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        “Semerwater? The Doctor’s brow scrunched in bewilderment as 
        she looked at the earnest faces of her three human friends.“Deep asleep, deep asleep,  Deep asleep it lies,  The still lake of Semerwater  Under the still skies  And many a fathom  Many a fathom  Many a fathom below,  In a king’s tower and a queens bower  The fishes come and go.  Once there stood by Semerwater  A mickle town and tall;  Kings’s tower and queen’s bower  And the wakeman on the wall.  Came a beggar halt and sore:  “I faint for lack 
        of bread!”  Kings tower and queen’s bower  Cast him forth unfed  He knocke’d at the door of eller’s 
        cot,  The eller’s cot in the dale.  They gave him of their oatcake,  They gave him of their ale.   He cursed aloud that city proud,  He cursed it in its pride;  He has cursed it into Semerwater  There to Bide  King’s tower and queen’s bower,  And a mickle town and tall  By glimmer of scale and gleam of final  Folk have seen them all.  King tower and queen’s bower,  And weed and reed in the gloom;  And a lost city in Semerwater,  Deep asleep till Doom.” 
        Yas read the poem displayed on her tablet screen, written by Sir William 
        Watson, who, to be honest, none of them had ever heard of.  
        The Doctor looked bemused, an expression none oTeam TARDIS really understood 
        until they came to know The Doctor. 
        “We took a vote,” Graham explained. “Which of Yorkshire’s 
        best myths and legends would we ask you to investigate with us.” 
        “Mother Shipton is boring, the Cotingley Fairies are fake,” 
        Ryan added. “The Wold Newton Triangle was just edged out by Semerwater. 
        The lost town under the lake, cursed by an angel dressed as a beggar.” 
        “Interesting legend for a lake whose name is a pleonasm meaning 
        watery-water,” The Doctor said. “Somebody either didn’t 
        believe the legend or wanted to make sure nobody else would.” 
        “’Play.. what?” Graham asked, on behalf of them all. 
        “It means two or more things that mean the same thing used for emphasis 
        – null and void, free and gratis, for example. When was this city, 
        town, village, conglomeration, supposed to have existed?” 
        “That’s the tricky bit,” Yas told her. “Nobody 
        knows. It’s not in the Domesday Book or anything like that. There’s 
        no record of taxes being collected. Archaeologists looked at it in the 
        nineteen forties when the lake was low because of a drought and think 
        there was a bronze age settlement, but all the pictures I’ve ever 
        found have proper houses, a church, stuff like that, and the legends talk 
        about a ghostly bell tolling….”  
        The Doctor looked at the images of a medieval kind of village with its 
        inhabitants dressed in jerkins and hose and pointy shoes. 
        “Thing about that sort of picture,” she said. “It IS 
        a picture. Not a photograph. It is like all the things people think they 
        see in Leonardo’s Last Supper, forgetting that he painted it from 
        his imagination. He didn’t pop up in front of the table and tell 
        them to all bunch up and say ‘cheese’.” 
        “So, it could have been bronze age?” 
        “Could have been anything,” The Doctor said. “Mostly, 
        I have to say, it sounds like one of those stories that gets retold in 
        different forms and in different cultures. I suppose you all realised 
        it was a bit like Noah’s Ark meets Sodom and Gomorrah – with 
        Atlantis thrown in for good measure?” 
        “Yeah… but it IS in Yorkshire. It’s our OWN Atlantis.” 
        ‘Do you mean you’re not interested, Doc?” Graham asked, 
        expressing a group disappointment. 
        ‘Of course I’m interested,” The Doctor answered. “Yorkshire 
        Atlantis! Brilliant!” 
        That was more like it. What nobody had realised was that she had already 
        started the adventure. The TARDIS was hovering over a calm, still lake 
        inhabited by wading birds. While the others admired the view, The Doctor 
        looked at a schematic on the environmental console that proved to be the 
        lake bed’s topography.  
        “Interesting,” she admitted. “And not bronze age. Not 
        by about a thousand years, give or take. I think I might be able to get 
        a fix on it. Might be bumpy. Grab hold.” 
        Everyone was used to reacting fast to ‘grab hold’. They clung 
        to whatever solid bit of TARDIS interior was closest to hand.  
        When the bumping stopped they looked at The Doctor expectantly.  
