Marie had regretted this idea at least two hundred times in the past hour.
It was fraught with disaster. It was worse than a trip to the zoo, and
look how THAT had turned out!
“Nearly every child in the junior classes has been off for the past
month with measles,” she had told The Doctor. “Six of mine
had it the year before, so they haven’t been sick. That’s
the good news, of course. But it means they’re stuck at school while
everyone else won’t be back until January. And its a school with
no decorations, no Christmas party, no Nativity play, no Pantomime, none
of the things that make the run up to end of term fun for them.”
“Grim, indeed,” The Doctor had noted lugubriously. He was
the only person Marie knew who could do ‘lugubrious’. Before
she met him it was a word that popped up in Victorian literature without
any clear explanation. But he nailed it.
“So, I was wondering, is there somewhere fun you could take them
in the TARDIS? Something to blow their minds and give them back their
Christmas Cheer?”
“Where do you suggest?” The Doctor had asked, passing over
the idea of six dispirited ten year olds in his TARDIS. “Short hop
to Lapland to see the reindeers, that sort of thing?”
“Something like that,” Marie had answered. “Didn’t
you tell me once about an actual planet called Christmas?”
“Yes, but that’s just the name of it, like Easter Island or
Piccadilly Circus. There are no chocolate eggs or clowns at either of
those places. Believe me, I’ve looked.”
“But surely there is something?”
“Well,” The Doctor had finally conceded. “There is Christmas
Station.”
All things considered, The Doctor had been gracious about the actual trip.
Niall Driscoll’s bladder had resulted in the TARDIS reconfiguring
itself to include a toilet directly next door to the console room. Colm
Finn had been travel sick, Bridget Drennan’s nose had bled so much
she looked like she should have had a transfusion. Gerard O’Connor
and Liam Murphy had both had panic attacks in which they claimed the walls
of the console room were closing in on them.
Áine Burke had sat in the corner biting her fingernails the way
she did every day in class. Marie had spent all of the autumn term trying
to work her out, fretting over the thought of a child like that being
thrown upon the shark infested waters of secondary school in another year’s
time.
The Doctor, not ordinarily known for his tolerance of the Human race’s
domestic mess, had put up with it all for an hour before announcing that
they were ‘there’.
“Where?” asked Colm Finn, discarding his sick bag in a receptacle
under the console that the TARDIS had acquired out of necessity.
“Christmas Station,” The Doctor responded, flicking a switch
that turned on the big viewscreen – the one that outdid the flattest,
biggest, HD ready television available. Filling the view was a space station
that looked exactly like a huge Christmas Tree. Lights from two hundred
decks sparkled like baubles and a beacon at the top shone like a multi-coloured
glass star against the panorama of real ones.
The children were impressed. Even Áine looked at it and managed
to raise her eyebrows.
“It’s looked like a pudding for the past few years,”
The Doctor added. “Boring, really. I mean, who would care about
a big round thing at the end of the solar system?”
“Our actual solar system?” Liam asked.
“Your actual solar system,” The Doctor assured him. “That’s
Pluto it’s in orbit around. In the Fifty-fourth century it’s
been reinstated as a planet.”
“Ok,” the boy conceded, not quite sure, yet, if this was all
some kind of virtual reality show in the school hall.
“Ok?” The Doctor replied as if that was an actual challenge.
“I’ll show you ‘ok’. Stand by to materialise on
the arrivals deck.”
The short hop from parking orbit to ‘there’ caused Colm to
reach for a fresh sick bag, though it wasn’t needed. When they retrieved
Niall from the toilet they were ready to disembark.
Of course, Marie had said ‘fun’, not ‘tasteful’.
She appreciated the difference as soon as they stepped from the hangar
bay where The Doctor had left the TARDIS among an assortment of personal
space shuttles and moon hoppers and into the ‘foyer’ of Christmas
Station. Amidst a phalanx of brightly decorated Christmas trees they were
greeted by young men in green elf suits and young women in red satin ‘Mrs
Santa’ dresses of the sort that made Santa regret being quite so
overweight. They handed out candy canes to children and adults alike and
welcomed them to Christmas Station.
