School was over, not just for the day, or the week, but the term. It was
officially the Christmas holidays. Clyde Langer stepped out through the
school gate and very theatrically and deliberately took a deep breath
of the cold air as if it tasted different on that side of the gate. Luke
missed the point, as usual. School, for him, was less of a chore to be
endured and more of an exciting educational challenge to be savoured.
Luke wasn’t a normal boy in so many ways!
Rani understood, though. For her, school was doubly binding, with her
father, the headmaster, always present,
“The assembly was good, though,” she admitted. “Dad
in a Santa hat! I never thought I’d see THAT! It won’t last.
He’ll be back to old misery guts next term.”
“I... really don’t think I’ll mind,” Clyde admitted.
“Mr Chandra... in all his grumpy moods... I think... you know...”
He stopped talking and gathered his thoughts. He was glad nobody else
was listening except his two closest friends and confidants. Anyone else
would think he’d gone soft.
“We’re sixteen. It’s all coming to an end. This... this
was our last school Christmas assembly. This Christmas is our last Christmas
as kids. This time next year, we’ll have done our O’levels,
you and me, Rani, we’ll be at sixth form college. You’ll be
fast tracked to university, Luke. It’ll all be different. This Christmas...
it’s special because we won’t have another one like it, ever...”
Luke didn’t completely understand that, either. This was only the
third Christmas of his life, anyway, since he was born aged thirteen.
Again, it was Rani who really got it.
“We might have better Christmases in the future,” she suggested.
“Even if we do, they won’t be this Christmas,” Clyde
pointed out. “So... let’s just... make the most of every minute
of it. We take NOTHING for granted from this moment on. Agreed?”
“Totally agreed,” the other two said in unison. Then they
spotted Sarah Jane’s lime-green Figaro pulling up at the kerb. That
could only mean one thing. Something was happening that couldn’t
wait until they reached Bannerman road. They ran to the car, the two boys
climbing into the back, taking care not to kick K9 who was hunkered in
the narrow footspace. Rani gracefully fastened her seatbelt in the front
passenger seat.
“What’s going down, mum?” Luke asked. Clyde nodded in
satisfaction. The boy wonder was finally starting to talk like a normal
teenager.
“Increased energy readings at Willow Chase,” Sarah Jane answered.
“Mr Smith has been monitoring it ever since Halloween, and over
the past week there have been erratic spikes. Now it’s going off
the scale again. Rani, are you all right to come with us?”
“The ban was specifically about Halloween,” she replied. “Dad
hasn’t said I can’t go there any other time. Should be ok.
Do you think it will be dangerous?”
“I’m not sure what it is,” Sarah Jane admitted. “Mr
Smith can only do so much remotely. The rest is old-fashioned investigation.”
“You mean you want a nosy around, mum,” Luke pointed out.
“Thing to remember in your future career, Rani,” Sarah Jane
said with a smile. “There is a fine distinction between being nosy
and chasing a story. Knowing when to cross that line is what sorts the
tabloid hacks from the award winning investigative journalist. The same
rule applies to checking out odd goings on in old houses with a history
of odd goings on in them.”
Rani laughed and mentally filed Sarah Jane’s words under useful
career advice.
“Mr Smith reports energy readings at Willow Chase are levelling
off. Meisson levels are constant at two hundred per cent above normal.
Gamma radiation is one hundred and twenty per cent above average background
level...”
K9 reeled off a half a dozen more readings that even Luke, science genius,
didn’t fully understand the significance of, except that something
unusual was happening at Willow Chase.
The big wrought iron gate was locked, of course. A representative from
Waring and Kemp, the estate agent whose sign was fixed beside the gate,
had secured the property after a group of school children had invaded
it on Halloween night.
Sarah Jane sent Rani with the slimline sonic screwdriver that had replaced
her old sonic lipstick to deal with the padlock. She slipped back into
the car and they carried on down the tree-lined driveway that hid the
house from view until they were almost upon it. Rani commented that it
was common for eighteenth century gardens to be planned that way, keeping
the house as a kind of hidden secret to be revealed at the end of the
journey.