        “Twelfth century England, 1180 to be exact, near the end of the 
        reign of Henry II. His children make for rocky times, politically, but 
        just now England is having a fairly steady and peaceful time. According 
        to the TARDIS database, Semerwater is half a mile thataway. We’ve 
        got a handy little coppice here to hide the TARDIS in. Let’s dress 
        appropriately to the time and explore.” 
        “Err….” Graham and Ryan both looked at a couple of pictures 
        of twelfth century clothing and were a little doubtful. Neither thought 
        they had the knees for it. 
        But as it happened, the TARDIS Wardrobe had made four outfits available 
        that would have fitted anywhere and anytime for five hundred years either 
        side of the twelfth century. 
        “We’re monks?” Ryan queried from inside a dark brown 
        cowl.  
        “We’re nuns,” Yas answered from within a white hooded 
        robe with a blue underkirtle. The Doctor was dressed the same.  
        “Pilgrims heading for York,” The Doctor explained. “And 
        since monks and nuns come from anywhere Christianity has been, skin colour 
        is not an issue.” 
        “Brother Graham, Brother Ryan… Sister Yasmin….” 
        Graham looked at The Doctor questioningly. 
        “If you two don’t mind I’ll be Sister Grace, like our 
        last trip to the past.” 
        Neither Graham nor Ryan minded. It was a kind of tribute to their Grace 
        when The Doctor remembered her in that way.  
        The sky was a pale blue of an autumn day, confirmed by the russet and 
        copper colours of the trees. The half mile ‘thataway’ was 
        pleasant enough. 
        They came easily in sight of the mystery village. It was distinguished 
        by three tall – for their time, anyway - structures. In the middle 
        of the huddle of houses, where it was expected to be, was the squat, square 
        tower of the parish church. Of the other two, one near where the path 
        descended into the depression that they were all mentally thinking of 
        as the lake bed, was a rectangular tower with small windows all the way 
        up the four sides and a castellated flat roof. The other, where the path 
        climbed back out again at the far side, was a round tower that narrowed 
        to a point against the bright afternoon sky. 
        There was a strange feeling that both buildings looked over the village. 
        And another feeling that they weren’t doing so in a benign, parochial 
        way. 
        “King’s Tower, Lady Bower?” Yas suggested.  
        The Doctor nodded.  
        ‘Can’t imagine why, though. You’d expect a feudal lord’s 
        manor house somewhere near a place like this. Never seen this sort of 
        thing before.” 
        ‘Since we’re dressed as monks and nuns… I reckon we 
        should call at the church,” Graham said. “If anyone knows 
        anything it’s going to be the parish priest?” 
        “Yep,” The Doctor agreed. She led the way down hill, past 
        the possibly King’s Tower. Everyone glanced up at it and everyone 
        shivered a little. They didn’t quite know why, but they felt there 
        was something about the tower that they didn’t like. 
        There was something a bit odd about the village generally.  
        “It’s very quiet,” Ryan commented. “Shouldn’t 
        there be lots of people bustling about, bakers baking, blacksmiths at 
        their forges, coopers making barrels, wheelwrights making wheels, chickens 
        running around…” 
        “At least SOME of that,” The Doctor agreed. “I expect 
        some of the people are working in the fields.” 
        “Yeah…” Yasmin agreed. “This would be the era 
        when people had strips of a field each and crop rotation, and some of 
        the produce paid as rent to the lord and a tithe to the church and all 
        that stuff we did in history….” 
        They came to the church. A nail studded oak door looked as if it was firmly 
        shut, but opened inwards at Graham’s hand. They stepped inside the 
        dimly lit place with a steep wooden roof above the thick stone walls. 
        It was empty. The stone-flagged floor rang with their footsteps as they 
        looked around at the plain, simple, church with no comfort for parishioners 
        other than a few benches against the wall for the elderly and infirm. 
        The altar was plain and unadorned by anything more than two very plain 
        wooden candlesticks.  
        “Cheery place,” Graham remarked.  
        “Go away!” A voice cried out in anguish and a figure in a 
        simple priest’s robe ran towards them. “Please, please go. 
        Don’t let them find you here.” 
        “That’s… not too obliging,” Ryan commented. 
        “We are pilgrims,” The Doctor said, stepping towards the priest. 
        “Surely there is sanctuary for us in a church.” 
        ‘No…. no… you must go,” the priest said. “You 
        must go before THEY find out….” 
        “Before WHO find out?” The Doctor asked. She grasped the frantic 
        priest by the shoulders and pulled him close enough to look deep into 
        his eyes. “Just calm down,” she said in a level tone. “Set 
        your fears aside. Breathe…. Breathe easy.” 
