Kristoph set their course for Earth and looked across his TARDIS console
at Captain Harkness.
“You’ve been in a TARDIS before, haven’t you?”
he said to him.
“How do you know?” the Captain responded cautiously.
“For one thing, you didn’t find the fact that it’s bigger
on the inside unusual. For another, I have been speaking to you in a southern
Gallifreyan dialect all along and you didn’t even notice. You’ve
been in a TARDIS often enough to fully absorb the ability to translate
languages automatically. And if that wasn’t proof enough…”
Kristoph paused. He studied the handsome captain’s face carefully
then glanced at the readout on the VDU in front of him.
“Your body is saturated with artron energy. At least a thousand
times more than a Time Lord has naturally occurring in his body. It’s
what allowed you to survive an unauthorised portal trip. And that energy
didn’t come from the portal. You brought it with you.”
“There was… a sort of accident,” Jack Harkness explained.
“I died and was brought back to life… somehow… and since
then… I can’t die. And… that’s not always a blessing.
Today is up there in the top ten of really painful deaths. But if I told
you it wasn’t the number one…”
“Then you and I have something in common, at least,” Kristoph
answered. “I’ve got some bad memories of regeneration, too.
But you’re… unique. A Human with Time Lord regenerative abilities…
It’s probably just as well I’m getting you away from Gallifrey.
We have scientists who would happily dissect you to find out what makes
you tick.”
“Thanks,” Jack said. “I think.”
“This accident…” Kristoph added. “It… was
something to do with my son?”
“Yes. But… I probably shouldn’t tell you any of the
details. I’m guessing you know perfectly well how dangerous foreknowledge
is. I’ve already pushed that envelope far enough.”
“You did that when you told my wife all about the hero our child
is going to grow up to be. She thinks about it all the time. She worries
about him getting hurt in some mission to bring peace and justice to an
obscure part of the galaxy. He hasn’t even been conceived yet, and
she is concerned about what he will do when he is a mature Time Lord.”
“Sorry,” Jack responded. “I guess that was a mistake.”
Kristoph half smiled.
“I don’t know. Even when she’s worrying, it seems to
make her happy thinking about him. But you’re right. That envelope
doesn’t need pushing any further.”
“And yet, I’m gonna push it,” Jack said. “You
said about Ramasu… he had been expunged from history. That’s
what you guys do to dangerous criminals? You wipe them out of your history?”
“When a Time Lord is declared Renegade, his family disown him. His
name is removed from their line. He is never spoken of again. It is as
if he never existed.”
“And these Renegades… they do the same… they renounce
their family line… take on new names…”
“It has been known,” Kristoph replied. “Ramasu was using
another name?”
“He called himself The Darkman.”
“Pretentious and melodramatic,” Kristoph commented.
“Yeah, I thought so too. Also a bit like a Batman villain. But…”
Jack Harkness stopped speaking and he turned his face away from Kristoph.
He had been thinking about something, but now he came to say it, he wasn’t
sure.
“You’re about to tell me that you know my son by a pseudonym
that starts with the definitive article.”
“Yes,” Jack admitted. “And… quite apart from not
knowing his real name, he was always a little cagy about his past. I know
I’ve no right to judge. I’ve done a lot of stuff I’m
not proud of. And, anyway, whatever he might have done before, I know
him as a good man. I’d trust him to the end of the universe. But…”
“You think my future son might be a Renegade – a reformed
Renegade turned back from the dark side?” Kristoph’s expression
was impossible to gauge. He might be angry at such a slur on his family,
or distressed about his own flesh and blood going astray. Or amused at
the way Jack had let his imagination go into overload.
Jack couldn’t think of a single thing to say.
Kristoph shook his head and smiled reassuringly.
“The future isn’t set in stone. I don’t know my unborn
son’s destiny. But there is another possibility. It’s not
one I would want for him. His mother certainly doesn’t. But the
best assassins in the Celestial Intervention Agency are always known by
the definitive article, too. You really don’t need to know what
I was known as in my younger days.”
“He… isn’t an assassin. He hates guns. And killing even
his worst enemies repulses him.”
“I don’t like guns,” Kristoph replied. “Which
reminds me…” He opened a panel under the console and brought
out what Jack recognised as his own property. “My butler found these
in the portal. Your clothes were destroyed, but these were rather more
durable.” He passed him a wristwatch. “1940s RAF pilot watch.
Interesting. This… on the other hand…” He looked at
the wider leather strap with some more sophisticated technology built
into it. “Fifty, fifty-first century Earth?” Jack reached
out his hand pleadingly and Kristoph noted how relieved he seemed when
he fastened it to his left wrist – the watch going on the right.
“Your revolver – a Webley – goes with the watch. 1940s
weapon, future technology, and you came through the portal from 1996.
