The location of Torchwood Cardiff in 1996 looked very
much like a work in progress. The TARDIS disguised itself as a portacabin
beside a huge hoarding that showed an artist’s impression of what
it was all going to look like by the millennium. But for now it was very
much a building site with temporary fencing and cranes reaching into the
air.
“We’ve got work going on below, too,” Captain Harkness
said. “The Hub is going to be extended right under all those new
buildings.”
He was just making conversation as they passed unnoticed by any of the
workmen busily sweeping away the long defunct docks and replacing them
with a bright and exciting new leisure area with theatres and restaurants
around a European style plaza. Captain Harkness led Kristoph down towards
the waterside and onto a wooden quay. A few yards along there was a door
set into a wooden frame. It was covered in rusty mesh that deterred breaking
and entering. There couldn’t possibly be anything worth stealing
behind it.
Inside the disused space Captain Harkness pressed a panel in the wall
and a concealed door swung open. That lead to a dimly lit corridor where
their footsteps echoed coldly and from there to a lift. Kristoph guessed
quite accurately how far down it went.
They emerged into a large subterranean room which was a mix of dungeon,
sewer and high-tech office space. Surrounded by rusting metal panels and
concrete walls that had seen better days, banks of computers hummed and
fast touch-typists worked without breaking their concentration for a moment.
The only person who noticed the Captain’s return was a young woman
with ‘secretary’ ingrained on her soul who asked for his visitor’s
name.
“Christopher de Leon,” Kristoph told her and spelt the surname
for her. She typed it into her computer and presently a small printer
on her desk spat out a credit card sized visitor’s pass. She put
it into a plastic cover with a clip and handed it to him.
“Harkness, where the hell have you been?” a voiced demanded.
In fact, he used a much stronger word than ‘hell’, but the
TARDIS was a diplomatic vessel these days. Its translation circuits filtered
out profanities. Kristoph heard the milder word in his head.
“You wouldn’t believe me if I told you, Alex,” Jack
Harkness replied. “But this man can help us. He has prior knowledge
of Magnus Ramasu.”
“Does he? Well… my office, now.”
The office was on a raised level, reached by metal steps. It had a glass
wall overlooking the main room. The door was glass, too. Captain Harkness
closed it behind him. His superior sat behind a large, tidy desk with
a name plate identifying him as Alex Hopkins, Director. He didn’t
seem to have any personal effects to brighten his workspace up at all.
“What do you know about the man who murdered seven of my people?”
he demanded without any preamble.
“What do you know about the man my people have pursued for a thousand
years through time and space because he is responsible for the deaths
of seven hundred people?” Kristoph countered. “I have the
greater claim. I am here to bring this man down and take him back to my
own world where he will face a stronger and more thorough hand of justice
than is dealt in this time and place.”
Alex Hopkins stared at Kristoph and found himself blinking as he was thoroughly
out-stared. He turned to his subordinate instead.
“Harkness, is this a wind up? If it is, it’s in very poor
taste, today of all days.”
“No, Alex,” he replied. “It’s for real. This man
comes from the same planet as Ramasu. He’s trained to deal with
his sort. He can help us. And we need help. This whole planet does. As
long as Ramasu is free we’re all in danger.”
“Tell me what you know,” Kristoph repeated.
“Alex, trust me on this,” Jack Harkness said to his boss.
“Show him what we have.”
Alex Hopkins looked from one man to the other, weighing up his options.
One of them may well have been to throw both of them in the vault and
perform vivisection on them at his convenience, but instead he nodded
and turned to his desktop computer. He opened a video file.
Somebody had held a camcorder relatively steady to record the interrogation
of a prisoner. He was fastened to a metal chair by leather straps while
a strange implement was placed on his head. Kristoph recognised it as
a primitive version of the mind probe the Celestial Intervention Agency
used on suspects. Even the sophisticated version hurt like hell. This
one must have been excruciating. It took a relatively short time to get
him to identify himself as Magnus Ramasu.
