made a small impressed sound. "Yeah. But other Antarians - the surviving adults from the Roswell crash - they'd been using their powers to kill, when they were trying to avoid getting captured, and leaving the same silver handprint. So - well, all three of us were panicked, and in fact we tried to leave town, but Liz convinced us that there was another way. That was the night of the Crash festival, another big event on the Roswell tourist calendar, and..."

Just then there was a rather polite knock on the door. Rose and Alex looked at each other. "That the Doctor come to fetch you away?" Alex asked with a soft chuckle.

"As much as I'd like to see him, I don't want to go away just yet," Rose replied.

"Could be the pizza already," Michael put in. Maria had already gotten up from the sofa and made her way to the door, opening it to reveal - Max and Liz. "Or not, I guess. Hi guys."

"Oh, hello," Rose said once she'd spotted and recognized the newcomers. "You didn't happen to see my friend recently, did you?"

Max took a breath. "No, actually not, though he did say hi in the Museum. Kept an eye out for him on the drive over - but if he was walking, he could have just taken a different route."

"Are you worried, honey?" Isabel asked Rose. "We could go out looking for him - the UFO center's still open, we could check there, and..."

"I - I do feel just a bit worried, but it's probably overreacting to send out the search parties just yet," she admitted. "Just - what I said about him being very good at finding trouble, though that applies just as well to me when I'm with him, I suppose. He can take care of himself, but..."

"Does he have a cell phone too, that you can call?" Alex suggested, pointing to Rose's superphone that she had been anxiously fiddling with and had set on the coffee table. (She hadn't been sure if calling her mother from so recently in the Earth's past might have set up some kind of paradox effect, or if it might have accidentally reached Jackie Tyler in the year 2001, before Rose had left home.

"Oh, umm - no. Could reach just about anybody in the galaxy, except for him..." The thought suddenly made her wonder, and she picked up the phone, wanting to try it to get through to him, but uncertain how to do it. He had never given her a number to connec to him, but there was the voice-calling feature. "Call the doctor," she instructed the phone, feeling a bit foolish. Around her the Roswell gang waited in silence, wondering what would come of that.

The phone rang twice and then picked up. "Hello, this is the Doctor," his familiar voice came over the tiny earpiece speaker.

"Oh, thank heaven, Doctor. Where are you? All the kids are here at Michael's place, really, and they've called in for pizza..."

"...you've reached the TARDIS, time and relative dimensions in space," he kept reciting. "Unfortunately, nobody's here to pick up the police call phone at the moment, so please leave a message for Rose Tyler, Nicky, or me at the beep. BEEEP!" It had clearly been the Doctor crying the word 'beep' rather loudly himself, and not an articifially synthesized tone.

Rose took a deep breath, trying to keep from laughing or something at the absurdity of reaching an answering machine in the TARDIS, and manged to compose her thoughts. "Hey, Doctor. This is Rose, and I'm over at Michael's place, sort of wondering if you've run into trouble, off on your lonesome. I'll probably run into you before you hear this, but if not, then get over to Michael's place, or - well, I guess that's it." She wondered if it was possible that he'd lost the directions to Michael's - no, he'd have memorized them on the spot, surely. "Oh, it's evening-ish, of our first day since arriving in Roswell. Couldn't tell you the time any better than that, after all our travels. Okay."

She hung up the phone and looked up, straight into Liz's face, as it happened. "Got his voice mail?" Liz asked, in a fairly neutral and slightly sweet tone.

"Sort of - he set up an answering machine in our ship," Rose replied. "Don't know quite why, since very few people would be able to call it up, but never mind that."

"Okay, so what next?" Max said. "Umm, I don't think that we really went through the pleasantries before, Rose, but time was short. I'm Max Evans, Roswell alien-in-residence, and this is my girlfriend Liz Parker."

"Yes, thanks," Rose said, getting up to shake both their hands. "Rose Tyler, I..." For a second, she had no idea how to sum up her identity as concisely as Max just had. "I'm from London, worked as a shopgirl until I met the Doctor - in the year 2004." It seemed important to her to mention this point then, that she was from a few years in their future. She had avoided talking much about her adventures in her own era because of this - they wouldn't know anything about the Slytheen crash, or the Christmas invasion for instance. Those would make the worldwide news, but hadn't happened yet. "I've been travelling with him for about two years, in my personal timeline."

"Alright," Liz said, and looked around the room. Maria instantly scooched over on the sofa so that Max and Liz would be able to fit there if they wanted to sit down, though it would be a bit cramped with four occupants, including Michael. "There's - um, there's something that I wanted to ask you and the Doctor about, I think... and to make sure that all of my closest friends know. Something about time travel - but I probably shouldn't get started until he's here."

Michael had stiffened slightly. "Umm, Liz, are you sure that you want to... to tell them about whatever it is? I mean, sorry, but it's Roswell business, and..."

"Give up the act, Michael, I'm pretty sure you know most of it," Liz informed Michael. "Not his fault, Maria, or yours, but we can't protect from flashes, not when we're in love, any of us. And yes, Michael, I'm fairly sure. We need an expert consultation, and we're not likely to get a better expert."

"What do you mean by flashes?" Rose asked. Once again, there was an exchange of glances.

"It's another of our alien abilities, sort of," Isabel said. "When we touch a person, or an object, sometimes we get impressions - see images from the past, or from their minds." She reached out a hand. "Would you like me to try it with you?"

Rose considered for a long time - and just as she was stretching out her own arm, there was a knock on the door again. Rose spun around to go answer it - and heard the pizza man call out his company identity just before she reached the knob. It took a little while for the six extra-large deluxe pies to be transferred into Michael's apartment, and for the full payment to be gathered and handed over. Maria was just closing the door when she heard the delivery guy telling someone 'hello, here for the party?' and so she waited for a moment just to see. Sure enough - it was the Doctor and Kyle Valenti, who had met up downtown as the Doctor was just getting ready to head over.

"Dad wanted to come and meet the new people, but he's on shift tonight at Metachem," Kyle told the assembled company. "He's still convinced that they're interested in aliens, but no smoking gun yet."

"Hello," Rose said to Kyle, who immediately blushed and mumbled something. "So, you and your father are just... friends and interested parties?"

"Dad's not extraterrestrial, if that's what you mean," Kyle replied after a moment to compose himself - and not looking straight at Rose. He seemed to have a bit of trouble doing that and speaking coherently. "I, well, I was born human, but apparently I'm somewhat 'changed' because Max saved my life. Liz too. He saved Alex's brain, but apparently that doesn't count."

"What on earth?" Rose said, and to cover her confusion she reached out to put a slice of bacon-double-cheeseburger pizza on her paper plate. "Saved his brain? Not in a jar, I hope."

"You'll have to forgive Kyle's melodrama, I suppose," Isabel said, squeezing her arm around Alex's shoulders.

"I dunno, it kind of fits," Alex admitted himself. "I... I could have had lifelong brain damage or just plain gone crazy if you guys hadn't figured out what was happening and gotten Max to help."

"What was it?" the Doctor asked, his voice concerned but kind - a 'bedside manner,' sort of.

A short pause before Liz took up the tale. "For nearly a year, there was... another alien teenager, here in Roswell. Tess Harding, that's the name that she used. She came here with Nasedo, the last of our guardians from the ship, a shapeshifter - he pretended to be Tess' divorced father."

Rose listened to the silence for several seconds before she prompted. "Okay, what - did she do something?"

"Well, yeah," Maria replied in her turn. "Tess - well, she was convinced that Max was her destined mate, no matter what Max thought or how much Liz loved him. We all knew that much, but nobody guessed how much she was really playing her own game. She - um, she needed a set of instructions on how to go home translated, and she thought that Alex could help her. Rather than risk taking no for an answer..." Maria's voice had been getting more and more unsteady, and she broke off into dry sobs at this point, Michael and Liz immediately comforting her.

"Tess had powers to bend other minds to her will - not perfectly, but she wasn't shy about using them on us when she had to," Alex explained, more matter of factly. "I really don't think that she realized the side-effects of what she was doing on me - keeping me working on her program, pushing my brain to work at higher efficiency than natural, and covering up my memories afterward. And she manipulated Max too, helping him get over Liz after they broke up and keeping him from seeing her true self. If her plan had worked, they'd have left in the Granilith, maybe Michael and Isabel too, before anybody found out that I'd been mindwarped. But Liz and Maria started to snoop around a couple of clues, and soon the whole thing was tumbling down."

"But you let Tess leave anyway," the Doctor guessed. "In this Granilith."

"Well, yes, it was a tough decision and I'm not sure I made it right," Max admitted. "But even if we had a three to one advantage over her, or more - she was very strong, and I didn't want anybody to get hurt if I pushed her into a fight. And - and she was pregnant, and it seemed like the baby couldn't be safely born on Earth. That might have been more of Tess' tricks, giving me a reason to leave with her, but in the end I felt I couldn't be sure about that."

There was another hushed pause. "Pregnant?" Rose said, after a moment. "And - and it was yours, Max?" He nodded ever so slightly, squeezing Liz's hand. Rose couldn't react for a moment, and then, to her surprise, the words she said were "Liz, honey, I'm so sorry..."

That actually made Liz burst out in nervous giggles. "Come on, I don't need the sympathy overdose from you too. It - it's something that I wouldn't have chosen to happen, but maybe that's why we don't get those choices. Max's daughter isn't the spawn of the devil, she's going to grow up into somebody pretty amazing... though I admit I share his motivation to make sure that somebody much less selfish than the Tess we all knew is raising her and teaching her about life."

"I just feel so dirty and idiotic, that I fell for her tricks, that I actually..."

"Stop that," Liz insisted. "None of us were entirely responsible for our choices back then. Tess was doing her best to make us all dance to her tune."

"Are you following along?" Rose asked the Doctor, who was sitting in a wooden IKEA armchair next to her, and seemed to be enormously enjoying his hot veggie slices.

"Yes, I think so," he stage-whispered back. "More stuff about mind-bending powers - mixed in with a melodrama plot good enough for... oh, what's that American show - Dawson's creek?"

Immediately a chorus of 'Love it' or 'Hate it!' rang out in semi-unison from the Roswell residents, with the girls mostly expressing their approval and the guys disapproval, but a few exceptions in that gender-based rule.

Maria shook her head, chuclking. "Liz, you had something that you wanted to ask our expert about. Something involving time travel, and alien powers, and melodramatic plots."

"Umm, yeah, okay," Liz said, taking a deep breath. "Last fall - I had an unexpected visitor come to my balcony at the Crashdown apartment: a future self of Max, from the year 2014. At first I didn't believe it was him, but he called out a scene between me and Max my own age - when he came to serenade me with a mariachi band. He said that in his time, aliens had attacked the Earth, and the reason they had lost was because Tess had left them and run away from town."

"Hmm, alright," the Doctor said, thinking. "You're sure that this wasn't an illusion or a trick arranged by Tess herself? You never saw another time period yourself, just this alternate Max?"

"No, I didn't see any other direct evidence, but I've worked out what Tess would need to do to fake the whole experience, and I'm convinced it would be beyond her abilities - that if she could have done so much, she could have gotten what she wanted much more smoothly and easily with a more obvious strategy. Especially because later, I was seeing Future Max and talking with him while Max was meeting Tess and holding a conversation with her, halfway across town."

"Yes, that does seem unlikely," the Doctor admitted. "And the possibility that she had a confederate? Someone who could take on Max's semblance, for instance?"

"Yeah, we thought about that, but - well, the obvious suspect doesn't seem to have been invoved," Liz said. "Or a few less-obvious suspects. And whoever it was would have to have known certain things that only Max and I knew."

"Okay, carry on with the story," the Doctor said. "I didn't mean to interrupt."

So Liz recited the litany of plots that she'd hatched to try to get Max to fall for Tess, or fall out of love with her, including all of her arguments with Future Max over the necessity, and how she'd gotten the idea of having Max discover her in the aftermath of a (faked) tryst with Kyle, from Maria's description of her own troubles with Michael and Courtney, an alien waitress who'd been staking them out at the time.

"Okay, now in my capacity as an expert, I do have some questions," the Doctor said, much more seriously, after Liz had described in vivid detail her last dance with Future Max, and how he had apparently vanished from her arms. "You've mentioned a few times this Granolith. Just what was it? How much do you know about it?"

Max immediately bristled. "What does that have to do with the situation?"

"It has EVERYTHING to do with it," the Doctor snapped. "You wanted my expert opinion as a time traveler, and Future Max mentioned that the Granolith was the mechanism of this journey into his own past. I must understand everything I can about its nature and capabilities. Now I have an educated guess, but I was hoping to confirm that much." Max silently set his jaw. "Since you're acting so hostile, I'll feel free to ask leading questions. Is it true that you don't know much about where it came from, that even as much as you know about Antarians, they either don't know how it works or simply won't tell you much about it? Possibly they consider it a religious artifact of great significance, or a cultural link to the royalty. It can be used as a makeshift spaceship, that's an obvious guess from what you said about Tess taking it to go home - and I suspect that if you saw it in something close to its true shape, it would be a cone, perhaps twenty feet high."

"How - how did you know all that?" Isabel asked, flabbergasted. Max shot her a dirty look for confirming the Doctor's guesses.

"Because it is of MY people!" the Doctor flared. "An ancient, historical precursor to the TARDIS I use myself, fashioned by the Time Lords when they were still learning to manipulate the forces of space and time, matter and energy. GRANOLITH - Gravity relations and Nearby Objects Leading Inversely Towards... no, sorry, I can't make the acronym come out right in English. Thought I had it there for a moment, but..."

"You meant you thought you could make up something off the cuff that would sound impressive," Rose shot back. "Like you so often do." The Doctor just shrugged, not commenting either way really.

"Okay," Max said, returning to the issue. "So you say that the Granolith is old... and old Time Lord relic? That's the name of your people?"

"Galifreyan, or Time Lord, yes," Isabel supplied helpfully. "The Doctor is possibly the last of the Time Lords, the only survivor that he knows of the Time War with the Daleks."

"Okay," Max said after a moment. "Are you claiming that as the sole surviving heir of Galifrey, the Granolith should be returned to you?"

The Doctor considered this question carefully. "I don't have any need for it myself. But my concern is that the Granolith could be dangerous technology - dangerous to the entire patch of spacetime occupied by this galaxy in this millenium. According to Liz's description, Future Max passed through a rift in time, opened by the Granolith, and changed his own past. That ISN'T supposed to be POSSIBLE! Myself, I would have expected that cleaners would have followed him through the rift, and wouldn't have rested until the prior timeline had been restored - by killing the older Max before he could fufill his mission, for example. Maybe they tried, but couldn't, because he had already touched Liz's life, and she was too important to the timeline that Max had come from..."

"So - so do you want to fix things yourself?" Maria asked, looking nervous.

"No." The Doctor sighed. "If this timeline were truly broken, there'd be signs of instability by now, obvious to someone like me who knows what to look for. I can't 'fix' it now - somehow time has managed to heal by itself. But there are a few things that I need to do in order to ensure that the patch holds, like examine the Granolith in the present." He stared intently at Max. "And if I judge that the Granolith's existence might lead to another risk like the one that you've all just missed - then I will dispose of it properly. Understood?"

There was a long tableau, and Max maintained a stony silence. Michael cleared his throat and weighed in. "So you mean to visit Antar, and track down the Granolith?"

"I do." For a second, the Doctor matched Max's stony mood, and then he let a wide grin break out. "Anybody wanna lift?"

"Just think about it, Max," Liz said, rubbing her hand up and down his arm. "We've been wanting a way to go there and settle with Tess. This is perfect, if we agree to let the Doctor call the shots with respect to the Granolith - which, hello, we don't have right now, and have no other opportunity to get back, really. I suspect that travelling via TARDIS even solves a few more minor problems - like explaining our absence, because we won't be absent long. The Doctor can bring us back only a few minutes after we left."

"Theoretically, yes," Rose said warningly. "Just as long as he doesn't land a YEAR later by accident."

"You're never going to let me live that down, are you?" The Doctor shot back, but his eyes were bright with the challenge. "If I'm careful, you'll be okay, and yes, that's a deal I'll be willing to approve. Passage for all of you to Antar, with time adjustment to minimize your absence, and assistance in retrieving your daughter, Max, and dealing with her mother - in exchange for your assitance in tracking down the Granolith, and acceptance that I determine its fate. Probably Tess and the Granolith won't be far away from each other." He reached out a hand towards Max, though they weren't sitting close enough to each other. "Do we have a deal?"

Max shot Liz another look, which this time was somewhat more calculating, and Liz smiled in response. "You have to recognize, Doctor, that Max feels VERY protective of the Granolith - even if it's not here anymore. It was sort of placed here under his protection, as near as we can figure out, and as you said, it's a focus of political and cultural power among the Antarian people. Now yes, it would be better for the thing to be dismantled than fall into the hands of his enemies, but still - I'm thinking you might have to sweeten the pot with a second favor."

"His enemies?" Rose asked. "Am - am I missing something here? I thought you lot grew up here on Earth. How do you have enemies on Antar?"

"That's... that's a bit complicated," Isabel admitted unhappily.

"Do you mean the enemies of your parents?" the Doctor prompted? "Who have extended the blood feud to you?"

"That's sort of like it, but there are a few twists," Michael said. "You - you were told that we're hybrids, biologically, right?" The Doctor and Rose nodded. "It's not as simple as being born of one Antarian parent and one human parent, though. We - we're sort of altered clones of young Antarians who were killed in a great civil war. Not just from their DNA, but apparently their energy or something like their spirits were saved, and transplanted into us. And DNA - harvested from abducted humans was blended in, to allow us to pass for human almost perfectly, and hide ourselves in human society."

"Hmm." The Doctor considered this. "I've heard of psychic energy being maintained after people die, but never come across an example like this. Do - do you mind if I ask you what you know about the civil war, and what role your predecessors played in it?"

"Do you know anything about Antarian historic civil wars already?" Liz asked.

"A few - but I'm not familiar with the full history of that civilization, so I might be in the wrong era entirely. Please."

"Okay," Max said. "My - my predecessor was King Zan, the eldest son of Sanren of the royal house of Liaret, who inherited the throne at around seventeen Antarian years old, when Sanren was assasinated. He tried to root out the forces ultimately behind the assasination, led by Duke Kivar Andraikus, but couldn't get support of enough of the old-guard nobles and corrupt guild leaders."

"While the people loved him for his noble reforms?" the Doctor asked with a slightly raised eyebrow.

Max laughed. "It might not be a perfectly neutral point of view, but that's what we've heard - except for the version that Kivar's own lackeys have occasionally spouted."

"Fair enough," Rose admitted. "Everybody has their own side of history."

"Soon after the fighting started, Zan was - was betrayed, captured by Kivar, and put to death," Max said slowly, looking down, as Liz nudged him supportively with her leg, (next to Max's own,) and rubbed his back with her hand. "Along with - with his wife of about a year, Ava of Dervensee - who was Tess' analog, and - his older sister, the Princess Vilandra," Max waved generally in Isabel's direction, "and her fiancee, Zan's general, Rath of Selezir." This time Max pointed much more directly at Michael.

"Wait a second," Rose put in. "Vilandra didn't get to be queen? Sexist much? Girls can't inherit the throne?"

"Probably not until there aren't any boys in the line of succession, or something like that," the Doctor said. "All right, I've heard a very little bit about the Kivarian war, as it was known, though I'm not going to tell you anything about how it turned out if we're going to be going there. Now - what's this other favor that you had in mind?"

Liz checked around the room with her eyes as well as she could before she answered this. "Well, we all realize, really, that we're operating on too little information, and too secondhand, when it comes to the Antarian history stuff. How about a trip to Antar's past, around the time that the civil war was brewing? That could help us get our bearings for the important trip, in Antar's present?"

The Doctor chewed on this, as Isabel, in particular squirmed but didn't object out loud, partly due to Alex's silent reassurances. "Possible. There are a number of rules that I'd insist on as the chaperone of such an expedition. Number one, obviously, is that you can't attempt to change the facts of the past as you know them - no sneaky plans to save Sanren from his assasination, or to spare the lives of Zan, Vilandra, Rath, or Ava. We'll want to keep our distance in time from the outbreak of hostilities, and the death of the four young people, just on the grounds that it might be too easy to change something by accident. But a visit to Sanren's court, not long before he is doomed to die, with the foursome as fourteen or fifteen in Antarian terms - that should be manageable."

"We don't even know that all four of them were at court at that point," Maria pointed out. "Zan and Vilandra, likely yes, but..."

"We'll need to go on a fact-finding mission, obviously," the Doctor put in. "Somewhat undercover - probably in the present, where all of this is recent history, and someplace just on the periphery of the Antarian sphere of influence. Kaalto, perhaps, or maybe Landorin. I'll have to check. For that first leg of the journey, and maybe going back into Antar's past, I'll make no secret of my being a Time lord, and let the rest of you pass for Gallifreyans or other humanoid companions. Probably best not to mention Earth by name. Sound good?"

"Do people all over the universe recognize the Time Lords?" Alex asked.

"Most species who have developed space travel and contacted others have at least heard the rumors about us, which the Antarians definitely have by this time," the Doctor said offhandedly. "We shouldn't have any problems."

"Okay, there's something I've been wondering," Michael suddenly put in. "You Time Lords - you're all time travellers, right?"

"Well, not all our species, we do have a large fraction of homebodies who never journey much in space OR time," the Doctor laughed. "Or did. But yet, most of our travellers, who are considerably more represented than in most species, would take advantage of TARDIS technology to tour time."

"So even if their - if their timelines ended at the Time War, you could still meet them at some point before they died, right?" Michael pressed.

The Doctor let out a very melancholy sigh, and Maria elbowed Michael just on general principles. "No, that's alright, it wasn't his fault," the Doctor said. "Fair question. Yes, unless I have information that such a meeting would be changing the past of one of my nationals, I could meet them in such a way - though it is hard for one TARDIS to trace or home in on another, so there would be numerous practical difficulties in arranging such a meeting. I - I have not attempted it yet, though. To meet one of my old friends, and know that they are yet doomed to die - I'm not sure if I could handle that. And it would be disastrous to let them realize that the great battle against the Daleks was in their future too soon. It could change the entire course of the war."

"I'm sorry," Michael muttered by reflex, but the Doctor waved him off.

"Let us turn our minds again to the practicalities of this journey of ours. Although returning at the very same moment we left is technically possible, there are logistical and psychological problems with 'cutting it too close' - the Narnia effect, for one, of adjusting to the idea that those you have left behind have not lived through the weeks or months that you have can be hard to get used to, and allowing as much time as possible, so as to minimize the relative difference, is advisable. Also, as Rose said, time orienting in my TARDIS is not perfect, and above all we would want to avoid arriving before we left. Can - can you arrange to cover your absences for a day, or even two?"

Again, there were many exchanged glances among the Roswell natives. "I - I suppose we could pull out the old 'gone camping in the woods' excuse for this weekend," Isabel suggested. "It's been a while, actually."

"Right," the Doctor said, rubbing his hands together. "And just how close is the weekend?"

"It's Thursday evening," Kyle blurted out - nearly the first time he'd spoken since meeting the new visitors. "So we'll be able to go tomorrow afternoon."

"Do you need a place to stay until then?" Michael chimed in.

"Well, we can just sleep in the TARDIS," Rose said. "Wouldn't be the first time."

"Yes, that's probably best, rather than trying to pull out that fold-out," the Doctor said, indicating the somewhat battered couch opposite him. "But I can probably move the TARDIS closer to here, since it seems to be a convient meeting point. We'll take in the sights of the convention tomorrow while you lot are in classes, and make a few preparations of our own."

"You mean you'll make preparations, and I'll play the tourist," Rose joked.

"Do you think your Dad will want to come along?" Max asked Kyle. "Or are you coming yourself, as far as that goes?"

"Oh, I'll go," Kyle insisted quickly. "And - and I'll ask Dad. I think he's only got the one shift, Sunday night, after tonight. We'll be back in time for him to make that, right?"

"I should hope so," Liz said. "My parents will pitch a fit if I'm not back in bed on a school night. Overprotective..." Her mumbles trailed off into the unintelligible.

"That's not such a bad thing, they just want the best for you," Rose told Liz, feeling nostalgia for her own mum.

"Anyway, as I was saying," Kyle continued, "he may well be up for it. I know that he's been feeling a strange urge to learn more about the alien stuff, if he could do that safely - and he still thinks of himself as your guardian knight."

"With my luck, he'll invite my Mom along too," Maria put in. "Ever since she found out, he's been wanting to help her see what the alien thing is really like - which is the last thing I want, most of the time."

"Maybe this one actually will help her relax, Maria," Liz suggested. "It does seem like a nice trip abroad to the stars... oh, that reminds me. What about the language issue?"

"The TARDIS will cover that," Rose told them brightly. "It automatically translates for anyone who's travelled inside it or are even in the area."

"Useful," Max said. "Okay, well, with all of that settled, I guess we can tell a few more stories, before any of us need to head back home. Who's got a good one?"

"I might as well, since we've got more listeners than you do," the Doctor volunteered. "Did you cover the Gamestation in the year two hundred thousand and change?"

"Ooh, no," Rose said, shuddering. "I couldn't bear to - eugh, so horrible."

"Sounds interesting," Michael replied instantly. Maria shook her head and elbowed him again, but nobody stopped the Doctor as he started telling them about the game show revival of the far future.

TO BE CONTINUED...
Read my other roswell stories!

"A man does not make his destiny: he accepts it or denies it. If the Rowan tree's roots are shallow, it bears no crown." From 'the farthest shore', Ursula LeGuin.

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Chrisken
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Re: Children of the Molecule (DW XO CC, Teen) Part 2 May 16 2009

Post by Chrisken »

Part Three

They started to clean up and get ready to go home from Michael's place, pretty early, a little after ten in the evening.

"I forgot all about Brody and the convention - for a little while," Max said as he held one of the empty pizza boxes open for Liz to dump dirty napkins and other trash into it to get carried over to the garbage - and tried not to sound whiny. "Friday evening and Saturday are going to be really busy, until the big farewell dinner. That's twenty-fours hours that I'm going to hang him out to dry, and..."

"Come on, Max, he'll be okay," Isabel pointed out. "Brody Davis has a big staff, and probably most of them would be eager to take on extra hours. You're just thinking of that first convention you worked, when it was just you and Milton Ross."

"Oh, you worked for Milton here?" the Doctor asked from down on the floor - at one point in the re-enactment of a chase scene, the end-table had born the brunt of an enthusiastic fall, so he had volunteered to put the sonic screwdriver to work fixing it. "I didn't even know that he set up shop in Roswell."

"Yeah - you've met him?" Michael asked, a bit warily again. "When, and how?"

"Probably around the time you kids were - well, never mind that. Early nineteen-eighties. He was working as a specialist with UNIT, and - well, I won't go into all of that. He was never in what you might call the inner circle, though - he didn't know my story, for instance - and eventually went absent without leave. I guess I haven't really thought much about him since that day."

"Poor Milton, never learns the whole story," Max said, the corner of his mouth quirking up. "Come to think of it, we're not really sure what happened to him either."

"No," Maria said. "And one other thing we haven't heard so far is how you knew when and where to find us, Doctor. Rose mentioned that she'd wanted to come to Roswell and find aliens, and that you knew to arrive in this year, and you headed straight for the Crashdown. What gives with that?"

"Sorry, dear, but I'm afraid I can't give you all of the answers that you seek," the Doctor admitted.

"Do - did you get your information from someone who's met us in our future?" Liz said. "So that you can't give us all of the details without risking changing our futures?" She met the Doctor's eyes, and once again he silently nodded. "Does - I'm feeling a bit dizzy and light-headed here, but - does the name Serena mean anything to you?"

"What?!" The Doctor actually dropped his screwdriver, and nearly let the table topple over. Rose absently reached out to steady it so that the Doctor could rise to his feet in stupefaction and walk towards Liz Parker, staring at her. "Did - did Future Max mention that name?"

"Well, yes. He said that she'd be my friend, and... and that they couldn't have worked out the time travel stuff without her. That's about all, but ever since, I've been sort of waiting for somebody to come into my life introducing herself by that name, and not sure how to react to that person when it happens."

"That's all you know, not even a last name?" the Doctor asked, and Liz nodded. "Well - I didn't expect that she'd be part of something quite this foolish, using a pre-TARDIS to open up a rift in time and send a person through. But since that timeline has changed, I can't even properly tell her off for that."

"Is she of the Time Lord people too?" Maria asked.

"Nuh-uh, not telling," the Doctor insisted. "You'll have to wait until you meet her. I - I'll tell you a bit of how much she told me about you, just so that you understand where I'm coming from, but nothing that you wouldn't know yourself at this point."

"Okay, I suppose," Max said. "Actually, I think that I can guess. You knew a few things when you first showed up - you were able to recognize most of us based on our appearances or our names, and you knew who was dating whom or related to whom, but I don't think that you knew many more of the specifics than that. For anybody who's heard stories about us from these days, it would be an easy guess that some of us would be working at or hanging out at the Crashdown on any particular afternoon. You were lucky enough to get us all, as it happened."

"Quite good," the Doctor had to admit.

"And in terms of the 'when'," Alex supposed, "maybe this was the last year, one of the last months, when we can all still be found here in Roswell. We've got plans underway to head off elsewhere for college, after all. And you wouldn't have wanted to go earlier if you had the option, because for one thing, we'd have been noticeably less mature, harder for - well, for people like the two of you to relate to."

The Doctor just waved a 'what can I add to that' gesture to Alex, and made a little bow.

Once the clean-up was finished, plans were made for trips home. Isabel insisted on getting a ride home with Alex, and leaving Liz to go with Max, despite the fact that she lived at the same place as Max, with their adoptive parents. Obviously the 'private goodbyes' were seen as worth the extra petrol and so on, Rose decided. She wouldn't have interfered with that herself, but the Doctor asked Max if he could also let the two of them ride as far as the Crashdown, so that they could go on and fetch the TARDIS.

"I guess it's you and me again, DeLuca," Kyle said to Maria with a mock bow, and Maria sighed, kissed Michael good-night very affectionately, and didn't say much else until they were well on their way home in Kyle's car. (Maria's mother was driving the Jetta herself that day.)

Then Maria turned to the young man who might yet become her step-brother and asked him: "So , you have the hots for that Rose chick, right?"

Kyle stammered for only a moment before catching his composure. "Well, yeah, actually, why wouldn't I? Pretty blonde, funny and confident, sexy as hell, and OH that accent. Lord have mercy!"

"Really? I wouldn't have figured that a British 'bird' would be your type." Kyle shrugged. "And she's older than we are."

"Not seeing where that's a downside even a little bit."

Maria had to chuckle in response. "And what about her and the Doctor?"

"Hmm? What, you think that she's already spoken for? I was looking for a signal that way, I have to admit, and I didn't see one. Not so much as holding hands. Seemed to me like she was a free agent."

"Yeah, well..." Maria struggled to find words, but they all escaped from her, and she let out her breath as an 'eesh' sound between hardly seperated lips. "No, they weren't obviously affectionate as a couple, but - but I saw something pass between their eyes. Maybe it's just sexual tension between two people who have known each other a while, maybe it's something a bit more. But I respectfully suggest that you should learn more and be very careful of what you're stepping into. That Doctor isn't one who you'd want to piss off, or any of us really, should be careful about that."

"Okay, yeah, thanks for the warning, yeah," Kyle said, a bit breezily. "But if it's just a 'will they or won't they' thing, then I think I can handle myself moving into that situation, now that I know what to watch out for."

"Don't make too many assumptions, though, Kyle," Maria said, but by this point he was already pulling up outside her house and she really couldn't lecture him any more.

-------------

For all the years that she'd been doing it, Rose never felt like she'd entirely get used to waking up in her room in the TARDIS, or be able to describe to someone who hadn't travelled with the Doctor what it was like. Being in a hotel room was something like it, not because of the ambience and the decor so much as the sense it immediately conveyed of how she was on holiday, how she was travelling. Even though it was the same room every time, she immediately associated waking up in that bed with asking herself the question 'where and when am I now?'

Of course, she was mostly guessing about the hotel connection, because she'd never really been in that many before travelling with the Doctor - a few on a road trip with Micky to see friends up in Aberdeen. Maybe it didn't matter that much. During the first few months since she'd started to come with him, she'd managed to accumulate some nice furniture and turn the first room on the left into a place that felt just as much like home to her as the room she still had in her Mum's estate housing - if in a very different way. The bed was one that she'd found for sale at auction in late nineteenth century Ireland, and since the auctioneer had insisted on receiving cash on the line in the local chronistic currency or he'd give the piece away to the next highest bidder, she'd had to appeal to a dignified and elderly lady she'd only just met for assistance and figure out some way of paying Missus Duane back, which had been a little adventure in itself. The dresser, the shelves, and the decorations on the wall were mostly...

"Rose, get your self a-moving. Michael will be waiting for us in ten!" the Doctor called through the TARDIS. She grabbed up a thick robe and towel and rushed into the 'plumbing cabin.' (Apparently for all the other conveniences that the flying police-call box could easily afford them, managing running water and drains were still extremely tricky and the Doctor had only managed them in one particular compartment, which led to its own set of interesting moments.) Somewhat to her own surprise, it was only fifteen minutes later when she emerged into the control cabin of the TARDIS, freshly scrubbed, hair and makeup arranged just so, wearing a faded pink t-shirt and cutoff jeans. Somehow she knew better than to hope that the Doctor would appreciate that feat of time management.

Michael seemed somewhat impressed, though. (Maybe Maria was as fussy about getting ready to go herself.) As they emerged from the TARDIS, which had been parked between the corner of Michael's building and the parking lot, he started talking about how long he would be able to work that morning, between getting up before six thirty and having a first period free at school. And then that got him started on other scheduling issues.

"Max called Brody Davis, that's his new boss at the UFO center, about leaving the convention early, and it seems like things don't look so good," Michael told the Doctor mostly, though he didn't seem to mind Rose hearing. "And that got Liz worried about getting out of her shifts at the Cafe, and apparently Kyle's dad does have to work the day shift Saturday, some last minute change. So we won't have a full complement until around Saturday evening. Myself, I didn't even have a shift at the cafe after this morning, until Monday after school. I'm not sure which way Maria will want to go."

"So, where does that leave all of our plans, Michael?" the Doctor asked softly. "I don't suppose Rose and I would mind waiting around and seeing more of the convention..."

"Well, there's the thing," Michael continued. "This first leg of the journey, I don't figure that we really need the whole gang along. Anybody who wants to can hitch a lift with you - Isabel and Alex almost certainly, myself and Kyle, maybe Maria - and the two of you. You're the one who really knows what research is necessary, and we'll come along so that we can start to get the hang of working with you, and learn things which we can use to help the others acclimate. Then we blip back to Roswell at 9 pm tomorrow, to pick up the others. Do you think that you can handle that one?"

"Hmm." The Doctor considered this carefully. "Doing such precise time landings always seems to be asking for some trouble, but yes, I think that I and my TARDIS are up for trying it if the rest of you are. We'll be making for Kaalto township for our initial research stop, by the way. It's not far from Earth, actually, and they'll be in the loop somewhat about Antarian matters, and have a decent historical library. Max has - has already participated in the Six-worlds summit by this point, yes?"