You’re quite a paradox in yourself, aren’t you, Captain Harkness?”
“Yes, I am,” he admitted. “I could explain why, but…
I don’t think this is a long enough trip.”
“You and me and my future son… all with our secrets to keep.
Perhaps it’s not so surprising that our paths cross, after all.
We seem to be three of a kind. That’s why…” He weighed
the heavy revolver in his hands and then passed it to Captain Harkness.
“That’s why I’m giving you this back intact. I’m
trusting you… the way HE trusts you?”
“Thank you,” Jack answered in a quiet, almost humble voice.
He watched as Kristoph opened the panel again. He took out a gun of his
own and slotted in a magazine. “Didn’t you say you don’t
like guns?”
“I like mass murdering Renegades even less,” he answered and
Jack saw a glint in his eyes and a steely set to his face. He thought
he could make a guess at what his assassin’s pseudonym might have
been.
And he thought his past was shady.
“Ramasu,” he said. “Do you know anything about him?
This… expunging… doesn’t it leave you kind of hamstrung.
If you don’t know who your bad apples are…”
“That’s the peculiar thing about us Time Lords. On the surface
we look like a perfect society. Peaceful, technologically advanced, with
our long lives to live, wisdom of the ancients at our fingertips. Scratch
the surface and we’ve got as many ‘bad apples’ as any
other society. But don’t worry. Even if we don’t speak of
them openly, we don’t forget. At least some of us don’t…”
“Your Celestial Intervention Agency… CIA?” Jack Harkness
grinned. “You do know that those initials….”
“I do. I’ve spent time on Earth. I’m not sure most of
my former colleagues would get the joke. But, yes. The Agency keeps a
complete database on its open cases. And Ramasu is one of those.”
He was typing rapidly. Jack moved closer and noted that the keyboard had
considerably more keys on it than the standard QWERTY layout. On a VDU
text was scrolling faster than he could read. It was not English, but
Gallifreyan, a language that wasn’t even written in characters anyone
on Earth would recognise. But he nevertheless could have read it if it
wasn’t going so fast. He spotted recurring words and phrases. They
were all associated with death and mayhem.
“Seven of your people dead?” Kristoph commented. “You
were lucky. On Talmar IV he massacred the entire government.”
“Does he just do these things for kicks or is there some kind of
plan?”
“Power,” Kristoph replied. “He wants power. He sought
it within our political system originally, but his ambition went hand
in hand with a ruthlessness that even our government found disturbing.
A government where dead man’s shoes is a common means of promotion,
you understand. Those at the top were not keen on being the dead men.
He resented them blocking his rise through the ranks and attempted to
blow up the Panopticon… our parliament chamber. When he failed,
he escaped using something similar to the portal you took a chance on.
Our people traced his end destination, the moon of Chula. I don’t
suppose you’re familiar with the Chula… they’re a very
militant lot. And their ships have basic time travel and hyperspace capability.
Cruder than a TARDIS but harder to trace. The trail went cold. All the
agents from Gallifrey could do was mop up after a series of deadly coups
on assorted planets.”
“Mop up… or cover up?” Jack Harkness asked with an inflection
in his voice that implied that he knew the difference from personal experience
and practice.
“Sometimes it amounts to the same thing.”
“Which will we end up doing on Earth in the time I’m living
in it?”
“I’m a Time Lord not a seer,” Kristoph said. “That’s
a different skill entirely. I can’t help you.”
“Yeah…”
Kristoph said nothing more. He reached for the drive control. He felt
the change in the engines the way a racing driver could feel a gear change,
in his very bones. He looked up at the main viewscreen. Captain Harkness
followed his gaze. They were in geo-stationary orbit above that part of
Earth known as Europe.
“It’s a very beautiful planet. It is capable of sustaining
at least four times as many people as it does in your time – comfortably
sustained, not in poverty as so many are. When your people get it right,
they will be indomitable.”
“It’s… worth fighting for,” Captain Harkness said.
“For that future.”
“Is that why you stay?” Kristoph asked. “You have a
vortex manipulator. You could go anywhere, anytime.”
“The twenty-first century is when everything changes – and
they’ve got to be ready.” He sounded sincere even if his words
resembled the tag line of a Hollywood blockbuster. Then he grinned sheepishly.
“Besides, the vortex manipulator doesn’t work properly. I’m
better off where I am for the time being.”
“Honesty is commonly the best policy. Where would you like me to
set us down?”
“I… guess you’d better aim for Cardiff. My office…
Torchwood.”
“Ah!” Kristoph carefully adopted an inscrutable
expression. “This is where all this could turn into a carefully
laid trap, I suppose?” Captain Harkness’s expression matched
his. “I gave you back the gun. I DO trust you. Torchwood it is.”
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