“He was telling the truth,” Jack Harkness confirmed. “See
that other gadget. The one with the green light. Best lie detector on
the planet. Green for truth, red for lies.”
“From Bataxa IV,” Kristoph said. “Doesn’t work
on Piscian life forms. If you’ve got any humanoid blowfish in custody
don’t waste your time. And any operative of the Gallifreyan Celestial
Intervention Agency who couldn’t fool it would be dead before they
even reached your custody.”
The interrogation continued. Ramasu appeared to be giving a great deal
of information about himself and his deeds. It was all recorded on the
camcorder. Harkness himself was conducting the interrogation, operating
the lie detector. On screen he looked a little smug, as if he thought
he was winning. In real life, standing beside Kristoph, he could barely
look at the screen.
“No,” Kristoph said. “It’s wrong. He’s not
really under the influence of the probe. He’s just playing along
until…”
He took no satisfaction in being right. Ramasu stretched his limbs and
broke the bonds that held him to the chair. He yanked the mind probe from
his head and threw it down before breaking Jack Harkness’s neck
with the flick of his wrist. Two other agents died a few seconds later.
Then the camera fell to the ground. They could guess the rest.
“You said he killed five of your men?”
“Four men, and a woman,” Alex corrected him. “Not counting
him.”
“Then what happened? Kristoph asked. “Where did he go? How
did he get out of this place? It seems to be quite secure.”
“He… used the rift manipulator,” Alex explained. “It’s….”
“I know what a rift manipulator is,” Kristoph said. “Very
dangerous. What are you doing keeping one here?”
“We’re doing our best for our race, our planet,” Alex
answered him. “What gives you the right to tell us what we can and
can’t do? You’re an alien… according to our charter
you are the enemy. I ought to have you strapped to that machine to find
out what you know about…”
“Just try it,” Kristoph answered, his eyes glittering angrily.
He deliberately turned away from the Torchwood director, his body language
speaking volumes about where he thought Alex Hopkins came in his estimation.
“Jack… tell me how you captured Ramasu in the first place.”
“It was…routine,” Jack Harkness replied. “We had
a tip about an alien who was planning to use gravity disrupting bombs
to rob banks. We broke into his house…”
“Two of your people died in this ‘routine’ operation.”
“Yes. He was waiting for us. Shot them down… shot all three
of us. But I... I shot him before I lost consciousness. I thought I had
that satisfaction at least – the one who killed my friends was dead.
But when I woke up… he was… changing. He took on a whole new
body. And he was alive. That’s when I knew what he was. I knew he
was a Time Lord. I cuffed him before his body was finished changing. I
brought him in…”
Jack stopped speaking. He looked at his boss, then at Kristoph. It was
almost possible to see his face change as it all fell into place.
“We were used. Weren’t we? It wasn’t about banks. It
wasn’t money. He wanted to get into Torchwood – because we
have the rift manipulator. He wanted that.”
“And seven of your people paid the price.”
Alex Hopkins looked disconcerted. The responsibility for that costly mistake
lay with him as the director, and he knew it.
“The blame for all the death and mayhem lies with Ramasu, and no-one
else,” Kristoph told him kindly. “Show me this rift manipulator.
It will tell us where he went.”
There was no more talk of charters. There was no question of Kristoph
giving Torchwood information. Now they were facilitating his investigation.
The rift manipulator was something that the humans of Torchwood seemed
to be proud of. Kristoph viewed it with the critical eye of an expert
in such things. He wasn’t, if truth be told. He knew as much about
temporal mechanics as any Time Lord who regularly used a TARDIS did. It
was a whole specialist field that occupied the minds of the least sociable
and usually unmarried Time Lords of Gallifrey – second sons who
had dedicated themselves to applied sciences and forgotten about everything
else.
But he almost certainly knew more about it than the people who had built
it in a hidden room underneath downtown Cardiff.
“At least part of this is Time Lord technology,” he said.