"Wha - did Isabel or Alex mention that?"

"No," the Doctor said. "I was doing a bit of reading last night, and I found a treatment of the Kivarian war and the history of Antar in this century, which mentioned it. Wouldn't have guessed that the 'Earthling hybrid' who represented for the Liarets was a Roswellian until I'd met you all, but after speaking with Max, it seemed clear that he would have been the one. I only asked to be sure that you knew about the other four great planets in the Antarian sphere, actually, the ones that sent delegates."

"Oh, yeah. They're mentioned by name in the book translation, though I can never remember. One's pretty good and friendly, the one that Larek is from, and one is about as nasty as Kivar through and through, and the other two are mostly neutral. Don't think that any of them are called Kaalto though."

"No," the Doctor agreed patiently. "But - well, I think that the one most friendly to the Liarets is Rahlicx, and Kaalto is a much more distant and smaller colony of Rahlicx."

"Sounds good," Michael agreed. "Why not - was it Landorin? The other place that you mentioned last night?"

"Um, yes - Landorin wasn't nearly as inconspicuous or inconsequential in the civil war as I had supposed," the Doctor said. "There would be possibilities of the three of you being recognized, and other potential complications, if we arrived there out of the blue. Wouldn't do at all for our research stop, which is supposed to be a safe and quiet small place where we can get our bearings. In fact, depending on what I learn at Kaalto, I might find that our best bet for finding Tess and the Granolith would be on Landorin, instead of going to Antar again, but that's not certain, and we've got a trip into Antar's past to make first."

"You know, if we're breaking up our trips anyway, why not make all three seperate hops, with a return to Roswell after that second leg?" Rose suddenly suggested. "I realize that we probably won't be able to get the kids away for a few days after a Sunday night return, but - but they'll all have a lot of stuff to ponder over after we get back from the past. We might, too, comes to that."

"Hmm." The doctor considered that as they crossed the street. (They were walking downtown, since Michael didn't really have an auto, just his bike.) "Maybe. What would you say to that, Mikey boy?"

"Don't call me that," was Michael's immediate reaction, and Rose giggled. "Yeah, that sounds workable. We could do the last trip on an overnight, actually - or try to, if those of us saddled with parents can find a way to keep them from freaking out about pulling all-nighters."

"Oh, come on, are American parents really so overprotective?" Rose asked. "You're seniors, only two months away from graduating high school. Mum wasn't hovering over me that much when I was your age."

"Yes, but your mum's a..." Rose shot a warning glance at the Doctor, and he wisely clamped it shut.

"Well, I'm not sure about how representative my friends' parents are, nationally," Michael said with a chuckle. "Miz DeLuca is actually surprisingly chill sometimes, but the others - we've put them through a lot, I guess, and it makes them worry more, not less."

"Yes, I suppose I see how that could happen," Rose agreed. "Well, we'll sort it all out somehow."

"You could always take a side jaunt, and meet up with us on another weekend," Michael suggested. "It's a bit too bad that you showed up later than Spring Break actually. That would have been good timing."

"Never let it be said that my timing is THAT good," the Doctor drawled lazily, setting Rose off laughing again.

-----------

A number of notes and whispered conversations made the rounds at West Roswell High that day, and the initial plan, more or less as Michael had proposed it, went through consensus and received Max's ceremonial seal of approval, and so that afternoon after school, Alex and Isabel, Michael and Maria and Kyle gathered at Michael's place. The Doctor had mentioned to Michael just before he left for second period to tell everybody to 'pack light', but the girls especially hadn't been sure just how extremely to take that. "This is an alien planet that we might be spending days at, with a completely unfamiliar culture and fashions and society and technology," Isabel had pointed out to Michael when he expressed surprise at the size of her carry-on suitcase. "And where we won't have any money, as far as we know. I've taken the very minimum that I could to assure myself of some kind of comfort. Get off my..."

"Hey, I was just commenting," Michael quickly insisted. "I'm not on your case - or anything else."

Now the five of them were waiting in the vicinity of the TARDIS, with no immediate sign of Rose or the Doctor in the vicinity. "Hey, does something seem weird about the parking lot, honey?" Maria asked Michael, her nose scrunching up just slightly as she thought.

Michael looked - and immediately grew upset. "Frickin' hell, somebody jacked my bike??" Sure enough, the motorcycle was nowhere to be seen, and there was not even any trace of the locking chain around the solid metal rack that had been provided for him to fasten it to.

"Are you sure, honey?" Maria asked, stepping close to him. "You didn't just forget and park it somewhere else??"

Michael turned to stare at her. "No - you were right here with me when we came home last night, and I locked it up. I didn't touch it since then - I walked to the Crashdown with Rose and the Doctor, took the city bus from there to school, and you gave me a lift home in the Jetta." He groaned morosely. "And now if we're going to make our 'trip', I'm not even going to be able to try to track the punks down, or file a report with Sheriff Hanson or anything..."

"I think somebody just presumed to borrow it," Alex said, pointing out at the street. Sure enough, the bike was approaching, being ridden by a man in a brown suit, with a pretty girl in a pink t-shirt and cutoffs riding behind him. Both were wearing protective helmets, but the girl had apparently not chosen to roll her hair up under the helmet, because a curtain of golden strands was flying out behind her.

Maria held to Michael's left hand tight, and Isabel stepped near him from the other side, trying to calm him down and keep him from absolutely losing his temper. "Great bike, Mister Guerin," the Doctor said respectfully once he had brought it to a stop in its usual parking spot. "Hope you don't mind that we took a spin - somebody at the museum mentioned this Air Force base out near the Crash site this morning, and we couldn't resist riding out to take a look."

"How - how did you even," Kyle started, but the question became irrelevant. Once both he and Rose had climbed off the bike, the Doctor bent down to reattach the locking chain, but instead of locking it in the usual fashion, the Doctor used his sonic screwdriver. Obviously he had done the same thing to detach the chain in the first place.

"He - um, he gets very protective of that bike," Maria blurted out. "And we didn't know that it was you, he just realized that it was gone and..."

"Oh, oh so sorry, that really was thoughtless of me," the Doctor said, shaking his head slightly at Michael. "Forgive my impertinence?"

"Umm, well..." was all that Michael could manage immediately.

"I should have at least left a note," he finished, and then headed off to open the TARDIS doors. "Alright, we've got our co-ordinates for first stop already - all aboard!"

Rose shot her Doctor a firm look, but there really wasn't anything to say as the Roswell kids grabbed what bags they'd brought and filed into the console room. "Alright, umm... here we are, might as well get settled to enjoy the ride, but give the Doctor plenty of room," Rose advised the five of them.

"It certainly looks really cool," Kyle volunteered. "Is there anything you can tell us about the TARDIS that we'll understand?"

"It goes 'whoosh-whoosh', disappears from here and appears somewhere else, and this is where the Doctor controls its travel," Rose joked back with a big grin. "Sometimes the trip as experienced from inside gets a bit - rocky, but since we're just going to another nearby planet, in our own time frame more or less, I don't imagine this jaunt'll get too rough. What do you think, Doctor?"

"It's hard to give any absolute guarantees, but unless there's an unmapped neutron star somewhere in this sector - yeah, we should be alright," the Doctor said, already starting to work on the console. "Are you sure that you don't want to give them the full six-pound-fifty tour?"

"Not right this second, no," she said. "There'll be time for that - though I guess. Well, I hadn't thought about this, but we'll need to find rooms for everybody when we get where we're going, right? When it's just a few of us we can all stay in the TARDIS, but there's no living quarters for - for seven people, is there?"

"Not the last time I counted rooms, no," the Doctor agreed dryly. "Now, Max and Liz, Mister Valenti and Maria's mum, there'll be waiting for us here tomorrow night at eight-thirty, right?"

"Yeah, and you'd better not muff your landing time and keep them waiting all night," Maria shot back.

"Fair enough," came the reply, and the TARDIS took off.

It was indeed a fairly smooth ride, though rather exciting nonetheless. There was still a wormhole that the TARDIS seemed to be travelling through, even if the Doctor usually referred to those as temporal wormholes. It reached out fairly straight with only gentle curves, and the Doctor seemed to be trying very hard to navigate the TARDIS through it without ever touching the edges once - she couldn't make out if this was actually an important safety concern in this particular wormhole, or if he was doing it to amuse himself and test his piloting skill. (Normally it never seemed to matter how many times they caromed and rebounded.)

The full 'flight' took about three or four minutes according to Rose's watch, and she rather thought that the Doctor had won his test and flown them through without a single bump at the end - at least, not one severe enough for her to have noticed it certainly. As they came in for the 'landing' she heard the whoosh-whoosh sound of the TARDIS phasing into a new resting place, and this time she decided to wait for the Doctor to emerge from the TARDIS door first. He took his time about securing all of the console controls first, and then led the way out.

"Umm, hello, I'm the Doctor, and... well, I'm sorry, but it didn't seem like anyone was using this spot. Terribly sorry about the table - but tell you what, I've got a sonic screwdriver, and I'll see what I can do about fixing it when we're ready to go."

Rolling her eyes, Rose headed out the door herself, gesturing to the five Roswell kids that they should stay inside until they were signalled. The room they were in was about one and a half times as wide as the TARDIS was, more than twice that long, with a high ceiling, at least four meters, so that the police call box had plenty of clearance that way. There had been, however, a long table running straight down the middle of the room, and part of this had been broken off - snapped and crushed downward, it seemed, exactly as if the TARDIS had come down on it in a vertical landing, instead of simply materializing in place. She'd never really thought of what would happen if something occupied the space that the TARDIS was taking - had assumed that security protocols would always make sure that such a thing couldn't happen, actually. It seemed that like many things, the TARDIS' security safeguards were impressive but not foolproof.

Just what would such a large table be used for, and a room like this? A dining table for feeding many people? No - something bugged her about the layout, and then Rose got it - it was a huge boardroom, suitable for a huge conference meeting. So either they had landed in a great business company headquarters or... "Is this the planetary government?"

"You got it, lady," one of the pleasant-looking, (if upset,) humanoid aliens snapped sarcastically at her - talking in his own language of course, but it sounded like English thanks to the TARDIS' influence. "Township administration, at any rate, which is as close to 'planetary' as we get here. Want to see our justice department?"

"No, I'm sorry about the circumstances, but I really don't think that pressing charges is the answer," the Doctor said, extending a familiar piece of paper. "Here are my credentials."

The first native, (Kaaltan?) glanced at the psychic paper, and made a fiercely annoyed sound. "Unless I'm supposed to have very different eyes, that's no good mister. Looks entirely blank to me."

The Doctor took the psychic paper back, flashing it, and a worried look at Rose. She nodded encouragingly - she could see the detail clearly - the english words 'SENATE AUDITOR', with the doctor's picture in the top right corner, and what looked like his fingerprints and maybe a retinal image on a watermarked background - it seemed enormously official and well-researched to her. But apparently psychic tricks weren't working on these people - maybe it was because they were of the Antarian species?

"Okay, let's try something else," the Doctor snapped. "Have any of you heard of the Time Lords?"

There was several moment's silence before the Kaaltan closest to the door raised his hand. "Yes, I've heard the legends. Kids stuff, about time travellers showing up places in - in ships that are smaller on the outside, and just appear wherever they please..."

"Maybe we'd better take you to see the Governor," another native near the front of the group suggested.

"I think I can handle that," the Doctor said. "But my entourage is bigger than it seems, and we'd probably better all come together - at least, at first. We won't need to all crowd into the Governor's office."

So Rose knocked on the door, and the Roswell kids filed out. "You know," the first Kaaltan mentioned as he started to lead the way out of the room, "before you mentioned Time Lords, I sort of had the notion that you might be an inspector from the Rahlicx senate. You know, with a surprise audit or something."

The Doctor shot Rose a surprised look, and she just nodded back, not sure what any of this meant. It wasn't long before they were led to the Governor's office, (they must have inteed arrived deep within the colony's Administration offices,) and after they were left at the waiting chairs outside, there was a few minutes of hurried whispering, and then the Governor herself, with short, electric blue hair tightly curled, announced in a ringing voice, "I will meet with this Time Lord alone - none of his motley crew of Companions."

The Doctor turned to Rose to ask her to wish him luck, (which she daringly did with an innocent kiss,) and then made his entry into the mid-size office. The six humans were left alone, without even guards to keep them company, and Rose immediately turned to address Isabel and Michael. "The doctor has something that he calls psychic paper - it can make whoever looks at it see what he wants them to see there - it's usually very helpful in getting us established in a new or unfamiliar situation. But this time - we've come across people who are resistant to psychic powers before, and they usually recognize the paper for what it is, a trick. That guy - he said that he thought it was blank, but the idea of what was on the paper occured to him, hardly a moment later. Does that make any sense to you, with what you know of Antarians?"

The two of them exchanged looks, and then Isabel nodded. "I have what you might call a psychic power, but it orients on the subconscious mind most of the time - I can enter people's dreams, with a picture of them. Occasionally weve gotten it to work with somebody awake, but it still seemed somewhat - subliminal, not something that they were highly aware of. Maybe that's something generally true about the Antarian mind and how it relates to psychic powers."

"Okay," Rose said, seeing it. "Well, if we can count on the paper working subliminally, then we should still be able to get some use out of it, as long as we adjust our strategy."

"I'd be very careful, though," Alex warned. "If the mental connection is conscious to subconscious, then the worst thing is if it reverses - the subject consciously sees something that you have deep down in the back of your mind, maybe something you didn't want them to know about."

"Oh, yes," Rose said, seeing it, and being reminded of her first meeting with Captain Jack. "That would not be good."

"And it looks like the 'Time Lord' bit is working so far," Kyle pointed out. "Might as well see how far we can get with that instead of trying another gambit."

"Yes, I suppose so," Rose agreed, smiling at him.

------------

"The stories of the Time Lords are nearly forgotten in this sector of space," the Governor said, after offering the Doctor a beverage and completing the other pleasantries.

"I'm sorry to hear that," the Doctor admitted. "I'm glad that some of your people, at least, could recognize what they had come across."

"Not that I'm really serious about this part, but do you have any particular proof that you are, indeed, a Time Lord?"

"If you know of anything other than a TARDIS that could have materialized inside your conference room, I'd like to know about it," the Doctor shot back. "And even in the old stories, is it not true that only a Time Lord can pilot their TARDIS?"

"Not exactly airtight logic, but we'll move on," Governor Isthin continued. "The key point, I suppose, is what you want with us."

"My students and I are on a historical research project. We will need some accomodations, nothing too fanciful, and access to the historical library at your college."

The governor considered this for a moment. "And do you have anything to trade for these requirements?"

"There have been and will be times," the Doctor said coldly, "when much more than this would be offered as a free token of friendship to a Time Lord - and when the Time Lords would move worlds and save civilizations as signs of gratitude for small favors."

"Yes," the Governor snapped. "And also times when civilizations who valued friendship with the Time Lords were wiped out utterly. Would you care to shed any light on THOSE episodes??"

Many lifetimes worth of pain clouded the Doctor's eyes. "Just about what you would expect," he muttered. "Enemies not only of my people but of the forces of life and freedom themselves - targeting allies of our side as the opening preparations to battle. If you wish an exchange, I will see what I can do, though I do not arrive weighted down with treasures or trade goods. I have some knowledge of my own that I might be able to fairly trade for the knowledge I seek. As far as hospitality goes..."

But the governor, struck by what she had seen in the doctor's face, was already backpedalling. "We don't need to concern ourselves about that just now. I will make certain that arrangements are made for your students, and you will be invited to eat with the high council tonight, if it so please you. The college is a semi-independent organization, not beholden to my government, so you may need to negotiate with them yourself, but I will arrange a meeting and convey my sentiment that you should be granted access. Is this sufficient?"

The Doctor stared at her for a moment, then nodded gravely. "Quite sufficient. Would it be advisable for me to move the TARDIS from your conference room?"

She blinked. "Umm, I wouldn't think so. We won't be needing it for several days, at least... how long do you think your project will take?"

This stopped the Doctor short. "Only three or four days, I suppose, at the most. But - well, it might actually be better for the TARDIS doors to be more convenient to the other rooms."

"I'm not certain how many sufficient open spaces we have in the secure residential levels..." She sighed weightily. "But I imagine that something can be worked out."

------------

"Alright, you'll be just down here," on of the Kaaltan attendants said, leading the five of them through a doorway. (The Doctor and Rose had returned to the TARDIS to see if they could home in on an available space to re-park it, and Alex was starting to feel just a bit jumpy about being here without them and hoping to see them again soon.) "There are quarters here that will sleep one or two people comfortably - will you all require your own private rooms?"

The same notion struck them all at the same time - Alex met Isabel's eyes, as Maria clutched Michael's arm excitedly. Kyle just groaned softly to himself. "Umm - I think that my friend Alex and I can share a double room," Isabel said.

"We'll be together too," Maria and Michael chimed in nearly in unison. "I think that Kyle will be happy by himself," Maria added.

"Very well, let's see - if it's alright for me to ask, are you mated pairs? Married, or formally committed, I mean?"

"Umm - not anything terribly formal - we're... we're in love, and hope to progress to a formal commitment in a few years," Alex said. "That's the way things are generally done - where we come from."

"I - I see," the attendant said after a moment, and led them past a number of doors, without really volunteering a reason why. Were these rooms that were more suited for platonic companions than young lovers, in his opinion? Finally, around the end of a fifty foot long hallway, he opened up a door and presented the key to Maria.

"Hmm..." Maria poked her head in, and visibly struggled not to make a face. There was a comfortable looking bed, something like a queen-size, but that was just about the only attractive amenity - no windows, (those would probably be hard to find in such an underground community as this,) nothing at all like ensuite bathroom facilities, and a very small storage press.

Michael hesitated just a moment, looking over Maria's shoulder, and squeezed her arm reassuringly. Maria nodded. "Great, thanks," she said, hefting her bag and walking in. "Ten minutes to unpack and, umm, and settle in, and then we'll meet up again?"

"Sure," Alex told her. Quickly the guide opened up the room next door - which was rather different, with thick carpeting, risers, a sort of a shallow depression in the middle of the floor with a mattress in the center, and something that looked like a cross between a cocoon and a double sleeping bag on the mattress. What furniture there was seemed to be built into the walls, all at least five feet up. Isabel and Alex shared a look, and Alex shrugged good-naturedly.

"We'll take it," Isabel said with a bit of forced good cheer. Alex led the way in to explore, but kept ahold of her hand.

Eight minutes later, they came back out and met Kyle coming out of his own room. "What's your place like, Kyle?" Alex asked him.

"And what happened to our native - friend?" Isabel asked.

"He had other stuff to do," Kyle pointed out.

"Did he happen to mention where the bathroom facilities were?" Maria asked. As Kyle immediately began to rattle off directions, (he generally had a very good memory for stuff like that,) Alex sidestepped around the young athlete and poked his head into Kyle's room - which was by all odds much fancier and more 'normal' than either of the doubles, looking like it wouldn't be too out of place in a cheap motel or college dormitory, except for a few unrecognizable gizmos on the desk - and something a bit fake about the sunshine through the frosted 'window.' Oh well. Isabel's company would certainly matter more to him than anything else, for the few days that they'd be staying here.

"Well, hello my friends, and how are the local lodgings?" an upbeat British accent rang out, and Alex backed away to join his friends. The Doctor and Rose had just returned - in fact, they had apparently just stepped out of the TARDIS, except...

"Where's the rest of your ship?" Maria said, pointing at the doors of the police call box - which were only a foot from the hallway, if that. "You didn't drive it through the wall and into whoever's room is on the other side there??"

"No," Rose said, with a little wave hello. "He explained it all to me. Since the TARDIS can travel in time, it can also be used to fold space and play tricks with it. It's always been bigger inside than outside, like the magic wardrobe. Now it's just smaller outside than it used to be, or something like that."

"I put most of its outside inside the inside," the Doctor agreed with a merry laugh. "So what about your places?"

"They're alright," Michael said casually. "Now, you said something about dinner?"

"Yes, travelling across light-years does tend to give a man an appetite, doesn't it?" the Doctor agreed, clapping Michael on the back. "And I'll need to put in an appearance at this ceremonial council banquet - don't know what it's about, but whatever. Now, I'd like at least one or two of you to put in an appearance with me, but it'll be fairly dull and a bit hard to follow even with the translations I expect - and they might not be wild about finding seats for the entire crew. There'll be communicators inside your rooms, I'm sure, and you can get some food sent up - or ask for directions to a community diner if you're feeling up for meeting the locals."

"I'm with you," Rose insisted quickly. "Got all dressed up for it Antarian-style, as nearly as I could." She was wearing a definitely exotic rose-pink dress outfit that had short sleeves and fell all the way to her ankles.

"I'll come too, leave the fab foursome to their own devices," Kyle decided quickly. "Hate being a fifth wheel."

"Oh, and that's so much better than being a third wheel," Isabel stage-whispered. Kyle shrugged. The Doctor shot a look at Isabel, then turned to consider Rose and Kyle, and nodded just a bit. Rose looked slightly flustered, but also thoughtful at the same time.

"Okay, this way," the Doctor said, leading the way down the corridor, and gesturing for Rose and Kyle to follow him. Maria looked from Isabel to Alex.

"So, what do you want to do?" Michael asked.

"Our room looks good for getting together in," Isabel decided. "I - I'd rather not face a diner full of aliens - we don't know what their usual mores are for privacy in a public situation. Though I'm not wild about the thought of just ordering in some food and being stuck with what we get either."

"It'll be okay - more or less," Michael said. "Probably a lot of sweet and spicy stuff, if our tastes relative to humans are any indication." Maria made a bit of a face. "And we'll do our best to find something good for you guys."

"So what do we ask for, when we find the right number to call?" Alex asked. "Just food? The Doctor never said anything straight out, but I kind of got the impression that we shouldn't say anything about being humans from Earth, or any of the Royal Four stuff."

"Ask if they have any idea what to serve for visitors from faraway planets in general," Maria suggested. "They probably get a few travellers across the galaxy here, and probably not all of them will be able to explain what their usual tastes are. They'll have some idea of what's fairly inoffensive."

"I'm not sure if there's any universals in those terms," Isabel pointed out. "But maybe we'll be able to explain in general terms. Humans are - they're technically omnivores, but there's got to be some better technical term for it, to explain the exceptions, right?"

"Maybe we shouldn't go into so much detail," Alex said, as he went into their room to look for something like a phone or a walkie-talkie.

TO BE CONTINUED...
Read my other roswell stories!

"A man does not make his destiny: he accepts it or denies it. If the Rowan tree's roots are shallow, it bears no crown." From 'the farthest shore', Ursula LeGuin.

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Chrisken
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Re: Children of the Molecule (DW XO CC, Teen) Part 3 May 21 2009

Post by Chrisken »

Part Four

In a sizable room, many and many people were feasting and making themselves merry. Of course, the term 'people' might be considered misleading under the circumstances. Most of them didn't appear to be human in the slightest at the moment.

There were contingents who were singing the songs of battles and victories on distant planets - not all of them in tune, or agreeing on which lyrics to use at what time. Fantastically exotic dishes and roasts were laid upon the tables. At the head table, a lively debate was raging over the legitimacy of the reign of a particular Galactic emperor, and the historical circumstances of his downfall.

Sitting at the far left end of that table, keeping to himself, Max Evans reflected how tired he was of the pageantry of the annual UFO convention in Roswell, New Mexico, and how he wished that he really was off with his friends on another planet. Then the slight surreality of that sentiment hit him and a string of laughter escaped from him, which earned him a few dirty looks from the true believers who didn't think that there was anything funny about their conversation.

He attempted to console himself by scanning the UFO center of a glimpse of Liz, since just seeing her always made him feel better. She had applied for a spot waiting on the dinner, since the money was better than she'd likely get at the Crashdown, and her parents had enough temporary help to last them through the night, even without Maria and Michael being there. Max did spot her dark hair, wearing the black dress that had been provided as uniform, but she was across most of the tables, hard to spot among the other people who occasionally stood up or walked between tables, and he couldn't catch her eye because she was so busy delivering new treats and clearing away old dirty dishes of various descriptions. He'd have to wait until the dinner was done. It was so frustrating - there wasn't even really any reason for him to be there, it wasn't like the conversation up here was anything that Brody needed him for in order to make a good impression.

Soon enough, though, Brody Davis had gotten up and made a short but upbeat speech about the drive for truth and open-ness of mind that had brought them all to Roswell for the convention, and after the chocolate ice cream flambee had been served, there really wasn't that much to keep Liz and the rest of the wait staff. Once they were alone together, in the alley behind the building, Max pulled his beloved lady close to him for a kiss that he expected to be hotter than a solar flare - but after just a second he could tell that some part of her, (mind, heart, soul, whichever,) wasn't really in her response. "Okay, what is it?"

"Oh, I - I'm really sorry, I miss you too, and you really do make me feel..." Liz couldn't seem to find a word to end that thought, and settled for an excited shiver that did make Max's ego feel considerably better. "But I was just wondering about... well, our friends, Maria and Alex and Kyle and Michael and Isabel."

"If you're worried about them - well, of course, I am too," Max pointed out. "But until the agreed on rendezvous time, there really isn't any point in dwelling on worry, or trying to check up on them."

Liz smiled a huge smile, and Max suddenly realized that she thought she knew something that he didn't know - not a terribly rare thing for her to do, Max realized. "So you might think. But - well, I guess I didn't mention this. Michael passed me Rose's cell phone number in English class today."

"Yeah, so? If she's out of cell coverage range herself, what good will that..." Max trailed off, suddenly remembering something. "Oh, right, she mentioned something about that, when she was using the phone to try calling the Doctor last night, but I guess I didn't realize exactly what that meant. She can call anybody or have anybody call her, no matter where?"

"Yeah, something like that," Liz agreed. "I'm not sure if it's compatible with the local communication systems of every planet in every galaxy, but definitely if we call from here, she'll get it - no matter what planet she's on or what era in time. The Doctor installed some kind of expansion card that routes the calls through the TARDIS systems, she said."

Max considered that for a moment, and took out his cell phone. "Then I won't have to pay for long distance, I guess?"

"I wouldn't be surprised if it doesn't automatically add itself to your free calling plan - but don't quote me on that. You wanna give it a try?"

"Hmm." Max took a look at the slip of notebook paper that Liz presented him with, tapped the numbers into the phone's keypad, (more numbers than he'd need for an ordinary US call, but not that many more,) and then passed the phone off to Liz without hitting the green talk key. She nodded at him, raised the phone close to her ear, (and posing so that Max could bend close and listen in if he chose to,) and connected the call.

It rang for maybe seven or eight times, each a distinctive brr-brr that was probably the usual English land line ring thing, and then finally a voice came. "Hello, Lizzie? Is that you, dear?"

"Um, uh, yes, actually," Liz said. "Nice to hear your voice..."

"Yes, it's nice to hear from you too, but you'll have to speak up, hun." Now Liz heard the din coming through as background noise, a racket that seemed oddly familiar to her, and realized that Rose was nearly shouting into her end of the phone. "Was there anything you wanted? I'm sort of busy over here."

"No, umm - just wanted to call, and check in, make sure that you'd arrived okay," Liz said. "And our friends."

"Yes, we're fine - the Doctor and Kyle and I are at a banquet," Rose explained. "The rest of your friends are all together - shall I go find them as soon as I'm able and call you back?"

"Yes, of course, certainly," Liz agreed. So that was familiar about the noise. She and Max had been in a fake alien banquet, Rose was at the real thing - but the noise seemed to be just about the same. "Tell Kyle hi from me, and we'll wait for your call. Thanks."

"You're very welcome, Liz. Until then." It was easy to tell when the line was disconnected because of the background noise of the banquet suddenly stopping. L:iz looked up to Max, wondering how much of the conversation, especially Rose's side, he might have heard.

"They've arrived alright?" he asked with a smile, and that gave her her cue, as Max must have intended.

"Yes, and Rose will call your phone back, when she's free to talk and back with everybody - I guess they split up," Liz said, not wanting to go into all the details about the banquet yet. "So I guess I need to stay close to you until your phone rings again, if we can manage that."

"I'm sure I won't have a problem with that," Max said, pulling her close.

"And not get so, um, distracted with anything, that neither of us will even hear the phone ring," Liz continued with a slight smile on her face. Max raised an eyebrow at her.

In point of fact, they didn't have that long to wait before that phone rang again - they agreed to go back to Max's place, (though he'd have to drive her back downtown before the evening was over, really,) and he was just about to pull into the driveway when the familiar ringtone sounded. Liz felt sure that this was somebody else entirely, maybe Davis with a new Convention-related emergency or Maria's mother calling to harangue them for letting the others leave.

"Hello?" Max said, picking up the phone once his Jeep was no longer quite blocking the way and its front wheels, at least, were on the driveway of his parent's house. "Yes, hi Rose, I'm a bit surprised to hear from you so quickly, are you okay? ...Yes, of course, I'd love to hear from Michael, but - wait a second. Nearly two hours? Are you sure?" He put the phone down slightly and turned to Liz, who had already gone to check her own watch. "How long has it been since..."

"Fifteen minutes, maybe twenty." She shrugged. "I know that they're not supposed to be travelling in time yet, but it's a faster than light signal. Who can tell if it's supposed to react the same as a local call?"

Max just nodded - and returned his attention to the phone, because Michael's voice was cearly coming out of it now, though Liz couldn't quite make out what he was saying, just his identity. "Hey yourself, man - we just - well, Liz and I didn't quite make it back to my place. How's Kaalto - did you think much of alien-style dinner?"

------------

"This is a good idea," Alex admitted, perching himself on the edge of the bed in Michael and Maria's room. One of the 'alien things' that he hadn't much noticed on his first look through the room turned out to be a holographic display tied into the communicator system, and in addition to more obvious uses, (like showing the face of somebody that they were talking to,) it was apparently capable of scrolling through a sort of room-service menu with three dimensional full color, so that they could attempt to judge what might be appetizing before ordering.

Of course, even though sight was a bit better than names, it still wasn't the best sense for making those determinations. Sadly, though, the room was not equipped with smell-o-vision, so they were making do.

"Yeah. Hey, does that look promising?" Maria said, pausing on one particular image before clicking along. "A bit like a deep-dish pie with chicken and - and blue peppers, I guess, but still."

~~"Okay, yeah, add it to the list to try," Michael agreed. "Maybe blue peppers are great."

"Alright, just a second." Isabel had found a sort of touch-sensitive clipboard and was making notes on their 'list' by dragging her fingernail across it to leave a mark that would apparently last until someone pushed the 'clear' button down hard for a few seconds. "Garben dur fallizi. I hope that the TARDIS translation effect works well enough that we can be understood just be pronouncing the text that we see, for things like this."

"I would think it'll be fine," Alex said. "If it couldn't, or wasn't working at all on names of things that Earth doesn't have words for, then we'd see an alien alphabet after all, not Latin letters spelling out something that sounds a bit food-like."

"Worst comes to worst, we'll summon someone in here and point at the pictures," Maria agreed. "Okay, so what do we have already?" Isabel opened her mouth. "No, I don't really want the list of names that don't mean anything to me."

"There was the triangular bread," Michael rhymed off, "yellow drink, bowls of orange porridge, and... and the red pancakes. I think that was about it."

"Do we need anything else?" Alex asked.

"Maybe something that looks a bit meaty," Isabel suggested. "I mean, everything else, except for the possibly-chicken on the pizza, is more on the starchy side. Wouldn't hurt to try for some veggies, actually." Michael let out an impassioned groan. "Or fruits at least."

Maria started jumping around from section to section of the menu blindly, (since she couldn't make out on what basis it was organized,) and they completed the list with pink bacon and small black things that would be larger than cherries and smaller than apples. Alex took the list from Isabel and went over to the communicator to talk with someone in the Township kitchen.

"Ahh, alright, that's one problem solved," Michael declared, lying back in satisfaction and stretching himself out on the bed for the first time. "Oooh, and another one discovered, maybe. Honey, give this mattress a try, but very carefully. Maybe we shoulda done this before we took the room."

"What, what could be wrong with it?" Maria said, stepping over. "It looks like a fine bed."

"Just stretch yourself out on it. There's something about the mattress, or what would be a mattress in an Earth bed, I dunno even what to say about it, except..."

Maria considered the bed far more dubiously this time, and crept onto it a little bit at a time, first resting one leg and hand on the edge, then arranging herself on her hands and knees on top of the bed, and ever so gradually lowering herself down to a lying position, stomach downwards. Almost immediately she shot a little ways back up, and tried to arrange herself again, curled up on her side as if she were spooning somebody invisible. The look on her face was immensely dissatisfied.

"Yeah, I, umm, I kinda see what you mean." Quickly Maria arranged herself into a sitting position crosslegged on the bed. "This is fine, but - it's like there's crossbeams and water pockets inside, and - and whatever principles they're based on, they do NOT work happily with my body."

"Yeah, that's it," Michael said. "Isabel, did you or Alex check yours?"

Isabel had been watching all of this display anxiously from the desk, where she'd gone to switch off the visual menu. "No, umm... I didn't, and I didn't see Alex do anything like that. Not sure that he'd have had time to."

"To do what?" Alex called from the other side of the bed.

"Are you done with the order?" Maria asked him.

"Just, err, just waiting for a confirmation on how long it'd take with the pizza. I didn't ask for an ETA straight out, but they wanted me to stay on until they could tell me, so..."

"Okay, that's fine," Michael said. "It's just, there's something weird about the beds, and we might need to - ohh." Alex had put up his hand, and as Michael trailed off they realized that somebody was speaking over the room communicator again.

"Thank you, that'll be fine," Alex said, and turned away. "Nearly half an hour. I, umm, I did ask about delivering some of the quicker stuff first, but I guess they don't want to make a lot of trips."

"Oh," Isabel said, her face falling. "I, well, I understand how they feel, and I'm not so hungry that I can't last half an hour, but... but what if we don't like any of what we've ordered?"

"Then we suck it up and go to the dining room, or anywhere else that's more convenient and close to the kitchen," Michael suggested.

"Yeah, I think that's only fair," Maria agreed. "But, Alex - did they really talk in terms of hours?"

"Yeah, that threw me for a moment too," Alex agreed. "Translation effect, I guess. I just hope that it's not referring to a local unit of time that's more or less comparable to an hour, without doing a conversion."

"I guess we'll find out," Michael pointed out. "So what now?"

"We go and test drive our bed," Isabel said, reaching out to Alex for his hand. He offered it quickly enough, but raised one eyebrow in a silent question. "In terms of relaxation and general comfort, to start with, not actual sleep or - mutual affection, though we might try the latter out if there's so much time. Michael and Maria thought that theirs was - not good for sleeping on."

"Oh." Alex blinked. "I'd have thought something like a comfortable mattress would be universal, for humanoids."

"They overengineered it inside," Michael guessed. "Probably it's great for a native, but our bone structures and joints are out of tolerance."

"Ooh, I see," Alex managed as Isabel led him back out into the hall.

"What do we do about ours?" Maria asked Michael. "I mean, even if theirs is fine, they got lucky, and won't want to switch, unless it's a random thing that they don't notice. And if we ask for something else - then they may want to put us in a room that's far away, instead of moving new furniture in here. Heck, maybe if this is the normal thing, they don't HAVE any other kinds of mattresses."

