Marion was relaxing in the ‘lunar’ of the Gan Hydro spa hotel
on the planet of Jox-Fol in the Cassiopeia sector. That fact alone was
enough to excite her. Jox Fol! What an amazing name for a planet. And
what an amazing planet. She looked up at the crystal glass roof of the
‘lunar’ at the three moons, each almost as bright as a sun
because their constituent rocks were a kind of quartz that not only reflected
sunlight like an ordinary satellite, but intensified it. Of course, the
roof had special filters that prevented the light from hurting her eyes
as well as filtering dangerous UV and Exotonic rays. It was safe to lie
on a cushioned lounger in a very small bikini and enjoy the exotic light
and warmth on her body.
If she ever ceased to be amazed to be doing such things in such amazing
places, that would be the day she forgot that she was once Marion Horsley
of Birkenhead
“This is amazing,” said the young woman lying on the lounger
next to hers. A Jox-Follian stewardess, a humanoid that reminded Marion
of a stick insect because she was so thin, with long, angular limbs, of
which three pairs were arms, had just brought them both cool, delicious
fruit drinks. “Absolutely amazing. Moon bathing on a planet called
Jox-Fol.”
Marion was surprised, not only by the fact that the young woman was saying
aloud exactly what she had been thinking, but that she did so in Earth
English with a Scottish accent. She had to make a mental adjustment before
replying to her. She was used to speaking Gallifreyan that was automatically
translated to the vernacular language of whoever she was speaking to by
the low level psychic radiation of the TARDIS. But when her Gallifreyan
was translated into Earth English people always remarked about her unusual
accent, and she much preferred to be herself with them.
“I feel the same way,” she said. “Where are you from?
And... er... when?”
“Inverness, originally,” the young woman told her. “But
when I left Earth it was from my aunt’s house in Leadworth, in Gloucestershire...
England. In the twenty-first century.”
“I don’t think I’ve ever heard of it,” Marion
admitted. “But it sounds nice.”
“It’s... ordinary,” the young woman replied. “Ordinary,
safe, boring. I’d rather be moon-bathing on Jox-Fol any day. This
really is the life. It even makes up for all the really creepy and scary
stuff that’s happened since I left home. If I hadn’t come,
or if I’d gone back when it got too weird, I’d have missed
this.”
“What made you choose to do that?” Marion asked, thinking
that this young woman could have been expressing everything she, herself,
had experienced since that day on Leeds railway station that so changed
her life.
“I met an amazing man,” the young woman answered. “He
changed my life.”
“So did I,” Marion said. “In ways I couldn’t begin
to explain. “My name is Marion de Lœngbærrow, by the way.”
“Amy Pond,” the young woman replied. “Amy, short for
Amelia. I’m pleased to meet you. Funny us meeting up like this.
So far from Earth.”
“It’s lovely to meet you,” Marion said. “I haven’t
been back to Earth for weeks. And then it was only to Liverpool for shopping.”
Amy looked puzzled by that comment. “I live on my husband’s
home planet,” she explained. “But I often go shopping for
things like tea and chocolate biscuits, things I miss. But, of course,
when I’m visiting Earth I can’t tell people I live on another
planet. They’d think I was nuts.”
“I know what you mean. I could never explain it to anyone. It’s
just so MAD!”
“Yes, that absolutely sums it up,” Marion laughed “Absolutely
mad. But I’m used to it by now. Kristoph and I have been married
for nearly four years, now. And I travelled with him for three years before
then. So I’m quite used to these crazy things happening. But this
is nice, today. Just a quiet afternoon in the lunar.”
“I agree,” Amy said. “The drinks are nice. I wonder
if the stewardess can bring some more of those nice nibbles. Chocolate
covered prawn cocktail crisps! Lovely.”
“And totally fat free and only one calorie per dozen,” Marion
added. “Isn’t THAT a heavenly idea!”