“I would say ‘stolen’ Time Lord technology, but there’s
no point. You’ll only quote your charter at me again. Besides, it’s
a mongrel. Bits from just about every temporal engine I’ve ever
heard of. And it’s capable of opening the time and space rift that
runs through this city?”
“Not usually,” Jack Harkness told him. “It’s not
complete. We have always been missing crucial parts. He… didn’t
seem to need them. He made it work anyway. He’s gone.”
“Gone where?” Kristoph asked. It was a rhetorical question.
He looked at the rift manipulator. Mongrel was the right word. It was
a mechanical Frankenstein monster to use a Human analogy. Then he took
out his sonic screwdriver and touched it against one of the central sections.
There was an arc of actinic blue light. Kristoph held the sonic there
for several seconds before turning to the nearest computer workstation.
The operator slid his chair aside deferentially as Kristoph pressed the
sonic screwdriver against the hard drive unit. Immediately, the screen
filled with data. The operator stared at it and then began to write something
down on a pad in front of him. Jack Harkness quietly took the sheet from
him.
“We’ve got a co-ordinate,” he said. “A space and
time co-ordinate. We know where he went.”
“But…” The computer operator pulled himself back up
to his workstation and tapped keys quickly. A map resolved itself on screen.
“But the co-ordinate is meaningless. Look… it’s only
a few hundred yards from where we are. It’s in the middle of a building
site.”
Kristoph sighed. Jack Harkness gave out an impatient sound that was almost
a growl.
“You’re not thinking fourth dimensionally,” Kristoph
said. “Yes, it’s a building site now, but what is it going
to be in the future, when it’s finished?”
The computer operator shrugged.
“It’s going to be the Welsh National Assembly,” Jack
told them all. “In a few years’ time.”
“We haven’t even had the referendum, yet,” Alex pointed
out. “We don’t have a Welsh National Assembly. How can you
know what…”
“He’s right,” Kristoph interjected. “In less than
a decade you will be working in the shadow of devolved government.”
“But that still makes no sense,” Alex sighed. “You said
Ramasu was after planetary dominance. We’re talking about a Welsh
National Parliament. He must have seriously misread the history of planet
Earth. Taking over Wales… the smallest and least significant part
of the United Kingdom… which doesn’t even make much impression
on the European Union, let alone the world…”
“Not yet,” Jack said. “But in the future… I know
what he’s going to do. We’ve got to stop him.”
“We?” Alex queried. “We can’t do a thing. He’s
gone.”
“Not you,” Kristoph told him. “Me. Thank you for your
co-operation. But this is where Torchwood get on with looking after Earth
in the 20th century. Ramasu is down to me from here.”
He turned and headed for the exit. A huge metal door stood in his way,
but he aimed the sonic screwdriver at it and it rolled back with a satisfying
sound of metal grinding over stone. The lift caused him even less trouble.
When he stepped out of it, though, he was surprised to see Captain Harkness
waiting for him.
“Take me with you,” he said. “You need me.”
“I don’t need anyone,” Kristoph replied. “I’ve
brought down harder men than Ramasu with my bare hands. I needed this
information. That’s all.”
“Ok, I need you. The people he killed… they were friends of
mine. I want to see… It’s not that I doubt you’ll do
it. But if I’m not going to see you again after this. I want to
know that it’s over. Take me with you. Let me help. Let me see that
#@*&$ brought down.”
“Where did you learn Nabusa IX swear words?” Kristoph asked
with a smile in his eyes if not on his lips. “All right. Come on.
You’re temporarily seconded to the Gallifreyan Celestial Intervention
Agency. And you’re under my command.”
“Yes, sir,” Jack Harkness replied. Kristoph nodded and carried
on walking out of the Torchwood Hub and back up to the place where he
left his TARDIS. Jack matched his stride. He glanced at the place where
a CCTV camera was fixed, monitored down in the Hub. Usually somebody would
be watching the images and would be surprised when the TARDIS dematerialised.
But she had been one of Ramasu’s victims.
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