"I - I don't know," Michael admitted, sliding close to her, (and feeling the discomfort as his bottom had to pass over a supporting rod,) and reaching out to stroke Maria's back comfortingly. "There'll be ways. For one thing, if they've got ropes, and straight rods, then we can work out something in the way of a hammock. This bedspread is crazy strong, it'd make a hammock fabric strong enough to take both of us together."

Maria turned to him, smiling a little, but her hazel eyes were still worried and a bit sad. "I've never tried a hammock except for summer camp when I was seven, and I didn't like it then."

"There'll be something," Michael insisted. "I could try using my powers to 'fix' this thing... or if that doesn't work, umm... oh, I know! The doctor's screwdriver. He can fix just about anything with that, I can tell. We'll just ask him as soon as they get back from their banquet."

"Right, okay," Maria said, letting out a long-held breath. "We'll have to tell Kyle to check his mattress in the single room, too."

"Yep." Michael nodded firmly. "Okay, so then, do you wanna see if this holograph thing has a general orientation to the township, for visitors?"

"Umm, sure, okay." Maria brought out the remote again, turned the unit on, and tried an icon that she'd noticed before, that might represent someone speaking into a box. "Orientation information for Kaalto."

"Program has been found," the holo crystal announced after a few seconds, much to Michael's surprise that that trick actually worked. "Beginning play." And the display showed them a sort of a cave mouth, covered by a huge glass and steel door, as seen from far above, in the middle of a barren, almost airless landscape.

"Kaalto township was founded two hundred years ago," an announced informed them, "by the compliment of the Rahlicx hybrid exploration and colonization vessel 'Cherilew'. Cherilew was on a mission to discover an oxygen/water world which could be settled by Antarians without requiring pressurized living quarters and full environmental recycling, but it failed in this primary mission and was unable to return to a previously established base world when an accidental fuel tank leak compromised one of its engines and poisoned hundreds of sleeping would-be settlers in a cryogenic suspension bay. Rather than further risk the lives of the rest of his settlers, the Cherilew captain landed on the nearest stable world, which they had surveyed two days before the accident, and began working on a community site that could keep the frozen volunteers in the riskiest suspension bays alive. The first pressurized settlement on the planet, which was christened Kaltonin, was a silicon-plastic tent inflated with oxygen/nitrogen air, but..."

Before too long, Alex and Isabel returned, reporting that they also had issues with the mattress in their room, and Maria quickly mentioned Michael's hopes for the Doctor and his screwdriver to save the night. The four of them kept watching the educational show about this place that they had ended up, and time flew to such an extent that Maria was startled when their delivery guy knocked on the door.

"How long was it?" She asked as the various dishes were set down on a convenient end table. "Alex, did you check your watch?"

"Yeah, I did - um, let's see - around twenty-four or twenty-five minutes."

"Great," Isabel said, and nodded at the courier. "Thank you very much." He nodded back, an oddly contented smile on his face, and headed back out of the room. "And now, it is time for the moment of truth." Isabel used a double-edged steak knife like thing to cut a huge square 'slice' out of the pizza, and transferred it to one of the hard plates that had been provided. (It didn't feel like metal, or plastic, more like porcelain or something like that.) From the plate, she lifted it to her mouth, and took a large bite including both a pepper and a chunk of the toppings that had originally been guessed as chicken. "And it's good!" she announced, her mouth still full.

"Yay!" Alex cheered, throwing his arms in the air and shaking them around like a crazy man.

"The crowd goes wild," Maria chimed in, matching his actions. Michael looked at both of them like they were going nuts. "Hey, so what? It's been a kindof stressful evening, our first trip to an alien planet and all, so if the two of us want to blow off a little steam by acting silly and excited over little things when we're alone, what does it hurt?"

"Nobody at all... um, gets hurt, I mean," Isabel agreed, nodding firmly as she swallowed the last of her bite. "Come on, guys, have a try, but one warning. It doesn't really taste that much like pizza, somehow, though it IS good, or at least I liked it - and the blue peppers are incredibly spicy."

"Okay, well, let's see. I'll just start with bread, bacon, and drink," Alex said. "Umm, if I can figure out how to get a serving of this bread. It's such a big - loaf or whatever, that the knives won't go all the way through."

"Well, the hacksaw looks big enough," Michael pointed out. "Presumably it's here for some of the food, and I can't see anything else where it'd be helpful." So Alex tried hacking off a slice of triangular bread, which he found worked quite well.

Dinner turned out to be an almost unqualified success, despite the exotic and unfamiliar nature of most everything that they'd ordered. The bread, or 'darva,' was the only thing that did taste more or like what they were expecting, but at least two out of the four of them approved of each item. Michael was the only one who had a real disappointment, in that he found the beverage they'd selected very sweet and sticky, but he made do with a cupful of water from one of the 'fountains' in the bathroom down the hall, (once he had figured out how to keep the water from foaming with soapy cleaning suds.)

~~They had more or less finished eating, discussing if they should try searching for something else helpful or entertaining on the holocrystal, and debating the points of the various food items, when the door just BURST open and Rose hurried in, carrying her cell phone. "Well, hello there, nice that you didn't bother to knock," Isabel drawled. "Or - or is something actually an emergency?"

Rose dragged herself to a stop and reconsidered, smiling apologetically. "No, umm... not an emergency, no, and I'm sorry about just barging in like this," she muttered. "But, umm, but Liz called while we were still at the banquet, and I - well, I couldn't spend long talking with her. I - I told her that I'd call back, and let you guys talk with her and Max, as soon as I could - and this was 'as soon as I could.' She sounded a little bit concerned."

"It's somehow nice to know that she worries," Maria decided with a lazy smile. "Oh, hi Kyle. Kyle had just shown up at the door, presumably trailing behind Rose's dramatic entrance, and the Doctor wandered into view as well.

"Yeah, sure, give her a ring back," Alex urged. "I'd be happy to talk to either of them." There was a muted chorus of agreement with that, so Rose focused her attention on the phone for a few second - probably identifying the recent incoming call and initiating a callback. Then she put the speaker to her ear, waiting through the ringing, and brightened noticeably before opening her mouth.

"Hullo, Max?" There was a short pause. "Yes, I'm finally out of the banquet, so sorry that I kept you waiting, but - who do you want to talk with first? Your mate Michael is right here... Yes, waiting, it's been nearly two hours since Liz called, it has to be." Rose switched the phone to her other ear in order to more easily check her watch. "Yes, I'm sure, but it doesn't matter. Here's Michael." She shrugged and passed the phone over, and Michael took it immediately.

"Hey, man, how's Roswell doing?"

There was a slight pause before Michael heard anything other than the indistinct sounds of Max and Liz conferring about something, and then: "Hey yourself, man - we just - well, Liz and I didn't quite make it back to my place." There was a short pause. "How's Kaalto - did you think much of alien-style dinner?"

Michael laughed. "A bit strange but good - triangular bread that was actually pretty normal otherwise, this sort of shepherd's pie thing with hot blue peppers, pizza oatmeal, fluffy sausage cakes and sweet strawberry bacon."

"Interesting," Max said, with the tone of voice that suggested to Michael that he was filing the information away to ponder later - and discuss with Liz, of course. "Is there anything else important that's happened?"

"Not to us, except that the beds suck and we're going to have to figure out what to do about them. I'm actually a little more curious about what this banquet was like than in telling you our stories about getting dinner and rooms, and the little history documentary or whatever. Do you want anybody else?" Michael turned to look at his friends, to see if anybody was expressing interest. Maria waved her arm and mouthed something with excessive clarity. "Maria wants your girlfriend."

"Yeah, like there's anything new about that," Max said with a little laugh. "Well, give Isabel some brotherly love for me, and we'll see you in - I guess it'll be a few days for you, or longer, and less than a day for us, until we meet again. Hey!" Michael had been about to pass the phone to Maria, but he hesitated. "Maybe that's why there was a different time gap between the phone calls on each planet - because the Doctor already knows he's going to come back in time on the return trip, he wanted to make sure that if you ring us two hours before you leave, it won't come through after you've already gotten back here. I mean..."

"This stuff gets too complicated for me, Maxwell. Ask Liz about it once she's off the phone."

"Yeah, but - any idea how long you were there before Rose and the Doctor left for the banquet?"

"Couldn't have been more than two or three hours."

"Huh." While Max mulled that over, Michael finished the phone handoff, and went over to where Rose was already telling Isabel and Alex about the grand banquet that they had been the guests of honor at.

The Doctor interrupted her gently as Michael arrived, though. "You mentioned something wrong about the actual sleeping facilities?"

"Yes, the mattress on the bed," Michael agreed, waving back to the item in question - which Maria was sitting on the far edge of, unconcerned about it as long as she wasn't trying to actually lie down on it. "Umm..."

"Let me see." The Doctor immediately hurried over and actually jumped back-first onto the bed, which prompted Maria to turn around and look to see what had bounced it - but she must have realized that they were working on fixing the mattress, and got up to sit down in a chair of uncertain construction instead. "Actually, I feel fine and even, dare I say it, dandy." Michael groaned. "However, I'm not even partly human, and I think I can see what the problem might be if I were. The flexible gel packets inside shouldn't pose a problem, if we can simply get rid of the supportive rods, which as you may have discovered, support in the wrong places and the wrong ways for human bones, especially that spinal column of yours."

"Okay, so can you take them out?" Isabel asked him.

"Not entirely out of the bed, at least, not without creating an enormous mess," the Doctor shot back gaily. "But I believe that I can do something just about as good. Each rod is held in place by telescoping support staffs, and if we can adjust those telescopes, the rods will retract down into the bed to the point where you wouldn't notice them any more." Something about what he'd said struck the Doctor as significant, and he got up from his supine position to examine the headboard, foot, and sides of the bed in some detail. "You know, come to think of it, I wonder if there's a user-accessible control so that these rods can be adjusted without any more extraordinary methods. But if not, then they certainly should be amenable to my sonic screwdriver, as you might have been thinking, Michael - or to your own abilities."

No push-buttons or dials had been found on the bed by the time Maria had finished talking on the phone and offered it to Alex or Isabel, though, and the Doctor got his screwdriver and went to work. Michael considered trying to use his powers on the bed - and then decided just to let the Doctor handle things as long as he was comfortable with that.

"So, what about you, Kyle?" Alex asked. "Do you think you need to check your bed to see if you can handle it, or are you just going to take our words for it, or what?"

Kyle considered. "Well, I'll give it a try, but if it's not great, I don't think I need anybody to go in and futz with its workings. Actually, there's a spot on the other side of the room that would be great for stringing up a hammock, and I always kinda liked them, so I'll try that."

"Do you need any help getting one put together?" Michael suggested. "Or materials to work with, that kind of thing?"

"Sure, I guess," Kyle allowed. "If you're not going to be busy with your girl."

"So, making hammocks is a guys' club only thing?" Maria chimed in.

Kyle let his eyes roll up just slightly as he pondered this, and then admitted, "Yeah, pretty much. No girlses allowed."

