Casoi 5 in the Sapphire System was reputed to be the most romantic planet
in the galaxy. In proof of that, every room in every hotel on the sweeping
Promenade des Amours was a honeymoon suite with a queen size bed. Every
restaurant had violinists that played soft music while the lovers ate.
There were wedding chapels to suit every possible religious or civil requirement
on every street corner.
How it came to be so even Kristoph, who knew everything, wasn’t
sure. It might have been the spectacular natural beauty of the place.
When the two suns, one yellow, one deep red, set on a warm balmy evening,
one to the south over the sea, the other to the north over the mountains
that rose up beyond the resort town of Cas, three moons of gold, shimmering
silver and burnished bronze rose in a clear velvet sky with golden stars.
They shone down onto a wide beach of yellow sand beside a gently lapping
sea where lovers could always find a piece that felt as if it belonged
just to them.
Yes, romance was the heart and soul of the planet, especially on ‘Romance
Night’. Every nine weeks when the three moons were full together
was Romance Night and it was celebrated with a parade that stretched along
that Promenade des Amours followed by music and dancing on the golden
beach. The idea might have been very cheap and commercial. Marion had
been just a little sceptical when she dressed for the occasion in the
executive penthouse honeymoon suite of their hotel. She thought Kristoph
was over-compensating for the worries they had both shared in the past
weeks by bringing her to such a place, and she wished she could find a
way of telling him he didn’t need to go to such trouble.
But she enjoyed every minute of the parade. Kristoph didn’t pull
any privilege of rank. They watched from the pavement along with all the
other spectators. It was delightfully colourful and loud like a mardi
gras festival. Marion felt the throbbing music in her feet and the lights
and colours dazzled her eyes. Dancers and acrobats in amazing costumes
did astounding things with their bodies as they passed along the road.
Others juggled luminous batons that turned and span in the air. There
were bands and musicians of all sorts and colourful floats with friezes
representing all aspects of love and romance. Then there was the whole
reason for the parade – the loving couples riding in carriages decorated
with flowers and ribbons and pulled by sleek horses. Some were newly betrothed
young people, some newlyweds wearing their finery, others celebrating
their anniversaries. It was custom on Casoi to have weddings close to
a full moon cycle, so there were always plenty of weddings and anniversaries
to celebrate.
And the custom was not confined to Casoins, either. Not now that they
had a space station and an intergalactic tourist industry. Now couples
from other places joined the parade. There were two ladies from Haollstrom
riding in one carriage, and a joyful pair from Mizzone in another. Even
more unusual was a Gellican bride with her six new husbands all dressed
in gold. These foreign concepts of romance had taken Casoins by surprise
at first, but now they embraced the different ways that love manifested
itself across the galaxy.
“It is the thing that binds all of these different races,”
Kristoph said as he waved back at the rather excitable pair of Hiye-Nez
wives with their newly wed husband. They were having trouble containing
their enthusiasm. If it hadn’t been for the decorative silver chains
that bound all three together in symbol of their matrimony, the wives
might have fallen out of the carriage.
“Love,” Marion said with a smile. “It caught us up,
even though we come from two different parts of the galaxy.”
“Next year, perhaps we should ride in the parade,” Kristoph
added. “Though I’m not sure if Gold Usher would approve. He
has a bit of a bee in his bonnet about the President upholding the dignity
of the Time Lord race. I think he would find this rather trivial.”
Marion laughed at the vision of Gold Usher wearing a bonnet, with or without
a bee.
“A flutterwing in his ceremonial skullcap, even,” Kristoph
amended. That made Marion laugh even more. Her laughter mingled with the
voices raised in celebration all around and she felt as if she was a part
of it all.
When the parade had passed the spectators followed on foot. They made
their way to the widest part of the beach where the tide came in only
once every eight years and the sand was fine and soft. An arena was set
up by the simple means of roping off a huge square of sand. There the
jugglers, dancers and acrobats performed in not too serious competition
and won rosettes simply for turning up. Then the couples who had ridden
in the parade were presented to the ‘king’ of the parade and
received crowns of golden flowers.
Thus blessed, the betrothed, newlyweds and anniversary couples danced
on the sand. Kristoph watched them for a while before taking Marion by
the hand and drawing her onto the impromptu dance floor. He held her as
closely and as lovingly as any of those who were crowned in gold. As more
dancers joined them, though, they were happy to withdraw. They slipped
away along the wide beach, leaving behind the crowds and the lights and
the music. It was nice to be in sight and hearing of it all, but completely
by themselves again.
“I have to agree,” Kristoph said looking up at the three moons
in a rough triangle pointing towards the horizon. “Casoi 5 is the
most romantic place in the galaxy.”
“I think it tries too hard,” Marion replied. “I mean...
yes, it is lovely. But romance isn’t something that a pretty view
can create. We always found ways of being romantic without a place like
this.”
“That is certainly true,” Kristoph admitted. “But I
thought it might help.”
