Sarah
Jane looked at the kitchen clock and noted that it was half past three.
She sighed. Half past three was usually a pleasant time for her. It was
when she made tea for Luke and Maria and, except when he had football
practice, Clyde, too.
She liked that time. She liked their noise and their chatter. She didn’t
even mind the mess, much. She listened to their school talk. They listened
to her. And precious few people did that.
But it was summer and they were all away. Maria was on holiday with her
dad. Luke had gone with Clyde on an adventure camp in Wales – canoeing
and that sort of thing. It was good for Luke. He got to spend time with
boys his own age, and got to be that bit more like an ordinary boy with
an ordinary life. And that was what she wanted for him more than anything.
But meanwhile, she was lonely. She missed Luke, her adopted son who needed
her so much at first, but was now starting to be independent in all the
right ways. She missed Maria, the daughter she never had, who came to
her with the sort of problems she would have taken to her mother if her
mother had been around to hear them. She missed Clyde and his cheeky,
irreverent, but wonderful ways.
The house felt empty. Yes, of course, there was K9 and Mr Smith upstairs
in the attic. But if she started to depend on them for company, then she
really would be at the end of her tether.
Of course, she had lived alone for years. And she enjoyed the privacy.
She hadn’t felt lonely, then. She didn’t regret anything much.
But then she had become a parent, and now she missed noise and mess and
chatter. Even yesterday, when she had tracked down a UFO and sent the
six inch tall would be invading party packing with a threat to step on
their space ship if they didn’t make themselves scarce, it just
wasn’t as satisfying with nobody to tell afterwards.
She sighed again and turned to put the kettle on. She could have a nice
cup of tea and then go and see if Mr Smith had picked up anything unusual
in the skies today.
The doorbell distracted her from the tea making, and she told herself
not to get excited. It was probably the milkman or a door to door salesman.
That was all.
It wasn’t.
She never quite knew how to react on the rare occasions he turned up.
Whether to punch him or kiss him, or possibly both, or to complain about
him parking his police box on her lawn.
Stuff the lawn, she thought as his wide grin infected her mood and she
hugged him.
“Hello, Sarah Jane,” The Doctor said to her. “How are
you?”
“I’m… great,” she answered. “Even better
for seeing you. It’s been… since Christmas. Which isn’t
bad really, considering once I didn’t see you for over thirty years.
But I never know if you’re alive or dead. I don’t know if
there’s anyone who could tell me if you were… and… and…
and…” She was babbling. Only The Doctor could do that to her.
With everyone else she was a grown woman, a parent. An accomplished journalist
and a professional. She was a person who could tell alien invaders to
go away and stop bothering this planet.
With The Doctor she always felt twenty-one years old, and not entirely
certain which way is up and whether the sun will rise in the east or west.
“I came to ask you something,” he said when she stopped hugging
him and let him into the kitchen. She found another cup and saucer and
poured tea into the pot. She opened a packet of nice chocolate biscuits
that she wouldn’t have bothered with just for herself. He waited
until they were sitting drinking tea and eating biscuits before asking
his question.
“Are
you free for dinner tonight?”
“Dinner?” she almost dropped her biscuit into her tea.
“Dinner. It’s a meal that most humanoids eat in the evening.”
“I know that, silly,” she answered. “But… you’re
asking me… to go to dinner with you… like… like…
a date?”
The Doctor smiled even more widely than before.
“Yes, I suppose so. Yes, why not. Sarah Jane, I am asking you to
go on a date with me.”
He blushed when he said it. He actually did. He blushed.
So did she.
“Er… Um… Where?” she asked. “Where do you
want to take me to dinner? And what should I wear?”
“Where is a surprise,” he answered. “Any nice dress
would do… I suppose.”
“Oh, will it?” Sarah Jane laughed. “You may be a Time
Lord, getting on for a thousand years old, but you’re a typical
man. ‘Any nice dress will do’. Dinner with you could be anywhere
from a burger bar on the space station at Alterion IV to Buckingham Palace.
‘Any nice dress’ I own would be two much for the first and
not enough for the second.”