"Not even Rose?" Isabel chimed in, and started to giggle.

~~~"Isabel?" The Doctor looked up and fixed her with a fairly severe look, and for a moment she was feeling concerned. The Time Lord had a particular kind of authority that unnerved her like her teachers or parents never could. (Mister Valenti could occasionally match it, like that one time in Vegas...) "I'm sorry, it's just that I'd like to be turning in sometime before the early workers here start waking up. With that in mind, could you possibly come over and lend your powers to the bed repair effort? As soon as we're done with Michael and Maria's, we'll start on yours." His expression now was much more pleasant and friendly, if a bit tired.

"Umm, sure, okay," Isabel agreed. "What do you want me to do?"

"Come on, Kyle, Michael," Alex suggested. "Let's see what we can arrange in terms of a hammock."

"And leave the Doctor with all of the girls?" Michael pointed out with a smile of his own. But he went along with the other guys, after hugging Maria and whispering something in her ear. Maria looked after Michael as he left, and went over to sit with Rose and watch the Doctor and Isabel at work.

"So, what did you think of the banquet?" Maria asked Rose. "The food was all okay?"

"Mostly, there was some kind of spicy pudding that I didn't care for, but the finger meats were delish," Rose enthused. "I just wish that we could have stayed for the dancing." She shot a meaningful look over in the Doctor's direction, but he was bending over the mattress, pointing something out to Isabel, and didn't look up.

"Don't worry, there'll be another time and another ball, Cinderella," he said after a quiet moment, though, his voice full of promise and mischief.

----------

"So, come on, Kyle, man," Alex said as he held out a metal post that they'd scrounged and the borrowed bedspread for Michael to start joining them together with his powers. "How'd it go at the banquet... with Rose?"

"Okay, so has everybody figured out that I want to jump her by this point?" Kyle asked with a good-natured smile. "Or is it just the girls who are spreading the word? I know Maria had called it by last night."

"I don't need to depend entirely on Isabel for this sort of info, man," Alex insisted. "I think it's good. Not to make too much of it, but you've been a little reluctant to get back into the game ever since Tess - took off."

"Yeah," Michael agreed. "And that whole Shelby deal with your Dad didn't help your confidence, I'm guessing."

Kyle shot Michael a look that was less friendly before he continued. "Anyway, there's good news and bad news. She gave me some decent flirt, but - but I'm starting to think that it might be harder than it seemed to slip into the middle of whatever's going on between her and the Doctor."

"What makes you say that?" Alex continued. "Just what happened?"

"It was no big thing, just - I dunno, every time he said something, or even did something much beyond the trivial motions of eating - then I didn't exist anymore in Rose's galaxy." Kyle sighed with resignation. "And she made a big fuss about not being able to stay to dance with him, after Liz called her phone."

"She's one for the dancing," Michael repeated pensively. "You may have to step up and win her heart that way, Valenti. Think that your rhythm is up to the challenge?"

"Hey, I know my way around a dance floor," Kyle insisted. "Maybe not whatever freaky alien moves they'd have in a place like this, but I can bluff my way through reasonably well."

"She may have experience with a lot of alien places and times, but she hasn't been anywhere like here or Antar before," Alex added supportively.

"I dunno, it wasn't just about dancing, it was like - when she said that, it was something private between the two of them. I was right there, but I didn't know what she meant by it, the way that he did. And that's why I don't think she'd let me dance with her just for asking, the way she'd go for him." Kyle let a long breath whistle through his lips. "But I'm not giving up, let that be perfectly clear. A girl like Rose - she's worth the time and effort it takes to get to know her, to understand what she's looking for in a man and win her heart the old fashioned way."

"Best fortune with that dream, brother," Alex said softly.

"Thanks. So, moving on from the prospects of my own love life, such as they are - how do you boys feel about the rooming arrangements with your sweeties?" Kyle let out a suggestive laugh, and Alex rolled his eyes, blushing faintly.

"Hey, I'm looking forward to it, are you kidding me?" Michael shot back. "It's not like this is entirely unfamiliar ground for Miss DeLuca and myself. Just a nice change to get a chance to bunk down without worrying about her matre - at least, not until we go back to Earth to pick HER up too."

"So she doesn't do ANYTHING that irritates you when you're sharing space together?" Alex teased. "Hog the covers, kick you in her sleep? Nag you about unpacking your luggage neatly, and folding your dirty clothes??"

"All of the above, obviously," Michael admitted. "It's Maria we're talking about, right? ~~But when it comes down to it... just a second, hold this steady, right?" He held out one of the non-wood spars out in front of him, (some kind of very hard plastic, it seemed to be, in a vividly bright blue.) Both Alex and Kyle took his words as aimed at them, and seized one end of the rod each. Michael blinked slightly, then considered how well they were holding the stick motionless between them, and decided not to disrupt a circumstance that was working well enough. "I'm more than willing to cut her some slack, in a circumstance like that, and Maria also... she's not really one to be difficult just for the fun of it or to insist on something that she can see is bugging me. Where we mostly get into trouble is the places where the lines of communication break down." As he finished his explanation, Michael started to use the power of his thoughts to 'drill' through the plastic, and run heavy cotton rope, (or something like cotton, it did seem to be a natural plant fiber at least,) through the drill holes.

"Okay, good answer," Kyle agreed. "What about yourself and the lovely Miss Evans, Whitman?"

Alex flushed fairly hard before he even opened his mouth up to reply. "Well, first off, I do take the 'no kissing and telling' stuff very seriously, so you guys shouldn't expect much in the way of details. I - I don't think that we've gotten quite as used to serious intimacy as - as you have, Michael, but there have been a few memorable moments. Hopefully tonight will be one to add to the book of memories inside my head."

"Alright. One more question, man, you don't have to answer but I feel like I need to ask - Isabel TOTALLY takes charge when you're in the bedroom, doesn't she? I mean, it's pretty easy to guess that dynamic, just by watching the two of you in any other situation."

"Oh, you might be surpri-prised," Alex muttered, but the stammer might have ruined whatever effect he was going for.

It wasn't too long before Kyle had his hammock arranged to satisfaction, and a few more ribald tales had been told by that time - mostly Kyle bragging about Vicky Delaney and a couple other notable ex-girlfriends he had had before really joining the 'I know an alien' club.

Wandering back down the hallway, Michael and Alex found that the Doctor and Isabel were by this point hard at work on the bed in the Isabel/Alex room, while Maria and Rose had remained behind in Michael and Maria's quarters to keep talking among themselves. Michael lost no time in suggesting to his girlfriend that they should give the bed 'a really thorough test run' to make sure that the Doctor's labors had been successful.

That left Rose with only Alex to talk to as they waited for the final mattress conversion to finish. "So, is it different sleeping on another planet?" Alex asked the slightly older girl. "Can you tell?"

"Hmm." Rose considered that. "I can tell waking up on another world, I think. Something in the gravity and the air, or something inside my head if nothing else is really different. In terms of falling asleep - actually not so much, assuming that I actually CAN get to sleep."

"Is that so ~~hard, usually?" Alex asked, smiling just slightly.

"Well, it can be - depending on what's going on, how excited I am, what the noise and lighting levels can be," Rose admitted. "I usually manage to get enough sleep to tick over, even if it's not always at the usually expected times."

"Makes sense," Alex admitted. "Well, maybe you should go in and wish Kyle a good night. Just so that he isn't sitting up all night trying to figure out the trick of getting some rest."

Rose shot him a confused look for a second, then stood up and balanced on the tips of her toes for a second. "Sounds like a very nice idea, and thank you for it." And she headed off down the hallway to Kyle's door.

Alex smiled to himself and watched Isabel and the Doctor working. Hopefully it wouldn't take too much longer before he could use the bed. He did feel pretty tired.

TO BE CONTINUED...
Read my other roswell stories!

"A man does not make his destiny: he accepts it or denies it. If the Rowan tree's roots are shallow, it bears no crown." From 'the farthest shore', Ursula LeGuin.

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Chrisken
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Re: Children of the Molecule (DW XO CC, Teen) Part 4 Jun 19 2009

Post by Chrisken »

Part Five

"Ahh, yeah, this is much better," Michael admitted, wriggling his back into the mattress somewhat and squeezing with his left arm, that was going around Maria's shoulders in a somewhat odd way that the two of them had found by trial and error was actually mutually comfortable. "Gotta admit, the Doctor's a handy guy with that screwdriver."

"A *sonic* screwdriver," Maria repeated, as if wondering at the conjunction of concepts there, and she leaned her upper body across to kiss him soundly. "Well, I'm just glad that it's all over with, that the bed is decent, and that it's just the two of us until morning. Whenever morning comes by Kaalto time." One of her hands reached out under the covers and playfully wandered down Michael's chest, in a way that gave him no doubt that she was heading 'below the belt' as it were.

"Umm... as strange as it might be for me to say this - can we just hold each other and go to sleep, or try to?" Michael blurted out. Maria didn't say anything in response, but her hand stopped its movement and somehow he could tell that she was looking at him - or focusing her gaze on the dark spot where his voice had come from, at least. "I mean - it's not you, it's me. Of course I'm still hot for you, in principle, but... no, that sounds horrible, can I..."

Maria's hand made it up to his right shoulder, where it rested. Possibly that was about as far as she could get to 'holding hands' without figuring out where his left hand was, or contorting to bring one of her hands to her own right shoulder, which was where Michael's right hand was currently resting. "Of course that's okay, sweetie," she said, her voice a whisper that was somehow intensely thrilling to him despite the content. "But - well, I admit I'm curious about what's going through your head when you don't want to fool around, given a reasonably great opportunity. Is it something to do with the simple fact of being on an alien planet? Not trusting the bed to stand up to different positions and energetic activities? Something else?"

Michael had to laugh at the way she'd put it. "A bit of each, I guess. Not like I'm worried about the Kaaltans watching us, or finding out about what we've been up to - but it's something of a... not a culture shock, more like a concept shock I guess, coming here, relatively suddenly. Has me out of sorts. And the bed is a serious concern. We've got it tamed so that it won't cause any trouble for sleep, I think, but I feel like it would be a bit foolish to press the point."

"Alright," Maria admitted. "Anything else?"

"Hmm." Michael considered. "Nothing I can put my finger on, or even begin to explain."

"Alright then. Thanks for - well, for being honest with me." Maria moved herself a bit closer to Michael, her body pressing along the length of his side from underarm nearly to his toes, and let out an enormously satisfied sigh. "Goodnight, sweet dreams my spaceboy. See you in the morning."

Of course, it was hardly Michael's fault that this provocation seemed to set all of his hormones on fire. He hesitated only a second to see what response he could make without ending up in dangerous territory with the bed, as he understood its current condition, and elected to start with more or less a mirror of Maria's own gambit - bringing his free hand across and running it over the front of her shirt.

Maria's giggle seemed to echo in his ear. "I knew it. Sucker."

"Oh, just you wait until I get started," Michael breathed back, licking his lips in readiness. "Now, if things get at all out of hand, we may need to spread the thickest blankets out on the floor, and move down there. You ready for it?"

"Just watch me."

"Not yet, kitten." With as smooth a pressure as he could manage, Michael encouraged Maria up from lying on her side to a reclining position more or less on top of him, and then started to tug her shirt loose and up her arms, over her head. "Let's just see where things go from here."

"I'll keep my panties on as long as you want, lover, but it doesn't take a weather girl to know which way the wind blows. This is just going to get both of us racing to go for more."

And Michael had to admit that was probably true. He saved himself from admitting it out loud by putting his lips to work on something else that he knew Maria would appreciate.

------------

Isabel felt consciousness settle on her like a restless weight, and as she turned her head to examine the room, somehow in the darkness she was sure that it was still the middle of the night, even before she caught sight of the illuminated chronometer and forced her brain through the mental math to interpret what the designation of 4122 meant. They had worked out, with the Doctor's help, just before turning in, that Kaalto used a clock of 50 'hours', each divided into one hundred 'minutes', and that 0000 time was conventionally more or less the time that most people woke up from sleep and began their day, as opposed to midnight on Earth, which was closer to the time that an average citizen would GO to bed.

Without even knowing what she was up to, Isabel gently extricated herself from Alex's tender nocturnal embrace, climbed off of the mattress, and dressed once again in the clothes that she had worn on their arrival yesterday. (Part of her would rather have chosen new wardrobe, even for a middle of the night sortie, but on the other hand she rebelled against the prospect of putting clean clothes on her body without cleansing the skin through bathing first. That could wait until morning.) And apparently it was a midnight sortie into the township colony that she was preparing for, even though she was nervous about the prospect and would rather have had company for her first explorations, but then - Alex was sleeping so peacefully that she didn't have the heart to wake him, and she wasn't sure about bothering any of the others. Michael/Maria's room, and Kyle's, and their own, all had a kind of fingerprint lock that only the assigned occupants could open automatically, though they'd been keeping their doors open during the 'evening.' There was a 'doorbell' control that could be used to signal for the attention of those who were inside, but she wasn't certain if it would be loud and noticeable enough to wake up sleeping earthlings. And the TARDIS, apparently, had a Time Lord lock that only the Doctor could open now, and no bell or knocker that Isabel knew of that would signal those inside.

Dressed now, she slipped out of the room, neurotically checked to make sure that her fingerprint would still let her back in, and considered the hallway. It made her feel a bit less alienated to identify Michael and Maria's door, and Kyle's, and the slight protrusion of the TARDIS side, (including the door) from a nearby wall. Now, where to next? She remembered some directions that Alex had mentioned before they'd turned in, during the ordering of dinner sequence actually. If they'd had to return anything to the kitchen because it was unpalatable, (for them to dispose of instead of reserving, presumably, but they didn't really have suitable disposals in their rooms,) or needed more food, Maria had insisted that the four of them should venture out to the dining hall themselves, instead of presuming on official couriers, and Isabel had endorsed that plan, so Alex had looked up the directions for the catering location.

Now, that was a direction that Isabel could head towards, at least, and - well, maybe she could find a suitable midnight snack that would help lull her back to sleep. Anything in the vein of a milkshake or chocolate beverage would probably do. The first step in Alex's directions, though, were to head up the hallway in the 'unknown' direction, not going back the way that they had come when the guide had shown the five of them to their rooms.

Well, there was no help for that. Setting her head at what seemed like a determined angle, Isabel strode off down the corridor, made a right turn at the first intersection as Alex had indicated - and nearly collided into a Kaaltan girl around her own age. "Oh, sorry, excuse me, I wasn't looking where I was going..."

"That - that's okay," the other girl said. "Are - I'm very sorry, this is probably rude, but are you one of the visitors who just 'sort of dropped in' today?"

Isabel laughed. "No, I don't think that's a rude question, and yes, I am. I - I don't suppose you get many visitors here?"

"Not a huge number, but enough," the girl answered, sounding a bit defensive. "MOST of them land outside and come in through the airlock, though."

"Well... I'd like to say that I like to do things differently, but that's actually the genius of the guy who we were hitching a ride with."

"Is he really a Time Lord? What does that even mean?"

"I hardly know myself," Isabel hedged. "Just met him a few days ago. Listen - I was having trouble sleeping, and thought that I'd go down to the dining hall for a midnight snack. I don't know if you have somewhere else to go yourself, but..." As she said it, Isabel suddenly thought that maybe she would rather go with this alien girl somewhere unexpected, than continue on to the dining hall on her own. Should she not have even mentioned...

"Oh, that sounds alright," the girl said. "I, um, well... I have to go on duty in around an hour, and could do with some sustenance before I start work. Umm - do you know what sort of stuff we'd serve that you'd - you know, like?"

Isabel laughed. "Well, my friends and I got through dinner okay, and I'm just looking for a midnight snack to put myself back to sleep - or I guess I was." The two of them started moving again - Isabel didn't worry about finding the way herself, but just followed the native. "I'm Isabel, by the way. What's your name, and what sort of duty do you have that you have to show up around 4200?"

Her new friend laughed in a sort of twinkly way. "Hi, Isabel, my name is Brandah. And - well, according to my employment contract, I'm a troubleshooting software engineer for the public transit system." Isabel made an impressed noise. "In reality, that means that I stare at a bunch of display screens for hours at a time, waiting for them to flash critical error message boxes which tell me I have to make routine adjustments to the routing or other criteria for the program." She sighed. "You might wonder why this sort of thing can't be fully automated, but..."

"Actually, somehow I can guess," Isabel said. "The system was built with prefabricated components that weren't intended for an underground installation like Kaalto, the pre-boxed software was tweaked from the start, and there's no sufficiently highly trained programmer workforce here to rewrite it from scratch, even if the township government had the funds to pay for a project like that. So instead they just keep paying someone to keep an eye on it and make routine adjustments."

Brandah whistled. "Not a bad guess, though I'm not sure of all the details. Do - I mean, how did you..."

"My boyfriend's a computer programmer, though he doesn't work with the same sort of systems as you have," Isabel said. "I've heard from him about the kinds of snarls that projects like this get into. And we saw on the history program last night how Kaalto's founding was more than a bit - makeshift. From there I just let my imagination wander and come up with the worst stuff it could."

"Ahh, okay." The two girls reached the bottom of a stairway, (which Isabel did remember from her directions,) and Brandah led the way around a left turn. "So, where *are* you from, anyway?"

Isabel tried not to visibly tense. The Doctor had been quite clear that he didn't want any of his large crowd of 'companions' to be forthcoming with the Kaaltans about an origin on Earth, and his reasons had been persuasive. From all that they could work out, Earth would be primarily known here in connection with the story of the Royal Four, as the planet to which their DNA had been taken, and from which the reborn four would re-emerge. (It was hard to tell if they'd know that Tess had already left Earth.) If any of them identified Earth, there would be questions about Antarian hybrids, and it might occur to someone to wonder if some of their visitors were part of the Royal Four, as indeed Isabel and Michael were. Then there could be all kinds of expectations of them, and the township governor might not even let them leave.

"Umm, nowhere special," she muttered, wondering if this evasion would work. "We don't really have a proper name for our planet, even, because we haven't made contact with other inhabited worlds or species on our own. If it weren't for the Doctor..." She trailed out on that suggestive line before she had to make it a half-truth or worse.

"Hmm... okay. There are enough places like that around, I've heard that much. Usually they come up with some sort of term for the planet - sometimes it's a variant on the local word for 'dirt' or 'ground' or whatever." Brandah tilted her head in a gesture that Isabel couldn't immediately interpret. "Do you know if it's near Kaalto or not?"

"Not exactly," Isabel said. That was true, inasmuch as she wasn't sure HOW near it was. The hint had been dropped that they were close to the same neighborhood, in galactic terms. "Really, home isn't interesting at all, compared to a place like this."

"The air always smells sweeter one sector away," Brandah said philosophically. "Growing up here on Kaalto, I'm definitely of the opinion that nothing could be duller. In fact, I'm building up a 'get me out of here' credit fund."

"Really?" Isabel said, as they finally entered what looked like the dining hall. "Where would you go, when you've saved up enough? Do a lot of ships land here that you might purchase passage on?"

"Not a huge number - maybe a small economy liner from Sector Warp Incorporated, every other tarran," she said offhandedly, leading the way to a short line for a touch-sensitive patch of wall. "And one or two some sort of independent enterpreneur within the same time period. We're not THAT cut off from civilization."

"Sorry - how many days in a tarran?"

"Oh - forty to forty-two, depending on the intricacies of the calendar."

"Alright." Isabel nodded and tried to figure out where she wanted to steer the conversation next. "How much of what you'd need have you got saved up? And you didn't say where you'd want to go."

"No, I didn't, did I?" It had only been a few seconds since they'd lined up, but Brandah was nearly at the head of the line already. "Well, first off, I've nearly saved up the sum I'd need for passage with an independent, but I'd like to have more before I cut my ties. It can take some time to get settled on a brand-new planet and find good work, and there'd be a lot of expenses involved in that." Isabel nodded, though Brandah wasn't really looking at her but at the Kaaltan working the kiosk interface just ahead of her.

"In terms of where I'd want to go - well, the first stop is closer in towards the heart of the Antarian sector. Oooh, excuse me." It was Brandah's turn, and she didn't take long to place her order, wave a wristband at the wall, and collect a little slip of paper. And then, the belated realization hit Isabel.

All seven of them had been issued bracelets like that, after the Doctor had finished his negotiations with the Governor, and a flunky had explained that they were necessary as a source of credit for any economic transaction anywhere in the township. They had all been provided with a generous spending account as a 'token of esteem' for the Time Lord visitor -- and Isabel hadn't actually brought her bracelet with her!

She'd put it on immediately, of course, and hadn't expected to remove the thing, since it seemed to important. However, trying to sleep with the unfamiliar texture in contact with the skin of her wrist had been oddly distracting, and she'd removed it and placed it - she'd placed it in one of her shoes, with the mental reminder to put it on again in the morning. This wasn't morning yet, really - but still, how could Isabel have put her DAMN SHOES on without being reminded of the credit bracelet? Quickly she squirmed her feet around, wondering if the bracelet was still jammed into her footwear, but there was no sign of that.

So she opted for the easiest way out she could. "Brandah - I didn't... this is so embarassing, but I left my wristband in my quarters. I'll just go back and..."

"No, come on, I won't hear of it," Brandah said, returning surprisingly quickly from the nearest empty table for two that she had been waiting at. "If all you're after is a snack, it won't come to much. I'll put it on my own tab." And she held up her own wrist.

So, feeling very foolish, Isabel scrolled through another menu, asked a few questions of her new friend when she got to the beverage area, and finally ordered a medium-sized serving of 'Karvalla', which was supposed to be a tasty and thick 'dessert beverage.' Brandah swiped her wrist again, Isabel took her receipt, (which turned out to be metal instead of paper, as she had thought when Brandah collected hers,) and went back to Brandah's table, which a boy-girl couple around their own age were just settling into.

"Hey!" Brandah said, the very picture of assertive confidence. "I was here first. My breakfast is probably already on the way." She pointed to a little slot in the tabletop near one of the chairs, and then to a delivery robot that had just started to make its way down from the far side of the hall.

"Yeah?" the new guy said, sneering slightly in a way that made his violet skin iridesce slightly. "Well, why weren't you here then?"

"My friend needed a bit of help," Brandah said. "She's new here and she's a VIP, and I don't think it would be a great idea for you to cause trouble."

The girl gave Isabel a classic up-and-down once over look, (or was that twice?) and let out a soft breath. "She doesn't *look* very important, Brandah. Why should we take your word for it?"

Isabel wanted to jump in and take Brandah's side, but she wasn't sure what response would be appropriate, so she just tried to smile an assertive and confident smile of her own. Brandah didn't look like she needed much help, though. "Sorry, I didn't make the introductions. Neelee, this is Isabel, of planet Grarhk from the far side of the Coalblack drift, and a Time Lord's companion. You did hear that a Time Lord had dropped in on the Governor today, didn't you? I'd do the honors for your friend, but I'm afraid I haven't had the formalities yet myself."

Neelee made a face. "Brandah, Isabel, this is my good friend Toreg, from the South Plains Tenting, just transferred to the College." There was a pause. "And we're sorry about the misunderstanding, I suppose. Your table first."

"Thank you so much, nice to meet you, Toreg," Brandah said, dazzlingly graceful in victory.

"A pleasure to be introduced to you both," Isabel chimed in as Neelee got up. She waited two seconds after the other girl moved away before seating herself and slipping her receipt into the slot near this seat, which presumably was used to let delivery robots know where to take her Karvalla.

Brandah giggled like a picollo after Toreg and Neelee had left, but didn't volunteer any further insights into the confrontation. "So, do you have a history with Neelee?" Isabel asked. Apparently that idiom didn't translate entirely clearly. "I mean, do you often have - personality conflicts with her?"

"Oh, umm - not really that often now, mostly because we don't meet all that often," Brandah answered. "We had some memorable starworks when we were both in secondary classes together - started off friends when we were younger, but a few differences of opinion drew us apart and set the stage for a rivalry." Brandah's face fell as the delivery robot pulled up to the next table before theirs. "But in one way I guess she's got the last laugh - she was able to get into tertiary schooling, and here I am, working a job that's literally a dead end."

"No, what would be a dead end was if somebody WASN'T doing your job," Isabel pointed out, and got the laugh that she'd been hoping for. "So, tertiary schooling - that's the college that she mentioned, yes?" Brandah nodded. "Why couldn't you go if you wanted to? Was it a question of credit, or your secondary school performance being not good enough, or tests to determine who has the most potential to learn, or something else?"

"Yes, there are always standards tests, and performance evaluations," Brandah agreed. "The credit isn't a huge deal - I mean, if I'd been accepted, it might have been hard to scrape up the tuition, but I'd have found a way somehow."

"Would your parents have been able to help?" Isabel asked.

"Mom would do what she could," Brandah agreed. "In fact, I think that there was a portion of Father's inheritance that she'd been earmarking for my school expenses, until I told her that there was no need and she should just spend it."

'Didn't you ask for any of it for your travel fund?' Isabel wondered to herself, but didn't ~say that out loud. Maybe Brandah's mother wasn't happy about the prospect of her daughter leaving the colony, after losing her... her husband, or mate, or whatever, and Brandah didn't want to aggravate the issue by 'asking for help.' Isabel could respect that. "Do you have any brothers or sisters?"

"Hmm?" Of course, at just that moment the robot started to offer Brandah her breakfast selections, all brightly colored and not really resembling anything particular that Isabel could think of just at the moment. "One little brother, just starting secondary school a few tarrans back, so that's another reason why Mom needed the money. It isn't easy raising kids on a single worker's pay."

"Yeah, I guess not," Isabel admitted. "So, going back a bit, you said that the core of the Antarian sector would be 'the first stop'. If and when you left."

"Oh, right." Brandah devoured some kind of puffy pink items, and kept talking whenever her mouth wasn't obviously full. "That's where all the ships go, it's kind of a hub and spoke system. I - well, I wouldn't want to spend much time on Antar now, or Breoll, they're each a mess and a half. Rahlicx, or the other old colonies, Gevina and whats-its-name, they sound decent enough. People say that there's still danger of a bombing from space or an unexpected terrorist attack, but I've checked the statistics and the danger really isn't that great. They're big planets and every time there's an incident that kills a few dozen people, it's big news."

"Right," Isabel said, fighting an instinct to suck in a deep breath. "We heard some about the fighting between the five planets, and the background on Antar. Didn't somebody take over the planet, years and years back? The Doctor mentioned something about that."

"Yeah, Kivar Andraikus." Brandah dismissed him with a breath let out of the corners of her mouth. "He's bad news, but unfortunately nobody seems ready or willing to take care of him and send him packing yet."

Isabel hesitated, and then took a chance. "And - and what about the people who were in charge before him. Do you know anything about them, from school and such, I mean?"

-------------

Kyle groaned as he woke up and only just managed to avoid flipping the hammock and dumping himself down onto the floor. Getting down off the thing in a controlled manner was a somewhat tricky affair, but his athletic agility stood him in good stead, and soon he was off to the bathing room chamber somebody had pointed out to him.

It was a bit hard to make out the workings of the various appliances though, except for the toilet receptacle, which seemed to have obvious similarities in shape to similar objects on Earth, (not a perfect match, but close enough to be recognizable,) and few enough controls that Kyle thought he could figure them out.

Near the far end of the chamber, though, there was a prominent metal pipe, that reached up maybe four feet and ten or eleven inches off the floor, with a lever that could be pointed left or right mounted near it, and a sort of a wheel control built into the floor. Cautiously, Kyle tried moving the lever back and forth, but saw no effect to it. He tried with his sock foot, (not having put on shoes,) to pull the wheel towards him - but it wouldn't come. Ever so gently, he tried a pushing gesture. The wheel moved maybe an inch and a half - and a very gentle trickle of water emerged from the top of the pipe, falling back down it, onto the floor, and was consumed by one of several drains that were installed in the floor around this area.

Hmm. Kyle brought his hand close to the trickle - the water was intensely cold, and there was much too little of it to try to scrub his fingers with. Well, the volume flow issue he might be able to deal with, but first, a few precautions. Kyle retreated across the room, checked that the door appeared to be locked, and stripped off all of his clothing, from shirt to socks and everything in between, including undershorts. Returning to the pipe, he prodded the wheel a bit further away with his toes, and the trickle grew into a small fountaining of cold water. This was definitely enough to wash hands with - but still bitterly cold. A bit of experimentation with the back and forth lever showed that it controlled temperature. Kyle had left it pointing very far to the right, which apparently meant 'cold.'

Was there no way to catch this fountaining water and hold some of it in a vessel like a sink? Further inspired, Kyle noticed a few odd shapes sticking out of the wall in the area of the pipe and found that they could be pulled together, metal plates fitting seamlessly together to form a kind of watertight basket. They let him construct a small sink that would hold hot or cold water from the pipe, and he could pull the 'basket' back apart to drain it. Still seemed to be a bit less dignified than an Earth washroom. He also located a dispenser of powder that foamed up soapily when it got wet, and a drawer with a collection of sponges from fist-sized to double the diameter of basketballs.

With this much accomplished, Kyle managed to clean himself up quite well and had fun doing it. The process of showering seemed a bit strange, since he had to ramp the pipe fountain up to its highest level, so that the curtain of hot water arced more than seven feet high, and then stand in the path of its return trip further down, with wasted water coming down onto the floor all around him and getting drained up. As he finished drying himself off with the biggest sponge, and dressing, someone was pounding on the door.

"Sorry," he said, opening it from inside, and then blinked. There was Rose, wearing nothing much other than boxer shorts and a faded tank top. "Hey - don't you have plumbing inside the TARDIS?" he blurted out, unable to stop himself.

"Umm, yes, but the Doctor's using it," she said with a shy smile. "Don't - umm, don't worry, I'm not going to tie things up here for long, I know that all your friends are going to have to clean up, not to mention - any other guest of this particular corridor who have nothing particular to do with us. Just - need to take care of a call of nature, okay?"

"Well - sure, who am I to stand in the way of a damsel in distress?" Kyle said, hurriedly stepping out. Rose gave him just one grateful smile before she slipped inside the room and closed the door again.

Kyle took a moment to recover his balance, headed back up in the direction of the Roswellian's rooms, and then noticed Michael poke his head out of his doorway. "Oh, bloody hell Valenti, who'd you let into the can?" he asked. "We're all waiting for a shower here."

"Antarian showers are something else," he warned, "and if you were so impatient, why weren't you standing in line at the door yourself?" Michael just glared. "Don't worry, Rose won't be long - I think that she just had a number one to take care of that wouldn't be denied."

"Rose, huh?" The look on Michael's face became knowing for a moment that irritated Kyle - after all, he would have let anybody into the bathroom after him in such a situation, it didn't have anything to do with his having the hots for Rose, really!

"Yeah. So, how'd you and Maria sleep?"

"NO complaints," Michael declared. As Kyle came up to the doorway, Michael pulled the door open even wider and sort of leaned against it coolly.

"You'd *better* not be complaining, after..." Maria's voice came from deeper inside the room, and then trailed off. "Kyle, is that you?"

"Nobody else, Miss Maria."

"How was your night?" Unlike her topic of dialog, Maria didn't seem to be at all self-conscious about her nightwear wardrobe as she stepped into his field of vision from behind Michael. Her curly brown hair hadn't been tied up for the day yet, and the long yellow nightshirt adorning her body showed off smooth skin in the arm, leg, and collar areas. Kyle's gaze immediately focused on his feet, and in the progress, managed to see enough to notify him that Maria's feet were bare.

"My night, umm... alright, though the hammock was a bit more unwieldy than expected." Suddenly feeling foolish about his schoolboy pose, Kyle made a determined try for eye contact with Maria, and achieved it - aware of nothing more than her face, really, as he stared at it. She giggled faintly, as if knowing what had bothered him, and not caring personally about it in the slightest.

"So, what's the plan for today?" Michael said, his voice betraying a bit of impatience. (That did make sense. Michael had a bit of the posessive and jealous streak in him, and even if Maria didn't mind about showing off for her nearly-stepbrother and enjoyed watching him squirm, Kyle wasn't surprised that Michael might take a dimmer view.)

"Don't know really," Maria breezed back. "Some kind of breakfast sounds good, after getting washed up. I know that the Doctor wants to get started on his research. Wonder if he'll want any help from us with it?"

"He should," Michael grumbled. "We've got more experience in Antarian affairs than he does, even if we haven't ever been to an Antarian planet before this, and - well, you know."

"I guess," Kyle agreed. "When you see him, volunteer to go, don't just ask. Something just this side of TELLING him that you're going."

"Sounds good," Michael agreed. "Isabel can do that too, and you too Maria if you want, you've been around for enough interesting stuff."

"Yeah," Kyle chimed in. "I don't think I have as much 'experience' with this stuff as you guys do, and maybe Alex doesn't either..."

"...Except it's a sore point with Alex that he always gets left out of alien business, so he'll want to come along anyway, and maybe learn," Maria filled in. "Trust me."

"That does sound like him," Michael agreed. "Oh, there's Rose. So who goes in next?"

"What sounds like who?" Kyle looked up and saw Alex coming from the room that he was sharing with Isabel.

"Einie, meanie, miney, moe," Kyle immediately started chanting, counting off the rhythm between Alex, Michael, and Maria. Of course, as it always does with three people, the final 'moe' came back to the first person, and Michael was looking daggers at both Kyle and Alex before the rhyme was done.

"What do I get?" Alex asked.

"To go into the bathroom next, if you're ready," Maria filled in. "After which we can explain what sounded like you."

"Umm... okay I guess," Alex said, patting down his pajamas. "Do I need a towel or something..."

"No, just check in the cupboard for sponges," Kyle advised. "Not the ones that I left out, they'll be dirty, I couldn't figure out where to put them for cleaning."

"People here have alien powers," Michael pointed out. "They probably clean out the sponges themselves after they're done."

"Well, we can't do that," Alex pointed out. "Any other gotchas about the bathroom, Kyle?"

"Umm, let's see, where do I start?" Kyle said, falling into step next to Alex, escorting him to the facilities room. "The pipe at the back is a sort of combination sink and shower, and it spouts up like a fountain. You control the temperature with a back and forth lever, and the spout height with the wheel on the floor."

"Hmm, useful tips," Michael reflected. "Guess there's an upside to not being the first one into the alien bathroom."

"Yeah, I guess," Maria said, walking over towards the door, which Alex had closed. "I guess the TARDIS translation field doesn't work on picture icons - do you think this is supposed to mean that it's a washroom?" She reached out a finger to point to a sort of plaque on the door, with a line drawing on it in bright blue."

"Hmm, yeah, I guess," Kyle said, seeing a hint of the fountain inside the image. "Are you thinking of looking for another one nearby?"

"Well, why not, if carefully?" Maria said. "I think I remember seeing another sign like this when we were being brought to our rooms. And there really should be more bathroom facilities for all of these accomodations." And she headed off down the way that they had originally come to this corridor. Michael shrugged and followed along, and Kyle tagged along curiously.

------------

"I think I'll invite everybody over for breakfast in the TARDIS," the Doctor announced, once all four of them had finally finished going through the washroom line. "Umm, aren't we missing somebody?"

"I think that Isabel had some trouble sleeping," Alex put in. "She'll probably wake up good and ready in an hour or so. I didn't think that there was any need to disturb her now that she's getting some decent zzz's. She'll be much more fun to be around today this way."

"Alright, I suppose," the Doctor replied. "Want to leave her a note saying where we'll all be, just in case?"

"Sure - of course, that would require having paper and pencil," Alex admitted, smiling feebly. Maria handed over a scrap of envelope from a tiny purse that was hanging at her hip now, and the Doctor provided an elegant fountain pen. "Umm - if she knocks on the TARDIS door, will we be able to hear it?"

"I will," the Doctor said enigmatically, so Alex shrugged and started to write his note, being careful with the pen because it seemed on a hair trigger compared to the ballpoints he more usually worked with.

Once the note was put on the pillow next to Isabel, they all filed into the TARDIS, past the console room into a slightly crowded dining room. "Sorry, but I don't usually play host to so many people," the Doctor said as the kids took their seats at a table already set and filled with the makings for an English breakfast. "Had to stick extender leaves into the table, even."

Maria instinctively reached out to run her hand along the underside of the table, once she had taken her place near the middle of the long back side of it. As far as she could tell, the Doctor must have been making a joke, because the surface of it was unbroken, and seemed to have a texture like plastic. But once Michael handed her the basket of cinnamon toast, she didn't worry about extender leaves any more.

"Alright, what can we do to help you with your research?" Michael asked forthrightly after finishing and swallowing his first few bites.

"Umm... I don't know offhand," the Doctor admitted. "Come with me to the university library this morning, and we'll sort out what needs to be done once we're there. Is there anybody who isn't up for coming along?"

There was a long silence in response to that - until Maria and Rose caught each other's eyes, and something passed between them. "Actually, I thought I'd go explore and shop, if there was somebody else who wanted to come too." She waited for a few seconds. "Maria?"

Hating herself just a little, (though it was for a good cause in her mind,) Maria shook her head. "Thanks for the invite, but I think I'll take a raincheck and go with Michael today. Anybody ELSE want to escort Rose safely through the markets of Kaalto?"

"Oh, hey, sounds better than the library," Kyle blurted out, finally recognizing his cue. "That is, if you wouldn't mind my company, Miss Tyler?"

Rose shot Maria a somewhat uncertain look when she realized the point of the whole exercise, but then shrugged slightly and favored Kyle with a bright smile. "I only hope that the two of us don't get into too much trouble together." The Doctor suddenly looked up from his rashers and browns and cocked his head. "Umm - seriously, doctor, I'll keep us both out of trouble. I really can if I try, you know."

"No, that's not it," he assured her absently and got up, heading out of the dining room, leaving a mystified silence behind him. Nobody started up conversation, or even started chewing, so the entire company could hear the Doctor's footsteps as he moved through the TARDIS - and suddenly a faint pounding rang out - a delicate and feminine fist trying to make itself heard against a metal surface. "Morning, Isabel," the Doctor replied mildly.

"Oh, hello. You heard me?" Isabel asked.

"I could hear a spider climbing up the TARDIS, if I were inside it," he told her matter-of-factly. "Didn't Alex say that I'd be able to hear you in the message?"

"Yes, but I didn't realize that... that the threshold was spider footsteps." Now her voice was coming closer to the dining room. "So, what's for breakfast?"

"Lots of good stuff," Alex chimed in. "Not to mention plans, which are admittedly not quite so tasty."

"Oh, I see." And then Isabel did get a chance to see the fully laden table, as she and the Doctor appeared in the wide doorway together. "What sort of plans?"

"Kyle and Rose are taking off for sight seeing and shopping," Michael filled in succintly as Isabel made her way to the empty seat between Alex and Maria. "The rest of us are planning to go help the Doctor on his research. Who are you with?"

"With Alex, of course," Isabel told him with a smile. "Though I hope I'll have other opportunities with the shopping."

"We'll make some kind of time," Maria assured her. "Here, try these crumpets with a bit of butter and grape jelly. They're amazing."

"How do you manage catering like this?" Kyle asked the Doctor. "Is it something like a mini-vortex that you can send back from the TARDIS to Earth, to gather up groceries?"

"No, I could possibly manage something like that if the need was dire, but the explanation for this food is much closer to the mundane," The Doctor admitted. "When we're back on Earth, I go shopping and stock up. Fond of the English fare, so it makes sense to carry plenty of it."

"And how long does it keep?" Maria asked, gesturing to the bacon and the little silver dish of cream.

"Just about forever," Rose filled in. "The larder's adjusted so that when the door closes, time doesn't pass inside."

"In addition to more a usual cooling effect," the Doctor added. "Just for those who can't be cured of standing there with the door open, trying to decide what they want."

"Okay," Maria said. "And how do we get to this college library? Will someone be coming along to show us the way?"

"Yes," the Doctor said, checking his watch. "But not for about half an hour, Earth time, so there's yet plenty of time to eat up."

TO BE CONTINUED...
Read my other roswell stories!

"A man does not make his destiny: he accepts it or denies it. If the Rowan tree's roots are shallow, it bears no crown." From 'the farthest shore', Ursula LeGuin.

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Chrisken
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Re: Children of the Molecule (DW XO CC, Teen) Part 5 Jun 30 2009

Post by Chrisken »

Part Six

"Umm, hello in there?" The Doctor knocked on a solid brown plastic door and it swung slightly further ajar. He peered within, then back at the retinue of Roswellian teenagers who had come along with him. Michael nodded encouragingly and gestured for him to go further in. His eyes somewhat ill at ease, the Doctor pushed the door wide.

