Kristoph rushed into the hospital waiting room. Hillary stood and embraced
him fondly. Nobody thought it odd that two middle aged men were hugging.
Not on Haollstrom IV.
“Calm yourself,” Hillary told him. “Your hearts are
both racing like mad. You’ll do her no good if you have a heart
attack.”
“I won’t. I’m fine. But Marion... What’s wrong
with her?”
“She’s in surgery,” Hillary told him. “Come and
sit down.”
Kristoph let his old friend press him into an armchair. He took the iced
water that was offered to him, but his mind was still only on the one
matter.
“She’s going to be all right,” Hillary assured him.
“She’s in good hands. Haollstromnian surgeons are among the
best in the galaxy.”
“I believe that,” Kristoph said. “But what happened?
She was all right this morning.”
“She started to feel ill when we were out on the yacht. She said
it was nothing, at first. Just a little sea-sickness. The water WAS a
little choppy beyond the bay. But she was enjoying the trip. Then I noticed
her clutching her chest as if she was in pain. And when I asked her what
was wrong, she couldn’t talk to me. Her face was white and... then
she fainted. I got straight onto the air-sea rescue corps. They were with
us in minutes and brought her straight here. There was no delay. And she’s
getting treatment, now.”
“Treatment for what?” Kristoph asked. “Hillary... I
know she’s had problems with her heart in the past. But...”
“She told you?” Hillary was surprised.
“What?” Kristoph looked at his old friend carefully. Those
three words opened up a whole set of questions. “You... Hillary...
what do you know about Marion’s health that I don’t?”
Hillary sighed dismally. He laid his hand on Kristoph’s hand and
said nothing for a long time.
“Some diplomat I am, when I go and blow a secret like that.”
“You’re a very fine diplomat, Hillary. And a good friend,
to me, and to my wife. But what is going on? Please tell me. Why did she
talk to you about this and not me? Did she think I would be angry?”
“She thought you would be worried,” Hillary replied. “And
that you would...”
“What?”
“Above anything else in the world, she wants to give you an heir.
She thinks if you’re worried about her health, you won’t....”
“If I thought it would put her life at risk. And... she’s
right. I need her more than I need an heir. I’m the owner of diamond
mines. And she’s the most precious jewel of them all. And don’t
look at me like that. It isn’t a cliché.”
“No, it’s how you have always described Marion to everyone,”
Hillary told him. “Do you remember when you introduced her to me
for the first time. She felt inadequate, a shy girl with a nice dress
and her hair done, over-shadowed by my impeccable wardrobe and careful
coiffure. And you said to me... ‘Hillary, in the eyes of the universe
you sparkle like a diamond. But allow me to introduce my own precious
jewel.’”
“I said that?” Despite himself Kristoph managed a smile.
“Yes, you did. And since you are a Time Lord, and I have never known
one of those to forget anything, I am sure you do remember. Marion is
your jewel. And she is the future mother of the child you so desire. But
perhaps you both need to be patient about that. As for...”
“Yes,” Kristoph insisted. “You have sidetracked me,
Hillary. I suspect you’ve been playing one of your pheromone games
with me. And that is hardly fair when you have a longer beard than I do.”
Hillary shimmered and turned into an elegant woman who looked just a little
odd in a man’s yachting outfit. She embraced Kristoph again and
this time didn’t let go. Still holding him she gently told him the
secret she had agreed to keep for Marion, about the time when she had
come to Haollstrom in order to see a physician without her husband knowing,
and had undergone emergency surgery to repair a tear in the wall of her
aorta. She had been within a breath of a fatal heart attack when the damage
was discovered and skilfully repaired by a Haollstromnian surgeon.
“That’s why,” Kristoph said. He remembered the Gallifreyan
physician who had treated her after she was trapped in the ruins of the
school. He had insisted that there were traces of previous surgery. Now
he knew when, and why.
“That was before her latest miscarriage. I didn’t know. Is
it possible that...”
“Kristoph, I’m not a heart surgeon. I don’t know any
heart surgeons. I don’t know what could trigger something like this.
Maybe nothing. Maybe everything. Maybe it was always going to happen one
of these days. In which case, be thankful that it was the day she was
spending with me, here, on a planet where we have such magnificently gifted
surgeons, rather than on yours where they barely understand the concept
or hers where the same operation would take twenty hours and months of
recovery afterwards.”
Kristoph acknowledged that much. But he was still desperately worried.
“You know what your problem is,” Hillary said to him.
“What is my problem?” he replied.
“You don’t cry. You hold it all in, stoic, unemotional Gallifreyan
to the last.”
“It’s not that I DON’T cry. I CAN’T,” he
told her. “We can’t. Gallifreyans don’t have tear ducts.
That doesn’t mean we don’t feel, that we don’t hurt.
That’s a myth about us. And I thought you knew better than that,
Hillary. As a friend, you should know me well enough, if not as an accomplished
diplomat with knowledge of other species and cultures.”
“I know,” Hillary told him. “I know all about your culture
and your species. And I know you. I know what you need.”
She placed her hands either side of his head and drew her own face closer.
She kissed him on the lips tenderly. As she did so, Kristoph felt himself
overwhelmed by her Haollstromnian pheromones, but not in a sensual way.
