Sarah didn’t say anything in reply to that shocking
claim. She simply pulled Maria gently over the threshold and shut the
door.
“Upstairs. We’re in the attic. The kettle is just boiled.
A nice cup of tea.” She guided Maria up the stairs. She was still
crying when they reached the attic, which was an indication of how upset
she was. Knowing that Luke was there, she would usually have pulled herself
together and put a brave face on. Crying in front of an adult was all
right, but according to the unwritten law of teenagers, crying in front
of somebody her own age wasn’t done.
Sarah Jane made the tea and made Maria drink half a cup before she would
say anything more. Then she listened to her story about Kaitlyn.
“Mr Smith….” she said. To her surprise, Mr Smith was
already ahead of her.
“I am accessing the police records,” he said.
“A hit and run accident occurred on Carlyle Avenue, Southall, approximately
forty minutes ago. The casualty, Kaitlyn Turner, aged fifteen, was taken
by ambulance to Ealing Hospital, where her condition is described as serious
but stable. The driver of the car was stopped by police on the A4020 at
Hillingden and was subsequently arrested for failing to stop at the scene
of an accident and failing a roadside breathalyser test.”
“There you are,” Sarah Jane told Maria in a deliberately bright
voice. “Nobody is dead. And it wasn’t your fault. It was a
stupid, stupid person who had too much to drink and drove his car too
fast. You couldn’t POSSIBLY have made that happen.”
“But I DID,” Maria insisted. “I know it sounds crazy,
but I DID. I dreamt it, and when I woke up, it had happened.”
“You had a premonition of it happening. That happens…. Far
more often than people think it does. U.N.I.T. have a whole department
where they research that sort of thing, you know. I bet if you told them
all about it, they would be able to tell you what parts of your brain
were active, and how low level telepathic fields can sometimes act to
produce random premonitions just like that.”
“I don’t want to talk to U.N.I.T. about it,” Maria said.
“Or Torchwood, or any of those people. I don’t want anybody
except you to know. And I want it to STOP. That’s three people in
hospital because of me.”
“But…”
“Is me being able to HURT people I hate more strange than me having
premonitions?” Maria pointed out logically. “I DID it. I felt
so much hate for mum and Lizzie last night. And I dreamt about how much
I hated Kaitlyn. And… oh… Remember what I said about Ivan…
what if…”
“Do you have a phone number for Ivan?” Sarah
Jane asked her. Maria did. Sarah Jane dialled it on her mobile. Maria
and Luke didn’t here Ivan’s side of the conversation.
“Hello, is that Ivan? You don’t know me. But I’m a friend
of Maria’s… Maria…. Your… sort of… Chrissie’s
daughter… Chrissie… the woman you live with…. Oh, I
see. How unfortunate. Well…. Look, never mind. Goodbye…”
Sarah Jane put the phone back in her pocket and looked around at the two
youngsters. Criticising an adult in front of children used to be considered
bad form when she was a girl. And she tried to maintain the same standards.
When it came to Chrissie and Ivan, it was difficult, since there was such
a lot to be criticised.
“Well,” she managed. “HE is alive and well. He’s
rather angry. The engine blew up in the courtesy car the garage gave him
while his is in for repairs. Apparently he was in a traffic jam on Uxbridge
Road and it just ‘went’. And then he got a ticking off from
a policeman for obstructing an ambulance with its lights and siren on
answering a 999 call. Though why he felt a stranger on the telephone needed
to know that…”
“So he did have a SORT of accident,” Maria said, wondering
if the ambulance was the one going to Kaitlyn.
“But YOU didn’t do it,” Sarah Jane insisted. “Now,
come on. Let’s be practical. Did you lock the house when you came
over?”
“I can’t remember,” Maria admitted. “I was so
upset…”
“All right. I’ll pop across there and get you some clothes
and lock up. I’ll leave a note for your dad to say that you’re
here. And you can have a nice relaxing bath and get dressed to go and
see your mum at visiting time.”
Those ordinary domestic ideas helped to push away the other ideas running
through Maria’s head temporarily. Sarah Jane picked up her handbag
and hurried downstairs and across the road. Maria HAD left the door unlocked,
but Bannerman Road was a quiet place, apart from being a regular stop
off for friendly and not so friendly aliens. There was no sign of burglars.
She went up to Maria’s room and found her a change of clothes. And
while she was at it, she scanned the room for alien entities.
She was surprised to discover that it was clean, now. No entities.
“It can’t have just gone,” she told herself. Then a
dreadful thought occurred to her.
The entity had attached itself to Maria. Like a familiar?