"Yehsss?" The scratchy baritone voice surprised all five of them, but the Doctor recovered composure first, nodding respectfully at the Kaaltan native wearing a kind of a long deep green dressing gown, standing just at the edge of his field of vision past the open door. "What is your business at the college of Kaalto?"

"I am an emissary of the Time Lords," the Doctor started confidently. "Come on a quest for knowledge, and your governor has given me permission to - to ask peaceful entry into the college library and archives. These young people with me serve as my staff and students."

"Well, come across the threshold, I suppose," he said with a weary sort of giggle that definitely wasn't about anything funny. Perhaps, with alien reactions, that was his version of a sigh. They filed silently inside and stood in a loose line, the Doctor in the center, on one side of the College's atrium. On the other side of the room, a few staff were quietly working on miniature computer terminals. "Your staff are not also of Galifreyan extraction, are they?"

The Doctor nodded first, not as an answer to the question, but a sign of respect to the man of learning for correctly identifying the name of the Time Lord's home planet. "No, they are not - I choose my companions from the worlds that I visit - those who are open to adventure and new experiences."

"Very well, Doctor. The College did receive word of your arrival from the Governor's office last night, and I have been granted the authority to listen to your petition, and rule in judgement of it, based on criteria suggested by the Board of Trustees. I am Precept Kivar Zeldiss, and..."

"Kivar?" The name escaped Isabel in a high-pitched squeak. Precept Zeldiss angled his head curiously in her direction.

"Excuse - excuse my friend," Alex volunteered nervously. "We have heard of - of Kivar Andraikus, the - the current ruler of Antar. He is part of what we have come to research."

"Oh, I see." Zeldiss seemed to be somewhat mollified. "Yes, I have encountered that reaction before, though it is an old and respectable name, if never particularly common. Somewhat frustrating to have it associated with so - so infamous a person."

"What does the name mean?" the Doctor asked curiously.

"Hmm - I suppose the transliteration would be 'Seeker after knowledge.' Appropriate for one in my position, and also not entirely innacurate for Andraikus, at least before he took power - he was a well known expert in mentalic power techniques, and some say his great political career started because the old Liaret king ruled that his researches were forbidden lore." Zeldiss met the Doctor's eyes intently. "If the subject of your research is Antarian, why do you come here, and not there, to learn?"

"Because part of our wish is to learn safely," the Doctor told him candidly. "From what I already know, asking too many questions about Kivar's rise, and those who ruled before him, might arouse unfriendly attention in Antar's capital city."

"And our modest home planet seemed quiet enough to be entirely secure, but close enough to the Antarian sphere of interest that you thought you could learn what you needed, is that it?" Zeldiss asked, and the Doctor nodded after a second. "Hmm?"

"Oh, sorry - yes, that's more or less it."

"And are those things all that you seek to know?" Zeldiss pressed him.

Michael tried to catch the Doctor's eyes, but he wasn't breaking the Precept's eye contact yet. There were other questions that they did want to have answered here - especially where Tess had gone and taken the Granilith, but asking about them straight out might be unwise, even here. "We may have other questions once we begin to research, but those are the ones we have to start with," the Doctor hedged.

"I suppose I understand that. Are you willing to subject yourself to the College's law and authority, if we grant you and yours permission to remain and conduct your searches?"

"We will follow the rules that you lay out," the Doctor said carefully. "That is only common courtesy, as your guests. But I will not have my friends, or myself, put on trial for some law that you do not inform us of until afterwards. That's not cricket."

"No, I suppose it is not," Zeldiss agreed. Maria grunted in surprise, probably stunned that the idiom 'not cricket' had translated so smoothly, given that they couldn't have the game here. Maybe the TARDIS converted it to something more literal. "Then I suspect that the first book that you should open and read - is the college's disciplinary code."

Michael stifled a groan, wondering how big the College's list of rules and regulations would be.

-------------

"Hullo there." The young Kaaltan, introduced to them as an undergraduate junior, seemed to speak with a definitely English accent, though that might just be some strange inhuman whim of the TARDIS' translation circuit. (They hadn't asked if it was capable of whimsy.) "You're new, right? I mean, not just to the college."

Maria paused for a moment before answering, and Michael bristled slightly at the fact that the question and remark had been spoken in her direction, but he didn't interrupt, so she answered. "Yes. Just passing through to hit the books a little, or whatever the local equivalent is. I'm Maria DeLuca, and thanks for showing us to our assigned room, even if Precept Zeldiss ordered you to do it."

"Oh, I don't mind," their latest guide said with a pleasant smile. "There isn't much chance to meet new people at a place like Kaalto - I mean, really new. Obviously, with more than twenty thousands of us here, there are always people who you've never really met, but they always seem to be the same kind of ordinary locals."

"Well, I'm not sure that we're that interesting just because we come from another planet," Maria disclaimed, hoping to use this line to fend off any questions about their homeworld.

"I guess. My name is Xamev, by the way, sorry I didn't volunteer that earlier. Shocking lapse in manners. So, just what is it that you want to find out?"

"Umm - details about the founding of your colony," Maria lied, "and Kivar taking over Antar, and other recent political events. We're working on a definitive history of the galaxy, and nobody has that much reliable information about Antar sector."

"Huh - I guess I never thought of people from so far away as being interested in us," Xamev pointed out. "Or the founding of our township as 'recent', but oh well. Here's your room." He gestured to the door, and Michael recognized the thumbprint sensor and thumbed open the door. Presumably, just because Xamev knew where their room was, didn't mean that he had entry privileges to it. The doors slid open just like on 'Star Trek', revealing a long table with alien computer access stations at every spot around it. There was a sort of a shelf against one wall, not covering the whole length of the room, but Maria couldn't make out just what was being stored there - long and thin, with some kind of writing up and down the 'spine' - maybe old fashioned books, or audio/video media or removable computer storage.

"One - one thing, and I hope that I'm not violating your species customs by asking," Xamev said to Maria as the Doctor and Alex filed inside. Suddenly nervous, Michael stayed right by Maria's side, and Isabel loitered on the other side of the threshold cautiously. "Your skin, Maria, it's so smooth and such a beautiful and exotic colour. Would you mind terribly if I - if I touched you? I don't mean to be too familiar, but I just - I wanted to ask for this one thing." His hand had already lifted up somewhat, and seemed to be straining to reach out for her cheek, though still held back.

Maria shot a look at Michael, who seemed to be containing his fury. In a way, she was sorry for his restraint, because if he'd let some of that displeasure out, it would have let her off the hook of deciding how to handle this for herself. "Umm - I'm flattered in a way that you asked, but - sorry, that just sounds a bit too weird for someone that I hardly know." Xamev's face fell. "That is, not on the face, I think that's what you meant, yes? But there's a custom with our species of touching hands with those we meet." She reached out her hand out for him to shake. "But - keep a wall up so that you don't connect psychically with me by accident, right?"

"Oh, of course." He seemed somewhat mollified as he pressed his palm against hers, even though he obviously didn't have any clue as to the precise mechanism of shaking hands. (She HAD said 'touching hands' to him.) "I hope that you find all that you seek. Best of days." And with a respectful jerk of his head sideways, he left them. Michael took Maria's hand in hers so hard that he nearly pulled her inside the room.

"So who looks up the disciplinary code?" Isabel asked.

"I'm already on it," the Doctor said, from the 'head' of the table. "You just explore in the computer system anywhere you like - no point in establishing an efficient search pattern for the information we need until you're familiar with the tools you'll be using."

It didn't actually take him too long to get through the rules - the Doctor scanned through 'the book' as a file on the College's networked computer system, and briefed them on the few hundred entries that seemed most likely to be relevant to them as visiting researchers. Meanwhile, the four young people started to search for basic information on recent Antarian history and royal politics.

"Oh, by the way, I got some 'girl on the street' input on this last night, by the way," Isabel said, as she tried to get the hang of paging over to a new index. "Well, girl in the corridor, I suppose, since we didn't meet on one of the few streets that they have in here."

"What, did you go off exploring by yourself?" Michael asked, sounding surprised. "Just when was this? I thought that we were all together..."

"Late in the middle of the night, when the rest of us were sleeping, honey?" Alex guessed, smiling tenderly at his girlfriend.

"Yeah, I woke up after just a few hours, and wanted to wander around and get something sweet and chocolate-like to help me get back in the mood," she said. "Managed all that and meeting Brandah too. I was careful when it came to asking her about Kivar and the Liarets, and she didn't really remember that much of what was covered in school - they had more Rahlicx history, and Kaalto itself. Just that the Liaret family line had been ruling for five or six generations, mostly fairly quiet and peaceful. They had a reputation as being 'men for the common people,' and were always butting heads with the families of entrenched old money or powerful exclusive guilds."

"I think that I like them even more now," Maria remarked. "But if the dynasty, if that's the word, was only five or six generations long, then did she know how they came into power? Somebody should have passed those details on. Was there another royal family, that the Liarets took over from, like Kivar took over and killed them?"

"I don't..." Isabel said, and was very surprised to get interrupted by a computer-synthesized voice from Michael's workstation.

"Negative. Before the accession of Granas the First, there was no royalty in power over the planet Antar, for a period of approximately five hundred Antarian years."

There was a hushed silence, before Alex asked Alex, "What is that?" His eyes were alive with keen interest.

The same mechanical voice didn't give Michael a chance to answer the question himself. "Program Identification: Interstellar history genie, version two hundred and five point seven ee. Do you wish the full build and authorship info?"

"No," Maria told it.

"Good thing, too," the Doctor said, almost talking to himself as he kept reviewing the minor details of infractions against the library property of the college. "Genie program like that, it'd keep us all afternoon if it recited who created and populated every part of itself."

"I just happened to find it in a program listing," Michael explain. "What is -" He broke off, considered, and then tapped the screen a few times. "I've put it on hold. Doctor, what's a genie program?"

"That's a generic term, if you'll excuse the word play, for an automated system that attempts to sort out natural language requests and give you what you want. In this case, I imagine it's an expert system that will access indexed files to explain parts of history to the questioner, in the level of detail you want, instead of letting you look up the files that you need yourself." The Doctor looked up at this point, as if the goings-on had finally caught his full attention. "Say, that sounds like just what you lot need to get yourselves started!"

"Yeah, and it might be a touch easier on you than learning their filing system, too, Doctor," Alex kidded him. "Okay, what do we want to ask him next?"

"Let me try again," Maria said, and waved at Michael to take the 'pause' off. After two unsuccessful tries, he did just that. "During that time where there was no royalty, who was in charge of Antar? Be descriptive in your answer, to around two hundred words, with attention given to the demeanour of the key factions, and the transitions between different eras."

"For seventy years after the fall of the last extant royal family, a single planetary council maintained strict order, believing that peace could only be kept if the entire planet was maintained under one universal law, seeking to eliminate all sources of conflict. Then that council, too, was overthrown, and each of the old Provinces of Antar formed its own regional assembly. The early Age of the Assemblies was considered to be quite orderly and benevolent, with a system in place where impartial representatives from distant regions would peacefully arbitrate conflicts. However, the arbitration system was subverted by networks of confederates forming agreements to rule in each other's favour, and was eventually no longer honored by enough of the Assemblies that the formalities were no longer attempted. This led to great rivalries between the Assemblies, to the point that many of them called out for Granas, a descendant of the old Royals, and a well respected philosopher, to assume the throne once again."

"My turn, okay?" Isabel said, and Maria nodded. "So Granas was - was related to the previous Royals, but that was so long ago that he's considered to be the start of a new dynasty?"

"Yes, or at least that is generally accepted. A perfect line of descent cannot be established, but Granas' stated geneaology was not questioned during his life, though the Kivarian regime has apparently worked to cast doubt on the royal connection of the previous ruling family."

"Pause it," Alex suggested. "That doesn't seem like it makes too much sense. If the Liarets hundreds and hundreds of years ago got thrown out, and the more recent ones were invited back as kings by the will of the people, does it really matter if there's any true DNA connection between them?"

"Maybe not, but I think that public spin in politics isn't always logical," Michael countered. "If he can influence some people by saying that they weren't 'legitimate' royalty anyway, Kivar doesn't have much to lose by making the claim."

"Except it might open him up for a counter-propaganda campaign contrasting the kings who were asked to rule versus Kivar himself as the guy who just took over," Isabel said. "And as interesting as this all is, I think that maybe we should concentrate on more recent events."

"Just a minute," Michael said. "I know it's not really on topic, but I want to hear what the long-ago Liaret kings got heaved-ho for. Then we can go to more relevant questions." Isabel shrugged agreeably, and Michael turned the voice receiver back on. "Very briefly, what was the reason for the fall of the early royal family, around the time that the strict planetary council was set up?"

"Contemporaneous sources are not in agreement about such details," the genie informed him. "Several writers active in court at the time speak of the Oceans tax scandal, in which great revenues were gathered from the populace and businesses in order to combat a growing persistent contaminant micro-organism in the Antarian oceans. After four years of the tax, a small group of iconoclast journalists publicly revealed evidence that a majority of the tax money had been diverted into construction funds for a new lunar city on Antar's furthest satellite. However, other references gathered by the Gevinar historian Maldar Wilcsinz have been used to argue that the Oceans tax issue was a manufactured issue, and possibly even that the information used against Vilander Liaret may have been falsified. Wilcsinz argues that the true reason for the 2618 overthrow was a growing tide of anti-royalist ill feeling among Antarian high society, perhaps inspired by the recent news that Rahlicx had replaced their own Feudal-nobility government and social structure with a computerized republic."

"Alright," Alex said. "So what should we ask next?"

"I'm sorry, but I don't think I know the answer to that question yet. Why don't you tell me more about your objectives?"

Maria caught the Doctor's eyes, and he was obviously just barely holding back a laugh. "Why not?" he said. "Obviously artificial intelligence is fairly advanced, even in a remote outpost like this. If the computer program thinks it can anticipate your questions by moving up to a higher level, then why not?"

Michael nodded decisively. "Genie, can you keep what we tell you in - in a locked file or something, so that not even Precept Zeldiss or - or the Board of Trustees could find out what we're here for?"

"Negative. That level of lock requires a class-A digital privacy seal, which is only issued to graduate students in good standing or higher ranks in the College. I'm sorry for the inconvenience."

"Darnit," Isabel muttered. The Doctor reached out across the table, realized that he wasn't going to get far enough that way, and got up to circle around and stand behind Michael. Alex's eyes brightened in pleasure as he realized that the Doctor was pointing his sonic screwdriver at the computer terminal.

"Class-A digital privacy seal granted, along with general Trustee-level access. Have a nice day!" the genie, (or maybe it was a slightly different part of the system programming,) chirped cheerfully.

"Genie, everything that we tell you or you tell us is now under our new digital privacy seal, right?" Michael asked it.

"Confirmed. In fact, our session up to this point has automatically been put under the seal. Do you wish to undo that action?"

"No, that's fine," he told it. "Okay, um, begin creating a file for our requirements, right?"

"File opened."

"First item, we - um, we believe that sometime in the last year, the Granilith returned to the Antarian sector, along with - with a person who we knew as Tess, who was associated with Ava, the bride of King Zan. Umm - oh, this gets complicated to explain..."

"Are you referring to the earthling hybrid so-called 'reincarnation' of Queen Ava dil Liaret, of the clan Derven-see out of Thrilacta?" the computer prompted. "Recreated out of Ava's DNA and earthling genes, along with her energy essence retrieved from the body shortly after her death?"

"Wow, yeah," Michael muttered. "That seal better be working."

"And I hope that nobody's listening to us in here?" Isabel said, looking around the small conference room that they had been given access to.

"Hmm - checking for bugs of that sort isn't my usual specialty," the Doctor admitted. "But I'll see what me and my screwdriver can do."

"So, do you have files on Earth?" Michael asked. "As in the home of 'earthlings'?"

"Minimal data available, including physical stats on galactic co-ordinates, orbital characteristics, physical characteristics including mass, radius, density, and gravitational strength, ocean and land makeup, and estimated sentient population. Native historical files not available, the only references in the historical archives involve expeditions from the Antarian sector, from the first exploratory team to discover sentient life on the planet, to recent political missions, including the Liaretian ship sent to hide the reconstituted Royal Four on Earth, and at least two confirmed Kivarian ships sent to find and eliminate them."

"Um, alright," Alex said. "Any further data needed to elaborate on the Tess item in the requirements file?"

"Two queries," the genie replied. "One - clarification of time frame. Please subdefine the term 'year.'"

"Use Earth solar year," Isabel instructed. "What's number two?"

"No actual query was supplied - what information do you require in relation to these background details?"

That stumped them all for a few seconds, and then Maria got it. "Right - you told it about Tess and the Granilith coming here, and got sidetracked defining the terms, but didn't ask it a question. Genie, append query: Where specifically did Tess land in the Granilith, and what has become of her, and it, since?"

"Item checks out. Next item?"

They spent a little while longer explaining the other things that they wanted to know, including what would be a good date and location for landing the TARDIS in Antar's past and learning more directly about the lives of the Royal Four and the prelude to Kivar's takeover, and a number of other details that people thought would be helpful. Just about thirty seconds after Michael started the search program running, there was a cry of intense agony from the hallway outside. Immediately Michael, Isabel, and Maria raced out the door.

"You lot are like that too, aren't you?" the Doctor grumbled towards Alex, even though he had hesitated after standing up. "Always running off at the worst moment..." But he shrugged and followed, Alex tagging along afterwards - after he made a point of returning Michael's console to a welcome screen. Only one of the five of them could return to their particular genie session, as he understood it.

The obvious source of the scream was lying on the corridor floor about thirty feet away from the door to their room - half on his back and half on his side, breathing raggedly, a Kaaltan about their own age or a bit older, probably an underclassman at the College. Isabel started to examine the stricken person, and quickly pulled aside a thick, loose jacket with a scorch mark in the panel. There were scorch marks underneath, too - a deep burn that probably went all the way down into a lung or some other similarly important vital organ. "Dammit, if only Max were here..."

Maria's reaction was a bit more practical. "MEDICAL EMERGENCY!" she shouted, a truly impressive bellow that seemed to shake the walls. "AMBULANCE! HOW DO WE SUMMON A HEALER OR A MEDICAL DOCTOR AROUND HERE??"

Alex had only taken a few steps out of the door at that point, but when he turned back it had closed and locked on him, and he lost precious moments thumbing the control panel to get inside and start looking for an emergency responses program inside the library menu structure. (Too late he realized that he should have just pulled up the generic voice response dispatcher and asked it for help.)

The emergency medical personnel did get there, and take the body away while performing extreme resuccitation techniques on it, but somehow in her heart Maria knew that they had arrived too late to save the young man's life. A Kaaltan man and woman in a different style of uniform, maybe College police, arrived and started asking them questions about what they had seen and heard.

Nobody was worried until the man shook his head and muttered, "Something here doesn't add up. I'm going to have to ask the three of you to come with me to Security Detention. We'll go over the whole story again, and see if we can't get to the bottom of it."

The Doctor hurried up to the officer. "Why the three of them? Are they bound by law for a crime?"

"Nearly enough, Mister Time Lord," the Kaaltan shot back. "I am not going through the formalities of laying charges yet, but the College Charter permits me to hold them for questioning on suspicion of murder."

The Doctor's face grew very serious. "You would be one of the College Baliffs, then?" He nodded somberly.

"This is ridiculous!" Michael explained. "There's a video camera right up there, covering the scene of the action, yeah?" He pointed at a spot up in the join between the corridor wall and the ceiling. "Just check the tape, or whatever, and you'll see that he came from one direction, already hit, and we from the other."

"Shut up, Michael," Maria insisted, as Isabel maintained a stony and reserved silence. "You're not helping."

"No, he is not," the Baliff informed them. "The reception of all surveillance for this hallway has been disrupted by an unusual kind of interference, and as far as I know, the problem has not been resolved. Asking us to check the records to prove your innocence could be seen as a naive attempt to establish your ignorance of that complication."

"We *were* ignorant, maybe," Maria insisted.

"I vouch for the behaviour of all three of them," the Doctor insisted to the Baliff. "We were all together in our access room, until the - the victim screamed. I was out the door by the time Michael got to his side, just as he was about to fall down."

"I see, sir. And just exactly what were you researching? And just HOW did you manage to hide your search file from me, using an access level that you have not been granted?"

The Doctor considered, then stayed silent. If he admitted anything about tampering with the library computers, that might be seen as incriminating him as an accomplice, especially in terms of the security camera. Only Alex really paid attention to his hand inside the pocket of his coat, which seemed to be manipulating something in a complicated way.

"I see, it's like that, is it?" the Baliff continued after a long moment of quiet. "Well, then. I'm tempted to take you into custody as well, Lord 'Doctor', but you're obviously a clever talker, and I don't especially want the Magistrate to get the notion that I've overstepped any boundaries when I next have to come before him. So..."

The Doctor had finished whatever he was doing in his pocket and moved on a conversational opening. "Forgive me for saying so, but in an institution of learning within a fairly small community like Kaalto township - you don't exactly have a lot of experience with murder investigations, do you?"

"No, I suppose I'm pleased to say that I don't. What are you getting at?"

"Just that - I know you'll try to do your job as best you can, and I can understand you being suspicious about us - but I'd hate my students to be stuck here because some crucial piece of evidence got missed. May I have your permission to investigate the circumstances myself? I've worked for law enforcement on several different worlds, back in my day."

The Baliff considered the Doctor's request. "I may regret this, but you've got a bargain, Doctor - on two conditions."

"Go ahead."

"One - You promise me you won't so much as step into that ship of yours until the investigation is closed. I've heard about how it appeared out of nowhere, so I expect it could disappear on me just as easily. I'm going to ask the Governor that you be barred from it, but I suspect you might be able to sneak past simple precautions if you had a mind to."

"Rose and I will need somewhere else to crash - we're used to sleeping in there, and all of our luggage is still inside."

"Rose is your mate?" the Bailiff asked.

"Oh, my, no - we're just friends, though she's been travelling with me for much longer than the student class."

"Well, such details will be handled by the Governor's office," the Bailiff said with a dismissive wave. "Secondly - you submit to a search for any tools with which you might falsify evidence or otherwise suborn the truth. I have learned something about Time Lords, you see. You are as clever as a Kafarran with your gadgets."

Once again, the Doctor seemed unhappy with the prospect, but allowed the Bailiff himself to conduct a search. First the burly Kaaltan came up with the sonic screwdriver. "Sonic matter manipulator, quite sophisticated," he admitted, "Could have affected our molecular relay systems, and explain just how you bypassed our computer security systems."

"I will require that instrument back when we are free to leave," the Doctor said coldly.

"If you clear yourself of the murder charge, I'll be happy to return it," the Bailiff answered. Next he fished into the pocket that the Doctor had been fiddling in. Alex's breath caught.

----------

"So, what *are* you interested in buying?" Kyle asked in a little bit of exasperation, as Rose led the way out of a stall on Kaalto's main public concourse. "We've looked at jewelry, music players, perfume, and footwear, among other things, any of which, no offense, I would have said were up your alley. The Doctor told us both that the credit we've been granted should stand up to a fairly impressive shopping spree. What's with acting like a window shopper?"

"Hmm - possibly just habit," Rose allowed with a pensive pout. (Lord ha' mercy, Kyle breathed silently to himself.) "Not so much used to having the money to spend, you know?" Before Kyle could start to nod, she took off on another tack, both conversationally and in terms of physical travel between the market venues. "It's more than that, though - I want to kick an experience off like this by buying something great."

"I think that we've kicked the experience off a while ago," Kyle grumbled, only just loud enough for her to hear. "According to my clock, the first half is getting close to wrapping up with no score, and then we'll have to wait through halftime and then kick again..." Rose had stopped and was staring at him with the most extreme look of blank stupefaction on her face, that Kyle broke off when he actually noticed her. "Sorry, American football references I guess."

"I don't even pay that much attention to *real* football," Rose replied. "Err - you know what I mean?" Kyle nodded, just to get off the topic. "Yes, I do realize that we've been looking a while, but I want the first thing I buy to be - well, not just great, if I have a chance. I'd like it to be perfect!"

"Then you've made your wish in the right place, meandering stranger," someone new told her. Rose and Kyle both turned to see what looked like a gypsy Kaaltan standing outside her tent - she was pretty in an alien way, with long curly black-purple hair worn loose down her back, and pale rosy skin that wasn't that different in shade from - well, from Rose's own, say. The long, elaborate, flouncy, and brightly colored outfit she wore only seemed to accentuate the 'Romani' effect. "Come, and let us see if I can find you your perfect wish." She reached out a hand.

"Watch out--" Kyle started, but he wasn't in time to stop Rose from reaching out and clasping the native. Gypsy-girl seemed a bit surprised by something, but that expression turned very quickly into a pleased smile. With that, Kyle decided to just come along and watch out for Rose as best he could - explaining might take a while and be awkward in this situation.

Once they were all three inside the tent, the shopkeeper girl offered them little flute-cylinders of one of the Antarian drinks that they had both tried the night before, and introduced herself as Emani. "I'm Rose Tyler, and this is Kyle Valenti," Rose explained. "We're new around here, just arrived recently."

"So I suspected," Emani agreed, taking a dainty sip herself.

"I - well, I'm happy to look at what you have to offer," Rose continued, "but promising 'a perfect wish' might be hyping yourself too much."

"Hyping?" Emani blinked. "I'm not sure if I've ever heard that word before. Like a starship, travelling in hyperspace?"

Rose immediately reassessed. Even the TARDIS translation field was having a problem with some English slang, it seemed. "Over-advertising yourself, I suppose. Promising more than you can deliver."

"Oh, let's just see. Come over and stand before the mirror," Emani insisted, and with a small shrug, Rose did, and Kyle followed. This mirror seemed to be real and conventional, as opposed to an energy field or whatever. (Michael and Maria had had a mirror field generator in her room - Isabel had insisted on going to use it after breakfast, since her own quarters hadn't had any such amenity.) It was also large, at least seven feet high, Kyle reckoned, and around half that wide. The dimensions reminded him of a carnival funhouse mirror, the ones that were distorted to show anybody as shorter or fatter, or whatever. But the reflection of Rose seemed to be quite accurate enough...

Until it changed. The sensation was somewhat familiar to Kyle by this point, and sure enough, when he looked over, Emani was frowning in a familiar concentrating way. (In fact, at this point, a faint sense of familiarity about the Kaaltan girl that Kyle had been faintly perceiving suddenly snapped into a sharper focus.) Rose, of course, didn't recognize the sensation of a mind-warp, and gasped in wonder.

After surprising him at the bathroom door that morning in her skimpy nightclothes, Rose had dressed for the day in a way that was conservative and casual at the same time - a blue jean jacket slightly open over a buttoned, collar shirt with a reddish plaid pattern, and blue jeans that were unremarkable except for one whole in the knee. Even her shoes were comfortable, practical, and relaxed, light white sneakers.

But of all that, only the shoes could be seen in the mirror now. Instead, that image of Rose was wearing a simply elegant black gown, with spaghetti-thin shoulders, silk-like fabric that clung to her figure, and a hemline that hovered somewhere about halfway between the top of her knees and total indecency. The black of the garment was only broken by a few accent marks in a rich slate gray, alien icons perhaps. Kyle had to admit that the vision was striking and beautiful.

But there was information that she didn't have that Kyle was FORCED to volunteer now. "That's a mindwarp," he hissed at Rose angrily, not caring too much if the shop girl heard that he knew the truth. "She's tricking us, literally fooling our eyes into seeing what she wants. And when she had you touch her hand, she was probably trying to get a psychic flash from you..."

Rose shook herself slightly out of the deep stare that had been focused at the mirror, and then turned to Kyle with a slightly puzzled expression. "Well, of course it's a trick, on some level - I'm obviously not wearing a dress of any kind, yet, so the mirror isn't showing either of us the truth. That doesn't mean that Emani wants to hurt us, or even to defraud us from credit. In fact, it seems like a clever and helpful use to put a naturally deceptive power to - demonstrating something conveniently."

She cocked her head, looking back at the mirror more critically. "And I'm not surprised or dismayed at all if she was looking through my head a little bit, not if this is the kind of thing she could pull out. I always wanted to design beautiful outfits, but could never get them to look right on paper like they felt in my head, never mind with actual fabric being worn by a person." Rose now turned to look back at Emani. As she met Rose's even gaze, the mirror turned back to Rose in denim and plaid shirt. "And you can make that dress for me, for real?"

"Yes, not easy, but for you, I will fashion it," Emani insisted. "The fabric is already here - Spider silk from Garvickle." She waved across the tent as she stepped behind a sort of sales counter. "I can cut and put the pieces together myself, but to do justice to your dream, I'll need to contract the services of a more skilled tailor for measuring the pattern. Could you please thumb the contract, and I'll take a swipe of your bracelet to verify credit and put a deposit hold down."

"Umm..." Rose looked around, bewildered, and caught the cautionary look that Kyle sent to her. "I'll want to look through the contract terms carefully, of course. And - and just how much will this dream cost me?"

The figure that Emani quoted didn't mean much offhand to Rose and Kyle - when they checked, they found that it was a hefty majority of the credit that she had available, but not so much that she couldn't do a little 'bargain shopping for accessories' and have some emergency money left over. It took Rose a while to be satisfied about the contract, specifically that it called for Emani to produce the dress that she had shown her, in a satisfactory condition, and not just any old dress. Emani herself seemed amused by the fuss Rose was making.

"I'm an artist, dear, not a charlatan, for all that I use some of the dramatic tricks," she insisted. "Nobody ever tries to back out of a contract once they see my goods - not since I started running credit checks to save myself the headache of completing a customized product for somebody who didn't have the money in the first place."

The tailor, Mizah Gorvan, insisted on having Rose strip to her underclothes to be painstakingly measured for a 'gown so enthralling,' and despite Kyle's eagerness to watch, Rose eventually had her way that only Emani would be present. As Kyle waited outside the tent with the bemused Gorvan, an upbeat pop melody that probably wouldn't hit the charts for years started playing inside. A few seconds later, the balled-up jeans sailed through the tent opening and landed unerringly in Kyle's arms. "You answer it," Rose called. "We're kinduv busy just now."

So Kyle dug out the cell phone, and found to his surprise that there wasn't a proper call coming in, just a text message. "Legal trouble at coklege. If u can, sneak in and access our reseasch file. I gave u access. Doc."

Kyle stared at the words and couldn't fight the urge to blink anymore. What exactly did 'Legal trouble' MEAN? What had happened to Kyle's friends? And why was it so important for them to 'sneak in' and access the file? (A research file, Kyle assumed. The doctor had been hitting the keys the wrong number of times, and that didn't seem like him.)

Despite his impatience, Kyle waited until the measuring was finished, and the tailor had stopped asking Rose questions about the dress, before he showed her the message. "Oh, no," she muttered. "Umm, what if you..."

"It might take both of us to get into the college without the legal authorities there knowing we've come," Kyle pointed out, "and if I know the doctor, he granted YOU access. He barely even knows me." Rose nodded. "I know that you're eager to see this dress ready as soon as you can, but they'll hold it for you. You've got a contract, right?"

"Okay, yeah," Rose agreed, and went over to the two artisans to tell them that she'd have to leave for a little bit. Emani assured her that it was no trouble, that she'd be able to try it on as soon as she got back, and they'd make alterations if necessary until it fit perfectly.

"One more question?" Kyle said. "Or maybe a few. Is there a back way into the college campus that isn't commonly used?"

Both the natives seemed surprised by the question. "Well, yes actually," Emani said. "I took a few art history classes, and - and when I was going straight from work, I went up to the ninth level, and straight down the blue-D corridor from there. There isn't even a door or a sign, just a fairly smooth transition from residential family units to student study rooms."

"Great," Rose said, smiling. "Can you just give us those directions in a bit more detail? We're not used to the layout of the township."

TO BE CONTINUED...
Read my other roswell stories!

"A man does not make his destiny: he accepts it or denies it. If the Rowan tree's roots are shallow, it bears no crown." From 'the farthest shore', Ursula LeGuin.

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Chrisken
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Re: Children of the Molecule (DW XO CC, Teen) Part 6 Aug 16 2009

Post by Chrisken »

Part Seven

"It's all your fault," Michael grumbled over across the narrow aisle in the detention center.

"Who, me?" Maria shot back immediately. Michael nodded slowly, as if to emphasize the guilt that he was laying at her feet. "What's all my fault? Do you think that I really masterminded a plot to kill that poor boy?"

"No, but you ran out first thing, as soon as there was a scream, no pause for discussion or caution. I only ran after you because I was worried about you getting into trouble alone, and..."

Isabel took a deep breath and preferred to use her 'Stop bickering, little kids' voice. (It would probably be years and years until she actually had toddlers to use it on, but in the meantime, Michael and Maria ensured that that particular voice got plenty of exercise.) She was sitting on the other end of a bench from Maria - they'd been put in a cell together, possibly because the Bailiff hadn't wanted to put a pair of mixed genders in together.

The center nearly matched the expectations that Isabel had of a ship's brig on 'Star Trek' or a prison in a far-future space station, with one exception. There were the bright gray walls with a faintly silver shine to them, bright lights, and cleanness everywhere, a kind of hush in the space, but force fields at the front of the cells were conspicuously absent. Instead, two grids of intersecting dull metal bars obstructed Isabel's view of Michael, including part of his face. She didn't mind that at the moment.

"Michael, cut it out," Isabel started out, as no-nonsense as she could make herself. "We all got up and ran for the door at around the same time. Maria only got there first because she was sitting closest. I do *not* believe that you were thinking of anything other than trying to find out who was in trouble, and helping him or her, and frankly I'd respect you less if you were." She sighed. "And Maria, don't rise to him. I know it's hard with Michael, but seriously, my nerves can't take much more of this."

"Okay." Maria sighed. "Would it be okay with your nerves if I asked how a cell like this can hold Antarians - or you guys? I mean, with your abilities..."

"Careful," Isabel muttered. What Maria had said was okay in itself, but they didn't want the authorities to hear anything about how Michael and Isabel were half Antarian, because they'd have more questions about how it had come about and why they didn't really look Antarian. "Anyway, the bars must be uranium, or some other really heavy elemental metal. Like the stuff that - that Pierce's organization used at Eagle Rock." That should be obscure enough. "I did try using my powers on it, just a little, though I didn't expect it to work. It's like the heavy atomic nuclei can suck up the energy that I send at them."

"Hmm." Maria considered. "I know that this is a stretch, but what about - about disintegrating me into my molecules and moving me past the barrier?"

"I can do that for you, sure," Michael said. "The tricky part is re-assembling all those molecules into a Maria once again. They don't really remember the way they were supposed to fit together before, like a jigsaw puzzle."

Maria's face fell. "Have you actually tried this? On what?"

"There was this stray cat that was hanging out on the fire escape outside his living room window," Isabel drawled in a bored tone. Michael shot her an angry look.

"Oh, Lemon?" Maria exclaimed. "Michael, how could you..."

"You're the only one who called him by that ridiculous name..."

"I tell you, I've never seen a cat with such bright yellow spots on his coat..." Maria sighed deeply and stood up to start pacing around the small space she was allowed to move through. "I remember now - Mom dragged me up to Phoenix for that stupid trade show, and when I got back you said that he'd just stopped coming around."

"Well, he had," Michael pointed out. "So I didn't tell you that I was involved in the reason why..."

"What brought up a discussion of Lemon the Cat's fate?" Alex asked, stepping into view of both the cells. Maria pointed at Alex and actually stuck her tongue out at Michael, who shrugged elaborately. "I would've thought there would be bigger topics for dialog at this point."

"Not until you got here, not really sweetie," Isabel said, blowing him a kiss. "Is there any news?"

"Not really," Alex admitted. "I tagged along with the Doctor when he went to talk to the dead guy's roommates, but that seemed to pan out like a dead end to me. No enemies except for a few rivals in his classes, nothing suspicious that they've noticed in the past few months. His parents live and work in the core Township, a synthetic food chemist and administrative assistant."

"They have fake food here?" Maria said, wrinkling up her cheeks.

"Not really the important part, sweetie," Isabel told her softly. "So, what else is he up to? The Doctor, is he going to talk to the parents?"

"To be honest, I didn't ask, sorry," Alex said. "Just that I wanted to go check in with you guys, and he mentioned a few things that I could ask the Bailiff if he seemed to be in a talkative mood."

"Okay," Michael said. "And what about K..."

Alex turned to Michael and silently shhed him, and Michael immediately got the hint and broke off. Alex hesitated, and moved closer to the girls' cell. They crowded close to their side of the cross-bars, as Alex dropped his voice. "I think he sent off a message, to the Super-cell, but I'm not sure what or why. We probably shouldn't talk about them or go to meet them until they initiate contact, just to be on the safe side."

"Well, I don't think that we need to worry about going to meet anybody, just at the moment," Maria pointed out, a bit more loudly.

"No, I don't suppose so," came yet another new voice - the Bailiff. "I know that your leader the Doctor seems to think that he'll find some little bit of evidence to set you free before night falls on the cave township, but I wouldn't count on that myself. Now, young messenger boy, what have you to say to me?"

"Have you been listening to us for that long?" Michael asked angrily.

"Um, how long?" There was a moment's pause. "My guard mentioned that Alex Whitman wished to talk to me if I could spare the time."

"Yes, a few questions if you'd be so good as to answer," Alex said, now looking totally at ease. "First, what's your name?"

"Excuse me??"

"You know all of ours - well, except for the Doctor, but that's what everybody calls him. You do have a name, don't you?"

"By tradition, it's not used or spoken of while I'm on duty," the Bailiff huffed importantly. "Like your friend, I am simply The Bailiff."

"What if there's another Bailiff, who you might be confused with?" Isabel asked.

"In practice, that seldom happens."

"But we're new here," Maria said, pressing the line. "We get confused SO easily."

The Bailiff sighed and surrendered gracefully. "My surname is Kavalos."

"Thank you, Mister Bailiff," Alex said. "Second - it's clear, both from Maria's description of what she saw, the medical tech's report, and the Morguer's examination, that Baren Ischith was killed by a beam of focused radiation - a laser beam of some description, that is. None of my friends were found with any sort of laser emitter. Doesn't this suggest that they're innocent, by itself?"

"Well, leaving aside the possibility that - that a 'murder weapon' might have been thrown away, hidden, or destroyed in the time between the crime, and the arrival of the authorities - that line of argument could only apply for Miss DeLuca."

"How do you figure that?" Michael asked, his voice starting to get calm and dangerous.

"I've had all five of you bio-scanned, and the results analyzed functionally," the Bailiff told them with more of a smile than anybody was comfortable. "Michael, Isabel - I suspect that I wouldn't be able to identify your species or your planet of origin even if I tried - which I didn't. Since you declined to give such details when I first questioned you, I am not going to try to track you down unless it seems a path that I must pursue for my investigation." He took a deep breath. "Where was I? Oh, yes - what I *did* find out was that your energy signature is close enough to an Antarian's that you are probably capable of the same sort of abilities that we are. An Antarian would be able to modulate energy and adjust the molecules of any transparent substance in such a way as to generate a 'laser beam', as Alex put it, quite literally out of thin air. And the air crystal necessary could be dissolved, its molecules released, in the next moment. The two of you are literally walking murder weapons."

"As is, by the same line of reasoning, every person of Antarian ancestry in the Township," Maria put in. "That must be a pain for keeping up law and order."

"Yes, but generally we are not a passionate or violent people," the Bailiff said with a dismissive wave of his hand. "Was there anything else - Alex?"

"Just one thing," Alex said, smiling secretively himself. "When the cameras in that hallway were turned off, do you know if any of the other security systems were also disabled?"

The Bailiff seemed to be confused by the question. "What other security systems?"

"I don't know, is there something for - I don't know, putting out fires, or catching someone on a - no, sorry, no rampages here on peaceful Kaalto. Never mind."

