This is a work in progress, and as such will probably be revised more often than not as I work through it. This particular chapter was tweaked in response to a few points a friend and fellow Whovian raised when I posted it before. It was the first instance, so far, where I realized I had to fix them early before getting too much further into the story. And so, here is the revised third installment of the Four Doctors.
The TARDIS landed with a solid “thunk”. The Doctor frowned over the
console readouts.
Rose tentatively loosened her grip on the support beam she’d been clinging
to. “Have we stopped?”
“Stopped?" The Doctor snorted something remarkably close to a laugh.
"Relatively speaking, the entire Universe is expanding outward at a rate
slightly greater than the speed of light. Nothing is ever 'stopped', really.”
He gave her a quick glance, a spark of humor in his eye. “But for now
we're anchored to a planetary gravity well. We’ve landed.”
“Landed where?” Rose joined him by the console to stare at a bank of blank
screens.
“Can’t say,” the Doctor mumbled, punching at some buttons and
re-checked his readouts. “That jaunt through the time corridor fried a few
circuits so I can’t get a reading.” He poked in frustration at the
controls once more. “We’ve set down just beyond the corridor’s terminus but
where and when that is exactly …” he slammed his mallet into the readout panel
and re-adjusted some dials, all to no avail. He turned and strode purposefully
toward the door. “We’ll have to go outside and get our bearings.”
“Is that safe?”
“Probably not,” he replied brightly, and threw open the door.
He stepped out and looked around to get a sense of the place. They
were in the middle of a city but somewhat removed from the bustle of downtown
by a wide, slow moving river to his right. The rising sun hung low in the
sky to his left. He took in the trees lining the streets and sniffed the
air.
“Definitely Earth,” he said as Rose stepped up beside him. “Mid
Twentieth-Century, I’d guess. Late summer. Some fifty years or so
before your time.” What he didn’t mention was a strong stench of death in
the air. They were in the middle of a war – one of the big ones, probably
the second World War.
He strolled down to the edge of the river, nodding a greeting to a small,
plump old man sitting contentedly at the riverbank, studying a chessboard set
up beside him. He seemed to be waiting for someone to come along and join him.
The man smiled and lifted his hat, reminding the Doctor of himself in a
previous life -- not so very long ago, and yet it seemed so irretrievably
distant.
“Nice day,” the Doctor observed, as he squatted beside the man and moved a
black pawn on the chessboard. "Good day for a game."
“It is,” the man said with a grin. “It is always a good day for
chess.” He moved one of his own pawns in answer to the Doctor's opening.
“Good way to spend a morning,” the Doctor said. He shifted another piece on
the board and settled to the ground.
“You speak Japanese,” the man observed as he made his next move. He seemed
more intent on the conversation at this point than on the game.
“I do,” the Doctor replied. It was technically true, and easier than
trying to explain the TARDIS and its translation matrix.
“You’re not a spy, are you?” the man asked benignly.
“Why, are we at war?”
“I hope not,” the man said. He sighed heavily, shaking his head. “Too
much war.”
The Doctor nodded. The two of them sat quietly, alternately staring
out at the river and studying the chessboard between them.
There was a sense of
deja-vu about this place. Not just the physical
location, though it did seem familiar. But something niggled at his temporal
senses. He suspected they were very near one of Earth's many unchangeable fixed
points. World War II had more than its share, certainly, so maybe it shouldn’t
have been all that surprising. Still...
He was more and more convinced that they had just left behind an unexpected
fixed point – it was the only explanation for the near-disaster when he’d let
Rose change history and save her father’s life. Oh, sure it had been risky. And
he had danced much closer to the edge with that one than he had ever done
(intentionally) before. But even so...
Not to be immodest, but he is
the
Doctor, after all. He quite literally wrote the book on Advanced Temporal
Manipulation (or at least, he had meant to but never quite got around to it. Although,
he had come across the book once or twice in Gallifrey’s used-book stores, so
he obviously wrote/would write it at some point.) He was the only Time Lord in
recorded history to meet and interact with his own past and future selves. He
simply didn’t make careless mistakes like that. No, he had to conclude that Rose
Tyler and her family had a greater cosmic significance than he’d thought.
And now he’d discovered a time corridor playing about the edges of another
fixed point. Whatever was going on here, it could not be good.
Rose sat down beside the Doctor and watched his dark brooding for a bit.
Then she turned to the other man.
"Hi! I'm Rose."
The Japanese grinned and tipped his hat in a way she found charmingly
old-fashioned. "I am Takeshi Watanabe," he replied. "It is a
pleasure to meet you, Rose. And he ... he is Thorn?"
Rose laughed at that. She bumped the Doctor playfully with her shoulder.
"Ah, the Doctor's not so bad once you get to know him."
"Nah," the Doctor said. "Once you get to know me I'm much
worse." He moved a bishop, but continued to be distracted by a vague
unease about his surroundings.
Rose reclined on the grass, gazing up at the early morning sky. Mr. Watanabe
brought one of his knights into play on the board. He leaned in toward Rose to
speak confidentially, but loud enough for the Doctor to hear.
"Your
friend, Doctor Thorn, he is trying to checkmate in six moves."
"Not trying," the Doctor said, flashing a toothy grin and shifting
a rook into position. "I don’t try, I do."
"Today you do not," said Mr. Watanabe with a grin, as one of his
pawns came forward to guard the square the Doctor had been headed toward.
The Doctor raised his eyebrows in appreciation. "Impressive," he
said. He brought a knight into play. "This game might actually take me ten
moves."
"You play well," Takeshi said with a grin, as he moved a bishop
off to the sidelines. "But I think perhaps you do not play quite so well
as you think."
"You're probably right," the Doctor said with a grin as he
repositioned his rook. "But near enough. I play to win."
"I also play to win," replied Takeshi, as he moved his knight.
"And you are in check."
The Doctor stared, slack-jawed, at the chessboard. "Fantastic," he
enthused.
"Doctor," Rose interrupted, still looking toward the sky.
But the Doctor ignored her, intent on retracing Takeshi's moves on the
chessboard. "This is really something," he gushed.
"Doctor," Rose repeated, more urgently.
"I mean I'll still win," the Doctor went on, "but I haven't
had a challenge like this since, I don't remember when."
"Doctor!"
"What, Rose?"
"Well I was just thinking it seems strange that that's the first
airplane I've seen all morning, and it might be worth pointing out to you, is
all."
"Yes, well. There's a war on, you know, and..." The Doctor paused
a moment and followed her gaze skyward. "Bloody hell!"
Suddenly the Doctor was pulling her to her feet and propelling her up the
hill. "Get back to the TARDIS!"
"Doctor," she called breathlessly as she ran. "...Doctor,
we... this is..."
"Back to the TARDIS!"
As she reached the top of the hill, the Doctor grabbed her hand and pulled
her roughly across the lawn. She stumbled in through the TARDIS door and
collapsed to catch her breath. The Doctor had only just got the doors shut when
the world outside exploded into a blinding white-hot light. She could feel the
TARDIS around her shudder as if it were buffeted by strong winds.
"Doctor..." Rose turned on him. "He was out there!"
"Yeah," the Doctor growled. "Him and a hundred-thousand like
him. Ordinary people, living their ordinary lives, in Hiroshima, Japan. They
all die today, and there is not a bloody thing we can do about it."
"But Doctor...!"
"You think I like it? I hate it. With every fiber of my being I hate
it. But I can't change it."
"So," a soft-spoken voice behind them broke in. They turned to see
Takeshi Watanabe, gazing around him at the TARDIS console room. "So this
box of yours ... it is bigger than it looks."