        The priest did so. Some of the terror left his face and he sagged as if 
        his anxiety had been the only thing holding him up. It was only then that 
        she noticed how old he was… at least seventy, with his face careworn 
        and his eyes… the only word for them was… haunted.  
        “This is a time when a good old cup of Yorkshire tea would be in 
        order,” The Doctor said to her friends. “But it hasn’t 
        been invented, yet. We’re probably going to have to drink wine or 
        ale or sack, whatever that actually is.” 
        They drank ale, in small sips, or in Yes’s cars, she pretended to 
        drink, around a wooden table in the vestry. It fortified the priest somewhat, 
        though he still kept insisting that the four strangers should leave Semerwater 
        before their presence was discovered with dire consequences. 
        “Why? What is wrong here?” Yas asked in her best ‘dealing 
        with anxious members of the public’ voice. “It’s all 
        right Father Ulrich. You can trust us. You KNOW you can trust us, don’t 
        you?” 
        “Its’s not about trust. Its about THEM… the Lord and 
        Lady…” 
        “Lord and Lady?” Graham queried. 
        “King’s Tower, Lady Bower,” The Doctor murmured. “You 
        mean there are two people who make rules for Semerwater… rather 
        draconian rules… though if you’d ever MET a Draconian….” 
        “Perhaps you’d better start from the beginning,” Ryan 
        suggested before The Doctor went off at too much of a tangent. A little 
        alien blather could be all right now and again, to pass the time, but 
        this felt urgent. 
        “The beginning… The beginning was nearly fifty years ago,” 
        Father Ulrich said. “There had been crop failures for two seasons. 
        Livestock died… people starved. I was a young priest, then. Only 
        just ordained. I came here to assist Father Michael. But even he couldn’t 
        do anything more than pray for the relief of suffering. And the prayers 
        were not answered. At least… not those prayers, and not by God.” 
        Father Ulrich sighed deeply before going on with the tale. 
        “Some of the people… I don’t know who they prayed to… 
        the devil, or some pagan god that there is still a memory of in these 
        parts…. But against Father Michael’s orders they did it. And 
        the next day…. The next day, the two towers were there….” 
        “Just like that … overnight?” Ryan the would-be engineer 
        was surprised. 
        “As if they had always been there… and with them came the 
        Lord and Lady. They brought a promise… a promise of food… 
        of crops that would no longer fail, peace and prosperity.” 
        “And what did they want in return?” 
        “They counted the villagers. There were two hundred and fifteen 
        souls that day. The Lord and Lady demanded the fifteen…. Fifteen 
        sacrifices. And they made a bargain. The prosperity would continue as 
        long as exactly two hundred souls lived within the environs of Semerwater. 
        Any above that number belonged to the Lord and Lady.” 
        “Huh?” Puzzled expressions passed across the table. “How 
        does that work? What about new babies….” 
        “When a child is born, an older member of the community gives themselves 
        up to the Lord and Lady. It has been that way ever since. We don’t 
        know what happens to them. No bodies are ever returned….” 
        Everybody could easily imagine lots of ways for there to be no body. 
        “The people send away any strangers who come. If anyone tries to 
        linger….” Father Ulrich shuddered and his eyes had an odd 
        look in them as if he was trying not to see the horror in his memory. 
        “That’s why you really must go. For all our souls….” 
        “It seems to me,” The Doctor said carefully. “That it 
        is time somebody stood up to your Lord and Lady and put a stop to all 
        this.” 
        “We… can’t,” Ulrich answered. “We daren’t. 
        We….” 
        A noise cut him off abruptly. It was the main church door crashing open 
        while, at the same time, the sacristy door was subjected to a persistent 
        hammering.  
        “They know already,” Ulrich moaned. “It’s too 
        late.” 
        The ‘they’ who poured into the church and made short work 
        of any fight the four might have been about to make were the people of 
        the village, the bullies and strongest leading the attack, but the rest, 
        women, elderly, even some of the children, were waiting as they were bundled 
        out to the wide patch of bare ground that passed for a village square. 
        The four visitors were held by the burliest while the crowd muttered darkly 
        and waited for something else to happen. 
        From either end of the village, from the two towers that kept their baleful 
        watch over Semerwater, two people came. They were both tall and richly 
        dressed in brightly coloured silk and ermine unlike the rough, mud coloured 
        homespun of the villagers. They looked regal. 
