The
next Bank Holiday weekend after their Cambridge adventure, Sarah Jane
again took Luke, Clyde and Maria on a trip. This time, she drove them
to Cardiff, at the special invitation of Captain Jack Harkness. Sarah
Jane didn’t know much more about it, except that he had rung her
and talked for a long time about certain things they had in common.
Yes, all right, she admitted when the boys laughed sarcastically. They
talked about The Doctor. They also talked about Clyde, Luke and Maria,
and how terrific they were, and Jack had invited them up to Cardiff as
a treat, a reward for their unwitting part in the time experiment.
Clyde and Luke were of the opinion that some kind of consumer electricals
– say a new laptop each - would be a good way of saying thank you
for tricking them into a time machine that no adult would dare set foot
in. Maria thought it was really nice of him to invite them and had been
quite excited about it all.
They got there by midday, and Captain Jack took them all for lunch in
a nice bayside restaurant. Sarah Jane threatened to throw the boys into
the bay if they didn’t put away their stopwatches and stop counting
how many times she and Jack talked about The Doctor, but otherwise it
was a nice lunch and they thoroughly enjoyed it.
And afterwards, they got to see something that definitely wasn’t
in any of the tourist brochures extolling the virtues of modern Cardiff.
“So, what did you kids think of my workplace?” Jack asked
as he drove them back to Cardiff Central Station a little after six o’clock
in the evening of what rated a pretty incredible day even for them.
“I think it was the strangest and most incredible thing I have ever
seen,” Maria said. “You work in a secret, underground sewer.
Like… I don’t know. A cross between Batman and the Ninja Turtles.”
Jack laughed softly. “A filled in coal dock, actually. And the remains
of a really crazy Victorian plan to connect London, Glasgow and Cardiff
by underground railway. Winston Churchill had a go at finishing it during
the war, but they never really got far with it.”
“Not surprised,” Clyde commented. “Loopy
idea or WHAT!”
“I agree,” Jack answered him. “Besides, the weevils
are enough of a nuisance in Cardiff without them having a ready made route
to other places.”
“Oooh, those I didn’t much like,” Sarah Jane admitted.
And she had seen some ugly things in her time.
Actually, there had been a bit of a debate about the weevils. On the one
hand, they were hideous, snarling, ghastly things with too many teeth
and creepy eyes that repulsed them all. On the other, and it had been
Maria who led this camp, they were sad, lonely creatures who were a long
way from where they belonged, and it was terrible that so many of them
were imprisoned in the cells deep in Jack’s strange headquarters.
She thought there had to be a better way to deal with them than that.
To her surprise, Jack had agreed with her. His people were constantly
looking at ways to send the creatures back to where they came from. If
they only knew where that was.
“The pterodactyl was fantastic,” Luke said, and all of them
agreed about that. Of all the wonders that had seen in their adventures
with Sarah Jane, a real, living prehistoric creature jumped right into
their top ten. They hadn’t been able to get close up to it, of course.
But they watched it for ages on the CCTV cameras pointed at its nest and
fed through to a big viewscreen on the wall of Jack’s office.
Among other details they were unlikely to forget were the cryogenic store
and the lift that led up to an invisible paving stone by the fountain
in the plaza above the Torchwood Hub. Emerging into the ordinariness of
life outside after spending their day in such an incredible place ought
to have been an anti-climax, but it wasn’t. Standing there, watching
tourists and ordinary people going about their lives, unaware of what
was beneath their feet, gave them all an amazing feeling of being in on
a great secret.
Maria wondered what it would be like to arrive at work in the morning
down an invisible lift. What qualifications were needed to work at Torchwood?
“Do you think Hub tours might take off as a tourist attraction then?”
Jack asked them.
“I think, possibly not,” Sarah Jane laughed. “You’d
never be able to make the tour wheelchair friendly. That’s an important
regulation. And I doubt you could get liability insurance in case the
pterodactyl bit anyone.”