Rather, he felt himself overwhelmed by a deep melancholy. All of the fears
and sorrows he had felt in the past year came to the forefront of his
mind. Losing the child they both wanted so desperately and the accident
at the mine were the deepest wounds, but there were other issues, too.
It had been a long, hard year for him, with the responsibilities of the
presidency thrust on him so unexpectedly and so many other worries. He
felt as if his head couldn’t contain them all.
He didn’t have tear ducts. But a rush of salt water welled up behind
the nictating membrane that served the same purpose in his species, keeping
his eyes moist and clean. The water overflowed from his eyes, running
down his cheeks unchecked for several minutes as Hillary held him closely.
“I know a secret,” she whispered after a while. “I think
Time Lords can cry after all. If they really have to. And it does them
a power of good.”
“Hillary...” Kristoph replied. He wanted to say something
more, but the words failed him. He let her hold him tightly as a quiet
hour passed. He felt comforted by her closeness. His worry about Marion
didn’t abate at all, but he felt he wasn’t alone in his grief.
One of his dearest and closest friends was there to help him, and he wasn’t
too proud to accept that help.
He looked up from that warm embrace of friendship to see a physician –
in female form – waiting to talk to him and Hillary.
“She is in recovery, now,” the physician said. “You
can see her in a few minutes. But I need to talk to you, first.”
She looked so grim when she spoke, that Kristoph feared the worst. He
clung to Hillary’s hand as they stepped into a well-appointed physician’s
office. He continued to hold her hand as he sat and waited to hear the
worst.
“Lord de Lœngbærrow,” the physician said. “Your
wife’s surgery was successful. She is in no physical danger and
can live a normal life. There is no cause for concern about that. But...”
“No cause for concern?” Kristoph contradicted. “This
is the third time she has needed surgery for the same reason,” Kristoph
said. “In only a few years. The last time, it was as a result of
an accident that caused stress to her heart. But...”
“You misunderstand, your Lordship,” the physician said in
careful tones. “Your wife didn’t suffer a recurrence of the
aortic tearing for which she has received treatment in the past. Her heart
was damaged by a build up of celestine in her bloodstream. The crystalline
form caused a blockage in the main artery. The blockage was removed using
micro-laser treatment and her blood purged of the foreign substance.”
“Celestine crystals?” Kristoph looked at the physician in
surprise. “But Celestine is a harmless mineral that occurs in the
fresh water on our planet. It is perfectly normal and natural. It is in
all of our drinking water. I have never heard of anyone being affected
by it.”
“Your wife is not a native of your planet,” the physician
pointed out.
“Oh, Kristoph!” Hillary squeezed his hand gently. “Marion’s
Human body can’t process the mineral that is natural to you. It
built up gradually all the time she has been living on Gallifrey.”
“Then... it’s my fault?” Kristoph shuddered in horror
as the facts sunk in. “I could have killed her... just by bringing
her to my world.”
“Marion is the first non-native of Gallifrey to live there for millennia,”
Hillary pointed out. “And certainly the first Human of Earth origin.
Nobody could have expected this. It’s not your fault.”
“It feels as if it is.”
“Well, it isn’t,” Hillary insisted. “And now that
you know there is a problem all you have to do is make sure that there
is a water filter fitted to the supply into your home, and that Marion
takes some kind of pill to flush the stuff from her body if she regularly
drinks water outside of your home. Which I know she does, since she spends
so much time with her friends drinking tea.”
“A simple chelating agent with no side effects can be prescribed,”
the physician said. “One pill a day would suffice.”
“There you go,” Hillary said. “Problem solved. Now,
come and see Marion. That’s what you need, now. To be with your
precious jewel.”
Kristoph nodded. He let Hillary guide him by the hand to the private room
where Marion had been made comfortable after her surgery. She looked pale,
but the heart monitor by the bedside showed a good strong rhythm, and
as he sat by her side, she slowly woke up.
“It’s all right, my love,” he told her as he reached
to kiss her on the lips and the heart monitor registered her quickened
heartbeat as she responded. “You’re fine now.”
“I’m sorry, Kristoph,” she said. “I didn’t
mean to worry you.”
“I’m not worried,” he assured her. “We’ve
got to get a plumber into the house. The Dower House, too, since you spend
so much time there with my mother. And the Lodge. It’ll cost a small
fortune. Good job I’m a rich man.”
Marion was puzzled. Kristoph slowly explained what had made her ill. She
was upset, but not as much as he expected.
“So... I’d need to take a pill every day, and then I’ve
got nothing to worry about? That’s not so bad. It’s just like
English people in Malaysia and places like that who have to take anti-malaria
pills. And it won’t affect any of our plans. We can still try again
to have a baby.”
“Not just yet,” Kristoph said. “I want you to get plenty
of rest before we think about that. I think we’ll have a holiday
on planet Earth while the plumbers are in the house. We’ll drop
Hillary in late 20th century Cardiff on the way to wherever you would
like to go.”
“I don’t know where I’d like to go,” Marion answered.
“Then think about it while you’re here overnight. And tell
me tomorrow.” Kristoph leaned forward and kissed her again. He sighed
with relief when he saw her smile. She was all right. This crisis was
over.
|