“I should get the recipe. When I finally go back to Earth, I could
make a fortune in the diet food industry.”
Marion summoned a stewardess and the chocolate savouries and other tasty
but sinless treats were brought. Amy was impressed.
“It took me a long while to get used to doing that,” Marion
admitted. “I wasn’t brought up as somebody who could summon
servants and have them wait on me. It takes a bit of practice.”
“I took a bit of time getting used to people who look different
to us,” Amy said. “The Jox-Follians... they’re not too
bad. But I’ve seen a lot of really weird things. Some of them are
really nice, even the REALLY weird ones. Sometimes really ugly things
can actually be kind and sweet and generous and beautiful things are horrible
and dangerous.”
“There’s a moral in that, I think,” Marion agreed. “The
universe is a big place, that’s for sure. But... do tell me about
some of the things you’ve seen. Who is this man you met? What’s
his name?”
“I don’t really know his name. He calls himself The Doctor.
I know that sounds very strange. I left everything I know, everything
that’s safe and normal, to go with a man whose name I don’t
even know. I don’t even really know where he comes from. He said
his planet isn’t there any more, anyway. He’s the only one
of his kind. I think there’s a very sad story, but he doesn’t
talk about it. And he doesn’t seem to be sad. He’s very upbeat
and excited, one of those people who runs on Duracells and he’s
still jumping around when everyone else is collapsing from exhaustion.
And he’s very clever. He has the answer to everything. But he’s
not arrogant or anything. He’s very, very kind and caring, and he
helps anybody who needs help, even if they’re not pretty.”
Marion smiled at that description of Amy’s friend. He sounded quite
a bit like Kristoph. He, too, had boundless energy and unlimited capacity
for kindness, as she had plenty of reason to know.
And he seemed to have the same capacity for getting into tricky situations
as Kristoph. She listened to Amy’s descriptions of some of the more
colourful adventures she had got into with her travelling companion.
“But... your.... Doctor... he’s not your boyfriend or...”
she ventured to ask.
“No. Oh, no. Nothing like that,” Amy was quick to assure her.
“He’s just a very good friend. I will be going back to Earth
eventually and I don’t know if I will see him again after that,
but I’ll go back to my ordinary life, and remember him and the things
I did as an incredible, amazing time.”
“I don’t think I could give it all up, now,” Marion
said. “Though there are days when I wouldn’t mind a bit of
ordinary life. When it all gets a bit too hectic and surreal.”
And this was one of those times, she thought as she spotted one of the
Presidential Guards coming into the ‘lunar’. She had managed
to avoid them for most of the afternoon. They were more concerned with
Kristoph’s arrangements in the conference hall. She sat up on the
lounger and pulled a silk robe around herself so that she felt less self-conscious
in front of the uniformed man.
“Madam,” he said. “His Excellency sent a message.”
“You mean my husband, Lord de Lœngbærrow?” she queried.
One thing she hadn’t quite become accustomed to was the number of
new titles Kristoph had since becoming President.
“Yes, madam.”
“What was the message?” she asked.
“His Lordship requests that you and Miss Pond join him in the executive
lounge.”
“He does?” Marion was surprised by that. “I thought
he wanted me to stay here until the conference was over. He said it was
going to be incredibly boring and I’d have much more fun in the
leisure area. I wasn’t expecting to have to do any diplomatic mingling
for hours, yet.”
“That was the message, madam,” the Guard told her.
“Yes, of course,” Marion said. “Well, I shall have to
take a shower and dress properly. I hardly think I am expected to present
myself in the executive lounge in a bikini.”
The Guard was doing a very good impression of a man who didn’t know
what a bikini was, and wasn’t going to find out by looking at his
President’s wife wearing one. His eyes were fixed on a point somewhere
just behind her left shoulder.
“She means that you can wait outside until we’re ready,”
Amy pointed out as the Guard continued to stand there with his fixed gaze.