She kept herself calm. She wrote the note for Alan and locked up the house
before crossing the road once again. She walked up the stairs to the attic
and noticed the low beep her watch made as she entered the attic. She
realised that it had done it when Maria arrived at the house, earlier.
But she had been too concerned about a very upset and frightened girl
wearing nothing but a nightie in the street to worry about it then.
“There you go, Maria,” she said, giving her
the clothes. “You go and have a nice long soak. I’ve got about
half a dozen different bath salts that are supposed to relax the body
and calm the mind in there. Help yourself.”
Maria managed a smile as she went off to the bathroom. Sarah Jane watched
her go and then looked at her watch.
“K9, Mr Smith, do you have the same reading?”
“Affirmative, mistress,” K9 replied.
“There is a Cavean Entity in this room,” Mr Smith added. “It
came with Maria and is still here now.”
“Which means it is NOT attached to her personally,” Sarah
Jane reasoned. “Unless it’s a shy entity that doesn’t
want to follow her to the bath.”
That was meant as a joke to lighten the tense atmosphere in the attic,
but nobody really got it. Mr Smith and K9 both had computer minds that
didn’t appreciate humour and Luke’s mind was formed by computers
and still had a long way to go to fully appreciate the subtleties of Human
interaction.
But he DID have a very SHARP mind.
“The DOLL!”
“Of COURSE!” Sarah Jane answered him. “WHY didn’t
I think of that. This ALL began when she got the doll. Last night she
had it in bed with her. And this afternoon when she had that dream. She
was holding it when she was talking about Ivan. But she retracted what
she said about him. She doesn’t really hate him. He’s an idiot,
but he’s not REALLY the cause of her problem with her mum, just
one of the symptoms. And she was grown up enough to realise that.”
“So Ivan just had a blown up engine, not anything really terrible.”
“Her mum just had a broken leg because she LOVES her mum even though
she hates her as well.”
“But Lizzie and Kaitlyn…” Luke shuddered. “I’m
glad I’m her friend.” He walked towards the sofa, where Maria
had left the doll. He picked it up. Its eyes opened. But it was supposed
to do that. It was a mechanism behind the face with a heavy weight that
obeyed the laws of gravity and swung down when the doll was stood up,
pulling the eyes open. Nothing sinister.
It was JUST a doll. A frilly, very girly kind of doll. Luke knew that
if Clyde was there he would feel really hot and embarrassed holding it
right now. But Clyde wasn’t there. Without any qualms, therefore,
he turned the doll over and started to unfasten its dress to look at the
doll properly.
“No, not yet,” Sarah Jane told him. “Her dad will be
here soon and they’re going up to the hospital. We’ll deal
with it then.”
It was Maria’s present from her grandmother. Sarah Jane didn’t
want to upset her by finding out that it was responsible for these terrible
things. She took the doll from Luke and sat it down again on the sofa.
When Maria came back from her bath, Sarah Jane and Luke were both doing
a good impression of people who weren’t worried about anything at
all, and managed to keep it up until Alan arrived to take Maria to the
hospital.
“Leave the doll behind,” Alan said as she went to pick it
up. “It might get lost at the hospital. And you wouldn’t want
that to happen.” Maria looked conflicted for a few moments before
putting it down on the sofa again.
“That was lucky,” Luke commented when they were gone. “I
thought she was going to take it.”
“So did I,” Sarah Jane said. “Now, let’s have
a look.” She picked up the doll and began to do what Luke had intended
to do before – undress it and see if there was anything unusual
about it.
She didn’t notice the doll’s eyes open and
shut, glowing blue momentarily.
“Oww!” she screamed as sparks flew from the plastic doll,
against all laws of physics and she felt an electric shock run up her
arm. She dropped the doll and jumped back from it, pushing Luke behind
her protectively. Automatically, she reached for the sonic screwdriver
in her pocket.
“Stay behind me,” she told Luke as she wielding the screwdriver
like a weapon. It was in scanner mode at the moment and no threat to anyone
or any thing, but she hoped the entity would recognise it’s power
as something to be reckoned with.
She and Luke were both startled when the doll stood up on its own two
feet and turned to look at them. The eyes were wide open and the glowing
blue colour was identical to the sonic screwdriver’s glow.
“Keep back,” Sarah Jane called out. “Keep away from
us.”
“Where is Maria?” it demanded. “What have you done to
her? I will kill anyone who stands in my way. Maria is under my protection.
I will kill anyone who harms her.”
“WE’RE Maria’s friends,” Luke answered. “We
protect her. Who are you and why did you come here?”
“Where is Maria?” the creature in the doll demanded. “Why
is she not here? What have you done with her?”