“Best it remains a secret then?”
“I think so.”
“I liked hearing about Jack when he was a pilot in the war?”
Clyde said. “I think that’s totally cool. I mean… there
was an old man who lived near us before mum and dad split. He was a fighter
pilot. But he was, like, 85, and he was losing his memory sometimes. But
you…”
That reminded Maria of something. She pulled her camera out of her pocket
and looked at the photographs on it. Jack had been very strict about what
she could take pictures of inside the Hub. Mostly it had been group photos
in his office. But she flipped through them now using the inch and a half
wide display screen. She was relieved to see that Jack was in the pictures.
“What? Did you think he wouldn’t be?” Luke asked.
“Yes,” she said. “I had a sort of an idea… that
maybe he’s a…” she blushed. The idea seemed silly now.
And saying it in front of him seemed rude.
“Go on,” he said to her. “Out with it.”
“Well… I thought you might be a vampire…
a friendly one, obviously. I thought that was how you’ve been around
so long. But you’re in the photos and everyone knows you can’t
photograph a vampire, because cameras use mirrors inside to make the picture.”
“Digital ones don’t,” Jack said as he parked the black
SUV in the car park next to the railway station. “But if you want
to be certain…” He waited until they were all out of the car
and then he called Maria to him. He stood behind her, one hand on her
shoulder and with the other he adjusted the wing mirror. She saw herself,
and Jack standing behind her.
“Not a vampire. Or a zombie?” She took hold of his wrist and
felt for a pulse. “No, you’re alive. You’re real. Just
really….”
“Devilishly handsome?”
“Don’t push your luck,” Maria told him. He smiled and
told them to follow him. They were a little puzzled. He seemed to be taking
them out of the car park and towards the station.
“But, Jack,” Clyde protested. “We didn’t come
by train. The car’s on the second floor of the car park.”
“Something else I want to show you before you go.
Another secret to share. I know I can trust you all, and I think you’ll
get a kick out of this.”
He wouldn’t tell them anything more, and Sarah Jane didn’t
know anything else. Jack led them into the busy station. At the ticket
barrier he showed some kind of identification and the ticket inspector
saluted him and called him “sir”. They all passed through
without any questions being asked and continued on down the long central
platform, beyond where the snack bar and newsstand and the toilets were,
and the crowds waiting for a late train to Bristol Parkway. Down there
it was quieter and strangely old fashioned. There were windows in dark,
unused offices with the British Rail logo still on them, and some that
actually still said “Great Western Railway” like the big 1930s
façade on the main entrance. It seemed a very long way from the
busy, modern part where all the noise and people were. Maria turned and
looked back to reassure herself that it was all there.
“This way,” Jack said, turning under an archway that led to
another platform.
“Platform 9 and ¾,” Clyde said as they looked at the
old-fashioned, disused platform and the black steam locomotive that stood
there, where it had absolutely no business being, as far as he could see.
“Hogwarts Express?”
“Not a bad guess!” Jack laughed. “But nothing magical
here. Just another outlet for the rift in time that runs through Cardiff.
That train… it slipped through the rift a month ago. We’ve
been waiting for the same conditions to recreate themselves. And tonight,
it’s going to happen. Hang on.”
He turned away from them slightly and pressed a button on the blue tooth
earpiece he wore. He told whoever responded to him that they could bring
them in now. Then he waited. A few minutes later a door opened further
down the mysterious platform and people began to pour in.
Most of them were children, though there were some adults with them. They
looked like teachers. Maria wasn’t sure why she thought that, but
she felt that the word ‘teacher’ was probably imprinted on
their spines or something. They all looked like teachers.
And the children, all in warm coats of an old fashioned sort that went
with the train and the platform, looked like…
“Evacuees?” Sarah Jane said it first, but they all thought
it at the same time. “From the war? Being taken off to the countryside
away from the bombs? My aunt Lavinia used to talk about when she was evacuated.