“Saturday afternoons with mum, visiting historical gardens and looking
at two hundred year old flower beds,” she added wryly. Then she
looked up at the house. She hadn’t seen it properly before. She
noted that it was a sprawling grey-stone mansion with lots of windows,
all shuttered and blank. The gabled roof was crowned with a huge chimney
breast with at least a dozen pots.
It looked a little foreboding in the failing light of a December afternoon
with no lights anywhere. Rani wondered what it must have been like when
people lived there and all the windows were warmly lit with welcoming
yellow-orange light. It would have been nice, then.
“I wonder which one Father Christmas thought he should go down,”
she said with a giggle.
“Tough call. But plenty of roof space to park the sleigh,”
Clyde said, joining in the joke before getting serious. “It looks
normal,” he added. “Last time there was all that weird light.”
“Mr Smith confirms,” K9 said. “Energy levels still high
but stable.”
“Well... we have two choices,” Sarah Jane said. “We
either go in and have a closer look, even though it might be a bit dangerous,
or we drive away right now and leave it alone.”
“What, chicken out before we’ve even had a look?” Clyde
exclaimed. “No way!”
Luke agreed.
“I’d be a terrible investigative journalist if I didn’t
investigate,” Rani pointed out.
“Then we’re going in,” Sarah Jane decided, handing out
strong torches to everyone. “Luke, Clyde, help K9 out of the car.
The two boys did so. They had to lift him again at the steps leading up
to the front door.
“Next time The Doctor drops round, get him to give K9 a hover conversion,”
Clyde suggested. Sarah Jane laughed softly at the idea as she unlocked
the door with the same sonic screwdriver mode as before. They stepped
over the threshold into Willow Chase’s dark, shadowy hallway. Sarah
Jane turned on a torch and shone it around the room, highlighting a grandfather
clock that hadn’t been wound for decades and a big mirror covered
in grime with a tarnished silver frame that once must have sparkled as
it reflected back the light from an equally grime-covered chandelier.
She closed her eyes and tried to imagine the room so much warmer and brighter
and the house full of life.
“K9, how are those energy levels?” Luke asked.
“They are still high but appear to be stable,” K9 replied.
“Mr Smith does not detect any spikes or troughs.”
“Well,” Sarah Jane said. “None of those traces are harmful
in themselves. But I don’t think we should stay long. Perhaps we
should split up and search for anything unusual. Luke, you stay with K9
on the ground floor. Rani, Clyde, you go to the kitchen and the servants
quarters down the back stairs. I’ll check out the cellar and then
the upstairs rooms.”
The torchlight made the shadows deep. Splitting up was not a particularly
tempting idea. But nobody wanted to be the first one to admit that they
were scared. They checked that their own torches were working and then
went their separate ways.
Clyde and Rani went down the passage at the side of the wide staircase.
Through a door there was no more faded carpet, but a stone-flagged passageway.
There were four steps down then another piece of corridor with doors leading
off from it. Most were small with only a tiny shuttered window. They looked
like they might be storerooms for food. One was a walk in cupboard that
still contained whole sets of china. Not the sort of set they had at home.
These were settings for at least twenty people, with different sized plates
and bowls, cups and saucers, gravy boats, tureens, massive serving plates
for a joint of meat and dishes for vegetables.
“Wow,” Rani commented. “How come all this stuff got
left behind when the people moved out?”
“Dunno,” Clyde replied. “Must be worth a fortune. It’s
proper expensive china, not the stuff you can get for twenty quid at Argos.”
They closed the door again and opened another one. This time there were
shelves full of what must once have been beautifully laundered linen tableware.
Rani picked up a lace cloth and it disintegrated in her hands. She was
sorry for that, and when they found another cupboard with glassware in
it she left well alone.