There was a collective groan from Marie and her party about the music
playing. The party were of one mind about Bing Crosby singing Christmas
in Killarney.
“I’ll give him ‘Holly Green’ up his nose,”
Marie threatened, but not completely seriously. Fake nostalgia for a kind
of Christmas that never really existed in any past era was a part of the
experience.
Besides, everyone, even Colm with his issues about travel, got excited
when they saw the steam train taking on passengers.
“Wow, it’s the Hogwarts Express!” Gerard O’Connor
exclaimed.
“No, it’s the Christmas Express,” Bridget replied, pointing
to the embossed name along the side of the water tank. “Christmas
colours, red and green.”
It wasn’t quite a full size locomotive, perhaps about two-thirds
of the expected dimensions. The gauge of the track was probably smaller
than standard, too, but it was still a steam engine of the sort that got
boys excited. The Doctor looked impressed, too.
“They used to have a sleigh with unconvincing animatronic reindeer,”
he said. “This is far superior.”
“Can we go on it?” The requests were multifold. Every child,
even Áine, who was rarely interested in anything, displayed enthusiasm
for a train ride in space.
“See all of the highlights of Christmas Station in a ninety minute
tour, then decide which bits you want to spend quality time in,”
explained one of the Mrs Santas. “Perfect for the first time visitor
or the indecisive.”
“Please can we go?” The gestalt cry was pitched at a perfect
level of plaintiveness to persuade any adult. Around them parents were
being persuaded in their droves.
The Doctor glanced at the carriages critically. They were red and green
liveried, too, with festive garlands hanging inside. They were the very
old fashioned sort with two wide leather seats facing each other, lots
of widows so everyone could see out on both sides, but no connecting corridors
and no toilet facilities.
“Niall, hold it in,” The Doctor warned as he held open a carriage
door and ushered his charges inside. Marie was last in before him and
he closed the door before dropping the window to get the full experience
of steam travel – mostly a faceful of smuts.
The youngsters were excited as the train moved off. They hugged the windows
and watched as the train passed into a tunnel, but not a dark, featureless
one as they might have expected. This was Christmas Station and the tunnels
were lit with twinkling multi-coloured lights. If Christmas trees had
an inner soul, this was it.
They emerged after a few minutes in a winter wonderland. The train chuffed
past a landscape of picturesque cottages set in a snow-covered landscape
as seen in the most hopeful Christmas cards. A couple tucked up with blankets
drove an actual ‘one horse open sleigh’ along the lane towards
one of those houses. A four-in-hand full of party goers muffled up in
warm clothing went the other way. On the far hills there was tobogganing
and skiing and a perfectly frozen lake provided skating for all levels
of competency.
“We ARE still on the space station? Liam asked. “Only it’s
snowing and the sky looks….”
“Is it real?” Gerard asked.
“In so far as it’s an artificially stimulated microclimate
and the hills are not as far away or as high as they look, its real,”
The Doctor explained. “Trust ten year olds to ask the awkward questions.
You’re supposed to suspend disbelief and enjoy it.”
“We’re enjoying it,” Liam and Gerard both assured him.
“It’s just mad, that’s all.”
“I like it,” Bridget admitted. “We don’t get snow
like that in Tallaght.”
“If we did, it wouldn’t be fun,” Colm pointed out. “It’d
just make the buses late.”
“He’s right,” Marie agreed as they passed a field full
of people having snowball fights and a couple building a snowman in true
‘walking in a winter wonderland’ style. “It really only
looks fun in nineteen eighties pop videos and Christmas card scenes. Real
snow is hard work.”
“Well, that’s you lot all down for the snowman building competition,
later,” The Doctor said. “Including you, Miss Reynolds. I
thought it was just the kids who had lost their Christmas spirit.”
“It’s been hard on the teachers, too,” she pointed out.
“But I’m here, aren’t I? Ready to have my spirit renewed.”
“Hey, where is the train going, now?” asked Niall. “It
looks like we’re going into the hill, under the ski lift.”
“Off to another Christmas zone,” The Doctor explained. “There
ARE two hundred decks on the station, and you want to see plenty.”
The train entered a tunnel straight through the snow-covered hill. Again,
there were multi-coloured lights but nothing to compare with the sight
when they emerged.