“Then take a look in the wardrobe while we’re travelling.
It always came up with something for the right occasion before…
well, except for that pink stripy number you wore when we got mixed up
with Eldrad’s nasty little scheme, and I have to admit I never liked
that big yellow coat.”
“Neither did I,” she admitted. “But…” She
broke off what she was saying and looked at him for a long, hard moment.
He knew she was looking at him and studiously concentrated on his tea.
“Doctor,” she said at last. “Tell me something. And
I promise I won’t be upset. Was I your first choice for this ‘date’?”
“Why the ‘’?” he asked. “It’s a date.
A real date. No need for ‘’.”
“What about Martha? Couldn’t she go with you? Or… Donna…
your new friend. I haven’t met her yet, but Martha told me you were
travelling with somebody nice.”
“Martha has her own life. She’s working hard. Donna is not
with me at the moment. She needed to spend a few weeks with her family,
touch base as it were. I’m on a promise not to get lost in the Alzodat
desert and remember to come back for her.”
“And Jack? Have you seen him lately?”
“I get texts from him now and again. Usually comparing notes about
alien species.” He paused and frowned. “You know Jack?”
“Our paths crossed. But you can’t have asked him to go with
you. He wouldn’t say no to a date with you. If I read the signals
with him, he’d jump at the chance.”
The Doctor laughed, though not unkindly.
“Yes, he would. I might even drop into Cardiff some time and shout
him lunch. He deserves that much. But no, Sarah Jane. You aren’t
bottom of some big list of other possibilities. You are the one I really
want to take out to dinner. Nobody else came to mind. You’re the
first one I thought of. I promise.”
She believed him. He might be many thing, but he wasn’t a liar.
She was sure of that.
“I ought to say no,” she said with a sigh. “Getting
on that roller coaster again… life with you… even if it’s
just dinner, just for an evening, and even though I’ve got nothing
better to do right now, and even if you won’t admit to being lonely,
I will. I’ll admit that I’ve got nothing else to do tonight
but make a meal for one and sit and watch a load of rubbish on television
that I’m not even interested in. And if I said no and sent you away
I’d probably choke on the meal and cry myself to sleep in front
of the TV. But I should say no. Because I can’t do it again. I can’t
live that life again, not even for a little while. I’m too old for
it now.”
He put down his tea cup and looked at her solemnly.
“I’m sorry, Sarah Jane,” he said. “For everything
that has happened, or not happened in your life that’s my fault.
I am sorry for it all. For taking you away from the life you should have
been leading, for making it impossible for you to have an ordinary life.
For leaving you in Aberdeen… for being too stupid to check the location…
for getting in the way of you and Harry… I know I did that, and
I am VERY sorry for it. For… for not coming to see you all those
years, when I could have done… when a cup of tea and a chat about
old times would have been nice. For…”
“For looking like that NOW, instead of when I was young enough for
us to actually look like we’re a couple,” she told him. “When
we might have…”
“Yes, that, too.”
“And for those rude remarks about my pink outfit.”
“I apologise unreservedly for any spoken remark, any unspoken thought,
about your pink outfit, and for any unconscious comparisons with Andy
Pandy. I’m also sorry for getting you blown up when you were wearing
that outfit.”
“Ok, then,” she said and poured him another cup of tea.
“Sarah,” he said after watching her put the right amount of
sugar and milk in his tea, as if they really were a couple who had been
together for decades. “None of those things, nothing that happened
in the past, has anything to do with me coming here today and asking you
to be my guest, my very special guest, my special friend. All I thought
was, ‘Sarah Jane would love it.’”
Again, she knew he was telling the truth. Because he had never knowingly
lied to her.
“I understand about the roller coaster. I get a bit sick of it myself
sometimes. I’d give it all up for a quiet life if I actually knew
what to do with one. But I promise you, one ride only. Will you, Sarah
Jane Smith, my friend, come along on that roller coaster with me for one
ride only.”
“Yes,” she answered. Because after all, she knew she would
regret saying no.
To Be Continued...
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