“The butler’s room,” Clyde said of a much bigger room
with a large fireplace. “His own drawing room with a bedroom leading
off it.” Rani looked at him quizzically. “My mum has the DVD
box set of Upstairs Downstairs.” Rani still looked blank. “It
was a programme made in the 1970s, all about people who lived in a big
house at the start of the twentieth century – the nobs upstairs
and the servants downstairs. Not that I watched, but the radiator was
busted in my room and I had to do my homework in the living room, and
I guess some of it sank in. The butler was like, the boss downstairs and
had his own private rooms.”
They continued down the passage and down three more short flights of steps
until they reached the kitchen. It was a huge room, bigger than any kitchen
they had ever seen in a private house. There were cupboards fixed to one
wall, much like in a modern fitted kitchen, but these were heavy, solid
wood, not laminated fibreboard. All along one side was a huge kitchen
range, rusty with age now, and probably useless. But it was easy to see
how it would have served both as cooker and heater when it worked.
“I don’t see anything that shouldn’t be here,”
Clyde said. “Do you think…”
Sarah Jane walked in and out of long deserted bedrooms that still gave
clues about who had slept in them. The master bedroom was much bigger
than all the others and the wood-worm infested remnants of a wooden bedstead
was left in it. The other rooms were even emptier. One had nothing in
it except a porcelain washbowl and jug.
The rooms that had been occupied by children were obvious. The former
nursery had faded wallpaper like every other room, but it was still possible
to recognise the Rupert Bear pattern. She guessed just how old the paper
was. Rupert Bear was more than ninety years old as a character in strip
cartoons in the Daily Express. But Rupert wallpaper probably didn’t
go quite that far back. It might have been a little before or a little
after World War II. Either way, the parents of the children who slept
here had spent a lot of money on what would have been expensive wallpaper
for the nursery.
“This must have been a happy home, once,” she thought to herself.
She wondered why the family had left it. A house like this ought to have
been passed down through the generations. Somebody ought to be living
in it, still.
There didn’t seem to be anything else unusual about it, though.
The strange energy readings that were registering on the LCD screen under
the clock face of her extraterrestrial made wristwatch didn’t seem
to be doing anything to the house.
At least….
Luke’s feet and K9’s wheels echoed strangely in the quiet,
empty rooms on the ground floor. There was nothing in any of them but
dust. If K9 didn’t have the blueprint of the house in his databank
Luke wouldn’t have known that he had looked into the drawing room,
the smoking room, the music room and the grand dining room.
The last room almost certainly lived up to its name once. It was a large
oblong room with tall mirrors lining one long wall, all tarnished with
age, now. Opposite were floor length windows that would have cast sunlight
onto the mirrors making it a bright, cheerful room. The windows were shuttered,
of course. Some of the panes were cracked.
There was a floor of once polished wood and a ceiling from which no less
than four chandeliers hung, all dulled by dust and grime that had accumulated.
Luke was a super-intelligent boy. But if he lacked anything it was creative
imagination. He couldn’t picture the room in his mind as it used
to be when people lived here. He couldn’t imagine gay parties with
women in elegant dresses and men in fine clothes to match. He couldn’t
visualise those chandeliers shining like diamonds above the party. He
saw it as it was now, decayed and forgotten, and that was all.
“It’s cold,” he observed. “I don’t see anything
unusual here, though. Maybe the energy is benign. It could just be venting
into the atmosphere.”
“Negative, master Luke,” K9 replied. “The energy is
concentrated on this property. The house is the epicentre of the flux
in temporal energy.”
“Even I don’t completely know what that means,” Luke
told the robot dog.
“It means…” K9 began. Then his robot voice took on a
new urgency. “Master Luke, danger. The energy levels are spiking
again. Master Luke… we must escape from this house.”
“Not without mum and the others,” Luke argued. “K9…
wait…”
“What....” Rani looked around at the kitchen and turned off
her suddenly useless torch. “Clyde... I think we...”