“She’s gone to see her mum in hospital,” Sarah Jane
replied. “She is IN hospital because of YOU. You hurt her mum and
those two girls. You have to stop doing that. You can’t be allowed
to hurt people. Maria is upset because of what you did.”
“No, I am Maria’s friend. She is upset because of them. I
will punish those who make Maria unhappy. I will punish YOU.”
“Sarah Jane!” Mr Smith called out. “I am detecting a
large build up of psychic energy from the doll. Protect yourself.”
“Protect myself from what?” she demanded.
"WITH what?"
“I will protect you, mistress,” said K9, whirring into position
between her and the doll. But Sarah Jane still found herself being lifted
bodily from the floor and whirled around like a rag doll. K9 shot a laser
beam at the doll, but it lifted a plastic hand and deflected it, burning
a hole in the back of the sofa. The doll’s other hand raised and
K9 gave an electronic yelp and retreated. But trying to hit both targets
at once had been too much. Sarah Jane fell with an ungainly bump onto
the same sofa. She was winded and dizzy, and she lost her sonic screwdriver
as she fell. Luke ran to grab it.
“Setting 5643#7,” Mr Smith said. “Stasis beam.”
“Is it?” Sarah Jane asked. “I’m glad you scanned
the manual, Mr Smith.”
Luke set the sonic screwdriver and pointed it at the doll. A blue, sparkling
beam shot out of it and surrounded the doll, immobilising it. The creature
within screamed in rage at them. Sarah Jane stood, rubbing sore parts
of herself. She took the sonic screwdriver from Luke and adjusted it to
another setting. Luke wasn’t sure what it was.
“Sonic disrupter,” she said. “It’s the fifth setting
in the manual. It dissipates energy. This creature is made of energy.”
She pointed the sonic screwdriver again. The creature screamed, agonisingly.
It didn’t say in the manual that it took so long and made something
that WAS a lifeform of a kind scream in pain.
“Mum!” Luke yelled. “Stop. It’s HORRIBLE. Stop.”
Sarah Jane stopped.
“Thank… you…” the creature said. “Thank
you for your kindness.”
“Just keep still,” Sarah Jane told it.
“I am unable to move,” it pointed out. “I am at your
mercy.”
“Ye you are. So now, let’s get to the bottom of this. I know
what you are. I know all about Cavean Entities. But I want to know how
you got into that doll. And why you think you have to hurt people that
Maria knows.”
“I am her friend. That is my purpose. To be the friend of the child
who owns the doll. I was born in the doll factory. It is my purpose. When
Maria was given the doll, I became her friend.”
“Are there other dolls with Cavean Entities in them, then?”
Luke asked. “Does that happen EVERY time a child gets a doll?”
The idea horrified him. Little children all over the country could end
up killing their parents if they didn’t give them sweets or they
didn’t want to eat sprouts.
“I am the only one. I was born alone.”
“How can you be born alone?” Luke replied.
“Everyone is born from a parent. Except me. I was made. But everyone
else…”
“I was born alone,” the entity told them, and it seemed as
if there was no way it could explain in terms they, as humans understood,
how he was ‘born’ alone, apparently out of nothing and from
nowhere. “I was born, and I knew my purpose. To love and protect
Maria. To make her happy.”
“But you HAVEN’T made her happy,” Sarah Jane told the
creature. “You have made her miserable. You have made her think
she is responsible for three horrible accidents, one of them to her MUM.
You can’t DO that. You have to come out of that doll and leave Maria
alone. Do it now, or I will continue dissipating your energy until there
is nothing left of you.”
“I cannot leave,” the entity said. “I will die if I
leave this shape now. You already took so much of my energy. I am weak.
Cannot leave. Powerless.”
“I don’t believe you,” Sarah Jane said. “You’re
lying. Stalling for time. Get out of that doll NOW.”
“I CANNOT!” the creature wailed. And Sarah Jane and Luke both
watched in astonishment as the dolls eyes seemed to fill with tears. “If
I die, who will look after Maria?”
“WE look after Maria,” Luke said. “And her dad, and
her mum, sort of. And she looks after herself. She DOESN’T need
you.”
“Maybe she DOES,” Sarah Jane conceded. “Everyone
needs somebody. If we let you stay, no more hurting people. Humans sometimes
get angry. Sometimes they SAY things they don’t mean. I guess nobody
explained THAT to you. When a Human says they HATE another Human, when
they’re hurt and feeling sad, it DOESN’T make them better
by hurting that other person. At least, not unless they are very twisted
humans. But Maria ISN’T one of those. She is a nice girl. If she
says she hates somebody then it’s just a thing she has said. She
doesn’t mean it. If you don’t understand that, then you CAN’T
be near her.”