“Oh, it’s the Fête des Lumières!” Marie
exclaimed as she looked up at a glass dome with a star field of deep space
beyond and a glorious display of dancing multi-hued aurora on the inside.
All around this deck tableaus of colour and movement were created by projecting
lights onto objects. The train slowed as it passed between an avenue of
trees made to look like fountains and fountains that looked like trees.
Beyond that they entered an underwater world projected onto curving glass
walls.
“What’s a fate dur… whatever?” Liam asked.
“Fête des Lumières,” Marie repeated. “It
means ‘Festival of Light.’ I suppose it could be anywhere,
but the main one happens every December in Lyon, in France. The whole
city centre is lit up, churches and cathedrals and public buildings all
covered in lights. I’ve never been there, but I always look at the
virtual tour online. It is fantastic. More fantastic than this version
of it, really, because it’s done by ordinary human effort in our
own time and no space age technology.”
The Christmas Station fête took all of the best elements of Lyon’s
tradition and put them under an exo-glass dome at the top of the station.
Visitors walked around in rather more comfort than they did in the open
air in France, in December.
All the same, Marie’s students were more impressed by the idea that
something as spectacular as they were looking at here on the future time
space station happened in their own real time. Of course, the chances
of any of them seeing it were slim. It was at least nine hundred miles
away from their home and hotels in the city were the most expensive on
the weekend of the Fête. It wasn’t even within the scope of
possibility for them. That fact had something of a deflating effect on
the youngsters. They looked at the reproduction of the Fête with
rather jaded eyes and weren’t especially sorry when the train passed
into another tunnel, leaving it behind.
“Christmas Station doesn’t usually have to work so hard,”
The Doctor admitted. “Perhaps the next exciting deck of Christmas
joy will inspire you lot.”
What they emerged into was a giant feast of Christmas fantasy –
Santa’s grotto complete with magical toy factory. Elves with smiling
eyes and rosy red cheeks happily hammering at wooden toys while a jolly,
fat santa in red walked among them checking on productivity and huge ‘naughty
and nice’ lists hanging from the wall either side of the train tracks.
It was pretty and imaginative, but perhaps not quite enough for ten year
olds with all their doubts about the reality of Father Christmas.
“Who do they make all the wooden toys for?” Niall asked. “Nobody
wants a wooden aeroplane for Christmas.”
“The wooden toys are just figurative,” The Doctor explained.
“In the sleigh they turn into Nintendo consoles and whatever was
on your list.”
“Do you expect us to believe that?” The youngsters all looked
at The Doctor with acute scepticism. He smiled back enigmatically and
refused to be drawn any further on the matter.
As if that wasn’t bad enough, the students of the senior class of
East Tallaght Community School were, to a child, unexcited to see their
names on the ‘nice’ list.
“We didn’t tell anyone here our names,” young Gerard
explained. “So that bit is just…..”
“Creepy,” Niall suggested.
“Plus, I know I’ve not been ‘nice’,” Liam
added. “I’ve… done stuff I shouldn’t have.”
He wasn’t prepared to expand upon his confession, even with The
Doctor glancing at him with the most fearsome eyebrows.
Meanwhile two more of the boys admitted they probably shouldn’t
be on the ‘nice list’ either.
“I haven’t done anything wrong,” Brigid said after a
moment. “But my da hasn’t had much work this year and mam’s
having another baby, so being on the ‘nice list’ doesn’t
mean anything. Christmas will be what we can afford.”
It hadn’t been as financially rough for the others, but they all
admitted to understanding the harsh economics of Christmas that Santa
couldn’t just magic away.
The Doctor couldn’t magic it away, either. As they passed into the
tunnel to the next attraction he realised that the level of Christmas
spirit in the carriage had actually DROPPED several degrees since the
novelty of a steam train wore off.
“You lot are the biggest challenge this place has had for a long
time,” he admitted.
Marie agreed.
“Any idea what else is on the tour?” she asked.
“Well, there’s usually a cultural element – three dimensional
representations of famous nativity paintings, the Old Masters, that kind
of thing....”