“We’ve gone back in time!” Clyde said. “Look at
this place!”
The kitchen wasn’t empty any more. In fact it was busier than any
kitchen they had ever seen outside of their school kitchen. There were
people preparing food all around two big wooden tables that took up all
of the floor space in the middle. There was a whole pig and four huge
birds roasting in the fireplace and pies being pulled from the oven. Food
was being piled onto the huge serving dishes they had seen gathering dust
in the cupboards.
“Excuse me,” Clyde said to a man in butler’s livery
who passed them by. “I’m sorry to butt in like this. Only
we’re...”
He stopped talking. The man walked straight past him. Rani stepped close
to the table and tried to take a long handled spoon from a girl who was
beating something in a large bowl. Her hand went straight through and
the girl carried on as if she wasn’t even there.
“We’re not really here,” she said to Clyde. “We’re
ghosts.”
“We can’t be. They must be the ghosts.”
“They look more real than us,” Rani pointed out. “They
look like they belong here. We don’t.”
“It’s a sort of echo in time,” Clyde suggested. “We’re
seeing how it must have looked years and years ago.”
“Centuries,” Rani decied. “I think, maybe, the 1800s.
They look like the servant’s clothes in Jane Austen. This house
was built in 1785. So that would be about right.”
As each dish was finished with careful garnishing, a footman or serving
maid was ready to carry it out of the kitchen. A whole line of them went
up the corridor with platters full of meat and steaming tureens of vegetables,
a whole baked salmon and all sorts of delicious food. Clyde and Rani looked
at each other and then followed them up through the stone flagged corridor
to a grand room where a party was in full swing. The food was placed on
a long table that already looked as if it was approaching maximum load.
The party guests ate as they pleased. Some stood or sat around the edge
of the room. Others danced on the wide polished wood floor to music played
by a string quartet. The women were in pretty dresses straight out of
the illustrations in the copy of Pride and Prejudice that Rani had been
reading for English Literature. The men wore tight breeches and highly
embroidered waistcoats and jackets. The dancing was very formal and polite.
“It’s a Christmas party,” Rani said. “Look at
the decorations all around the room.” She pointed to the boughs
of holly and vines of ivy around the mirrors that lined one wall opposite
the curtained windows. There was more greenery all around the room. Here
and there were splashes of colour where red apples or holly berries, or
silk ribbons had been woven into the vines. It was pretty in an understated
way, not like the glittery plastic streamers and decorations that everyone
had in their own time.
“No tree,” Clyde noted. “Is it too early for that sort
of thing in Britain? I think I read somewhere that Prince Albert started
it up in Victorian times.”
“Actually, he just made Christmas Trees fashionable. They were around
about fifty years before,” Rani answered. “Which must be about
this time, but the people here haven’t gone for it. They do have
a kissing ball, though.”
Rani pointed to an elaborate arrangement of greenery that hung in the
middle of the ceiling. It was like a chandelier made of holly, ivy and
mistletoe. Its purpose was plainly obvious. Every couple that danced under
it kissed, from fresh-faced young lovers to an elderly pair who both wore
white foundation to give the impression of a youthful complexion.
“Rani...” Clyde said, catching her hand. “Come and dance.”
“What?” She was surprised. Clyde didn’t even dance at
school discos. He thought it was the height of uncool. Even so, he drew
her onto the floor and held her at the waist. Neither of them were quite
as precise or graceful as the dancers around them, but they tried to match
them. Rani glanced at one of the mirrors as they passed and was a little
disappointed to find that they didn’t have any reflection at all.
She was managing to imagine herself in one of those fine dresses and Clyde
looking like a black Colin Firth in breeches and waistcoat.
She looked away from the mirror and realised they were under the kissing
ball. She caught her breath as Clyde adjusted his hold on her slightly
and drew his face closer to hers.