She was sent to Gloucester and lived with a nice old couple who kept goats.”
“How come they’re here?” Clyde asked.
“Like I said,” Jack continued. “The train slipped through
time. These kids and their teachers were aboard. We’ve been looking
after them ever since, hoping we could find a way of getting them home.
We usually get two or three people coming through the rift a month. But
a hundred and fifty was a bit more than we knew what to do with. We had
to get U.N.I.T. to help. They let us keep them in an old army barracks.
The important thing was not to expose them to too much modern culture.
They’re from 1940. TV is practically unheard of. They don’t
have pizzas and computers, pop music… We really hoped we could get
them back without too much harm. And we think tonight’s the night.”
“You think?” Maria looked at the children. They all looked
scared. No wonder. It must have been bad enough being evacuated in the
first place. Then they got lost. And now they were being herded back onto
a train that MIGHT take them back to 1940. Or it might just as well take
them to the planet the weevils come from or somewhere even worse.
“We are confident that the rift is lined up exactly as it was when
they arrived here,” Jack said. “More than confident. It’s
a risk. And I wish it wasn’t kids. They don’t have any say
in this at all. But we talked to their teachers. They decided to risk
it. So did the train driver and his crew.”
“How will you know if it worked?” Clyde asked.
“This,” Jack said and handed Clyde an old newspaper. It was
dated April 16th, 1941. “Two days after they disappeared. One of
the teachers has been told to put a small ad into the paper. Under personals.
Page two… keep an eye on it after the train leaves.”
Luke wasn’t listening. He was watching a boy about his own age who
had slipped away from the line of children getting onto the train. He
was hiding in a dark alcove behind an old GWR luggage trolley. Luke stepped
quietly towards the spot.
“Are you all right?” he asked. “Don’t be scared.
I won’t hurt you. But why aren’t you getting on the train?”
“I don’t want to go back,” he said. “I know what
happened. I overheard that man and Mr Todd, the housemaster, talking about
it. This is the future.”
“I….” Luke wasn’t sure if telling him that he
was right was a good idea or not.
“But you have to go back. You’ve got a mum and dad there,
friends…”
“No, I haven’t,” he answered. “Mum died when I
was little and my dad was killed at a place called Dunkirk, and I hate
the children’s home. And I’ll hate being evacuated, too.”
“But…” Luke didn’t know what to say. “But
you have to go,” was all he could think of. “It’s important.
You have to…”
“There’s no war here,” the boy continued. “I don’t
want to go back to the war. I don’t want to be scared any more.”
“What’s your name?” Luke asked.
“Fred,” he answered. “Fred Dixon.”
“I’m Luke. And I know about being scared. About doing things
that are frightening. I understand how you feel. I really do. I think…
sometimes you have to do those sort of things. Because if you don’t
do things that scare you, then you’ll never do anything. You’ll
spend all of your time hiding and miss out on everything.”
“But….” Fred looked at him. Luke didn’t say anything
else. It had to be the boy’s decision. But he had to make his decision
quickly. Behind them, the train whistle blew and there was an increase
in engine noise. He wasn’t entirely sure - he didn’t know
much about steam trains - but Luke was almost sure that it was nearly
ready to go.
“All right,” Fred said, seeming to make his mind up. “All
right, I’ll go back.”
“Ok, come on.” Luke reached out his hand to him. He took it.
They turned to see the train starting to move. “Jack!” he
shouted. “Jack, there’s one more.”
Jack turned and saw Luke and Fred. He waved frantically, but nobody on
the train realised he was signalling to them to stop. They just thought
he was waving. Luke and Fred ran to him. He grabbed the boy and ran towards
the train. It wasn’t fast yet, but it was moving, and he knew there
was very little time. To his relief, somebody on board saw what he was
doing and opened the door. He grabbed Fred up off the ground and passed
him up to hands that reached to grab him. The door closed behind him.