“Yes, exactly,” Marion added. “Go and wait. We shall
be no more than ten minutes, and that is only because there are very excellent
automatic hairdressers in the changing rooms. Otherwise his Lordship could
hardly expect prompt attendance at all.”
Amy giggled as the Guard turned. She and Marion rose from their loungers
and went to the very luxurious changing rooms. The showers had several
different settings from a gentle spray to an invigorating torrent with
a choice of sweet scented and skin moisturising soaps infused into them
already. Without the summons to the executive lounge it would be easy
to enjoy it much longer. But the two women dried and dressed themselves
and availed of the automatic hairdressers – hoods like big old fashioned
hair dryers, but which actually used ion technology to dry and style their
hair in a few minutes.
“I much prefer to have it done the old fashioned way,” Marion
said as she examined the results in a mirror and applied a little make
up to her face to finish off. “Having my hair washed and dried and
styled by somebody else is a nice way to relax. But I don’t often
have the time these days.”
“What with your husband being an Excellency and a lordship and all?”.
“Lord High President,” Marion admitted. “I... wasn’t
trying to deceive you by not telling you he was that important. It was
just nice to have a normal conversation out of earshot of the entourage
for a while.”
“That’s all right,” Amy assured her. “Lord High
President, though! Wow. My mum would say you fell on your feet all right.”
“I thought he was a literature professor when I met him. And even
that seemed a world above mine. But never mind. I’m glad he invited
you to come with me. I’ve enjoyed talking to you, and it would be
nice to spend some more time...”
“Yes. I agree,” Amy said. “Although... I am wondering
how he even knew about me. Your husband, I mean. We only met an hour ago.
How come he sent a message inviting me to come with you to this lounge?”
“Actually, that’s a very good question,” Marion conceded.
“Why didn’t I think of it?”
The two women looked at each other and a dozen explanations ran through
their heads. But none of them made any sense, and some of them were downright
sinister.
“Do you know that Guard?” Amy asked. “The one who came
in here.”
“No, not as such,” Marion had to admit. “They DO all
look the same after a while. We have a few close protection men who I
see every day and I know all of them. But the ones who came with us on
this trip, I’m not so sure about.”
“Then... how do we know he’s even a real guard? Maybe it’s
a military coup or...”
“A military coup on Gallifrey!” Marion laughed at the idea,
but only because she knew what sort of place Gallifrey was, not because
the idea was a silly one. “No, maybe not. But I think something
funny IS going on. And maybe we should be careful.”
“Maybe we should go out the back way and avoid the Guard,”
Amy suggested.
“Does this place have a back way?” Marion asked.
“There’s a service corridor where the stewards bring the food
and drinks. We can go to this Executive Lounge. If everything is normal,
then the Guard just looks a bit silly. But if there’s something
funny going on, then we’ve given them the slip and we can do something
about it... whatever it is.”
“I really did just want a quiet afternoon,” Marion sighed
as Amy opened the door to the service corridor and confirmed that it was
empty. They slipped through the door and closed it behind them moments
before the Guard came back into the lunar in search of them.
“Me, too. But this is fun, too.”
“Fun?” Marion examined her usual definition of that word against
what was happening now and couldn’t in all honesty say she was having
fun. She was concerned. Something wasn’t right about the situation.
Or perhaps she and Amy were both jumping to conclusions and this was all
a silly misunderstanding.
That small shred of hope was shattered when they turned a corner near
the pantry where the chocolate covered crisps and cool fruit drinks were
prepared. A hatch opened in the ceiling just ahead of them and a man jumped
down. Marion’s first thought that he was a fatter than usual Jox
Follian. His limbs were long and angular like theirs. But when he stood
in front of them, straightening his bow tie and adjusting the cuffs of
his tweed jacket he spoke in what Marion recognised as Earth English with
a merest hint of a Gallifreyan accent.
“Amy,” he said. “I’m sorry. I promised this would
be an easy afternoon. But the Lord High President is in terrible danger.”
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