“Interesting, but I’m not sure if it would take Niall’s
mind off his bladder,” Marie conceded. When The Doctor mentioned
Victorian street scenes with carol singing that. didn’t sound hopeful,
either.
“Have I got it wrong?” he asked. “I thought this place
would be sure to cheer them up. It has everything you could want from
Christmas under one roof – well, one exo-glass skin, anyway.”
“But most of what people want from Christmas is fantasy,”
Marie pointed out. “They’re from Tallaght. They’re too
aware of real life to succumb to fantasy easily. Maybe Christmas Station
should admit defeat, this time.”
“You could be right,” The Doctor conceded. “We need
to think this through a bit. There’s a request stop coming up. The
food court. Maybe turkey and chestnut stuffing subs and minced pies with
cream will cheer everyone up.”
“Plus, Niall will be able to find a bathroom,” Marie added.
And perhaps that MIGHT have been a good idea, but it was within the next
tunnel that things started to go wrong. The Doctor had guessed, though
he hadn’t shared his guess with anyone else, that the tunnels were
a cover for space age technology. Each of the decks they had seen were
far apart. The Fête des Lumières was on the very top deck
with the exo-glass domed roof. Santa’s grotto was three floors beneath
the shopping arcade and Christmas department store. The Winter Wonderland
was on deck four just above the hydrogen cooling plants that generated
the snow. The tunnels were, in fact, instant transmat chambers, shifting
them between the decks. Up until now that had worked smoothly enough.
Nobody had noticed anything other than forward motion of the train. Even
Marie hadn’t questioned it.
But this time they were all too aware that they were not travelling under
steam power. Colm retching into a paper bag was the last thing The Doctor
heard as the nauseating sensation of an unguarded transmat overcame even
him. The last thing he felt was a small hand gripping his. Exactly who’s
hand he thought it was owed much to a long life full of short acquaintances
and often painful parting.
When he woke again, he recognised that the slightly sticky hand belonged
to Áine. The two of them were alone in a dark alleyway with soot-tainted
snow on the ground.
“Sugar,” he managed to say. “We need sugar. The transmat
has reduced our blood glucose to dangerously low levels. Diabetic coma
is imminent.”
Áine reached into her pocket for the candy cane given to her at
the start of the Christmas Station experience and which accounted for
the stickiness of her hand. She broke it in half and shared it with The
Doctor.
“I’m cold,” she said. “It’s really cold
here. And I don’t have my coat.”
She was wearing one before. All of the children had coats and hats and
gloves of some sort – most of the gloves being the sort with strings
through the coat sleeves to prevent them going missing. Now she was clothed
in a very thin and unwintry cotton dress and a very dilapidated pair of
shoes with a wafer thin bit of sole left on them.
His clothes were the same as before. Nobody messed with his clothing even
when he was unconscious without a reckoning. The Doctor pulled off his
coat and the hooded sweatshirt from underneath. He put the hoodie on the
girl making a baggy sort of woollen dress and put the coat back on himself.
“Now you’re a bit warmer and I’m a bit colder,”
The Doctor told her. “I think we’re going to have to put up
with that for a bit. Let’s see where we are.”
Where they appeared to be when they emerged from the alleyway was Victorian
London. In truth it could have been Victorian Glasgow or Manchester, or
even Dublin, but narrative causality made it London. It was dark and it
had been snowing for a long time. There was nothing charming about the
way the falling flakes could be seen in the light of the gas lamps. It
was too cold for any sentiment other than irritation.
There was nothing charming about being improperly dressed in winter, either.
What made it worse was that they were surrounded by people who did have
warm coats and scarves and gloves were all around. Even more painful was
the fact that those people had money to buy packets of hot chestnuts or
roast potatoes from vendors with hot braziers. Being hungry as well as
cold, and on top of being lost and confused, was no fun at all.
The Doctor dug deep into the pockets of his coat, knowing instinctively
that they were empty of useful things like his Sonic Screwdriver or any
viable currency.
He found two pennies with Queen Victoria’s glum face on them.
“The chestnuts are two pence,” Áine pointed out hopefully.
The Doctor gave her the pennies. She ran off, returning presently with
her cold hands wrapped around a cone shaped paper bag. She offered the
open end to The Doctor. He took one of the chestnuts and peeled it. The
morsel of hot food was welcome, but he let the child have the rest of
them. She had a hungry, pinched look even before they were pitched into
this odd simulacrum of destitution.