        They looked, not quite human. There was a sheen to their fair complexions, 
        to the gloss of the Lady’s hair, a glint in the emerald green eyes, 
        that didn’t quite belong to Earth.  
        But after Ulrich’s description of how the towers arrived overnight 
        and the ‘bargain’ the Lord and Lady had made, nobody was entirely 
        surprised by that. 
        What was puzzling, perhaps, was the way two people had such a thrall over 
        two hundred. Surely they could have ganged up long ago and overthrown 
        them? But the people looked at the Lord and Lady with expressions that 
        suggested complete and utter defeat. Any spark of defiance had long been 
        suppressed. Indeed, it was unlikely the younger ones, born under the regime, 
        even knew what defiance was.  
        The conquered eyes of two hundred people were fixed on their conquerors 
        as they came into the space left in the middle of the crowd. They, for 
        their part, didn’t look at any of the villagers directly. The hard 
        emerald eyes fixed upon the four strangers. 
        “Visitors are not welcome in Semerwater,” the Lady said. “Why 
        did you linger here? Ulrich… you fool…” She turned to 
        the priest. “You gave them comfort. You let them bide within your 
        ‘church’.” 
        “I am a Christian. It is my duty,” Ulrich answered with just 
        a faint glimmer of courage. 
        “You are, as I have already said, a fool. You continue to harbour 
        a belief that some benevolent god is watching over you. Surely by now 
        you know that isn’t true.”  
        “God is good,” Ulrich managed to say before the Lord smacked 
        him in the jaw, sending him reeling back against his captors. 
        “We are NOT good to those who defy us,” the Lady continued. 
        “The pact was clear. No more than two hundred shall reside in Semerwater. 
        The surplus shall be ours, our sacrifice.” 
        “Wait….” Graham protested. “We’re not residing. 
        We weren’t planning to stay.” 
        “None who enter may leave this valley,” the Lady snapped. 
        “You are forfeit to us. Unless there are four who would give themselves 
        up in your place. Is there anyone with the courage to do that? Is there?” 
        Her icy gaze glittered over the people. None of them met that gaze. Their 
        faces were downcast. 
        “I will….’ Ulrich spoke. “I will show you that 
        my God DOES exist. I offer myself as a willing sacrifice as His Son did 
        at Calvary.” 
        “You are a fool,” the Lady told him again. “But your 
        miserable hulk will do. Is there another?” 
        Nobody stirred.  
        “Very well,” the Lady continued. “One of these may live 
        on as a denizen of Semerwater. The others belong to us.” 
        “Let me go,” The Doctor whispered to her companions. 
        For a moment, the three wondered if her courage had failed, too. But the 
        very idea of The Doctor begging for her life seemed impossible. 
        “You’ve got a plan?” Graham asked.  
        “Kind of,” she answered.  
        “Go for it, then,” Ryan said. “But don’t take 
        too long. I think we’re in big trouble.” 
        “Let the youngest go,” The Doctor said, pointing to Yas. “She 
        has so much to offer. We are unworthy.” 
        “What?” Yes responded. “But…” 
        “No!” the Lady responded. “I do not give cattle the 
        right to pick and choose. YOU will be the one. Go… go from my sight 
        and may the fate of your friends remind you of the price of disobedience.” 
        The Lady nodded to The Doctor’s captors. She was pushed forward, 
        free of any restraint. She turned once and looked at her friends, then 
        she ran, pushing though the crowd until she was out of sight. 
        “We shall divide the spoils, Lord,” said the Lady. “I 
        shall have the girl and the old fool. You may have the boy and the old 
        man.” 
        “Oi, less of the old,” responded Graham who was at least twenty 
        years younger than Ulrich 
        “Less of the ‘boy’,” Ryan added.  
        “Be silent,” the Lady told them peremptorily. “Cattle 
        do not answer back.” 
        That was twice that she had used that term ‘cattle’. Graham 
        glanced at Ryan as the two of them were manhandled away towards the tower. 
        If they were cattle it didn’t bode well for their future.  
        Their only hope as they neared the sinister edifice was their glimpse 
        of The Doctor, running like the wind, almost at the stand of trees where 
        they had left the TARDIS. The Doctor slammed the TARDIS door shut and leaned against it as she 
        took a deep breath and the coloured flecks stopped floating in front of 
        her eyes. It was a long time since she had run so fast without remembering 
        to breathe. A very bad mistake but her only thought had been to reach 
        the TARDIS and work out how to rescue her friends. 