Sarah Jane saw the fluctuation in the energy readings on her watch screen.
A moment later she turned around and saw the room with the Rupert Bear
wallpaper in a very different way.
The wallpaper was fresh and new. The clean, bright paper was softly lit
by an electric nightlight on a cabinet between two beds. The light was
inside a shade decorated with silhouette pictures of the Rupert Bear characters
so that the shapes were cast around the room.
Rupert wasn’t the only decoration around the room. There were paper
chains around the ceiling and a tiny Christmas tree on top of the dresser.
At the bottom of the beds were two large knitted stockings - large enough
to fit an elephant’s feet - in multi-coloured stripes. Beside them
were two ordinary sized children’s socks.
There were two children, a boy and a girl, in the beds. They looked as
if they were asleep.
The door opened softly. Sarah Jane was horrified for a long moment until
she realised that the man who crept into the room couldn’t see her.
She wasn’t really there. It was a kind of temporal echo.
The man had a sack with him. He quietly opened the sack and took out carefully
wrapped gifts that he put into the large knitted stockings at the bottom
of the two beds. Very soon the stockings were soon bulging. He put an
apple, orange and a handful of nuts into the two socks next to the stockings
as a final touch and then bent to kiss the faces of the children. Then
he stepped out of the room as quietly as he had come in.
Sarah Jane watched as the children waited a few minutes before sitting
up in their beds. They looked at the bulging stockings but the little
girl told her brother they had to wait until morning for those. They looked
in the socks and took the apples. They put on slippers and dressing gowns
and munched their apples as they slipped out of the bedroom.
Sarah Jane followed them as they crept down the dimly lit stairs. They
went to the door of the grand dining room where the man who had delivered
the presents was host at an elegant dinner party for more than twenty
guests. The room was decorated beautifully with paper chains and fresh
greenery. A huge Christmas tree was at one end of the room, lit with fairy
lights.
The children watched their father and mother at their dinner party for
a long time. Sarah Jane watched with them. It was obviously a happy party
with friends chatting among themselves. Then the man of the house stood
and raised his glass to his guests.
“I want to thank you all for coming on this day. This Christmas,
1965, is a very special one because… it is the last we will be celebrating
in this house. In the New Year we are moving to Australia. The business
has not been doing as well as it should in the past few years. We have
all had to tighten our belts. And this old house is too big for us to
keep up. Over there, I’ve secured a good position in an established
firm of accountants. There’s a lovely house on the outskirts of
Sydney. It even has a swimming pool. The children will love it. So…
my friends… I hope you will wish us well in the future as I wish
you all a Merry Christmas.”
The children drew away from the door as the toast was echoed by the friends
around the table. They crept back upstairs. Sarah Jane thought they looked
surprised by the news, but excited, too. She heard them repeating the
word ‘Australia’ as if it was one they were not yet familiar
with. She heard the girl say ‘swimming pool’ and the boy observe
that they would need to learn to swim. Then their bedroom door opened
and closed and she could only presume that they were back in bed, now.
Luke gasped as he saw the dining room in a very different way. The room
was decorated for Christmas, with streamers on the ceiling and a Christmas
tree covered in baubles and tinsel and a star on top.
It was daylight. The windows were unshuttered. Outside the garden was
covered in snow. There was a group of children in coats, hats and scarves
building an army of snowmen out there. Inside, women were busy setting
a long polished table. They were chatting happily as they worked.
“This is going to be a wonderful party for them,” said a middle-aged
woman in a peach coloured dress and very carefully arranged hair and make
up. “The first Christmas of peace. Some of the little ones have
never known a time when there wasn’t a war on. They can’t
get over the ideas that we can leave the curtains open and have light
in the room after dark. It’s a pity food is still short. I wish
we could put on the sort of spread we used to have before. But I’ve
saved coupons and got as many treats as I can for them.”