And simulacrum was the appropriate if rarely used word for it. The whole
thing was fake. There was something just a bit wrong about everything
here, from the yellow of the glow from the gas lamps to the jangle of
the reins on the hansom cab horses. It wasn’t just fake. The Dickensian
Christmas themed deck of Christmas Station was fake, anyway. But this
was a fake of the fake.
“Miss Reynolds!” Áine cried out, suddenly.
“Where?”
“There.” Áine pointed to a woman in a very thin shawl
who was selling matchbooks on the street corner.
“How corny,” The Doctor remarked. “The match girl!”
He walked straight up to her. She held up a matchbook hopefully.
“A farthing, guv,” she said in a fake cockney accent that
was murder to the ears.
“Marie, wake up,” The Doctor told her. He touched her cold
face gently and her eyes widened in surprise. She dropped the tray of
matchbooks onto the snow-covered pavement.
“Doctor… what’s going on?”
“I’m not sure,” he answered as he pulled off his coat
and wrapped it around her. “Now we’re all equally cold,”
he added. “And equally bewildered.”
“Áine, are you ok?” she asked the girl. In fact, Áine
looked more animated and engaged right now than she had been all term
at school. She offered Marie the last, slightly cooler chestnut. She accepted
it gratefully.
“We need to find the others,” Áine stated as a fact,
just in case the grown-ups had forgotten.
“Yes, we do,” The Doctor agreed. “Marie, do you have
any clue about that?”
“I can’t remember anything,” she answered. “Except…
wait a minute…. There was a man….”
“A man?”
“He was….”
Marie shook her head. Everything felt strange and unreal. She turned around,
though, and looked at a dark, ominous building that loomed over the street,
blocking out a portion of the sky and somehow making everything in its
shadow a little bit colder.
“What is it?” Áine asked.
“A workhouse,” Marie answered. “A worse fate than prison
for poor people in the past. Don’t talk about it too much. You don’t
want to give our government any ideas about dealing with poverty.”
“We’re missing five kids. Workhouses have kids in them,”
The Doctor concluded. “Seems like a good place to look.”
He marched right up to the forbidding door of the terrible building and
grasped a knocker shaped like the tormented face of Ebenezer Scrooge’s
dead partner. He hammered it forcefully into the wood.
The door creaked open after a half a minute to reveal a skinny teenage
boy with close cropped hair and ragged, grey clothes.
“I’m here for the latest arrivals,” The Doctor said,
stepping across the threshold without waiting for an invitation. Marie
and Áine followed. The boy closed the door behind them, cutting
off the falling snow.
It felt colder inside.
They followed the boy through dimly lit ante rooms to what could, with
a little charity, be called a dining room. Something like fifty or more
children were sitting on benches at rough wooden tables eating something
thin and grey served in portions too small to possibly fill them. Asking
for more was probably not an option.
“There they are,” Marie said, pointing to a group huddled
together at the end of the table. She walked right up to them and called
each of them by name. They quickly came out of the trance that made them
think they belonged in that grim place and looked at their dinner in disgust.
It was a long way from the turkey subs that had been promised.
“Everyone here?” The Doctor asked. Marie did a head count.
“All right, let’s get out of here.”
They would have done so except that Niall was desperate for the toilet
again and Colm was vomiting up the gruel he had been eating.
Plus, the way out was barred by a tall, thin version of the character
played by Harry Secombe in the film musical of Oliver.
“We’re leaving,” The Doctor insisted.
“I am the Warden of Christmas Station,” the figure replied.
“These children are mine. All ungrateful wretches who refuse to
find the Spirit of Christmas in what we have to offer are mine. They and
their parents… the greedy and the selfish who think only of the
value of their ‘presents’, clamouring in the toy shop for
the latest noise making box of tricks, sulking when they don’t get
what they want, forgetting that LOVE was the greatest gift given to all
of Creation by the First Christmas.”
“We haven’t been anywhere near the toy shop,” Marie
pointed out. “We haven’t had time to do anything except ride
a train around a couple of floors.”