Jack stepped back and watched as the train started to go into the dark
tunnel ahead of it. He looked at his watch and bit his lip anxiously.
Then something amazing happened. The locomotive was suddenly surrounded
by a bright, glowing, orange light. It kept on going and the coal truck,
then the three passenger carriages and the guards van all went into the
light. The sound of the train seemed to be swallowed up by the light.
Then it was gone, and there was nothing but a dark tunnel and when Maria
and Luke looked closely they saw that it was actually bricked up about
ten yards inside.
“Did they make it?” Sarah Jane asked. “Jack… are
you sure?”
“YES!” Clyde’s shout echoed around the suddenly silent
platform. “Yes, look.” He waved the old newspaper frantically.
“Look!”
Sarah Jane took the paper and looked where he pointed. In the middle of
all the ordinary personal ads was a short message that proved without
a doubt that the plan had worked.
“Hogwarts Express arrived safely.” She laughed, not just at
the joke of a message like that, but with relief to know that they were
all safe. Or as safe as anyone was in 1941. Of course they still had a
long, frightening war, and all sorts of problems to go through. But that
couldn’t be helped.
“It was right to send them back, wasn’t it?” Luke asked.
“Yes, it was,” said a strange voice. They all turned and looked
at the old man who stood by the entrance to ‘platform 9 ¾.’
“You were right, Luke. I did have to face up to my fears.”
“Fred?” Luke did the sums. It was 68 years since 1941. Fred
was fifteen then. That made him eighty-three now. That had to be about
right. He looked well for it. He leaned heavily on a walking stick, but
he seemed to be in pretty good health. He nodded.
“Hello, Luke. Nice to see you and your friends again. It was all
right in the end. The place I was evacuated to… I loved it. I never
went back to London, you know. I got a job here in Cardiff after the war.
Station master here, at Cardiff Central. I made sure this platform didn’t
get interfered with when they brought in diesel trains and electric trains.
By the time I retired, they’d forgotten it was even here.”
“Torchwood remembered,” Jack said. “It’s good
to see you, sir. Sorry I was a bit rough shoving you on the train.”
“No harm done. But I had to come and see. I still don’t quite
understand it, but maybe it’s not my place to do so.”
“I’ll be glad to explain some of it, sir,”
Jack told him. “If you’d like to go and have a cup of tea
in the café up on the main platform, I’ll just see my friends
back to their car and then I’ll give you a lift home.”
“That’s very kind of you, young man,” Fred agreed. They
all walked with him as far as the café and Jack bought a pot of
tea for him before he came with the rest of them back to the car park.
“That was amazing,” Sarah Jane told him. “You really
helped those people.”
“Now and again, we get to do stuff like that, as well as fighting
monsters. I suppose it must be the same for you? Not all Slitheen and
gorgons?”
“Yes, sometimes,” she agreed. “Not as often as I’d
like, but sometimes.”
“And what do you kids think? How would you fancy a career with Torchwood?”
“Seriously?” Maria’s voice had a touch of eagerness
in it. The boys, too, looked at him with interest.
“Why not? You’ve already been doing the work we do along with
Sarah Jane. When you’re older, when you’ve got your university
degrees or whatever, you’ll be just what we need.”
“Jack!” Sarah Jane looked at him crossly. “This was
a recruiting drive?”
“Not exactly,” he answered. “I just
wanted to give them a fun day and show them that what we do isn’t
always bad stuff. But you have to admit,
these three have potential. And there’s no way they’re just
going to get desk jobs when they grow up. They’re too much like
either of us for that.”
“Yes,” Sarah Jane agreed. “Yes, you
may be right there. But they’ve got a lot of years yet before they’re
ready to choose careers. They don’t have to decide.”
But Maria had decided. She liked the idea of going to
work down an invisible pavement lift to a place where people worked to
protect Earth from terrible things, and now and then helped to make good
things happen. She looked at Luke and Clyde and thought they were thinking
the same.