"No," the Bailiff insisted. "I *will* find out more about this, if there's any other system in that area that could possibly be considered the province of security, and what their status was." He took a deep breath. "The guard will escort you out when you're done, Whitman."

"Thanks." He reached out to brush fingers with Isabel. "Have to go back and see about a room for - Oh! One more thing, sheesh, I hate to keep coming out with 'just one more thing' again and again, but..." He trailed off.

The Bailiff sighed. "Yes, what is it?"

"I was hoping to come back here and bring my friends a few of their personal things, but I wasn't sure what would be allowed."

"Not much," the Bailiff told him gruffly. "The guard can get you a list. And they won't be here for much longer."

"What?" Michael asked. "We're not?"

The Bailiff turned around to fix him with a fierce glare. "Not at all. These detention units are only while we process the paperwork for you. Then you'll be transferred to permanent jail cells until your series of hearings is over."

Maria groaned slightly. Not trusting himself to speak, Alex made a faint wave and headed back towards the guard's station.

----------

It was surprisingly easy for Rose and Kyle to follow the directions that the concourse salesgirl had given them and sneak into the Kaalto college campus via the back way. Figuring out how to proceed once they were obviously inside the college sector, on the other hand, was not nearly so easy.

"No, that's no good," Kyle advised Rose, after they'd both poked their heads around an open doorway into a large open area filled with storage shelves of 'bookfilms' (or something else, but that's what they looked like,) and about half a dozen students ranged around a few computer tables and talking. "Yes, there's an empty table and workstation that we could get to, but they'll notice us, probably have questions. If the Doctor said 'legal trouble,' then we need to avoid attracting that kind of attention."

"So we'll need to find an unlocked room, with a computer in it, but nobody around?" Rose clarified.

"Yeah." And Kyle sighed, hoping that they'd be able to find such a place. "Come on, let's try down here.

It took a little while, and more run-ins with other travellers in the hallways than Kyle liked, but eventually they found their room, and it even had a locking mechanism on the door that Kyle could work out from inside. Soon they were on the computer station's general voice response mode, and Kyle was struck by the inversion of that scene in Star Trek Four, (one of the best ones really,) where Scotty tries to talk into a computer's mouse. This time, the visitors were coming from a less sophisticated place to more advanced computer systems.

"Let's see - um, do you have a user record on file for someone only called 'The Doctor'?" Kyle hazarded.

"Affirmative."

"Did he perform any searches through available data?"

"Friend or Administrator access required to track another account's usage. Please submit identification and authentication."

Kyle looked over at Rose. "Identify me as Rose Tyler," she said. "I hope that works - oh, and run the usage tracking under my access."

"Account for Rose Tyler is set up with biometric authentication. Please present your thumbprint."

"Um - where do I stick it?" she asked, after looking around the terminal.

That seemed to stimy the computer for a moment - apparently it didn't have a pat answer for such an 'obvious' question. "You can find the touch sensitive pad to the right of the keyboard interface."

"Oh, this? I - um, I thought it was for pen input." In fact, the pad looked like it might have been a part of a high-end computer terminal back on earth, down to the little black hard stylus that was clipped next to it."

"It is multipurposed hardware for that application as well." So Rose pressed her right thumb firmly against the black, slightly soft surface. "Thumbprint recognized. The Doctor performed one search - requesting access to the College's disciplinary regulations."

"After whoever it was got into legal hot water," Kyle guessed. "But that can't have been what he wanted us to collect, can it?"

"Hmm - no, I suspect not," Rose decided. "This must be something more secret, with all the sneaking around. This seems like a relatively civilized place - they can't be withholding legal documents from the people who need them most. It must be a search that somebody else went through." She took half a breath. "Computer, did the Doctor grant himself access to any other searches or tag them for later followup? Or other files, if he identified them specifically, not just giving himself rights for a large subject area."

"Working, please wait," the computer said, and they waited for nearly two minutes. "Seventy-three matches found."

"That's too many," Kyle muttered.

"Let's take a look," Rose insisted, and the listing flowed down the screen and scrolled away. After checking the first six or seven through, she was less certain.

"He must have granted himself access to every search a student's run today, just out of idle curiosity," Kyle decided. "Okay, let's tackle this from another angle. Does Isabel Evans have an authentication account?"

"Affirmative."

"Can Rose track her searches?"

"Affirmative."

"Show them."

"Three matches found." Rose looked through them more quickly than she'd considered the Doctor's results.

"Just asking about how to use the system, and general historical documents. I don't think she's the one either," she decided. "How about Alex Whitman?"

It was another few minutes before they finally found the Genie file waiting under Michael's searches - he was the one both Rose and Kyle had least expected to actually get results in a computer and library environment.

"Search was a 'history genie' session," the computer explained to them when Kyle asked for more details about Michael's most complicated search.

"A genie?" Rose asked. "Like a rub-the-bottle..."

"What is a genie, briefly?" Kyle asked the computer.

"A computer routine designed to intelligently perform a task on behalf of the user with only general or conversational directives, as contrasted to a conventional program which typically requires many very detailed requirements, specified in exactly the syntax expected."

"Sounds like a good idea right now," Kyle admitted. "Okay, has this genie finished the task assigned it?"

"Affirmative."

"Can we retrieve the results?"

"Affirmative. Result set will fill eighteen double-sided sheets of standard hard copy material..."

"Like a paper printout?" Rose asked, smiling. "You still use paper?"

"Not paper in the technical sense," the computer corrected her, "as it is not constructed from tree pulp, but a similar process working with synthetic plastics. Results could also be spoken out loud, which woud take approx two sectors, eleven minums of the day..."

"Okay, we don't have time for that," Kyle said. "How long to generate the printout?"

"Two minims."

"Do it," Rose said. "And - is there any way that we can get the results on - on something like a disk or a flash key or whatever - lord, I'm not good even with Ea - with computers back home..."

"Results can be written to a pocket chip," the computer informed them.

"Ooh, good."

"Please insert your chip into the writer located on the left side of the keyboard."

Kyle and Rose exchanged an exasperated look. "We, umm, we don't have a chip yet," Kyle said. "Is there - is there any way you can issue one?"

The computer considered for a few seconds. "Do you have your credit bracelets on your person?"

"Yes," Rose said. "Do we need to pay for the chips?"

"Negative, this unit is not equipped for processing payment or requisitioning chips. However, the bracelets have computer memory that can be accessed, and some of that storage is not used by the traditional identity and credit functions. One bracelet will not have quite enough free capacity to save the full search results, but two will be sufficient to split the load between."

"Alright," Kyle said. "Where do I swipe my wrist?"

It was less of a swipe and more holding his bracelet in an awkward position near the base of the screen as a considerable amount of data was written, and then Rose taking her turn. Kyle then collected his papers.

"Thank you," Rose told the computer, smiling slightly. "On my authority, all records of our session, and the genie search results, will be wiped when we leave the room, right?"

"Command logged and verified," the machine told her. "One notification before that event is fired?"

"Umm - yeah, sure."

"If secrecy is a concern, you should be warned that the use of your credit bracelets for mercantile functions before the data dumps have been retrieved and wiped from their circuits may reveal the presence of your search results."

"Oh, no," Rose said, looking back at Kyle. She really wanted to go back and collect her dress before meeting up with the Doctor - but Emmalin would want to swipe her bracelet and finalize the payment. She didn't think that the gypsy alien girl would be likely to turn them into the legal authorities for anything, especially after she'd gotten her credit transfer, but how could they be sure? And being unable to use the bracelets would be inconvenient in lots of other ways too, especially if they were still wearing them and couldn't explain to any of the Kaaltans why they would prefer not to swipe.

"We've got to leave now, anyway," Kyle said, crossing over and taking her hand. "It'll be okay."

"Yeah," she agreed, unlocking the door and stepping back out. As Kyle followed her, the computer beeped, probably to signal that it was following her last command and wiping itself. "We'd better go back to the TARDIS first thing, and stash the printout there at least. Maybe I can get the info transferred and off our bracelets by myself."

"Does the TARDIS have a computer built into it?" Kyle said. "Well, I guess it would probably need something of the sort to help the Doctor plot a course through time..."

"Yeah, it's hard to recognize any part of it as computer hardware, but it works like that," Rose explained. "I'll show you once we're inside."

-------------

Kyle felt nervous as they raced quietly for the 'back way' out of the College. He hadn't been at all sure that he'd be able to figure out the way back for this part, that wasn't covered in the detailed instructions that they'd got, because once they got inside the campus, they'd been looking around so much for a suitable empty room with a computer terminal in it. But Rose appeared to have kept careful track of each turning, because she led the way unerringly, (well, she took a few steps down one corridor before apparently realizing that something was wrong, and turning around, but Kyle didn't hold that against her.) Kyle just stayed a few paces back and followed, paying at least as much attention to Rose's bottom in tight blue denim as the details of the turnings. Hmm, maybe that was why he hadn't remembered in the first place.

So they made it out of the college, and back down to the edge of the shopping Concourse, and from there Rose led him on to the doorways by which they had first entered the public shopping and gathering area. Now, suddenly, as if her memory had run out entirely, she turned to Kyle. "Where from here? How do we get back to - to your rooms, and the TARDIS? I, umm, I can't really remember, I know I should be able to..."

"We took a local transit," Kyle reminded her, and Rose nodded with approval for that. "I, um, I think that the stop was over that way." He pointed off to the left as they faced 'out' the Concourse doors, and when she nodded again, but didn't move, Kyle decided to lead the first time. (Would Rose check out his backside as well? No, she seemed a bit too distraught at what had been happening to worry about things like that - just now.) It was easy enough to find the designated waiting area for those who wanted to ride the local - a small wheeled vehicle that made its way down a small reserved 'road' - really just two slightly depressed lanes through the walkway corridors. There were spots marked off every so often where pedestrians could cross the 'road' if no transit vehicle was approaching in either direction. From here, it looked like they'd need to cross to reach the waiting area for a 'bus' heading back their way, which they hadn't had to do when getting off.

Rose grabbed Kyle's arm just as he started to get to full walking speed in that direction. "Did - did we need to swipe our bracelets when getting onto the transit? To pay a small fare, that kind of thing?"

"Oh, I didn't even think of that, dammit," Kyle muttered. "If we did, then it's probably safer to just follow the transit route on foot. It wasn't really that long - only five minutes or so, and that thing must do forty miles an hour between stops easy. Allowing for the stops - well, it's possibly another mile, or three quarters of one, which is a fair hike, but... but we DIDN'T need to swipe," he finally said, and Rose nodded sheepishly. "I asked the driver about it, because we both assumed we'd need to pay, but he said the locals were free to everybody."

"Yeah, sorry," Rose said. "I remembered that bit just as you got up to forty miles an hour."

"Well, no harm done," Kyle pointed out, and the two of them smiled at each other as they walked over and - and couldn't cross the transitway immediately because there was a vehicle coming in towards the stop in the same direction that they had travelled in the morning. After it had passed, and while passengers were piling on and off, they crossed and took their place in the waiting queue. Kyle noticed at this point that the transitway made a fairly lazy ninety-degree turn to the right at this point, right after the stop - or before the stop, for the way that they wanted to go. So their vehicle would arrive from the right, as it were, slow down to take the turn, and then come into the stop. Possibly it was making some kind of detour for the shopping Concourse itself - Kyle hadn't seen any transit vehicles inside the Concourse proper, and it probably wasn't coincidence that there was a stop just outside these doors. Maybe there were transit connections for each of the major ways in and out.

Then Rose tugged on his arm, and when Kyle turned slightly, she leaned against his side and whispered into his ear. Rose wasn't particularly short, and Kyle certainly wasn't tall, for all that he had made the basketball team. What he lacked in inches on the court, he made up for in accuracy and agility - but anyway, she was able to get into position with only a bit of rising onto the tips of her toes and Kyle didn't have to bend down to help her. Something about the intimacy of the pose made him freeze in place anyway.

"What about the plastic printouts?" was all that she whispered, though. "You have them safe? We don't want anybody to see what's on them, especially not before we can review the results."

Kyle just tapped one of his baggy pants pockets and smiled at her. Just at that point, the transit vehicle did appear around the corner - a bit like the Roswell public bus, but less long, and without solid walls - there was a roof, and railings so that the people sitting down near the edge of the coach couldn't easily fall down out of it. This particular vehicle had been fairly full, and the number of passengers who disembarked for the Concourse weren't nearly as many as those waiting to go home after their shopping, or whatever. Kyle and Rose were the last two that were admitted for standing room on the coach, and four people who had arrived after them were quite upset at being told that they'd have to wait for the next ride.

"What's our stop?" Kyle asked Rose as the coach started back along its route.

"Umm - darnit, I don't remember seeing a sign or anything," Rose muttered. "Think I'll recognize it when I see it. There was a logo on the wall - like a silver Christmas wreath. Come to think of it, might be just 'Township admin.' That sounds familiar."

"Very comforting," Kyle muttered to himself, as the bus continued to speed up.

----------

But as it happened, the driver did call out 'Township administration' as the fourth-next stop, and as they were waiting for him to come to a stop, Kyle spotted the shiny leaf circle that Rose had mentioned. Their first choice for which passageway to take out of the larger chamber where the localway had left them was a mistake, because the hall itself was symmetrical, and both Kyle and Rose had forgotten to account for needing to cross the localway again, but that didn't cost them a long delay in the end, and soon enough they were finally coming up the hallway that they both remembered as where...

"What the BLOODY hell?" Rose called out, suddenly truly incensed at what she was looking at. A few workmen in dark blue uniforms were still busy at the TARDIS doors where they protruded out into the corridor, using small hand-held laser devices to put the finishing touches on - on a kind of cage, with the bars made out of dull grey metal. Quite obviously, the contraption was barring her access into the timeship, and it was hard to imagine any kind of a purpose to the cage other than just that. "Why are you doing this?" she screamed more clearly at one of the Kaaltan natives.

"Blocking access to this - this Time Lord contraption," he replied matter-of-factly. "Only way we could work out of doing it that seemed likely. Director of Justice signs the work order, but of course he doesn't provide any suggestions as to how to get a job done. Well, that's not his job, is it, I suppose. If Engineer Kralos was around, he might have had a brighter idea, but... well, you know what the Savarran flu is like."

"Not really," Rose said weakly, all the fire drained out of her when the workman had mentioned this 'Director of Justice.' Kyle supposed he knew how she felt, a little. If these 'legal difficulties' were serious enough that the township administration felt that the Doctor needed to be kept out of his TARDIS at all costs, then things were obviously serious. Was the Doctor in legal custody himself, or would they only have gone to these lengths if he was out on bail or the equivalent? Kyle had heard of the cliche of the cops telling a suspect 'Don't leave town', but confiscating or impounding a vehicle to make sure of it seemed to be a different sort of deal. Then again, the TARDIS wasn't really the equivalent of a car - it wasn't that much use for getting around within Kaalto's jurisdiction, and once the Doctor was inside it, there would be nothing else that the law could do to prevent his escape. Maybe these bars were just a second form of insurance, in case he was able to break out of jail...

"Oh, no, I guess if you're visitors, maybe you wouldn't," the workman told Rose affably, and then, visibly, the other shoe dropped. "Oh, are you - um, you're friends of the..."

"Of the Time Lord, yes," Rose agreed with as much pride as she could scrape up. "I'm his closest Companion, and was living inside the TARDIS here, as is my custom."

"I believe that alternate facilities will be provided for you, and his Lordship, but they're not ready yet," one of the other workmen said, from the other side of the cage. He tested it with a good yank and then put his laser welder into a belt pouch. "The kid was making a fuss about that."

"Yes, sorry," the first one who Rose spoke to agreed. "We're done here, I think." He started packing up his own tools.

"We can't even get through to my room!" Kyle pointed out. Actually, if he had gone edgewise and been careful about his posture and breathing, he might have been able to maneuver through the space provided between the cage and the far side of the corridor - and Rose too, as she was a slender young woman, and even the feminie curves she posessed didn't stick out too far.

"Yeah, I know," the workman agreed. "There'll be lots of complaints about this, I don't doubt, but what else could we do?" He sighed. "You can go around the other way, as I'll have to do to meet up with the rest of the crew looks like. So I'll show you the way if you need it."

"You're all heart," Rose muttered, but they followed him disspiritedly. Though neither mentioned it, Kyle was acutely aware that without access to the TARDIS, they couldn't upload the data from their bracelets to its computer, or even wipe them clean again in order to rely only on the plastic printout. There hadn't been much in the way of electronic gear in any of the guest rooms - a video player, and communicator, and the door locks themselves - but none of those seemed likely to let them work with data storage on their bracelets. What was their next step? Well, Alex and Michael had said that they'd been able to order food without paying for it the night before - but that was then. Courtesies would probably be much scantier now that some of their ensemble was in legal hot water.

The welder guy pointed the other end of their dormitory hallway, (not that necessary, Kyle had been thinking that it looked familiar,) and he led Rose up to his room, opening the door with his thumb. Just as the door was about to swing back closed and give them a bit of extra privacy, another door just around the corner opened up and Alex charged out, putting his foot in the way of Kyle's door. "Boy, am I glad to see you guys," he said, talking fast and excitedly. "Thought about trying to send you a message, but I wasn't sure how to use your cell phone number with these Kaaltan communicators, Rose, and figured that it might draw attention to you at..." He looked around, waited a moment, and stepped inside Kyle's room himself. Once the doors, (his own and Kyle's,) had closed, he finished: "--to you at the wrong time. You did get the Doctor's message, and go find the historical data we need, right?" His eyes were brightly hopeful.

"What the hell happened in there, Whitman?" Kyle asked irritably. "All we know for sure is 'legal troubles.' Who exactly is in what trouble?"

"He asked first, Kyle," Rose said, and under her disapproving glance Kyle pulled the plastic sheets out of his paper, and waved them meaningfully at Alex. (This had the extra benefit of unfolding them.)

"No, it's okay, I can explain, though it might take a while if you want more than the headlines," Alex said, sitting carefully on the edge of Kyle's Antarian bed, (which he had abandoned in favor of a jerryrigged hammock.) "Michael, Isabel, and Maria are being held by the college Bailiff on the suspicion of a murder, though the last I heard there's a good possibility that Maria may get released when she goes through processing, and be free by this evening. Not much of a case against her."

"Whose murder?" Rose had to ask.

"Umm - I heard the name, but - well, anyway, he's just some kid, a student at the college, who happened to get blasted near to where we were working. They - the three of them charged out to see what was wrong when they heard a scream, so they were the first ones at the scene, and the Bailiff finds that very suspicious, on top of us all being strangers."

"Great, so he's one of those type of lawman, huh?" Kyle grumbled. Alex shot him a puzzled look. "Not that that was ever one of my Dad's failings, but I know the type - small town sheriff who goes for the easy collar, doesn't like anybody who wasn't born within ten miles of where he was, and doesn't stretch for an answer that he wasn't expecting."

"Alright," Rose told Alex. "Well, as Kyle showed you, we've got your search results on a plastic printout, and haven't really looked at them. I'm not even sure what questions you asked your Genie. We - um, we also got the same data transferred onto our credit bracelets," and she lifted up her wrist to show it, "with the unfortunate side-effect that if we use them for paying for anything, whoever we pay might know that we've been futzing with them."

"Oh, I see," Alex said. "Not sure I can help with that, except for picking up the tab for dinner and anything else we need immediately."

"What about the Doctor?" Kyle asked Alex. "He wasn't listed among the people who were under arrest or whatever, so where is he?"

"Still in the College, I think, investigating the murder himself," Alex said softly. "He might want your help now that you've finished the other errand, Rose - the two of you are a long established team and I think he feels more comfortable with you."

"Maybe," Rose said, looking around as if expecting some ghost of the Doctor to confirm or deny that notion of Alex's. "Any idea of how I could find him?"

"Can't you just call him on your phone, or text message him back from the message he sent us?" Kyle said.

"Umm - I hadn't thought of getting his number from that message," Rose said, pulling her cell out again. "Didn't know he had a cell."

"He had a Blackberry, one that's possibly from my future but still recognizable, when the Bailiff searched him," Alex said. "They let him keep that, but the sonic screwdriver has been confiscated until the case is resolved."

"Oh, tarnation!" Rose muttered. "Without that little thing - well, we'll be unable to break your friends out of jail, which is probably the point, or something like that."

"What's a blackberry?" Kyle asked.

"Kind of like a pager that collects email for you and beeps when a new one comes in," Alex told him. "They're planning to build the technology into cell phones, and those going to be popular, I can tell that without having to time travel."

"Alright, I'm going to try ringing back this number," Rose said, and held her phone to her ear. "Ringing - ringing - hullo, Doctor? Yes, it's me. I'm here in Kyle's room with him and Alex - how's the investigation going? Alright, need any more help? ... Got it, okay, we'll sit tight for the time being. Listen, Kyle and I, we - we picked up your package, but there's a bit of trouble. We'll need access to another compatible computer, fairly soon - I was expecting to use the TARDIS, but - yeah, it's been sealed off already. Okay, I'll see you then. Best hunting, or whatever." She hung up the phone, and sighed. "No, he doesn't want me coming along to help just yet, he'll meet us by this evening if not sooner, and he suggested just asking if we can get a mobile computer brought into the room."

"Hmm." Kyle considered that. "It might be programmed to spy on us and report by a no-wires network, or something like that."

"Yeah," Alex agreed thoughtfully. "Well, considering the computer situation, does it make sense to do anything with what you've got on the bracelets beyond just wiping it? That we can probably do, and even if they can tell that's what we're doing, it'll just frustrate whoever's monitoring."

"Unless it gets them curious enough to search in person," Kyle said. "Where they might find these papers - or use some alien data recovery tech on our bracelets. It's hard to erase something so thoroughly that it can't be recovered, right?"

"For Earth computer tech, yeah, possibly the same with this local stuff," Alex agreed. "Well, come on, let's start by looking over the hard copy. We don't need to worry about anything else until after we've done that."

"Except possibly getting some lunch," Rose pointed out.

"Hmm, yeah," Alex agreed. "I'm feeling pretty hungry too. Should I try calling for takeout again?"

"Yeah, give that a try," Kyle said. "So we don't have to leave the area."

So Alex went up and turned on the little communicator set into the wall of the room.

TO BE CONTINUED...
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Chrisken
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Re: Children of the Molecule (DW XO CC, Teen) Part 7 Sep 8 2009

Post by Chrisken »

Part Eight

"Will the accused stand up?" the Bailiff asked. Sharing a look, Michael, Maria, and Isabel got to their feet in the small hearing room.

"Thank you." The hearing was being run by a young female Magistrate, whose demeanour so far reminded Maria more than a little bit of Judge Judy's. "Now, having heard the circumstances, I would like to once more urge the three of you to claim alien's privilege for us to contact your home planet and request their intervention on your behalf. By terms of the Shadow Proclamation, this option must be made available to travellers accused of a crime on foreign planets."

Michael blinked in surprise. "Uh, your honor, as we stated earlier, our home planet is not one that has formal diplomatic relations with any part of the Antarian sector or other nearby worlds, and far enough that any arrangements that you might make to send us there would be - be both costly, and take a very long time for us."

"Yes," the Magistrate said, "but once the process is begun, it does not necessarily have to be completed. Some things would be out of our hands."

"Your excellence, I protest," the Bailiff exclaimed. "I am very serious about this case, and..."

"I am not trying to be glib," the Magistrate said. "I am simply proceeding from the starting point that the alien's privilege is on the books, though we never expected to be applied to visitors from so far away, I realize. Last thing we want is the Shadow Proclamation coming down on us for violating Being's rights"

"But we'd need to identify our home planet, and its co-ordinates?" Isabel confirmed. The Magistrate slowly nodded. "Then I'm afraid we must decline that privilege."

"Very well." The magistrate tapped a button on her bench. "I hereby empower the Bailiff of Kaalto College Parish to hold the visitors Michael and Isabel in secure confinement, while conducting his investigation of the murder of Animon Soluz, for up to a period of twelve days. By that time, you'd better have some evidence to take to a Grand Panel, Bailiff."

"Yes, your excellence," the Bailiff muttered just as Maria was about to blurt out, 'what about me?'

"Based on the genetic analysis, and the reconstruction results that indicate she called, loudly, for medical assistance while the victim was still alive, I do not find sufficient reason to hold visitor Maria in confinement. She is to be released this hour, with the understanding that she is not to leave Kaalto township until the case is resolved or so authorized by this court. I believe that the - um, the vessel on which she arrived has already been sealed off, and orders regarding the other members of her party have already been given to Spacefield officials. Her name and likeness are to be added to that injunction. Is there anything else that any of the parties involved wish to bring to my attention?" There was a short moment of silence. "Then this court stands idle." She tapped a little knob on the bench, producing a dramatically deep sound effect, and rose to sweep out of the room.

Maria turned to Michael. "Hang in there, spaceboy," she said, hugging him as best she could with the wrist restraints they both wore.

"Hey!" one of the Bailiff's guards exclaimed.

"Take a chill pill, bud," Isabel muttered. "It's just a hug goodbye. I didn't get one with my guy, and if you want to pull my friends apart, you're going to have to go through me."

Maria wasn't entirely sure that it was 'just' a hug goodbye. Something strange seemed to seep from Michael's hands into her body as he held her, not something tangible, but - the wrist restraints were supposed to keep him and Isabel from using their powers. So what did that leave?

It didn't take all of the Magistrate's hour for Maria to be set free - she was escorted back to the holding facility where she'd shared a room with Isabel, and given back her credit bracelet and a few personal effects that had been confiscated. Just about the time that she was expecting that she'd be told she was free to go, who should walk through the door but the Doctor.

"Sorry, sorry, I meant to make it back in time for the hearing, but I got held up," he told her. "How are Michael and Isabel doing?"

"About as well as could be expected," she told him. "But I'm better off - the Magistrate set me free! More or less."

"Yes, I heard about that." The Doctor turned to the guardsman. "Free as in I can just walk off with her right this minute?"

"One more thing," the guard said, and had Maria face a little prism-shaped object on a four-legged stand. Maria knew what this thing was, and didn't object until it was over.

"This was for the 'do not sell passage to these people' sign that you'll send down to the space field?" Maria asked, and the jail guard nodded. "Why couldn't you use the image of me that you took when I was first taken into custody?"

"I dunno, procedure," he replied laconically. "Or that you look a little less 'captive' now, which should match the look you'll have if you're trying to escape the township."

Maria considered that a moment, and then walked on out of the security office suite, the Doctor right behind her. "Okay, so where's the rest of the gang?" she asked. "Alex, Kyle, and Rose are all okay, right?"

"Yeah, they're hanging out back at Kyle's room, last I heard," the Doctor told her. "If it's okay, though, I hadn't planned to take you to meet them right now."

"Um - why not?"

"Because I still need to solve the case, and I think you're the best one to help me out with a little detective work."

Maria stopped short so suddenly that she had to windmill her arms a little to keep from falling over, and then reached out and grabbed the Doctor's arm, which helped steady her. "Why me? I mean, I've done a little investigative work, but - but only with Michael."

"That's good," he said. "I'm not sure why I picked you, but that doesn't mean I'm about to reconsider. Will you consider assisting me in order to get your regular partner his freedom?"

Maria took a short breath. "Of course, I'd do anything for Michael - and I think I trust you that this is the best way to help him. So where do we go from here?"

"Probably first, find a little coffee shop or some equivalent venue, so I can catch you up on what I've found out so far," he suggested. "Sound good?"

"Yeah, definitely. They gave us some food in the clink, but I couldn't make myself swallow much of it." Maria sighed, as the Doctor led the way off.

-------------

"Ah HA!" Kyle exclaimed as he shuffled his share of the pages around. "I have a Tess - well, not sighting perhaps, since it's not a picture. A Tess description, maybe?"

"It can be a Tess sighting by proxy, if it's describing the experience of someone who's seen her," Alex pointed out. "But I guess that's not so important. What does it describe?"

"Let's see - I'm not sure of the details of the Antarian calendar, but an Earthling hybrid girl claiming that she was Queen Ava of Antar reborn... appeared on the Antarian moon Nunyes and established herself as overlady of that world, to the acclamation of many of the populace," Kyle read. "This was seen as a revolutionary shift in the politics of the entire sector, especially since she has maintained her control over the Granilith and threatens to use it as a weapon against Kivar, or anyone else who might stand against her."

"Whoa," Alex breathed. "I sort of expected her to throw in with Kivar or the Liarets, or maybe seek sanctuary from Larek or one of the other major planets."

"Come on," Kyle said. "I know you've mentioned the idea that she was really working for Kivar the whole time, and I don't believe her. I know Tess Harding, and..."

"Do you really?" Alex sighed. "Until the day she took off, had you even caught a glimpse of the girl who twisted my own mind into a prison to hold me captive in Las Cruces, working myself in the ground to get the information she needed? Or who bound me with those same chains to never do or say anything to let my friends suspect what had happened?"

Rose cocked her head, the edges of her mouth turning down prominently. "She did that? Wouldn't - wouldn't it have been easier just to wipe your mind, give you a false memory of being to Norway or whatever?"

"Sweden," Kyle put in.

"Whatever," Alex agreed. "Maybe Tess didn't have that kind of power over the memory sector of the brain, or maybe she just didn't want me to forget. I'm not sure which."

"Still - to know about that kind of thing, and be trapped inside the life of a person who refuses to speak of it - how horrible," Rose said.

"It wasn't fun," Alex agreed, and Rose realized that he'd rather she drop it now instead of belaboring the subject. "So Tess took over one of the Antarian moons, huh? Guess that's where we'll have to go to find her - after we settle the murder case, get back into the TARDIS - and take that little trip back into Antar's past. Any idea what Tess is planning?"

"Like running a moon wouldn't be enough for this girl?" Rose asked.

"Hmm - not really clear," Kyle said, returning to the sheet. "Apparently delegates from most of the major powers have come to negotiate with her - but it's not really clear what the negotiations were about. Most of the infighting between the six factions who were at the Summit has been put on hold while everyone waits to see what happens next with the Granilith - maybe that's what she had in mind - trying to stall long enough for a new ceasefire to take hold."

"You still have more faith in her good intentions than I do," Alex said and sighed. "Okay, what about the stuff about the past?"

"Oh, you mean Antar's past?" Kyle shuffled the papers he was holding, and shrugged. "None of that here, I think. Go fish." Rose giggled as Alex collected several of the pages that were piled slapdash on the floor between them. Then there was a soft chime at the door.

"That's got to be either the Doctor or dinner delivery," Rose declared enthusiastically, rising to her feet and going to check the results of her guess. Yes for dinner, no for doctor, Kyle decided, looking up after a moment and seeing her collect several fairly light containers from a tall Kaaltan man. She brought them back, and placed one package in front of each of them on the floor. They were the kind of segmented synthetic, disposable dinner plate that Kyle was familiar with eating frozen dinners out of - or maybe, with the fitted and poppable lids, more like the takeout containers for barbecue chicken.

"Smells good," Alex said, looking up from the papers to lift the lid from his own dish. There was a geometic construction in one segment of the plate that seemed to be made out of folded plastic - Alex tore off a tiny bit near the top and put it to his lips, tiping the container. "Allaris, I think they called this - it's good, did you have any at the ball?" he asked them.

"Yeah, but in glasses, not whatever one of those are," Rose said.

"Ehh, to each planet their own," Kyle pointed out. "On Earth, we have milk cartons and juice boxes. Just how do you open it properly, though, Whitman? I'd hate to spill on the floor - or myself."

Alex picked up Kyle's container and indicated the key segment and the direction in which to pull it,.then handed it back to let him try. As Kyle and Rose slaked their thirst, Alex considered another section of his tray, which gave off a meaty aroma and seemed to indeed be a dressed and cooked creature, or part of a creature, as opposed to food that had been processed into shapelessness. Experimentally, he prodded the surface of it a bit.

"Really hard," he narrated out loud for the benefit of his friends. "Hard enough skin that I wouldn't want to have to chew or cut through it - hmm." By getting his fingers underneath a key joint, he was able to pry up a sizable section of the shell. "Kinda like lobster, maybe, not really as tough to get into." He dug into the vulnerable spot that had been prepared with his bare fngers, tore loose a strip of orange substance, and popped it immediately into his mouth. "Delicious," he mumbled, the look on his face showing a delight to match that word - and then suddenly falling somewhat. "Eww. Another something hard, inside."

"Like a bone?" Rose said, and then twigged. "Wait a second, if it's got a shell - a lobster's shell is an exoskeleton, right?"

"Yeah," Kyle agreed. "But these critters may have found that just one skeleton, inside or outside, wasn't enough. They had to have both."

"Yeah," Alex agreed reluctantly, trying to delicately spit the bones out without dribbling decent meat. "Evolution never took that tack on Earth, as far as I know, but that's not really saying anything about what's possible and what isn't."

With that warning, Rose and Alex were able to dig into their own main courses to some satisfaction. The 'meat' didn't take like chicken, though Rose was almost expecting it to, or shellfish for that matter. It was spicy and savory though - the closest things that she could think of to compare it to were Atlantic cod and lamb, but neither was that good a resemblance. Another section if the plate was filled with a pile of firm cubes an inch or more on a side. Picking up, Rose thought it felt like a chip, but the taste was more like cheese cannelloni with barbecue sauce on it. And there was a mess of shapeless jelly that shaded from blue through green to yellow. Alex tried picking some of that up with his bare fingers, but it slipped away from him.

"You go," Rose told Kyle, as he withdrew a small spoon from under his 'plate' and shot her an inquiring look. "I'll be right over here - ready to come to the rescue if it suddenly attacks you."

"Oh, how reassuring, but I don't think that I'm really in danger," Kyle said. "Looks just like my Dad's lime jello."

"With that color scheme?" Rose asked, uncertain if he really meant that or not.

Kyle didn't answer, but took a spoonful in his mouth - and made a slightly unhappy face again.

"Ooh, how bad is it?" Alex said, offering one of the pages to Kyle as if he would use it to spit u into. Kyle made a point out of swallowing.

"Not - not that bad," he told them. "I guess I was expecting it to be sweet, like jell-o, and it's definitely not. The flavor is definitely in the vegetable-ey family, but it's not any less pleasant than a serving of carrots or butternut squash."

"Hmm." Rose took out her own spoon and poked the jelly, still uncertain.

"You'd better eat up," Alex said, digging in himself. "Keep yourself healthy and strong for whatever happens next."

Soon enough, the dinner was done, and all the dishes sent back down the recycler-disposal chute in the room. By this time, Alex had found the printout pages with information about the time of the rise of Kivar and the fall of the house of Sanren, and they were talking about how well the Doctor would be able to determine co-ordinates from them... always assuming that they were allowed entry back into the TARDIS.

"It looks to me like there are two main possibilities," Alex said. "One is the Royal Court itself, and though we've got a lot of information about that, it's not really all that detailed, when you consider that we're talking about a big castle surrounded by an even bigger city - lots of little details that might get left out. I think that we might be better off to go with this seaside holiday thing: the descriptions are incredibly vivid, really, and in a small setting like that, there are fewer unaccounted for variables."

"Hmm, I dunno," Kyle said pensively, and scratched on his forearm for a moment. "It's weird, but I feel like I'm not quite full. It was a good dinner, as far as it went, but..."

"But no pudding," Rose blurted out, and the boys shot her a look. "Dessert, I guess I should say, for you lot."

"I actually did know what you meant," Alex put in. "And I guess I can see your point, but actually after a dinner like that, I'm inclined to leave well enough alone, instead of trying to find something nice for sweets. It'd be different if we weren't on a planet full of alien cuisine, I suppose."

Rose nodded, but her face was disappointed, and even if he didn't mean it, Kyle would have been inclined to say what he did next. "Well, I'm feeling lucky and a bit advenurous. How about we go look for the nearest community dining hall? You said that there should be one around somewhere, right Alex?"

"Umm - actually, yeah, turns out Isabel went there for a midnight snack, which is part of why she was late to breakfast," Alex said absently. "But even if the colony authorities are still happy delivering our dinner with no charges, I think you're not going to be able to get anything down at the dining hall without using your bracelet. Umm, unless you leave them behind and then meet a really friendly native who takes pity and charity on the strangers."

"Hmm, that could work," Rose pointed out.

"No, come on," Kyle complained. "I've got a bit too much pride to go out begging for charity, yet. Why don't we just swap bracelets, Alex?" Alex looked up and clearly hesitated. "Aww, I know that they're supposed to be personal, but really, who's going to know the difference between us? Is now a good time to be a stickler for the rules?"

"Well, I'll go through with it if you want," Alex said quietly. "But considering that some of our company have already been thrown into jail for a crime that they DIDN'T commit, I'd put forward that now is actually a very good time to stick by the rules. You might not have noticed, but I think that they scanned some biometric data from us before issuing the bracelets - height and weight, face shape, and so on. Might have even got retinal and finger prints."

"Oh," Rose said, getting the point. "You mean, they might scan his bio-metrics again when he uses the bracelet, and if the results don't match what was put on the chip..."

"F-- flippin' hell," Kyle muttered. Rose raised an eyebrow, as if bemused that he censored himself in front of her. "We shoulda gotten the wheels rolling on the laptop computer thing hours ago, to deal with these wretched data bombs we've got on our wrists..."

"Come on, sweetie," Rose said, smiling at Kyle in an effort to cheer him up. "We can just - umm..." She trailed off without being sure how to finish that sentence in a reassuring way.

And in the silence, they heard a very faint door signal - not in Kyle's room, which was where the three of them had gathered, but somewhere nearby - and also a faint shuffle out in the hallway. Kyle got to the door first, and found another delivery person waiting at Alex's door. "Oh, hey man, umm..."

"Excuse me?" the Kaaltan courier said with a very snooty 'this isn't any of your business' attitude that shut Kyle up for a long moment.

However, Alex was curious enough to get up and see what was going on, explain that the door that the guy was waiting at was his own, and open it from the outside using his thumbprint to prove it. "Ah, very good, sir. Loaner equipment from the Colony governorship - by taking it, you are accepting responsibility and WILL need to make restitution if there is any damage, no matter what your financial circumstances or the influence of your Patron, please indicate your acceptance for the voiceprint record."

"I understand and accept those terms," Alex recited, wondering slightly how the TARDIS translation field affected things like those recordings - would the electronic voiceprint device capture words in Antarian, with the true characteristics of his own voice?

"Very good," the delivery guy said, bored and lofty at the same time, and handed over the package. He was already making good time down the corridor, (in the direction that it wasn't blocked by the gate over the TARDIS door,) when Alex closed the doors.

"Is that what I think it is?" Rose asked him.

"Probably," Alex said. "I did put the requisition in for a portable computer device capable of interacting with other computer circuits, but didn't plan on such a co-incidental arrival, obviously." He opened up the package, finding something that was definitely much smaller than most laptop computers, but bigger than a palmpilot - and just slightly bigger than a shoe, though the shape was different. "Figuring out how to work it, though, may take some time - and sorting out what sectors on your bracelet are forbidden data and what information is supposed to be there. You might have to wait a while for your dessert."

"Unless we try the obvious solution," Rose pointed out with a charming smile. "Alex, would you mind terribly coming with us to the dining hall? You don't have to get anything if you don't feel like it, but you can sit with us and we can all talk..."

"And I can put your orders on my bracelet," Alex said with a big smile. "Makes sense, under the circumstances - and doesn't it figure that neither of us thought of something so simple, huh Kyle?" Kyle looked as if this solution was hardly better than no dessert at all in his opinion, but Alex could hardly back out when Rose had invited him - well, not right away. If there was a good moment, he'd go back to the room early and leave the two of them to stay, or take the scenic route, or whatever else they chose.

It didn't take long to find the dining hall, even though Isabel hadn't really given complete directions to Alex, and it seemed to be very busy, full of Kaaltans at what was apparently a regular dinner hour. They could see a lot of families with small children as well as singles, pairs, and larger groups of adults of all ages. Once again, Alex was seized with an unexpected 'wonder' as the three of them waited in a queue for the food dispensers, musing on how much of the population of Kaalto township ate regularly at a public diner like this, for each of their meals. Would a majority of family groups have a food preparation area in their quarters, or had such 'personal kitchens' been deemed an inefficient use of community resources and discouraged, except for possibly a few of the rich who could afford them anyway?