“All of which you have dismissed,” the Warden responded. “These
children didn’t even appreciate being on the ‘nice’
list. They have so little spirit of Christmas they have even stopped believing
in Santa Claus... at TEN years old.”
“I don’t think there’s a minimum age,” Marie pointed
out.
“And YOU are just as guilty,” the Warden rounded on her. “You
dismissed the magic of the Winter Wonderland. You thought our fête
des Lumières was not as good as the ‘real one’.”
“It isn’t,” Marie answered, standing her ground.
“The Lumières on Christmas Station are bigger and better
than anywhere in the human space colonies.”
“Only Americans think ‘bigger’ is ‘better’,”
Marie retorted. “Your Lumières may be expensive and flashy,
but they’re soulless. The Fête des Lumières in Lyon
isn’t just about cramming the streets with tourists and selling
them fast food. It is in memory of a time in the seventeenth century when
the people of Lyon promised to honour the Mother of Jesus if they were
spared the plague. Whether it was a miracle or fresh air and clean water,
I don’t know, but ever since they have kept their promise with the
lights and the procession and a Mass in the Basilica on the hill at the
top of the city. The lights have got bigger and fancier because of technology,
but the meaning of it all still remains. The centre of it all is still
the Mother of Jesus, and if you need proof of that, a year or two back
the people of France were feeling too sad for huge celebrations so they
cancelled all the lights and fancy stuff and just had a candlelit Vigil
at the Basilica. So, yes, their fêtes des Lumières will always
be better than yours.”
The silence that followed was punctuated by a ripple of applause led by
The Doctor and joined in by the children.
“I think Marie has made her case,” The Doctor said.
“She may have. These ungrateful brats have not,” the Warden
answered. “They were still unmoved by any aspect of Christmas offered
to them.”
“Well, of course they were,” The Doctor answered. “After
all, everything at Christmas Station is as fake as the window dressing
in Harrods. It’s all just for show, and to direct parents to the
toy shop floor. These kids enjoyed your show, but they know it for what
it is. Just a big advertising ploy.”
“Rubbish, they are ungrateful,” the Warden insisted. “They’re
like all the others – their heads full of greedy Christmas wishes
for piles of toys.”
“They’re not,” The Doctor insisted even more fervently.
“They most certainly are not.” He looked around at the children,
who looked back at him as if he was bargaining with the devil for their
very souls.
“Áine,” he said, drawn to the biggest and most pleading
eyes of them all. “Tell this man YOUR Christmas wish, the one top
of your list.”
Áine said something very quietly, with her head down, the way she
had replied to every question put to her in school all year.
“Louder, girl,” the Warden demanded. “What is it? Some
doll with distastefully realistic bodily functions?”
“I wish that da would just go away somewhere so that me and mam
can have a Christmas Day without him getting angry about some little thing
and hitting us and throwing the dinner on the floor and breaking my toys,”
Áine replied. “Like last year and the year before and….”
“Oh!” Marie hid her face in her hands. This was something
she ought to have recognised as her teacher. There was training in spotting
the signs. But between marking and assessments and sick days, Niall’s
bladder, chewing gum under the desks and casual bullying, the quiet girl
who said nothing had been forgotten.
“And if you ask any of the others,” The Doctor continued.
“Naming no names, one of them is hoping their dad will be let out
of prison in time for Christmas. Another is hoping for the all clear on
his mum’s cancer. Most of them just hope that they can have Christmas
without their parents fretting about how to pay for it. They’re
ten years old and they already KNOW there’s no Santa Claus and no
Magic about one arbitrary day of the year appropriated by Christianity
from a pagan Solstice rite. They KNOW what the spirit of Christmas is
about. They just don’t think it applies to them. Come on, kids,
we’re leaving.”
He looked back at the other children at the long, dismal tables.
“There was nothing about this in the fine print on anyone’s
ticket,” he added. “Everybody finds their spirit of Christmas
their own way. If that means a mountain of expensive presents that’s
their way. If its volunteering at the homeless shelter making sure others
get fed on one day a year that’s another. If its….”
He stopped and grinned like an alligator. “Never mind, all that.