        Graham and Ryan were easy enough. Wide materialisation around a person 
        or persons was an old trick. Getting the TARDIS to distinguish between 
        them and their captors as they trudged towards the tower was harder. But 
        only slightly. On a schematic view of the topography they were easily 
        identified as being humans soaked in artron energy from the TARDIS. A 
        little tweak of settings….  
        It was slightly eerie. Ryan and Graham appeared near the console as solid 
        figures, but those without the artron energy remained like insubstantial 
        ghosts. 
        Especially, The Doctor she noted as she hit the dematerialisation switch 
        again, the one calling himself ‘Lord’.  
        But that wasn’t entirely a surprise. 
        “Well done, Doc,” Graham said. “I knew we could count 
        on you.” 
        “But what about Yas… and Ulrich?” Ryan asked. “He 
        was brave when it came to it. We can’t let him…. I don’t 
        know what those two do to people…. But Ulrich doesn’t deserve 
        it. Nobody does.” 
        “Too many people have suffered already,” The Doctor said. 
        “I’m ending it now.” 
        She couldn’t quite do the same thing a second time. Ulrich had never 
        travelled in the TARDIS. The only way she could get him and Yas aboard 
        was to bring their human captors as well. 
        At least that left the Lady outside. The TARDIS knew for certain what 
        everyone else could have guessed. The Lord and Lady were certainly not 
        Human. As four figures solidified within the console room, the last remained 
        insubstantial, though everyone saw her mouth open in a scream of rage 
        and frustration before she vanished. 
        Graham and Ryan had been ready to fight, even though the two men holding 
        Yas and Ulrich were big and burly, their skin tanned by forge fires and 
        the nails of their slablike hands black from working metal daily. 
        But as soon as they found themselves within the TARDIS they let go of 
        their captives and backed away. Of course, the sight of the console room 
        with its glowing walls and ethereal machinery had to be terrifying, but 
        it was more than that. Within its protective walls they were free from 
        the baleful influence of the Lord and Lady. They looked at each other, 
        at Ulrich, and at The Doctor and her companions as if they were waking 
        from a dream. 
        “Yes,” The Doctor said to them. “You have been used 
        by evil. Will you now fight that evil with me?” 
        “Aye,” the blacksmith and his assistant answered without hesitation. 
        “What will thou have us do, Mistress?” 
        “Call me Doctor, for a start,” she answered with a wry smile. 
        “Mistress… has some historical ironies I don’t want 
        to get into just now. I suppose none of you have ever been in either of 
        the towers?” 
        “None ever goes in that comes out again,” Ulrich said.  
        “Well, that’s going to change,” The Doctor replied, 
        pulling on the spatial transmission lever which sent them on a very short 
        journey to the centre of the building Yas had called Lady Bower. 
        “This is inside the stone walls?” Graham asked as the party, 
        including puzzled but surprisingly fearless medieval villagers, stepped 
        out of the TARDIS. The room they were in was as technologically advanced 
        as the TARDIS, though lacking its style. Computers hummed and the glow 
        of monitor screens illuminated a wide space with a metallic floor, walls 
        and ceiling. 
        “It looks a bit….” Ryan began. “Its’s not….” 
        “We’re not in another TARDIS, are we?” Yas finished. 
        “The Lord and Lady aren’t….” 
        “They certainly are not my people,” The Doctor answered with 
        genuine effrontery. “Granted there seems to be some knowledge of 
        chameleon circuitry in the way they made the outsides of their ships blend 
        in. But they are certainly not Time Lords. If I had to guess….” 
        She moved from examining the alien computers to a large fixture that looked 
        something like a free-standing shower unit with opaque glass around it. 
         
        “Oh… Now I see what they wanted the spare humans for. One 
        or two a year would sustain them… willing volunteers from among 
        the villagers or luckless travellers.” 
        “What… is it?” Yas asked with a kind of reluctance as 
        if she really didn’t want to know.  
        “A rendering chamber,” The Doctor answered. “It… 
        renders… an organic body into its constituent parts… molecules… 
        nutritional molecules….”  
        “They ATE people,” Graham translated. He wasn’t the 
        only one who shuddered. Ulrich and the two men of the village could think 
        of names, faces, people they knew who had met that grisly fate. 
        “I should have had the courage….” the old priest sighed. 
        “It wasn’t your fault,” The Doctor assured him as she 
        returned to the computer array. “The towers have been giving out 
        a signal… an inhibitor….” She looked at the medieval 
        men and sought for words they would understand. “Demonic forces 
        that took away courage and strength of mind… making you all subservient. 