"Okay, there's still a lot of - of people waiting behind us," Kyle pointed out as they drew slowly closer to their destination. "It would seem to be very - antisocial to take a long time to decide on what we want. How do we get an at-least-passable dessert as quickly as possible?"

"Hmm - I wonder if the food dispenser units have a genie mode?" Alex asked. Rose glared at him. "Okay, maybe it's better not to try that. In any event, I've had some practice this morning working with their computer systems around here - but I guess you did too, finding the genie results."

"If you want to order for me, go right ahead," Rose suggested, looking over at Kyle to see if he would agree to that too.

"Hmm - yeah, you go first - I think I'll try for myself, especially since I can go to a second station," he suggested.

"No, you can't," Rose reminded him. "Or at least, it might be awkward. It has to be on Alex's bracelet, remember."

"Oh, right." Kyle sighed. "Whatever - but don't order me the same thing as Rose. If we get two - then at least we could maybe share if one of them sucks - or switch if we don't agree on what sucks."

"Alright!" Rose exclaimed, nearly clapping in her excitement. "Are you sure you don't want to make it three puddings, Alex?"

"Umm - maybe I'll wait to decide until I see how well the search is going," he hedged. "And it looks like we're up. Let's go." Sure enough, one of the wall stations had come free, and the three of them were now at the front of the line. He headed over, found a dessert-ish category fairly quickly, and narrowed in on a subcategory that actually seemed like what Americans would call 'pudding', cued in by Rose's choice of words.

Feeling reasonably optimistic, he finalized the order for three items and swiped his bracelet to pay for them - two dishes that had exactly the same description except for the flavoring of 'roast mendono seed' versus 'wolee stalk', and a slightly different item in the same category, that sounded to Alex like an apple-infused rice pudding. Kyle took dibs on that one as it emerged from the dispenser, and offered Rose next choice. She took the roast seed dish, and then asked Alex if he was okay with what was left, and he assured her he was. After tasting it, and finding that wolee stalk appeared to taste like a blend between cherries and pears, he was indeed well satisfied.

In fact, the dessert dish was so tasty that Alex found himself eating quickly, as Kyle and Rose dawdled over their dishes and chatted. Seeing that this was his opportunity to leave them alone, he hurried through the food even more, and excused himself to go back. Rose seemed surprised, but Kyle just smiled and wished him a good evening, which Alex was happy to offer back again. After throwing the dishes in a public disposal-recycler, he hurried out of the dining hall, concentrating on the way back to their rooms.

As he climbed up the steep ramp that connected two different levels of the underground city, Alex suddenly felt dizzy, and at first he ascribed the sensation to the unfamiliar task. When he actually realized that something was seriously wrong, he tried to call for help, but couldn't seem to make his voice work, it was closing in on him. But when he lost consciousness and tumbled back down to the base of the incline, it was only seconds before friendly natives called for the emergency services.

-----------

As they rode in a monorail car back towards Colony admin, the Doctor suddenly started and cocked his head as if there had been a piercing shriek so high that only Gallifreyans could hear it. Maria looked at him nervously as he patted all the pockets of his suit, finally fished out his pad of psychic paper, looked at it, and frowned.

"What is it?" she asked.

"Your - our friend Alex," the Doctor muttered. "Something's happened to him, not an act of violence or anything immediately life-threatening, but he needs help."

"How can you tell?" Maria asked.

"Something I thought I'd try since there'd be a whole clan underfoot on this jaunt - I established a low-level psychic link with each of you. Even with the paper to guide my thoughts, I can't get much detail, but..."

"Can you tell where he is?" Maria asked.

"Not certainly, but we should be heading in the right direction. I told him to go back to base camp and not stray far."

Somehow Maria wasn't too reassured at that.

------------

Isabel sighed as the guard stomped over to her cell in the detention area. She'd been somewhat worried that they'd get moved over into a more serious prison area, but from what she'd been able to tell from overheard comments, the Kaaltan legal custom was much like the American in this respect - the holding cell or jail area for those who were simply arrested on suspicion of a crime was relatively safe and benign - even the fact that she and Michael had been arraigned and denied bail didn't change their status in this respect. If they were actually convicted of a crime and sentenced, then that would result in a transfer to a much rougher prison facility, according to the details of the sentence and what crime the prosector got a conviction for.

"Is it dinner-time yet, Maral?" she asked the guard without looking up. He was the only one big enough to leave such a tread. Earlier in the day, Isabel had been somewhat hyper and talked to the guards about their lives for as long as they'd been willing to put up with her.

"In a little while, Izzy-bell," he replied. "Figured that I'd let you get settled with your new cellmate first."

"Uhh?" Worried, Isabel looked up. Was someone else that she knew about to get tossed in with her? No, that hardly seemed likely. So she'd have to share this tiny little space with a Kaaltan native, (or some other type of alien?) who was under suspicion of violating Kaaltan laws, probably in the college campus or nearby. Again, a number of scenes from movies about rough county jails and similar venues ran through her head.

When her eyes finally focused, though, the person standing next to tall and bulky Maral was clearly a young girl, in her teens as far as Isabel could tell, (which presumed that Antarian development paralleled an Earthling's,) and undeniably short - even shorter than Liz or Tess. Maybe she would measure five foot one, or possibly only five feet even. And there was something in the girl's face that did remind Isabel of Liz Parker - not the more confident and mature young woman that Liz had grown into while Isabel had known her, but the fresh-faced and naive waitress whose life Max had saved.

"Her? What are you bringing her in for?" Isabel asked.

"Stay back from the cell doorway," Maral grunted unresponsively, so Isabel looked to make sure that she was well back from the entryway an then firmly sat where she was.

The new girl grinned slightly. "They got me for a political protest," she declared. "Hi, I'm Beyla - nice to meet you Izziebell."

"It's pronounced Isabel," Isabel clarified, stressing the flat 'a' just slightly. "Good for you, I guess, any planet needs people to stand up for their beliefs." Though Isabel had never really thought about doing such a thing back home on Earth herself - but she had bigger concerns, she supposed. "So what hot button issue are you involved in a cause for?"

"Pretty much the whole colony puppet government thing," Beyla raged as she she urged inside and Maral closed the door again. "So what if historically, this piece of rock happened to be settled by a ship that came from Rahlicx? That doesn't give them the right to decide what goes on around here in perpetuity. The time has come for Kaaltan self-determination."

"Hmm." Maral stepped away at this point, and Isabel realized that the cell across from hers was now empty. "Wait a second, Maral - what happened to Michael?"

"He's still safe in custody," Maral grunted. "We moved him to another unit two hours ago. Thought you'd have noticed before this. The Bailiff agreed that we'd probably have more peace this way."

Isabel wondered very much if the other 'unit' was just another block of cells in this security complex, or another location far across the underground township. She didn't ask it out loud, though. "Okay. So - if the Kaaltan grass roots were running the show instead of Larek's tapped governor, what would you do differently?"

"Hmm?" Beyla said, sounding strange. "What do the roots of leafy green plants have to do with it?"

Whoops - that idiom had slipped through the TARDIS translation effect it seemed. "Sorry - a movement formed from the ordinary people with no particular government experience."

"Oh, right. Well, for one thing, we'd take the smart road when it comes to protecting ourselves when it comes to the whole war situation."

"War?" Isabel said, getting a bad feeling. "Do you mean, with Kivar and the Liaretians and the Breoll and all of those other people?"

"Well, is there another war in this sector that I haven't heard about? It's easy for Larek to denounce Kivar Andraikus as a tyrant usurper and say that he won't rest until Antar is free of him, but he keeps his fleets close to his own home planet, and there's precious nobody out around here to stand guard in case Kivar wants to take one of Larek's little colonies away from him, as the easiest way to punish him for his impertinence. If Kaalto were independent, we could sign a decent deal with Kivar and his Breoll allies - nobody really likes them, but they've got the biggest fleets, and on a practical level you eventually come to a choice between respecting that or getting pounded into molecular dust by an orbital bombardment..."

Isabel sighed and started to tune the details of the girl's rant out at this point. Try as she might, though, the larger issues posed by Beyla's point of view weren't nearly as easy to ignore. From the point of view of Isabel and her friends, it was a good thing that Larek, and the colony worlds that stood behind him, were resisting Kivar as vehemently as they could. Whether this was fair to the inhabitants of the small colonies who couldn't be afforded protections that would stand up to Kivar's fleet - that was a tougher question. On the other hand, if Kivar's dominion really was evil, then for smaller planets to cut deals with him just because they were afraid - was it unfair to compare people like that with countries who had tolerated the Nazi Reich, way back when??

And she'd feel better if she knew where Michael was, and had more news of how things were going with Alex - and Maria, and the Doctor and Rose, even Kyle.

--------------

Alex woke up, and was immediately conscious of an odd sensation, that of not remembering how and when he had fallen asleep, like that time at camp when he'd participated in the wake-a-thon, and refused to admit that he'd nodded off at the monopoly table. "What - what happened?" he muttered. The last thing he remembered was - there had been the public kitchen, and leaving by himself to give Kyle some time to spend alone with Rose, and...

"You found out the hard way that Wolee stalk is very bad for your cellular metabolism," someone told him. Alex squinted and saw the Doctor smiling down on his bed - and Maria, Kyle, and Rose were all there too. "Interferes with oxygen usage inside the cell, I figure - kind of like cyanide, but works more slowly - which is probably good for you, or the medial response team wouldn't have been able to help you in time - though if you'd collapsed in the public kitchen there might have been somebody there who'd figure out what to do in time. As it is, you're still an undeservedly lucky and somewhat foolish young man."

"Well, we're on a strange planet, trying to manage as best we can," Alex pointed out. "It's not like there's a feature on the kitchen computers that will flash if something's poisonous to us - especially when we can't come right out and tell them where we're from."

"Ssh," Rose went, nodding at him seriously.

"Yeah, yeah, I know." Alex groaned. "The lights are so bright. Is this a public health facility of some sort?"

"Yes," Kyle told him. "They called Rose and me when we were leaving the kitchen ourselves, somehow they found out that we had come in together. And the Doctor seemed to know you were in trouble already."

"Will I have to stay here for observation all night or something?" Alex asked.

"I don't think so, but - well, here's the Healer now," Maria told him, as a Kaaltan stepped up to join them. After the Healer monitored Alex's reaction to an even brighter light shone straight into his eyes, touched his skin, measured his pulse, and asked permission to connect to his bodily systems momentarily for a quick check, he declared the patient fit to go home as soon as he felt ready.

"Still feeling a little dizzy, to be honest," Alex admitted, relaxing back onto the bed.

"Do you need something to eat?" Maria asked. "Something safe, I mean?"

"No, I feel alright as far as food goes," Alex assured her. "We had a great dinner."

"Yes, but yours got mixed with the Wolee contamination while it was sitting around and waiting to be digested," the Doctor pointed out.

"Yeah, they force-emptied your stomach with alien powers," Kyle reported, a bit too gleefully. "It was so gross." Rose looked a bit sick and brought the heel of her shoe back into the side of Kyle's foot.

"Okay, well, umm - I don't think that I'm blood-sugar-crashing yet, but no sense in asking for that to happen on top of everything else," Alex decided. "Anything safe to eat and not that much effort to chew, I'm good for. Any word from Isabel?"

There was a slightly awkward silence after that. "I'll ask the nurse for something good," Rose said, stepping away.

"No updates since I left Michael and Isabel, after the - the arraignment, I guess," Maria said, her face scrunching up slightly. "We should go see if we can visit them - umm, maybe I could make it tonight, but..."

"They'll be okay until morning, I think," the Doctor said in a wise grownup tone of voice. "There's been enough rushing here and there, back and forth today, and we've nearly gotten ourselves tied in circles because of it." He looked around to check on if any of the clinic staff were near to their little cluster. "Speaking of which, young Mister Valenti..."

"We got the info," Kyle said, his voice as low as the Doctor's whisper had become. "Hard copy, and digital - on the only compatible electronic media we happened to be carrying at the time." He lifted his ID bracelet just slightly, with a significant look down at it, and then nodded slightly towards Rose.

The Doctor was by no means slow to catch Kyle's meaning. "Oh, I see. Have you had to use your IDs for their more traditional purpose since?"

"No, but that's been awkward," Kyle admitted. "Rose commissioned an outfit on the concourse today, and we couldn't go back to collect it - the tailors put a hold on her credit but didn't actually take it out. And - and we dragged Alex out with us to go for a snack after the dinner that was delivered... which is why he..."

"You didn't force me to have any myself," Alex pointed out.

"And if you hadn't," Rose told him as she came near, "one of us might have picked Wolee stalk. Bygones. Try this." She handed him a tall and skinny cylinder.

"Uh, okay." Alex accepted the flutelike object, pondered how to consume the contents, then put his entire mouth around the opening, then tipped it up to be nearly horizontal. After swallowing a small amount, he returned the tube back to a nearly vertical orientation, pulling it back away from his mouth. "Not bad. Do I want to know what it's made from?"

"Maybe - I didn't ask myself," Rose admitted. "Just that it was guaranteed to be nutritious and compatible with everything that they could figure out about your metabolism. What does it taste like?"

"Hmm." Alex peered at the contents of the tube. It was now clear that the container was mostly transparent, though it had a slight scattering effect, and inside was a pale blue liquid. "Something vaguely fruity, though I couldn't really identify the fruit." He considered, and took another sip. "Has an aftertaste sort of like chocolate milk, too."

"Sounds good," Maria pointed out. "Can I get one of my own, or are they only for patients?"

"What, didn't you have anything to eat while you were running around with the Doctor?" Kyle asked her.

"Well, yeah, we stopped for a bite after I got out of the clink, but that must have been a while ago," she pointed out.

"I'm sure that we can arrange something," the Doctor told her. "Alex, as soon as you're feeling a little steadier, we should probably be going. The staff are being very nice, but hospitals are always short of beds, across the galaxy as far as I know. Is there anything else that we absolutely need to take care of before turning in for the night? It's been a long and rough day for everybody." Hie glance flicked to Rose and Kyle's wrists, as if to reassure them that he hadn't forgotten about their ID issue.

"Rose, you've still got your super-phone, right?" Maria said. "We need to call Max and Liz again - no matter what time it is back home. They need to know what's going on with Michael and Isabel."

"Even if it's already after we picked them up, back home?" Alex asked with a little smile, as he sat up and swung his legs down off the edge of the bed. "I assume that's possible, based on the way the TARDIS works."

"Well, we'll give them a call and see if anybody picks up," the Doctor told Maria as she frowned at this possibility. "Anything else?"

As Alex got himself ready to go, Rose went over to the clinic dispenser and punched for another thin tube of blue milk. Nobody objected as she collected it and brought it over to Maria.

TO BE CONTINUED...?
Read my other roswell stories!

"A man does not make his destiny: he accepts it or denies it. If the Rowan tree's roots are shallow, it bears no crown." From 'the farthest shore', Ursula LeGuin.

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Chrisken
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Re: Children of the Molecule (DW XO CC, Teen) Part 8 Oct 31 2009

Post by Chrisken »

Part Nine

Michael woke up with a fairly familiar sense of confusion, and then blinked through it to realize that something was actually going seriously wrong. He was - he tried to shake his head and think more - he was tied to some kind of frakking examination table. "What the heck is going on??"

For a moment, there was no reply. Then a silky and slick voice that made Michael's skin crawl came from out of the shadows. "Don't worry, Michael. It'll only take a few more minutes, and then you can go. Back to the jail, at first, I'm afraid, but if I get all that I'm interested in from this procedure, my employers will do what they can to drop the murder charges and secure you your freedom."

Uh-oh. As promising as the words seemed, Michael could tell that none of this was good news. Why not? He had to fight to think - something was clouding his thoughts, He needed to understand what the problem was, or he couldn't fight what was coming - if he could even figure out a way to fight with his limbs all secured in metal, and his powers... experimentally Michael tried to shoot a small burst of energy off in the direction that the crawly voice had come from, and - nothing. Of course a Kaaltan would have been able to take some kind of precautions, before kidnapping anybody who had an Antarian's powers.

If he'd been on Earth, if this was a dark and gloomy version of the White room, then he'd be worried about his slick captor finding out that he really was an alien. Obviously that wasn't likely to be the problem here on an alien planet, but - oh, of course! It was the other way around, here. They needed to hide the fact that they were half human, Antarian hybrids, because somebody might think of the Royal Four based on that clue. And it would be possible for a Kaaltan to figure that out based on a blood sample, or other DNA...

Okay, so that was the objective Michael had to work toward, or rather against - keep Silky from analyzing any samples - that he already had an opportunity to take when Michael was helpless. While he was restrained and helpless. That didn't sound hard at all.

"But if you don't have any other weapons at all, you can still bluff," he whispered under his breath. "Hey, buddy - you'd better let me out of here right now, if you know what's good for you! You're not going to be able to keep me here long enough to get what you need, anyway."

"And what makes you say that?" Silky stepped out partway into the light, and Michael struggled to hide a grimace at the ferociously cragged visage of an alien noticeably less humanoid than the Antarian-bred Kaaltans - maybe a Klenthorr, Michael had heard that there were several thousand of that other species in the Kaalto colony, and wasn't sure if he'd seen one before. "You're at my mercy, with no friends nearby, and nobody even knows that you've been borrowed from the jail complex."

"That's all that you know," Michael insisted, the balderdash coming quickly now that he was counting on it. "You've heard about our friend and protector, the Time Lord, right? Trust me, you don't want to make him angry, and he's keeping an eye on what's going on with all of us. He doesn't need to be watching the jail in obvious ways - he just thinks about us, and he knows how we're feeling and what we're worried about. Since I woke up, I've been pumping out enough nervous brainwaves to show up as a red alert to him, and so the only way you could possibly keep from getting your ass kicked is to dump me back where I'm supposed to be, toot sweet."

"You're bluffing," the Klenthorr scientist muttered, sounding uncertain.

"Maybe I am," Michael admitted. "I'm good at it. But I've also been telling you the truth, at least part of the time. What it really comes down to is - how big a pair of rocks do you have, buddy?"

"Alright, come on," he finally said, stepping over to the table and starting to push it out of the room, while still leaving Michael restrained upon it.

This wouldn't do, Michael realized instantly. "No, wait. Let me go."

The ferocious creature hesitated for just a moment before bowing to the mighty name of a Time Lord and unfastening the restraint. As he found a small tube, something a bit like an IV drip, that led into the skin on his wrist and pulled it out, Michael almost immediately felt his powers return. Good, that would make this next part easier.

Summoning a light first, Michael examined the alien laboratory surrounding him and tried to estimate how many different containers or machines might already contain a sample of his blood or other bodily substances. Since he wasn't sure what he was looking at, the list grew very quickly, but that couldn't be helped.

When Michael started the energy discharges, he didn't stop until everything on the list was glowing red hot and in ruins, or something like that.

When he turned and stared at the Klenthorr, the alien scientist made a sound like a doorbell sounding faintly a few times in the distance. "I... I don't care what you tell me, I am NOT taking you back to jail. You can try to find your own way, or - or go wherever the hell you want. I'm out of here." And he ducked around a smoking object that had once looked like a seven foot tall microscope and disappeared, leaving Michael to ponder what he actually did want to do next.

-------------

"Are you sure that you'll be okay in that Spartan little room by yourself, Alex?" Maria asked solicitously, as the five of them trudged up the corridor.

"Umm, I think I'll be fine, I'm really feeling much better now, why?" Alex looked back over at Maria and was surprised to see her drop her gaze to the floor instead of making eye contact. "What, were you thinking of inviting me to room with you, until our respective sweeties get back from the slammer? I'm not sure I really want to sign up to be your substitute Spaceboy."

"Well, I didn't mean it like THAT, obviously," Maria insisted. "But - well, yeah, I think that we could both use some company for the night. Especially since you've just had alien food poisoning and all."

"Come on, anybody would think that you weren't used to sleeping all on your own, little Maria," Kyle teased her.

"Oh, yeah, that's it," she bit back sarcastically. "The fact that we're on an alien planet many light-years from home has nothing to do with my desire for a little companionship and having a friend close by."

"Hey, alright, you've sold me," Alex admitted. "I'd be happy to move into your room for the night. The bed looked like it was big enough that we wouldn't need to be all cuddled up together or anything - because THAT would be awkward."

"You know, that gives me an idea," Rose mentioned. "I know that somebody said something about getting other rooms for you and I, doctor, now that we can't easily bunk down inside the TARDIS, but if the requisition actually did go through, then I'm pretty sure that nobody showed any of us where we're supposed to be, and I'm desperately weary at the thought of trying to find out anything from the Colonial bureaucracy, especially since I figure that nearly everybody has gone home..."

"It's not really that late by Kaalto time, I think," Kyle told her. "Their days are a bit longer than us, or I mean Earth's, I mean, so none of us have really adjusted to the time difference - as it were."

"Yes, but still, she does have a point," the Doctor admitted. "Are you suggesting that we can take Alex and Isabel's room - if Alex doesn't mind?"

"It occured to me," she admitted, and shot a look over at Alex. Alex, for his own part, was also uncomfortably aware of Kyle's frustrated stare, but couldn't figure out what kind of an objection he was supposed to raise to stop this without looking like an inconsiderate buffoon.

"Umm - it's fine with me. I guess I couldn't really say that Isabel wouldn't have a problem with it, but that - that's up to you guys to decide in the end I suppose," he managed to say lamely.

"Hmm - well, can anyone work out what the situation was with our accomodation more closely?" the Doctor said, looking around to the others.

"Just a moment, let me try to think, it's been a long day," Rose grumbled, reaching up to rub her fingers on her temples. Maria shot Kyle a look, and he took the hint, stepping behind Rose to rub her shoulders in a friendly way as she stood and thought. The Doctor raised an eyebrow at this behaviour from the humans, but didn't comment out loud. "We came back from the township admin station, Kyle and I, after retrieving the info from the college computers and going back via the concourse. Found workmen, setting up the fence around the TARDIS doors, and I asked about where you and I were going to sleep. He said that - that alternate facilities would be provided for us, but that they weren't ready yet, and that." She smiled slightly, nodding at Alex. "That 'the kid' had already been making a fuss on our behalf."

"Oh, was that me?" Alex asked in a slightly vague way. "Don't really remember it so clearly myself.

"Okay, then that settles it, we'll take your room," Rose declared. Kyle tried to stifle a groan. "Anything else that we need to work out before everybody turns in?"

Kyle looked up and down the corridor as if trying to find something, and everybody else shrugged. Maria led Alex into her room by the hand, keeping up a running patter line, and Rose turned to the other door - and called back after Maria and Alex. "Umm, you do have to let us in, I think, and maybe get anything that you'll need, friend."

"Oh, uh, right," Alex said, with a laugh, as he hurried back out. He was confused enough that he tried to swipe his wristband on the door to open it, before the Doctor reminded him that they were keyed to thumbprints.

"Wristbands!" Kyle pointed out, waving his meaningfully at the Doctor.

"Oh, right, yes," he agreed. "Should deal with that now, before any other complications arise - or arrive." He held the door open after Alex got the lock mechanism disengaged, and waved both Rose and Kyle inside. Alex did come just to take a quick poke at his luggage, and opened up both his case and Isabel's thoughtfully 'so that you (Rose and the Doctor) can grab anything you need that we happen to have.'

"Will you need the Kaaltan laptop that they lent us?" Kyle asked the Doctor before he entered. After receiving a considered nod, he disappeared briefly into his room to fetch the hardware, and soon the Doctor was proceeding through a boot sequence and exploring available functions.

Rose, meanwhile, couldn't seem to resist the temptation to poke through Isabel's baggage, under the pretext of figuring out what she'd need to get ready to turn in for the night. She whistled in amazement and drew out a short, see-through, and pink nightgown with thin shoulder straps, and modeled it for a few seconds by holding it in front of her still-clothed figure. Kyle's eyes bugged out a little, more at the concept than what he was actually seeing, while the Doctor, once again, just raised an eyebrow before going back to what he was doing.

"Okay, I think that I've got a short-range memory access module online, that should be just the thing to rewrite your bracelets," he announced after a minute or so more work. "What do we think, do we actually need to copy the files to this laptop, or just purge them?"

"Umm - we've got a lot accomplished with the plastic-paper printouts already," Kyle pointed out after a moment of thought. "Keeping files on the laptop is just pushing out the problem, as I understand it - we'll need to move or delete them before we give the computer back to the Kaaltans, and where do we move them to next? Buy a pocket chip that we can't access directly, ourselves?"

"Good point," the Doctor allowed. "Rose, any thoughts?"

"I understand where you're concerned, Kyle, but let's not jump too hastily," she decided. "Buying a pocket chip in the concourse shouldn't be hard, once we can use our bracelets again. And, well, it would be a useful backup - IF we'll be able to access it after we leave Kaalto. Like, in the TARDIS, or maybe rigging up something special on a computer back in Roswell."

The Doctor turned to Kyle, who nodded an agreement at this point, and then the Doctor gestured that Kyle should bring his bracelet wrist close to the portable Kaaltan computer - and had him hold it there for nearly a minute. Then it was Rose's turn, and she sat down on the riser next to the Doctor so as to be more comfortable for the process."Alright, do you want to pick up a pocket chip at the Concourse tomorrow?" he asked Rose as he finished. "You've got that outfit of yours to collect, as I recall."

"I didn't even remember that we'd mentioned that to you," Rose admitted. "But yes, that sounds good." She looked over at Kyle, as if wondering if he'd come back down to the Concourse with her, but he didn't return the eye contact. "Do you want to tell us how to move the data to the chip, and clear out the traces?"

"No - it shouldn't be too hard, but we've had quite a day, haven't we?" the Doctor admitted. "If any of you try before I have a chance to give a lesson, then just ask for help mode, it seems pretty good - a similar idea to the search genies - but you weren't there for that, were you?"

"No, but we heard about them when we picked up the results of the Genie's labors," Kyle pointed out.

"Oh, right. Speaking of, did you make any attempt to clear away the traces of the Genie's activity?" Rose and Kyle shared a slightly stricken look when the Doctor posed this question. "That's okay - it wouldn't have been so easy. We should make a try when we get a chance, but I think that the encryption guards I set up on the kids' accounts should be good for a while yet."

"Well, I guess that's my cue to go back to my own room," Kyle said, wandering close to the door. "See you both for breakfast in the morning? Down in the cafeteria?"

"No, let's order in," Rose suggested. "Maria's room. We haven't had poison issues with the stuff that they bring us, now have we?"

"Can't argue with that logic," the Doctor agreed, and after a moment Kyle nodded, and made his way out the door. Rose turned around to stare at the comfortable mattress at the lowest point of the room's rounded floor, and then looked up to meet the Doctor's gaze.

"Well, as you said, it's been a long day," she said with a throaty chuckle, and quickly reached down to pop the snap at the waist of her jeans. The Doctor continued to watch, bemused, as she worked the pants down and away from her bottom, and kicked her comfortable sneakers off when they were getting in the way. Whichever way Rose had intended it, he didn't really get a 'good' look, because the plaid shirt that Rose had been wearing was fairly long and naturally fell past the tops of her thighs - but that didn't stop the air in the room from being charged with a certain amount of natural excitement.

It actually took more than one try for the Doctor to come up with something to say and make himself heard. "Teasing, Miss Tyler?" was what he finally came out with.

"Not necessarily," she insisted, stepping close and brushing a lock of blonde hair back away from her eyes. "It's sort of up to you, Mister Doctor." Admitting that much seemed to take all of Rose's forthrightness and she dropped her gaze to her own bare feet. "I mean, well, I think that you know how much I like you by now, and - we've been through so much together." She managed to look up and lock her eyes with his at this point. "We've both been circling the edges of the floor for so long - will you dance with me tonight?"

After a long moment, the Doctor smiled at her, a fierce excitement dancing in his eyes - and something in the power of that look made Rose literally weak in the knees - and left her gasping with mixed shock and dismay as she caught her body with her hands on the carpeted floor. Even though, when the Doctor hurried over to help her sit down on the mattress, there was nothing beyond the gentle kindness that she was used to in his eyes, Rose was still shaken by something that had happened to her between one breath and another, and he could tell.

"As you might have noticed, I'd like to," the Doctor admitted. "But - well, it's hard to phrase this without sounding a bit full of myself, but dancing with me can be dangerous. I'm not sure that anything you've seen so far has prepared you."

"Why should you worry so much about sounding full of yourself THIS time?" Rose muttered bitterly, and that got a laugh from the Doctor.

"And there's young Kyle Valenti, who's clearly so eager to - to dance," the Doctor admitted as he sat on the mattress himself, not right next to Rose, and pulled his own shoe off. "Could you really stand to disappoint him?"

"Kyle? Well, Kyle's a cute kid, but - well, I'm afraid he's not nearly the man to match you, as far as I'm concerned," Rose admitted a bit awkwardly. "I suppose that I wouldn't mind taking him for a fling, try teaching the American lad a thing or two. We're not likely to meet again, after your business with his Roswellian friends is done, I suppose."

"No, it'd probably be safer to have no contact, once I sort out the Gandarium affair," the Doctor admitted, a bit wistfully. "Between that, and Serena's involvement, the timelines could get somewhat messy."

"That wasn't really what I was thinking about, but alright," Rose admitted.

"Maybe you should - try a whirlwind romance with Kyle," the Doctor said, and Rose looked at him in shock. "He's a bright boy, and has probably figured out the reasons that there's unlikely to be a long-term entanglement. But, well - ever since I whisked you away from London, you haven't had much conventional passion in your life."

"No, I suppose not - not even Mickey," Rose admitted. Though she'd seen a lot of the charming young man from her past, before he disappeared into an alternate dimension, they hadn't really fanned the old flame as such. "So are you saying that you'll be here, waiting - even that you want me to go and have my fun with Kyle before we - sort out our own thing? Sorry, I just can't repeat 'dance' one more time in this conversation." The Doctor wagged his eyebrows at her. "Except just that one time, in the quotes."

"Well - I'm not going anywhere without you," the Doctor admitted. "And - well, yes. I'm not going to insist on it, or anything - when could I ever get you to do something that you didn't want to do? But I do think that it would do you good to date somebody in your own species, before - before getting involved with something like, well, you know."

"I don't really know what I'd be getting involved in," Rose admitted softly. "But I suppose that's the point. Come on, if we're not going to flirt any more, then I'm tired enough that we should both turn in. Suit jacket, please?" She held out an arm for it, and with his best slightly bemused air, the Doctor passed it over. "Since you don't have a dressing gown here, at least I assume you don't, then maybe you'd feel just as comfortable staying in your trousers and shirt?"

"Maybe that's best, I suppose." The Doctor stretched out on one side of the mattress. "It's different, trying to get to sleep outside of the TARDIS. I can feel the planet, spinning around beneath us and flying through space. Not like it's really trying to throw us off, just - well, it's just enough to make me feel a bit dizzy."

"Aww, poor Doctor," Rose said with a laugh, putting the jacket (now folded,) on a riser. "Do you need something to help you fall... oh." Turning back around, she saw that the Doctor had his eyes closed and somehow an expression of completely restful slumber on his face. "Never mind then, I suppose."

So she lay down on the other side of the bed and thought about what tomorrow might hold for her - and Kyle Valenti.

----------

Maria wandered down the corridors of some run-down sector of Kaalto, frustrated. She couldn't remember how she had gotten there, or where the rest of her friends were, but for the time being that didn't bother her. What she was aware of was Michael's voice, calling to her. She HAD to find him - he was in trouble, worse trouble than jail or even a murder sentence in alien prison, and nobody else was paying attention for him. At a junction of ways, she listened intently, and hurried down the left branch.

This corridor curved fairly tightly to the left after twenty paces or so, to the point that it was leading back in the direction that she had come, somewhat to the side, but Maria wasn't worried about getting lost if she could keep following the sound of Michael's screaming out her name. All of a sudden, as she finished navigating the curve, she realized that somebody was blocking the way - a Kaaltan who seemed somewhat familiar, but she couldn't say how. "Get out of the way," she grumbled, and he backed off a bit, and started to keep pace, hurrying backwards so as to keep himself in a position where he could look into her face. "Who are you, anyway?"

"I would have hoped that you'd remember my name, Maria," he muttered. "I remembered your touch."

"What? When??" she muttered, hoping that he'd understand what she was trying to ask. She didn't have time for proper grammar.

"This morning, as you began your studies."

That was cryptic, but Maria managed to place his face, and even come up with a name. "Our guide at the college, Xamev. Sorry, I'm a little - well, anyway. What are you doing here?"

"I'd like to help you. All your friends are beset by troubles, Maria, and those who serve me have much power. All that is required is for you to tell me what service you most need."

Something about this suddenly made Maria suspicious. Why did he really want her to say any such thing? Yes, 'beset by troubles' was probably understating the case for the TARDIS expedition to Kaalto, but if this kid really had any ability to help them out, then she was certain that he wouldn't do it without an ulterior motive - though that might just be trying to impress her because he was smitten. Maria was willing to give herself enough credit to entertain that possibility, but hardly enough to count on it.

"I won't say that it's the most important service in the long run, but I'm trying to find Michael," Maria admitted. "He's in trouble." Would Xamev volunteer to help Maria reconnect with her boyfriend?

"Beware." Xamev just pointed out into the hallway before them. Dimly, in the distance, Maria could see a familiar shape huddling in a corner, hurt or VERY frightened. More scared than she had ever seen Michael. But between them, was a great and terrible shadow in the shape of a stone creature with a fanged face, four claws, and huge wings that might be razor-edged.

"Nonsense," Maria said confidenly. "The shadows should beware of ME, tonight." And with that, she charged towards Michael - but she felt the shadow creature wrapping itself around her, and her skin went ice-cold.

"This wasn't supposed to happen," Xamev complained from behind her. "Adwenit."

And with that, the shadow creature immediately fell through a hole that had been hiding behind something very small, and left for other places, dropping Maria in one of them - across Liz Parker's bed! Liz groaned and fumbled for the bedside lamp, trying to figure out what had just hit her.

"Umm, sorry about that," Maria muttered, somehow completely unsurprised at the abruptness of her return to Earth. "Isn't, err - Max somewhere here too?"

"Huh?" As soon as Liz had her eyes open, she rolled them up very far in her head. "He, umm - he left, err, about two hours ago, I think. Went back to his place."

"Oh, I see." Maria did indeed understand that much - she just hadn't realized before that she had arrived in Liz's bedroom so close to dawn. It still looked very dark outside.

"Maria - what the Antar are you doing here?"

"That, umm - that's a very good question," Maria admitted. "I went to bed with Alex - not WITH him, just sharing a room, it's a long story - but I remember charging through the dark corridors, looking for Michael, and he was calling out to me. Liz - Michael and Isabel are in some alien jail, and..."

"This is too weird," Liz grumbled. "Am I dreaming??"

The question hit Maria like a cascade of ice water. Whether Liz was dreaming herself or just a figment of a dream was something that she wasn't sure of, but suddenly Maria was certain that she herself was caught in a dream. Everything made much more sense that way - and in that second of realization, she felt the dream start to fragment, as it so often seemed to do, self-realization being most of the way to true wakefulness. Maria didn't want to expend the effort to try any lucid dreaming tricks at this point, but on the off-chance that Liz was actually real, she tried to express one other thought. "We found Tess - she's taken over the Antarian moon."

"I know that," a voice told her from the dark bedroom. "I was the one who told you about her, remember?"

It wasn't Liz's voice, or even Max's, and so Maria realized that she wasn't in the same bedroom anymore - she was lying on a bed with her head on a pillow, her body and limbs under a heavy blanket, and conscious of the fact that there were no windows, and only a faintly glowing string of numbers as light source - 4272. Maria freaked out at that clock reading, then forced herself to relax, reminding herself that it was perfectly sensible by the details of the Kaaltan time system that she had learned. There was also a familiar body next to her in the bed, not getting too close.

"I wasn't telling you," she said drowsily to Alex, hoping that speaking drowsily would help her get back to sleep. Surprisingly, it seemed to start working right away. "I was dreaming of Liz, and wanted to tell her, in case she remembered."

"Umm - sorry honey," he put in, "but I think that kind of logic only works if you're dreaming of Isabel." Sighed. "Which I think that I might have been, before you woke me."

"Sorry," Maria muttered, and shut up to give Alex as much of a chance to get back to Isabel as she could.

One thing bothered her as she sank back into a dreamless sleep of her own. Why had she dreamed about Xamev? Had her subconscious just brought him in as an enigmatic figure from the previous day, or was he also able to ent...

----------

This time around, it was Rose who got into the bathing room first.

Kyle hadn't noticed any sounds before he opened the door. The first thing he realized afterward was that water was running, and then - wet blonde hair, creamy skin. "Ohmygawd." Somehow in the space of one second he had closed the door again, turned around one hundred eighty degrees, and closed his eyes - in case any of those two measures alone wouldn't protect Rose's privacy enough, he thought wryly to himself. "Sorry, umm, I didn't mean to - but the door wasn't locked."

"I suppose I didn't, sorry - glad it was you who prompted me, I suppose," Rose's voice came back. "How much, umm, did you see?"

"Uhh." It was with a guilty rush of pleasure that Kyle's mind replayed that split-second sight. Despite the first impressions, however, all of the 'naughtiest bits' had actually been more or less obscured, but he wasn't quite sure how to indicate that through the door. "A lot of skin, but not the full Belle, actually."

"Oh, okay." Rose almost sounded slightly disappointed - or maybe she was just still a bit upset. "One more question?"

"Sure, yeah, what's that?" Kyle wondered what would come next. It sounded as if Rose had come over very close behind him, as he rested the back of his head against the door.

"Just how DO I lock this thing?" Kyle laughed and went back through his memories to try and figure out how to talk her through the alien mechanism.


When all five of them gathered in Maria's room to pick from the various breakfast foods that had been delivered to them, the mood was more than a little quiet and subdued. Maria seemed particularly withdrawn and introspective, which was definitely an unusual mood for the usually energetic girl, and Alex and the Doctor appeared to have somewhat caught the sentiment from her. (Alex was probably missing Isabel somewhat fierce, and maybe he still wasn't completely over his brush with food poisoning.)

Only Rose herself seemed to be full of enthusiasm and excitement. When Kyle had finished dressing and straightening up his room and luggage, (for whatever reason he'd felt impelled to make an efort,) and went into Maria's room, Rose was sitting at the other end of the 'sofa' from Alex, giggling at some joke in her head, and taking bites out of a spherical muffin-like pastry a little bigger than a softball.

It was the first time that Kyle had seen her in the morning, since that one accidental glance in the shower, and at first he thought that there was something slightly familiar about the light summer-y dress that she was wearing, a white background with a pattern of blue and red flower plossoms, green leaves and stems. For a few seconds after he'd recognized the garment, Kyle actually wondered why she'd have borrowed any of Maria's clothes, and then he remembered how Rose and the Doctor had been barred from the TARDIS, which still held their luggage. Would they both be reduced to begging for clean clothes for several days, until the mystery murder was solved?

It was at this point that Kyle looked for the Doctor, who was wearing the same dark brown suit as yesterday, and it seemed to be perfectly clean and crisp. Had somebody used alien powers to - no, they didn't have anybody left who could use alien powers on his behalf - at least, not any of the usual gang. Could he have asked a stranger, maybe even the kid who brought them breakfast?

Speaking of which - Kyle gathered up a baseball muffin of his own, and several other promising delicacies, and sat down on the middle of the couch. Rose had been excitedly waving him over by that point. "So, Mister Valenti, what do you have planned for the day?"

"Umm - I'll be happy to tag along, if you're still going down to the concourse, if you're still going there for your dress - and one of us was supposed to buy a memory card. I guess I can put that on my own expense account, since yours is mostly spoken for. Aside from that - no real plans. I guess I figured that I should be available in case anybody needed my help with the murder investigation, instead of making vacation plans."

"Hey, you bought some new clothes?" Maria asked from halfway across the room, at the end of the bed. "Do they look very - alien?"

"No, the girl in the shop - I don't know, she might have read my mind and pulled out an outfit idea that I sort of always wanted to make - except I can't sew for beans."

"Sorry to cut the discussion of clothes off short, but Kyle did say another magic phrase, girls," the Doctor said soberly from a chair on the other side of the coffee table. "The murder investigation."

Alex perked up slightly at that. "Yeah - do we have any leads from yesterday?"