I’m not the narrator of a feel-good film. You can work out the moral
of the story for yourself. Meanwhile, you let those children and their
parents out of your little Scrooge pageant and stop judging them and Christmas
by the one warped measuring stick. And do it before I reach the admin
offices and lodge a very serious complaint about the way Christmas Station
is being run lately.”
This time he was done. He brought his charges out of the forbidding building.
He wasn’t entirely surprised to find that the fake Victorian London
was starting to dissolve around them. Adults dressed in ragged and ill-matched
clothes were heading towards the workhouse in search of their children
and explanations about their unscheduled visit to this floor of Christmas
Station.
“They must be the ungrateful ones who only care about presents,”
Bridget noted. “Do you think they’ll learn the lesson?”
“No,” The Doctor told her. “That only happens in Disney
films. Besides, the management of Christmas Station will modify their
memories to avoid a lawsuit and offer them huge discounts on the piles
of presents.”
Nobody thought that was completely fair, but that was just one more unfair
thing about the situation.
The Doctor spotted a partially disguised entrance to a turbo lift and
brought everyone to the parking deck where they had left the TARDIS. He
didn’t need to take a vote to know that they had all had enough
of Christmas Station.
He had a good idea about where they could get a real sense of Christmas
spirit, too. The clues had been laid down thick enough. A mere half an
hour later the TARDIS had travelled back to the early twenty-first century
and parked in the Place des Terreaux in Lyon, France. The anachronistic
and thoroughly noticeable blue police box was dwarfed by the projections
of great works of art on the façade of the Museum of Fine Arts
and of operatic tableaux on the front of the Opera House.
It was bitterly cold in December in the northern hemisphere, but everyone
was snug in coats, hats, scarves and gloves. Hot chocolate from one vendor
and warm croissants from another satisfied hunger pangs as they enjoyed
to the full the REAL Fête des Lumières so eloquently extolled
by Marie.
“You know,” she admitted to The Doctor. “Maybe SOME
of it IS about commercialism. Try getting a hotel room this weekend at
any price. But it still FEELS real.”
“That might be mild hypothermia,” The Doctor suggested, but
he was just teasing her. By a roundabout way filled with mishaps she and
the children had found their Christmas spirit and he could call that a
success.
There was just one more thing he needed to do. He waited until later in
the week, when Marie was at home, doing what school teachers did when
they weren’t teaching. He parked the TARDIS quietly behind an Eirecom
phone box of rather different dimensions and waited.
“Donal Burke,” he said, stepping in front of a man who walked
home from the pub with an unsteady gait. “Appropriate surname, for
a complete and utter berk.”
“Who the…. hell are you?” Donal Burke replied, punctuating
the short question with profanities that The Doctor had learnt to edit
out before the words reached his brain.
“I’m doing the talking, sunshine,” The Doctor answered,
pressing a long finger into the centre of Donal’s skull. “You
have a wife and a daughter you ought to love and cherish. You’ve
got a job and a home and a lot less to worry about than a lot of people
in your neighbourhood. You and your family shouldn’t be a concern
to me. So this is what I’m going to do.”
“Wha….” Donal began.
“Still talking, which means you sh up. The feeling of disappointment
and emotional turmoil you’re feeling is what Áine and her
mum both feel when you go off on one of your moods for no reason. From
now on you’re going to feel that instead of them until you stop
getting in those moods. Meanwhile you and your family ARE going to have
a good Christmas even if it kills you. Have you got that? Nod if you have.”
Donal nodded. The Doctor removed his finger.
“Right, away you go. And take this.”
“What is it?” Donal asked, looking at the gaily wrapped parcel.
“It’s a doll with distastefully realistic bodily functions,
because despite the evidence of her home life, young Áine’s
biggest ambition is to get married and have wee humans of her own and
that sort of thing is practice, apparently. Can’t see it myself,
but we didn’t have Christmas on my planet and even if we did I don’t
think anyone would have given me a doll. Anyway, Happy Christmas, Merry
New Year and all that.”
By the time Donal Burke had worked out the bit about the planet The Doctor
was gone. So was the TARDIS. He shrugged and walked on home, a little
more sober than before and with a strange feeling that things were going
to have to change or it would be the worse for him.