“You’ve done wonders, Mrs Oakley,” said a younger woman
who was wearing trousers and had her hair tied back in a headscarf. “The
youngsters will appreciate it, I’m sure. It’s good of you
to think of them.”
“There’s just me and Colonel Oakley here, now,” Mrs
Oakley said with a resigned sigh. “Gina sent a Christmas card from
Ohio. She’s settling down nicely there with her Joe. I never quite
pictured my only daughter marrying an American soldier and going off with
him. But she’s happy. And giving a party for the children…
so many orphans left without family or home… it’s the least
I can do for them.”
Luke watched her place paper plates with wobbling red jelly at each place
while the girl in the trousers put a paper cracker beside the plates.
Another woman filled paper cups with orange juice. Plates of thinly cut
sandwiches and mince pies were put in the middle of the table, along with
other nice things to eat. Then when all was ready, Mrs Oakley went to
one of the windows and opened it wide. She called to the children and
told them to come on inside, now. They left their snowman building and
there was soon the sound of cheerful chatter in the hall while they took
off their outdoor clothes. They trooped into the dining room, looking
flushed and excited from their snow fun, only to have their eyes opened
wide at the sight of the party food. They took their seats at the table
and waited until Mrs Oakley told them it was all right to start eating.
It got dark outside while they were enjoying the food. But the curtains
stayed open. The light from the chandeliers reflected in the mirrors on
one wall and the windows on the other. The children glanced at the windows
often, as if the very idea of an uncurtained window surprised and excited
them.
“Eat up, children,” Mrs Oakley said. “There’s
plenty for everyone. And afterwards, we’ve got games and prizes.”
Luke was curious to know what games they might play after their party
tea. He hadn’t been to very many Christmas parties and he was interested.
But he never found out. K9’s metallic voice warned him that the
energy levels were changing again, and he found himself in darkness. He
turned on his torch and it illuminated Rani and Clyde standing in the
middle of the room very close to each other. They both looked around at
him and then looked up at the ceiling directly above them as if something
was missing.
Then another torch beam crossed his. Sarah Jane stepped into the dining
room.
“Is everyone all right?” she asked. “Did you...”
For a few minutes while they were all talking at once it was impossible
to understand a word. Then Sarah Jane told her story of seeing a past
Christmas at Willow Chase. Rani and Clyde told theirs, and then Luke.
K9 claimed that he had seen and heard nothing. Luke had been standing
in an empty room.
“But THAT proves something happened,” Sarah Jane pointed out.
“Because K9 didn’t see Clyde and Rani in the room until the
energy dissipated. He only saw Luke.”
“So what happened?” Clyde asked. “Did we really travel
in time? They couldn’t see us. We could only watch.”
“I think...” Sarah Jane began. Then she shook her head. “I
really don’t know what happened or how. But I do know that it was...
well... rather wonderful. We saw three different times when the former
occupants of this house had a good Christmas. Neither they nor us were
in the slightest danger. It was really rather pleasant.”
Everyone agreed. They had all seen a happy slice of the past.
“The energy has completely died down,” Sarah Jane added, looking
at her watch. K9 confirmed it. “All normal. I think it will be all
right now. We can go home.”
They walked through the quiet, echoing house and out into the cold December
evening. Sarah Jane promised to stop for pizza on the way home.
“One thing I don’t understand,” Luke said as they shared
their historical Christmas experiences in the car. “Clyde, what
were you and Rani doing when I saw you?”
Rani shifted in her seat. Sarah Jane glanced at her and said nothing.
“Luke, for a genetically enhanced boy genius, you can be pretty
thick, sometimes,” Clyde answered. “What do you think we were
doing?”
Luke was puzzled for a few seconds. Then he looked at his friend and realisation
dawned.
“Oh!” he said.
Sarah Jane stopped the car outside Pizza Hut. She asked them what kind
of pizza they wanted. She asked Luke to come into the shop with her. It
would, she thought, give Clyde and Rani time to decide how they would
handle questions like that when they came up again.