"Just one, and it's not much, I admit," the Doctor said slowly. "Having eliminated a few possibilities, espcially with respect to motive, I'm convinced that the answer to the killing lies back close to the scene - on campus. The Bailiff might not be eager to let any of us ask too many questions around there, which is why I didn't try too hard yesterday, but we might have to - what's the saying that starts that way?"

"We may have to break a few eggs to get this omelette made," Kyle quoted with relish.

Just at that moment, perhaps,an egg that nobody expected cracked open, because the video screen on the wall brightened and let out the alien equivalent of a phone ringtone. The five of them exchanged glances, and then the Doctor stepped over to speak for them, and touched the screen to accept the call. Kyle could just make out the angry face of a Kaaltan in impressive robes, one who he hadn't met before. From Maria and Alex's reactions, though, he wondered if they had met him.

"Good morning, Bailiff," the Doctor said, calmly and with a nod of his head in greeting. "Has there been a development in the case?"

"You could say that, Time Lord." the Bailiff growled. "Your 'student' Michael has escaped from jail, and though I cannot prove that you and the rest of your friends were involved, I have my suspicions."

There was a moment of stunned silence, and then Maria let out with an impressive scream. "You LOST my boyfriend, you..." Alex dived across and covered her mouth before she started to tell the Bailiff what she was thinking in any greater detail.

The Doctor seemed to think furiously for just an instant. "I'm sorry to hear that you're so suspicious of us, Bailiff. Myself, I suspect that this new development is not at all what it seems. Is it possible that Michael didn't even escape willingly. Someone might have, as the saying goes, 'busted him out' whether he wanted to come or not."

"Why would anybody want to do that?" the Bailiff sneered.

"I - I'm not sure of that yet," the Doctor admitted. "Do we need your permission to search for him ourselves? If so, may I request it?"

"Just a moment." The Bailiff's image became a slightly fuzzy greytone, and the sound cut out - he seemed to be turning his attention to a different screen on his end. Finally, after around two minutes, he came back to the Doctor. "Michael has been apprehended and is being brought back to jail in a secure transport. For whatever it's worth, his initial statements have been speaking of somebody taking him out of the jail while asleep or drugged unconscious, and experimenting on him."

"Really?" The Doctor grew concerned. "Do you have any further details on that?"

"Just this one quote," the Bailiff sighed, and read something out loud. "He said that if I co-operated, I would be returned to jail, but instead I bluffed on - on my Master the Time Lord's reputation, and convinced him to free me. At that time, I used energy discharges to destroy any samples of myself that might be in the lab, and quite a lot of his equipment there as well. At that time, the suspect - fled, commenting that he would not return me to legal custody no matter what I told him."

"I see," the Doctor said.

"Yes, a clever story," the Bailiff shot back. "On the other hand, it doesn't seem to me that Michael was attempting to return to my custody and surrender himself. In fact, my people might not have caught him in time - if I hadn't arranged them in a cordon around the township administration sector, specifically to intercept him on his way back to you."

There was a long pause. "I might be able to help explain that," the Doctor said. "I have established a low-level psychic link with my friends while they are here - it has already alerted me to an unrelated case of accidental food poisoning. I admit that I wasn't aware of Michael's situation before you alerted me, but the link might have helped him find his way here, when he was so disoriented that he wouldn't have been able to navigate directly back to Security. If he had arrived at our rooms, then after a short conversation, I would have escorted him back to your custody, Bailiff."

"You have explanations for everything, Time Lord," the Bailiff snapped. "Clever talker."

"Do the events of this morning change your word that I can continue to investigate the murder, clearing Michael and Isabel's names?" the Doctor pressed.

"I suppose not," the Bailiff grumbled. "But there are limits to my patience, and you have nearly reached them. Perhaps the opinions of my supervisors will let afford you more chances - that much I cannot say. Good day." And without waiting for a signoff, the screen darkened.

"Okay, what the hell?" Maria asked. "Who would take Michael out of jail just to - to test his DNA? That's what it seems like."

"Maybe somebody's already guessed something about us," Alex said unhappily. "About them, I mean. Whoever designed Michael and Isabel knew what they would look like as they grew up, right? We didn't think of that one when we planned to be anonymous."

"Yes, but I don't think that this changes our primary priorities," the Doctor said slowly. "The Bailiff will make doubly sure that nobody else gets at Michael or Isabel now, I think. His pride has been stung by this 'escape,' no matter who carried it out and why. We still need to get to the bottom of the original murder." He looked around. "Alex, Maria - are you both up for returning to campus with me?"

"Try and stop me," Alex muttered.

"Yeah, I'm up for it," Maria agreed. "What about checking in at the law and order station and talking to Michael first, though?"

"No, I don't want to let the Bailiff have such a good opportunity to change his mind," the Doctor said. "We'll swing by there after investigating on campus, near the scene of the crime - it isn't far, and we might have new evidence for him to consider by then, and actually get Michael and Isabel freed."

"Wouldn't that take the Magistrate's word?" Rose said. "She had them held on suspicion."

"Depends on their legal structure," Kyle said. "Here, I mean back on Earth, sheesh - you get arraigned by the judge, but the chief of police - or Sheriff - can still drop charges and set a suspect free, if he comes across good evidence that seems to justify such a decision."

"Alright, good enough," Maria said. "What about you two - Kyle, Rose?" She seemed to have a bit of laughter dancing in her eyes.

"We've got a shopping trip to go on," Kyle pointed out. "Nothing really exciting compared to your investigation, but each of us can do our bit." He considered. "Maybe we should agree on a place to meet for lunch?"

"I don't know how long we're going to be occupied," the Doctor said with a slight frown on his face. "But - there's a small cafe not far from the detention center - Maria and I grabbed something there yesterday. If you want to drop by there after you're done at the concourse, then we'll see..." He blinked, realizing something. "Oh, I nearly forgot. We picked up a few useful things yesterday."

"Who's we?" Alex asked, as the Doctor hurried out the door - and returned to the room half a minute later juggling three objects in his two hands - they were flat, and oblong shaped, and a bit smaller than a small hand held with the fingers and thumb all together.

"The cell phones, right!" Maria exclaimed happily.

"Not quite, but perhaps close enough," the Doctor admitted "We should be able to reach each other using these, and they'll be useful for finding your way around too, Kyle. I'll program the location of the cafe into it. They have a function that's somewhat similar to GPS direction finding on Earth, though they don't use satellites, just transmitters within and near the township itself."

"Alright, good enough," Kyle said. "Go team Roswell on three,and break."

Rose giggled a bit, but nobody else responded to that.

TO BE CONTINUED...
Read my other roswell stories!

"A man does not make his destiny: he accepts it or denies it. If the Rowan tree's roots are shallow, it bears no crown." From 'the farthest shore', Ursula LeGuin.

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Chrisken
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Re: Children of the Molecule (DW XO CC, Teen) Part 9 Dec 6 2009

Post by Chrisken »

Part Ten

"Okay, here we are," Alex muttered as he, Maria, and the Doctor walked slowly through the corridors of the College at Kaalto township. "This is the bit where our sleuths return to the scene of the crime to look for evidence. We have got to that bit."

The Doctor turned to look at him. "Arthur Dent, right?"

"Yeah, actually. Do you like the books?"

"There's books about him?" The Doctor put a comically quizzical expression on his face for a moment, and just as Alex was about to ask for a clarification, he turned to consider the scene. "Okay, the first order of business is to confirm whether or not there actually is an automated security weapon, one capable of delivering the lethal strike, covering anywhere that the victim could have gotten to this spot from. I've gotten a theory about who could have controlled that weapon and how, but I need to be sure that it exists before barking too far up the tree."

"I thought that you gave the Bailiff the idea of checking on that possibility himself," Maria pointed out.

"Yes, I did - but I'm not sure that he'll tell me what the results of his check were, or be able to follow up on the lead in the way that... that we can." The Doctor looked around, considering. "Black Tarnation and all - if I hadn't surrendered my screwdriver, I'd have been able to use it to probe into the wall for the control circuits and power relays that would be necessary for a weapon like that, and trace them each way." He seemed very disspirited at having been seperated from his trustiest tool. ~~"How else can we find them ourselves?" he asked his de facto assistants, seemingly desperate for a good idea.

Fortunately, Alex had one. "We still have high-level computer access, here in the college, right? Ask the system itself."

"Brilliant!" the Doctor admitted, turning about again. "Why didn't I think of that? Computer!" There was no obvious answer to his command. "Is there an AIVAS in the house, by any chance?" Still nothing.

"Maybe the pickups are only in the rooms, not - hallway," Maria suggested, feeling a bit uncertain about it. The Doctor nodded.

"Good point. Umm..." The Doctor turned, orienting, and tried a door a little way up the corridor, which the teenagers realized after a moment would be the same room that they had used the day before - before the murder. It didn't open automatically as he stepped near, and in a few seconds the Doctor found the little signal contact at the side of the doorframe and left his fingers on it until the door finally slid open.

"Yes, can I help y... Maria!" The young Kaaltan who was standing opposite the Doctor seemed very surprised. "Umm, your Lordship..."

"Sorry, umm - was just looking for an empty room to access the computer in," the Doctor told him. "No worries, if this one is taken, I'll just..."

"Er - try that one, two doors down," Xamev suggested gaily, pointing along the same wall back in the direction of where Maria and Alex had been standing near where the murdered person had been found. "Just before the turn in the hallway."

"Thanks muchly," the Doctor declared back, and headed off to try his luck again.

"I - I can't believe that I'm seeing you again," Xamev said to Maria, who shivered slightly, and Alex moved next to his old friend and even slightly in front of her, in a way that was obviously trying to be protective.

"Really?" Alex said. "Seems a bit of a coincidence that you're in the exact same room that you showed us to yesterday."

"Well, umm, okay, you caught me, I thought I'd do my work here today, just in case - but I didn't really think that it would work, that you'd have any reason to come back, especially considering what I heard - that you were in the Bailiff's confinement on suspicion of murder."

"I was, for a few hours yesterday," Maria said. "Our friends still are, and we're trying to find evidence to set them free with."~~

"Yes, this will do," the Doctor said, having opened up the door that Xamev had indicated. "Computer, this is the Doctor."

"Voiceprint recognized," the computer voice said from inside his room. "How may I assist you today?"

"Are there any automated weapons in the corridor outside this room, part of the College's security system or something of the sort?"

"Affirmative. Level two red corundum lasers were installed in all public access spaces when Kaalto colony was constructed, until the store of available parts was exhausted."

"And this was the oldest part of the township, the first constructed?" Maria asked, but the computer didn't answer her. The Doctor looked back out the door and gestured Maria and Alex over. Xamev looked curious, but elected not to tag along and went back to minding his own business.

"Red corundum," Alex repeated as he joined. "As in, a ruby laser?"

"Yes," the Doctor said absently. "The TARDIS translator is like that sometimes - red and the technical name for ruby and sapphire crystals must be closer to the way the phrase works in Antarian. They might not use the stones as jewelry or have particular words for the different shadings the way that Earthlings do." He returned his attention to the computer for a moment once the door had closed behind Maria. "Can you indicate the placement of the lasers and their coverage area on a schematic of the nearby hallways?" The computer represented that with a miniaturized hologram. "Oh, before I forget, are there security cameras in the public access spaces as well?"

"In many of them, yes," the computer told him. "Visual recording devices are now marked in blue."

"Will it be this easy?" Maria asked.

"Show me the footage for device 58B2, starting with time index 1187 yesterday," the Doctor commanded.

"Cannot comply - the relevant videos for cameras in that sector running 1165 to 1220 are not in repository," the computer informed him. "Trace indicates that they have been cleared by the use of a high security access code."

"The Bailiff!" Maria exclaimed. "Is he holding out on the evidence that could clear Michael and Isabel?"

"No, I won't believe that," the Doctor said. "The Bailiff might not be the most open-minded being, but he's an honest lawman at heart. If he has this footage, and it shows that they're innocent, he'll release them - but he might make us sweat first."

"But it might be less than conclusive," Alex put in. "I can see that he'd remove evidence from the main computer files to keep, um, anyone from poking around looking for it." Another explanation occurred to him. "Or someone else in his office might be less than honest, even in cahoots with the killer."

"Well, we can ask about this later on, but let's continue on with what we have," the Doctor said authoritatively. "Maria, tell you everything that you remember about yesterday - what you heard and saw after you left the room."

~~As Maria related her memories, disjointedly and a little flustered, the Doctor worked quickly at the computer keyboard, building up a sort of schematic of stick-figure images in the holographic corridor, and the businesslike way he went about it seemed to reassure her, calming her babble down and eliciting more useful information. When she had finished, the Doctor silently triggered a kind of a simulated reply - one generic figure walking on his own down the hallway, getting struck down by a red beam of laser light, rushing out of the way of that weapon and running for help, before he collapsed and was met by three others - Maria leading, then Michael and Isabel.

~~"Okay, so - what now?" Alex asked, breaking the silence that had settled. "Is there much else that we need to do here at the scene of the crime - or near it, anyway? We don't have the equipment to do a full forensic examination of the corridor, and it probably won't tell us much that's really useful anyway, will it?"

"No, not really," the Doctor said. "One thing - computer?"

"How may I assist you?"

"Can you tell if the corundum laser unit mounted at intersection, umm, 28D of this floor and sector was discharged within the past local day?" The doctor checked an elegant wristwatch and added on, "and ten segments, just to be on the safe side."

"Yes, Doctor, that unit fired a single beam for approximately one point six seconds," the computer replied, and then recited a date and time in the Kaaltan local calendar-clock system.

"The time of the attack, or when we heard the first scream at least," the Doctor said.

"Guess it shouldn't surprise us that you have a very precise sense of time," Maria joked. "So - I don't think that there's any doubt that laser was the murder weapon."

"I don't believe so, no," the Doctor agreed. "Is there any record of why the laser fired? Surely some sort of diagnostic trace of the programming criteria would be saved, in case of a computer glitch - so that the tragedy of an accidental injury or death from the system could be debugged and would never be repeated."

"Such traces are saved, affirmative," the computer told him. "But the traces have been cleared."

"Just like the video surveillance," Alex said morosely.

"But still, I think that we have something to take to the Bailiff," the Doctor said happily. "Um - computer, I'll need to copy my simulation work and other data to my ID bracelet - do you have the appropriate hardware here?"

The computer identified the appropriate peripheral attachment and started saving the Doctor's work as he put the bracelet up next to it. "Wait a second, there's one big problem with that plan, Doctor," Alex said. "So far, we've proved that somebody used clever computer reprogramming and the security weapons to kill that boy - or we think that we have. But we've also proved that YOU'RE clever with computers, and were more so before you gave up your sonic screwdriver. And you don't have access to the TARDIS. What if he - if he turns around and accuses you?"

Maria gasped, and the Doctor let out an unhappy sigh. "He may try. But - well, but the fact that I *did* give up my screwdriver freely, and that I'm coming with this information to him, should buy me a little reasonable doubt at least. Though I'm not sure that these people have the bit about reasonable doubt in their legal codes, come to think of it. That's a bit worrying." He brought his wrist away from the data writer and rubbed it slightly with his right hand. "In any event - there's simply not much help for it. I - well, I have a theory about how the 'computer hacking' was actually done, which would exonerate all of us if proved right, and also represents a great enough threat that the authorities need to be informed."

"Oh, yeah," Maria said, as the Doctor led the way back to the door. "This sounds just peachy."

-----------

"Miss Rosey!" Emani exclaimed as soon as she looked their way and saw Rose and Kyle approaching her 'tent' on the sales concourse. "It's ready, and I've been waiting and waiting - and I was worried that you wouldn't be able to come back. They said that there was a murder at the college campus, around the same time that you left to go there, and two strangers held in custody, a young man and a pretty girl..."

"Those are friends of ours," Kyle told her softly. "Things were pretty crazy yesterday, so that's why we weren't able to make it back until now." Emani bobbed her head to the side in what seemed to be a 'well, alright' kind of gesture. "And, for the record, the murder had happened by the time we got the message and rushed off. That's why we asked directions to the college."

"Oh, alright." Emani seemed to still be a bit puzzled, and Rose was tempted to say that they'd gone to meet their friends, to help in any way they could as the authorities investigated - but that wouldn't exactly be the whole truth, and leaving her to draw her own conclusions seemed safer than throwing any more deception around. "Well, your dress is here, let me see, umm..." Emani led the way into the tent, behind a long low series of shelves that she generally used as a combination desk and sales counter, and produced a rectangular box not much bigger than a shoebox, setting it on the counter. "I just need to swipe your bracelet one more time, to finalize the charge, and then you can take it with you."

"My dress is in there?" Rose asked, not sure if she should feel bemused or horrified. "It hardly even seems big enough, and - well, where I come from, fabulous dresses like that, you store on - on a hanger." Emani didn't seem to be able to place the reference. "A thing that supports the top of the outfit a bit like a person's shoulders would, and lets the rest fall free, so it doesn't have to..."

"To fold, or wrinkle, or scrunch," Emani said, smiling wide as she got the point. "You only worked in primitive fabrics before - raw plant fibers, that kind of thing?"

"Umm - well, not me directly, but yeah, I guess that's what I have experience with," Rose admitted, looking down at the cotton sundress that she'd borrowed from Maria that morning.

"You can get much beauty from simple materials like that, but you do need to take better care of them, yeah," Emani agreed, sounding very friendly now that she was down to talking shop. "This is molecularly simulated fabric. We've worked out a lot of clever tricks with such things - partly because we don't have much room in the enclosed gardens to grow clothing fibers and such. One of the advantages of this variant is, you could probably squeeze the whole dress into a ball, sit on it and rest your head on it for a week, then shake it out and it'll STILL look lovely."

"Umm, well, thanks," Rose mumbled, surprised by this at least as much as the more impressively alien things that she'd experienced. "Oh, right - wrist swipe." She held out the bracelet near to Emani's sensor, and completed the transaction. "One other thing that you might be able to help us with - we need to buy a little computer storage card, to copy files around with. Any idea where we could find..."

"There's digital supply places everywhere on the concourse now," Emani grumped good-naturedly. "Can hardly walk ten paces without walking past one - or bumping into them, if you're not careful. But - well, they're all kinduv crooks, charging huge profits - how much storage do you need?"

"Not much," Kyle put in. "Umm - 50R." He'd read that off of a sheet of scrap plastic paper that the Doctor had given him. (Not the pages with the research results on them, but from a pile of to-reuse pages that they'd found inside a desk drawer in Maria's room.)

"XKCY standard?"

"Umm - no, XKCD."

Emani frowned just slightly, and Rose wondered if there were actually two variant types of chip with such similar code names, or if somebody had gotten the details (or the translation) wrong. "Well, I'm tempted to tell you to leave the concourse entirely and check out Giloren sector - but it's not the nicest neighborhood to strangers, especially off-worlders. Maddy B probably won't cheat you too much, especially if he sees your credit total, Rose, and you can convince him that you just don't have any more to spend."

"Umm - the plan was that Kyle was going to pay," Rose muttered. "I didn't think I'd have enough."

"You should be able to cover a more than fair price," Emani insisted. "If you let your gentleman friend pay, he'll be paying twice as much."

"Well, thanks I guess," Kyle said. "How do we find Maddy?"

~~"Hmm." Emani considered the question, and then came back around from behind her shelves, towards the main entrance to the tent, and Rose and Kyle followed her. Peeking out into the concourse, Emani seemed to geet her bearings. "Okay, you take a left turn on your way out, and keep going straight for a long time - well, as straight as the aisle will let you, it kind of bends back and forth a little bit it isn't hard to tell that aisle from the branches and crossways. One junction before it dead-ends, you should see a portable building made out of bright green plastic, taller than anything else in the area. Circle around the back of that and go in through the circular doorway - that's Maddy's shop."

"Um, alright," Rose said, hoping that the directions would be as easy to follow as they sounded, or better. "Thanks again."

"No, thank you for your patronage," Emani insisted. "I hope that the outfit gives you a great deal of joy."


It was actually easy enough to find the dark green building, go inside at the proper door, and meet Maddy B. Kyle's first impression of him was that Maddy was the biggest Kaaltan, or Antarian of any type, that he'd met - as tall as a some of the tallest NBA players,, but built to that scale more like a football player. His manner was the same sort of determined friendliness that reminded Kyle of a kind of sports player, too - the old high school jocks in Roswell who had no better choice than to become store managers when they grew into their late twenties, (usually of businesses that their parents owned.) Kyle never wanted to become one himself, but he felt a bit reassured by the familiarity of this archetype, and sat back with a grin to watch as Rose bickered over the price. A few times Maddy actually asked about Kyle's credit, but he refused to get swiped, saying that 'The lady's the one who wants it' and refusing to be deflected from that purchasing tactic.

Soon enough they'd finalized the purchase, and come back around to the front side of the green building. As Rose tucked the tiny memory card into the rectangular garment bag, (which wouldn't have had room for any bigger of an item,) Kyle pulled out the communicator that the Doctor had given him and pulled up the directions entry for the cafe where they'd agreed to meet. "Proceed up Xyzzyx way until you come to Concourse exit Eighteen," the device informed him in exactly that same smoothly synthesized voice that some elevators talk to you in, while showing him a graphic for the first step of the journey that Kyle was entirely unable to relate to their actual surroundings.

"That's really helpful, little thing," he grumbled at it.

~~"It's like a GPS unit," Rose said. "If all else fails, we can try walking around, and see how the dot marking our current location changes, use that to orient."

"You have a lot of experience with GPS devices?" Kyle asked her, slightly surprised.

"Well, yeah, I don't have a car, but a few friends of mine..." She trailed off. "Whoops."

"Oh, right." What with the culture gap of America versus Britain, it was easy to forget that Rose also came from several years in the Earth's future. "Guess I'll have to watch for affordable GPS mapping to hit the market - what, my senior year in college, something like that?" Rose smiled as enigmatically as she could. "Alright, then."

Her suggested trick was good, and soon they'd taken the indicated exit from the concourse. "At this point," the communicator told them, "you have a choice. Wait for the local transit car, which will be arriving in four minutes, or proceed down the central walkway."

"It's pretty early yet, right? On our own two feet, then, the whole way," Rose suggested, and Kyle was glad enough to agree. The communicator navigation screen led them through several pedestrian passages, some smaller corridors, and then to an elevator.

"Ascend to level thirteen," it told them as Kyle got close to the door. Rose reached forward to signal for a lift going up.

"I guess these people don't have any superstitions about a thirteenth floor," she pointed out. It was possibly only thirteen seconds after that when the door irised open, and Kyle stepped inside.

They had the elevator car to themselves once the door closed again and Kyle punched the button for thirteen - and only just realized that Rose was coming towards him before they were suddenly in each other's arms, her lips planted against his in a passionate first kiss. ~~Kyle felt an urge to stiffen with shock, but instead allowed himself to relax into the older girl's embrace, leaning his back against the side of the enclosed cube of a room. One part of his mind was trying to think of what level they'd been on to start with, how fast an alien elevator might move, doing mental multiplication and guessing how likely they were to be interrupted by another stop before level fourteen, while another aspect of his brain was coaching him to stroke his fingers through Rose's loose and long golden hair, and how hard to purse his lips against her lips and tongue.

They were still deep in mid-kiss when the door spiraled open again for level thirteen, and Rose turned to look just in time to see it swirling closed again. She stepped away from Kyle, trying to get close enough to stick an arm or leg in the door, and then thought better of it. Surely any responsible civilization would have thought of the safeguards necessary to keep a person from being injured in such a situation - but what if the Kaaltan mindset was so different from humanity than nobody would think of doing such a thing?

Kyle maanged to save the day by turning to the bank of controls, and on his second try, pressed a button that opened the door again. They filed outside as if nothing had been unusual about their trip, butwhen Kyle realized that nobody else seemed to be around, never mind waiting, he cleared his throat and tried to think of something to say.

"I thought that we'd both enjoy that," Rose started, beating him to the punch.

"Uh - well, I certainly f-found it fun, yeah," Kyle stammered, wishing that he could manage just a little bit more cool factor. "But..."

"Don't worry," she said. "Casual thing, holiday fling - for now. Not that I'm ever exactly not 'on holidays' since I started travelling in the TARDIS, I suppose, but - you know what I mean? Is that okay??"

"Yeah, that's totally cool," Kyle insisted. "How about we find our way to that cafe, though." He chuckled. "I can buy you a cup of of Clakh, since I happen to know that you're too low on credit to insist that we go dutch."

Rose laughed merrily. "Okay, so which way?" she asked him with a gesture at the communicator. Kyle looked. Since it still showed the icon for the elevator, it was much easier for him to get his bearings. "Down the left way," he said, gesturing accordingly. "Shouldn't be far now."

------------

Once they arrived at the Bailiff's security complex, it was a while before the Doctor could speak with the Bailiff, or anybody else of much importance, for that matter. When they finally got an interview, the Bailiff seemed to be even more hostile than usual without explaining why, and looked stonily at the evidence that the Doctor carefully presented without really commenting one way or the other. When the presentation he had planned was over, the Doctor finally let a bit of sarcasm and testiness show. "Should I even bother explaining my theory about the way that the murderer controlled the laser weapons?"

The Bailiff shook himself irritably. "Frankly, no, not at this point, Doctor. We've already reached the same conclusions, and also exhaustively analyzed your little sonic device. Though it neither carries nor leaves traces of electronic intrusions, I have to say that it is the best tool for such 'hacking' into our systems that existed on Kaalto at the time of the murder. The fact that you have brought this evidence to us openly, I believe I can safely discount as a smokescreen - you had to know that we would reach such conclusions for ourselves eventually, even if you didn't give us enough credit to beat you to it. Even without any plausible motive, this is enough that I am forced to take action."

"I - I see," the Doctor admitted. "So I am to be held for trial myself?"

"Pending an investigation, at least," the Bailiff agreed. Without any obvious signal other than his words, the door opened and five members of the Kaaltan campus watch filed in, intimidating to a man.

"You won't find enough evidence of all this that will satisfy a jury," the Doctor protested, trying to keep as much of his composure as he could. Alex and Maria were both speechless by this point.

"I admit that it'll be hard to prove the allegations," the Bailiff said, rising and gesturing that the three outworlders should follow him. Without much reluctance, the Doctor did as he was bid, showing little surprise as the Watchmembers filed in on either side of him, and of Alex and Maria as they trailed behind. The Bailiff led the way into the open room, where there were more Kaaltan security personnel than they had ever seen before. "You're a clever man, Doctor, whether you're truly a villain or not. If I'm to have any hope of finding the truth, I will have to look in the one place you'd feel comfortable hiding your dirty secrets - the place you don't think that anybody else can enter without your permission."

There was a moment of a stunned silence before the Roswellians suddenly erupted in exclamations. Maria's offering was just reaction: 'No, not the T...', while Alex simultaneously tried a warning: 'Doctor, look out, he's going to try...'

Alex didn't really have time to get to any helpful content in his alarm, and most of what he did say couldn't have been easily understood at the time. The Bailiff extended one hand towards the Doctor, and suddenly the chain around the Doctor's neck began to rise into the air, seemingly of its own accord. With the expertise that the Bailiff could bring to using his natural Antarian powers when he chose to employ them, purloining the TARDIS key took little time, and though the Doctor made one desperate snatch to retain his property, all his fingers closed on were empty air.

When the Bailiff had the key chain in his own hand, the key itself dangling down only about an inch, the Doctor glared furiously at him, panting a little. "Many have tried to seize the TARDIS for themselves," he hissed in a low, dangerous voice. Two of the guards came close to him from either side, as if ready to grab his arms, but didn't - perhaps they were waiting for him to actually attack the Bailiff. "It's been two hundred years since anybody got so far as wresting the key away from me by force. But even that desperate measure will not avail you."

"I have one desperate measure left," the Bailiff said. "First off, I do not covet your TARDIS for itself. I seek only justice."

"And if your courts find me guilty, what then of my property?" the Doctor snarled back.

"The Magistrate may seize it as retribution, but that is not my affair, and I will seek no credit for it," the Bailiff said. "In any event, the first matter before us is finding evidence." He passed the key off to another silent Kaaltan who had been standing nearby. With a bright flash of light and a sense of liquidly shifting flesh, the new holder of the key transformed into a perfect likeness of the Doctor, complete with his suit.

The Doctor stared at his doppleganger in dull horror, and then words burst out of him again. "No, no, you cannot do this. It is not for my own sake that I ask now, but for concern out of the safety of your man. He will face great danger if he so much as leaves the confines of this station wearing my face. Enough time has passed, I would fear leaving myself if I could not convince you to take action. At least wait long enough for me to explain my theories and my fears..."

With a gestur rom the Bailiff, the Doctor was held back by two of the Watch. "Excellent," the Bailiff said in a stage whisper to the false Doctor. "This facade will be enough to get you access to the TARDIS. Once you get to the site, use this token as mine to order that the barrier be brought down again." He passed over a little plastic bauble, and then stood back, satisfied, as the false Doctor strode out the front door of the Bailiff's headquarters.

And everybody saw him get struck down by the powerful blast of a red laser. A young officer, taken entirely by surprise, rushed out to help his fallen comrade, and was also hit and collapsed.

"Nobody else can leave this station until we know that it's safe," the Doctor burst out. The Bailiff glared at him. "Well, if you don't want to listen to me at this point, it's your own people that you'd be sending out to be cut down. I *will* tell you what's going on, though, unless you gag my mouth to prevent my speech. This is all because of your damnably helpful computer genies. Aritificially intelligent servitors and bright, inquisitive college students - really that's a bad combination."

The Bailiff gaped. "But all computer genies that students have access to are programmed with firm limits on their access."

Alex was starting to get it, now. "But of all your smartest and most imaginative young people, surely there would be one who was clever and unscrupulous enough to push the limits just a little. There always is, and normally it doesn't matter, not that much. But with genie technology in the mix - what if one hypothetical student manages to unlock a genie just enough to order it, 'Find out better ways of circumventing security limits on computer access, and use them to increase your control of the Kaalto built-in systems. Repeat until I order you differently."

Now it was the Bailiff's turn to stare at them in dawing, silent horror. "What - what do we do?" one of the Security assistants asked in an oddly childlike voice.

"Xamev!" Maria exclaimed. "He's the Genie's master - he has to be, all the pieces fit. He either arranged to be our guide when we showed up at the College, because he was curious, or that was a coincidence. But he saw enough to guess that we'd be convenient points of suspicion, so he finally used the access that the Genie gave him to kill someone - a rival, or someone he'd come to hate. That's why he was doing research near the scene, to try and keep a direct eye on investigations in a way that security cameras couldn't tel him - and that's why he broke into my dreams last night."

"Perhaps," the Doctor muttered. "It's not conclusive proof, but suggestive, and I give you full points for intuition my dear. However, the sad truth is that finding the master first is going about it backwards. We could not hope to subdue him while the Genie is free to act and defend him, and once the Genie has been vanquished it should not be hard to find out the identity of its master by computer analysis."

"But - but even if this is true, how could such a program be overcome now?" the Bailiff asked, sounding nervous himself.

"You've built your network systems around an N-1333 TVO architecture, right?" the Doctor asked. The Bailiff looked blank, but two of the others around the room nodded. "Then I doubt that the Genie could have compromised the key security override yet - not unless it's been on the rampage for much longer than would seem likely. Do you know how to access that override?"

"Well - yes," the Bailiff admitted, looking surprised. "I - well, I tried to use it against you, only an hour ago, but couldn't identify a signature for the trojans that I supposed you had used your screwdriver to implant in the system, to establish control that you could use even after surrendering it."

For a second, he seemed to be considering a resurgence of suspicion the Doctor's way, but then his eyes glanced over to the fallen shapeshifter, and once again he couldn't reconcile his old theories with any reason that the Doctor should program the lasers to shoot down someone who looked like him. "And - and there's a common kernel signature to all the Genies, isn't there? We can lock them all down. It would cause some disruptions and inconvenience, until we found the one genie with the wrong access levels for its stated purpose, and allowed the rest to resume their duties, but I think anyone would agree that it's what we have to do under the circumstances."

"Yes, yes," someone else chimed in. "But how do we GET to the access point for the override? The Genie and the master will know what's up if we charge off from here - and with those lasers just about everywhere between here and there..." The speakers let various parts of his body shake to and fro in a most disturbing fashion.

The Doctor immediately seized on this opportunity to get down to business. "Okay, how far away is it? Can we identify how many of the lasers, and what other obstacles or dangers that might plausibly be computer-controlled, would be between? We can't afford to stay here shaking in our slippers. Your little master has struck thrice now, and I suspect it will be getting easier each time, harder to keep the power over life and death from going to his head."

"Yes, of course," the Bailiff agreed, pulling up a schematic on the big situation table. "Is it dangerous to use our computers in here? Our security is strong, but probably not invincible."

"Probably best to use it while we've got it," Alex suggested. "No accessing systems outside, though - in fact, if you've got a firewall lockdown mode here, I suggest you turn it on." Someone else rushed off to attend to that. "And while we're making helpful suggestions, would somebody mind going into confinement and letting our friends go?"

"We're a little busy here," the Bailiff grumped. "That might be the safest place for them, unless you can think of a good reason why they'd be indispensable out here."

~~"Umm, actually, well, I can." Everybody turned around to see a tiny young Kaaltan woman, probably less than four foot ten, half hidden by the desk that she was standing behind. She nervously fiddled with something that looked like goggles strapped around her head. (They hadn't seen anyone wearing Earth-style glasses on the alien planet, so maybe this was the nearest equivalent, for those whose vision issues couldn't be corrected by Healers.) "The, umm, there's the maintenance droid tunnels, underneath the floor all over this level. There's an access port into the tunnels here, in the back workrooms of the security complex, and if this override access point is where I think it is, there's an access port to come back up in the next room over. No lasers or other defensive weapons down in the tunnels there."

Alex smiled cautiously at this idea, but the Bailiff scowled and started to rant at her. "No weapons - unless you count the droids themselves, which a Genie could easily take over if it's as powerful as the Doctor suggests. And we put life sign sensors down through all of those tunnels just last year, to give us warning when the mid-age kids start playing around down there. I was overseeing the installation of those sensors, don't forget that Clapta."

"Yes, life sign sensors," Clapta insisted, "but they don't work right on lifeforms that aren't entirely of Antarian derivation, like us. Remember the fuss when the Klaatu ambassador accidentally fell through an open access port, and at first nobody would believe his aides that he was down there because the computer insisted that it wasn't reading life signs? *I* was the one who went and troubleshooted the programming after that mess, and came up with the plan for what was necessary to realign the sensors properly, except that Township refused to pay for the project. Trust me, then great Bailiff, that I know whereof I speak. The more of the Doctor's alien friends that we can bring down into the tunnels with him, the harder it will be for the Genie to tell where they are down there - but it must be them alone, none of us."

Everybody was silent for a moment. Through Alex's mind ran the thought that Isabel and Michael's life signs might be closer to Antarian than Clapta had guessed - nobody suspected that they were really Antarian hybrids. But the Bailiff knew that their physiologies were similar to Antarian - that had been part of the evidence that he'd used to keep them in jail, hadn't it? Alex decided that he still had to keep his mouth shut about that part.

And the Doctor was going down a different mental track, it seemed. "Sounds like a plan to me," he decided. "Have Isabel and Michael freed at once and brought here." One of the aides looked over at the Bailiff, saw no immediate sign of a protest, and rushed off to follow the Doctor's orders. "And - Clapta, is it? Can you tell me how to find the way that I must go in these tunnels? That'll be tricky, I suspect, without being able to bring a native guide along."

"It is entirely BESIDE the point!" the Bailiff raged. "You - you do not have the authority to engage the system override, and the Genie will be able to take control of the hatch portals down in the tunnels. Even if your life signs can't be localized at all, there will surely be some evidence that someone is down there, and it will lock down the entire network."

The Doctor turned regretfully to the Bailiff. "Those are two good problems," he allowed, "but they have the same answer, as much as you might not want to hear it."

"Yes!" Maria cheered quietly, pumping one arm down by her side.

"No - not..." The Bailiff took a step back, stricken.

"I'm afraid so," the Doctor continued, his voice as kind and peaceful as he could make it. "I think that you'll have to give me my screwdriver back."

The Bailiff hemmed and hawed, but finally he reluctantly stepped over to an evidence locker and started to turn the safe dial on it. Just then, Michael and Isabel spotted Alex and Maria from opposite sides of the room, and there was much rushing together and hugging, even under the scary circumstances.

-------------

"Oh, what did they call that blue milk concoction last night in the clinic?" Rose muttered to herself. The Kaaltan waiter who had stopped by the 'patio' table to take their orders just looked blank and tapped his toes at her.

"Umm, I don't remember," Kyle admitted a bit sheepishly. "Actually, didn't you say that you didn't ask?"

"Maybe." Rose shook her head. "No, that was what it was made from - but maybe I didn't ask for a name either." She sighed and looked as pleadingly up as she could manage at the stone-faced waiter, and Kyle was actually surprised not to see him melt.

"We're not from around here, and we need to be careful to avoid accidental food poisoning," Kyle pointed out.

"From the same planet?" the waiter asked them in a bored tone, and Rose nodded with surprise. The waiter proceeded to pick up an empty glass with one hand, take Kyle's hand with the other, and suddenly Kyle felt a prick of pain without being sure what had caused it. And then, just a few seconds later, the waiter was carrying a slightly bloodsmeared glass away, and Kyle was wrapping a cloth napkin around the heel of his hand. "I'll be back in just a moment with a guaranteed safe menu for the two of you. Shouldn't be too much for you to work your way through," the waiter declared as he left.

"The hell?" Kyle muttered, and when he looked over towards Rose in the hopes of seeing some sympathy, he was annoyed to find that she was struggling to contain a laugh. "Come on, it's not funny!"

"Well, it's kind of funny," she said, "but if it helps I can kiss it and make it better." With somewhat bad grace Kyle extended his hand towards her, not bothering to unwrap the napkin. Rose considered the little pinprick type wound that had mostly stopped bleeding, and stood up, altering the angle that she was facing slightly, looking around the wide pedestrian corridor that the cafe patio had been carved out from with its simple fence.

...And a blast of red energy dashed her to the ground. "Rose? Rose!" Kyle exclaimed, jumping up from his own chair, hurring over to see what had happened to her.

-------------

"Okay, this is no fun," Maria groused as she crawled on her hands and knees down the dark corridor. It didn't help her mood to know that she was just along for the ride to be one more non-Antarian life sign signal to confuse the sensors, essentially. Everybody else had been given some kind of a job, but she was just along for the ride so that it would be all five of them. (Nobody had seriously suggested going to find Rose and Kyle, when they couldn't travel safely through the corridors of the township.)

And if she had to be here, couldn't she at least have been behind Michael, so that she could catch faint glimpses of his behind in the dim light when she looked ahead of her? As much as Alex might have appreciated her view of Isabel's bottom, it didn't do anything for Maria. But then, she did feel a bit safer with Michael guarding the rear of the procession, and Alex didn't have any better a view, certainly, having to follow behind as the Doctor led the way.

She nearly missed the first turning before Isabel hissed at her from a side passage that she'd not really noticed, and had to back up until she could make the sharp right-angle bend in her body. Then, there was the sound of a loud clunking from up ahead. "Okay, that's screwdriver one, hatches nothing," the Doctor's voice came faintly. "Not bad for us."

"Yeah, not bad," Maria muttered, and then jumped enough to hit her head on the roof of the tunnel. "Michael, Isabel! There's - there's a robot or something, coming up fast from beside us, from one of the other tunnels in that turn I just slid around. What do I do??"

TO BE CONTINUED...
Read my other roswell stories!

"A man does not make his destiny: he accepts it or denies it. If the Rowan tree's roots are shallow, it bears no crown." From 'the farthest shore', Ursula LeGuin.

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