That was obviously a poor choice of words. Marion looked at him curiously.
“Does it seem to you that we need help to be romantic?” she
asked him. “Is there something wrong?”
“Of course not,” he assured her. “There isn’t
a day goes by when I don’t think how lucky I am to have you beside
me, my wife, my Lady. I brought you here because Gallifrey isn’t
a place where the concept of celebrating love and romance will ever be
fully grasped and I wanted you to know how much I love you and I want
to celebrate that fact.”
Marion smiled and let him press himself close to her. She felt his heart
beating. That was the chief difference just now. He was still recovering
from the dreadful injury done to him. His new heart would grow in a few
months, but until it did the sound was very different to the double syncopation
she was used to.
“Two hearts or one, I can’t love you more,” he said.
“You’re not like any other Time Lord,” Marion told him.
“All the others know full well that the heart is a complicated muscle
that pumps oxygenated blood around the body. Only you know it has anything
to do with love.”
“I’m the Lord High President – by custom, the wisest
man on Gallifrey. I am given many secrets not known to ordinary Time Lords.
That the heart is more than an organic Archimedes Screw is one of them.”
“I doubt that,” Marion replied with a soft laugh. “Mainly
because I don’t believe there ARE any special Time Lord secrets
imparted to the President. I think that’s one of those myths that
keep people guessing like the Colonel’s secret ingredient in Kentucky
Fried Chicken.”
Kristoph laughed and hugged her.
“I used to think the same thing. But unfortunately it is not so.
The Lord High President guards very many secrets, some of them in his
very soul, and some of them so dark they would blot out those stars above
us. That’s why I need a special, romantic place to be with you,
so that I can stop being Lord High President for a while and just be your
husband and lover.”
“Oh, Kristoph!” Marion felt his embrace tighten around her,
as if he was reluctant to ever let her go. She knew he carried burdens,
but she little knew how onerous some of them were. And he, a great man,
the greatest of his people, strong and wise as he was, needed her as his
rock to lean upon when the burden was heaviest.
“I will always be that,” she promised him.
“I know you will, my Lady Marion,” he answered. He didn’t
let the one traitorous thought enter his head. ‘Always’ for
her was a much smaller word than it was for a Time Lord. There would come
a time when his precious rock would not be there and he would carry his
burdens alone. He didn’t let that thought blot out the stars for
him. She was with him now. That was enough.
“Kristoph,” she said after they had walked in silence for
a little way. “If those secrets are only given to the Lord High
President... what happens when he isn’t President any more? Does
Lord Gyes still have the same secrets?”
“No,” Kristoph answered. “When the new President accepts
the Coronet of Rassilon and is accepted by the Matrix as the one, true
and only leader of the Time Lords, the burden is lifted from the outgoing
man. The knowledge is wiped from his mind. It is the only safe course.
Such secrets would be of value to our enemies. A former president would
be at risk. Lord Gyes lives on in contented retirement knowing he has
done good service to Gallifrey and that his burden is on other shoulders,
now.”
“And in time you’ll pass that burden to somebody else and
be free of it?”
“Yes.”
“Good. I am proud of you. I think you’re a very good President.
But I look forward to a time when you’re just Lord de Lœngbærrow
again.”
Kristoph decided not to point out that presidencies of the High Council
could last for centuries if there was no cause for impeachment. His chief
reason for doing so was that he didn’t see himself being President
for that long. He had no expectation of impeachment, not now he had crossed
the hurdle of his first fiercely opposed Bill. But he knew he would not
wait so long as that before passing on the ultimate power over the Time
Lord race to another man.
Because in many ways, simply being Marion’s husband was a more satisfying
occupation and he would be glad to give up all else for her.
“Enough of such thoughts,” he said. “I brought you here
to forget about Gallifrey for a time and simply lose ourselves in the
most romantic place in the galaxy.”
“Which I must reluctantly agree it is, I think,” Marion told
him. “But you know I could love you just as much on Gallifrey or
anywhere else.”
“So could I,” Kristoph answered. “After all I fell in
love with you on Leeds railway station. I didn’t know it at the
time. Nor did you. But we did. And there can be few places less romantic
than that. We don’t need three moons shining down on us. But it
cannot do any harm, can it?”
Marion looked up at the three moons and sighed happily as Kristoph took
her hand and led her up the steps to the promenade. It was quiet there
now with all the excitement happening down on the beach and they didn’t
see anyone else on their way back to the hotel except a few couples like
themselves who had left the party seeking quieter and more intimate romance.
They found their hotel, overlooking the beach and went up to their room.
After she got ready for bed, Marion looked out of the window at the lights
on the beach. The festivities would go on for many hours, yet. The Romance
Night literally went on all night, heralding the dawn. But she was happy
to come to bed when Kristoph was ready for her. She was happy when he
turned off the bedside lamp and the dancing lights on the beach reflected
off the ceiling as he reached for her.
Romance was very definitely in his mind as she surrendered to him.
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