“Mistress,” K9 said in a small voice.
“Yes, K9, what is it?”
“I am programmed with understanding of Human emotions.”
“Yes? And….”
“Let me teach the Cavean Entity. It is a telepathic being. I can
sent it a microburst of information that it can process. It will understand,
then.”
“We should let him try, mum,” Luke suggested. “Because
otherwise… I think we have to kill it. And… I don’t
think we should do that.”
“I don’t think I want to,” Sarah Jane said. “Not
unless I really have to. K9… you’d better try it. But…
I’m watching that doll. If it does ANYTHING I don’t like…”
K9 moved closer to the doll. It remained standing as Sarah Jane turned
the sonic screwdriver to another setting and dissipated the stasis field.
K9 hummed slightly, like a computer with its drives all going at once.
Other than that, there was no sign that anything was happening.
Until the doll began to cry again.
This time, huge tears fell down the plastic cheeks and a pitiful wailing
accompanied them.
“It’s upset,” Luke said. “It knows what it did
wrong, and its upset. It’s… got a conscience now. It knows
right from wrong properly. And it knows it did wrong.”
Sarah Jane had only become a parent a year ago. She had never done the
soothing crying toddlers routine. She was not naturally maternal, if truth
be told, despite managing to be the best parent she could be to Luke.
But she reached and picked up the doll. She hugged it.
“It’s all right,” she whispered kindly. “It’s
all right. You understand now. You know how much it hurts. That’s
how Maria felt when she thought it was all her fault. So… so now
you know you can’t DO those things.”
As she hugged the doll, the crying noise gradually stopped. She looked
at it and wiped the wet face with a tissue. Then she put it back down
on the sofa, sitting down, its plastic legs slightly splayed under the
dress.
“Maria isn’t to know any of this,” she said to Luke,
K9, Mr Smith, even to the doll. “She will still feel it’s
her fault because the entity did what it thought she wanted. This remains
our secret. When no more accidents happen, she’ll get over it. She’ll
think she was just over-reacting and put it behind her. And she will NEVER
know about this. You….” She looked directly at the doll. It
blinked its eyes, but there was no glow. It could easily have been a slight
vibration as K9 bumped the corner of the sofa. “You can stay with
her. You’re her friend. You can… I don’t know…
be a friendly, warm aura in her bedroom, so that when she does feel sad
or troubled she will feel better about it. You NEVER reveal yourself to
her. Do you understand?”
There was no answer except another blink of the eyes.
“Ok,” Sarah Jane said, pocketing her sonic screwdriver. “I’ll
put the kettle on. When Maria and Alan get back they’ll probably
enjoy a nice cup of tea.”
“Will they come back here?” Luke asked.
“Yes,” Sarah Jane answered. “Maria has
to pick up her doll.”
She was right, of course. Maria and Alan stopped off at
her house before they went home. Maria looked a lot happier. Alan looked
irritated. Sarah Jane knew them both well enough to know that contact
with Chrissie Jackson made Maria happy and Alan irritated. Maria picked
up her doll and held it while she had her tea. She told Sarah Jane that
she had gone to see Lizzie while they were in the hospital. They let her
visit for just ten minutes. Lizzie couldn’t talk, but she was able
to write. She thanked them for looking after her mum.
“She hasn’t had ANY cards or anything from
any of her ‘friends’,” Maria said. “I always thought
she was popular at school. But it seems like nobody REALLY cares about
her. That’s really sad. I think… I think I’m going to
go and see her again when she’s able to have visitors for longer.
Dad asked about Kaitlyn, too. She’s going to be all right. I DON’T
want to visit her. I’m glad she’s not dead, but I don’t
really have anything to say to her. But I think Lizzie… I think
she needs a friend right now.”
She paused and had some more tea and laid the doll down on her knee so
that its eyes closed and it looked like a sleeping child. “I am
sorry I was so silly earlier,” she added. “All that fuss I
made. I think I was just tired and worried about mum,” she said.
“I over-reacted. I’m sure it was all just a huge coincidence,
that’s all.”
“I’m sure that was all,” Sarah Jane agreed. She looked
at the doll. Its eyes blinked open and shut again, with just a VERY faint
blue glow. Be a friendly, warm aura, she had said. Was it doing it already?
Helping Maria to feel better about the things that had worried her?
Or was it just a vibration as K9 bumped into the sofa again.
Sarah Jane made a note to have her friend Mr Lumsden look
at his gyroscope to see if it was a bit scrambled by his fight with the
entity and asked if anyone would like more tea