        Your faith kept you slightly resistant, Ulrich. You knew it was all wrong, 
        but you couldn’t fight it alone.” 
        “But you’re not alone now, mate,” Graham told him. “Trust 
        us… trust The Doctor. She’s going to sort it all out.” 
        “Its’s not going to be so simple as that,” The Doctor 
        told him. “I think….” 
        She was interrupted by the sound of an electronic door opening. The fact 
        that this door, on the other side, was studded oak, apparently weathered 
        by age, hardly surprised anyone at this stage. Nor did the Lady stepping 
        through and reacting with surprise to see so many invaders within her 
        Bower. 
        But it was Yas who reacted first, crossing the floor and then punching, 
        inelegantly, perhaps, conforming to no known rule of unarmed combat, but 
        her fist landing on the Lady’s chin and sending her backwards to 
        lie quite senseless on the floor. 
        “It was as easy as that?” Ryan queried as Yas nursed her bruised 
        knuckles. “They can be fought so easily?” 
        “Well, I’m not a fan of physical violence,” The Doctor 
        mentioned. 
        “Me neither,” Yas admitted. “But she’s been eating 
        PEOPLE.” 
        “So has the other one,” Ryan said. “Are we going to 
        get him, too?”  
        “No need,” said the blacksmith. He pointed to a wide video 
        screen that acted like a CCTV system, showing what was happening in different 
        parts of the village.  
        “That’s how they knew we were at the church,” Ryan noted. 
        “They could see anything and everyone in the village.” 
        Right now, everyone in the village, the people who had gathered subserviently 
        on the green, were rounding on the Lord. They caught him outside his Tower, 
        and what happened next made everyone look away. Father Ulrich crossed 
        himself and uttered a desperate prayer. 
        “I cancelled the inhibitor,” The Doctor said quietly. “The 
        people… very quickly realised they had been used… and they 
        knew who had used them.” 
        “They ate PEOPLE,” Yas said again. “He deserved…. 
        No… no, he didn’t. He deserved to be put on trial somewhere… 
        some kind of alien court where crimes like his could be dealt with. That 
        was… wrong. But….” 
        Everyone was going through much the same moral dilemma as Yas, but their 
        thoughts were disturbed by a sudden seismic rumbling beneath their feet. 
        “Oh no,” The Doctor groaned as she read the control screen. 
        “As if we needed another problem!” 
        “What?” Graham asked. 
        “The towers… the two alien ships… They’ve got 
        a self-destruct system…. I guess it was the last act of vengeance 
        if the people ever did what they did just now. Semerwater is on top of 
        a natural aquifer… a huge underground reservoir of water. And the 
        towers are programmed to blow down into it. The village will drown.” 
        “You can’t stop it?” Ryan asked her. 
        ‘I’m not sure I’m supposed to,” The Doctor answered. 
        “History records this as a good place to catch freshwater pike.” 
        “But… the people.” 
        “Brother Ulrich… you and your friends need to get everyone 
        moving,” The Doctor said. “Get them up to high ground. Don’t 
        leave anyone behind.” 
        She opened the electronic doors. The light of a medieval day flooded in 
        along with the sound of frightened people who felt the ground shudder 
        beneath their feet and probably thought it was a divine punishment for 
        what they had just done to their alien oppressor. Father Ulrich and the 
        two villagers did as she said, crying out for everyone to run from the 
        danger. 
        “To the TARDIS,” The Doctor said to her companions. Nobody 
        needed to be told twice. 
        “What about her?” Yas asked. At the threshold of safety she 
        turned back towards the unconscious Lady. She had really not liked what 
        had happened to the Lord, and she didn’t think being blown to bits 
        in a self-destructing space ship was a good end, either.  
        The Lady must not have liked the idea herself. As Yas bent to help her 
        she leapt up. Yas stumbled and tried to reach her again, but the Lady 
        moved quicker than somebody who had been out cold ought to be able to 
        move.  
        She ran for the sinister cabinet where so many of her victims had gone. 
        Yas tried to each her, but Ryan grabbed her by the arm and literally dragged 
        her into the TARDIS. 
        “You can’t help some people,” he told her.  
        “Yes… but…” 
        “You CAN’T help some people.” The Doctor repeated Ryan’s 
        words. “We CAN help the ones fleeing from Semerwater.” 
        The towers collapsed noisily and the water began to pour into the valley 
        almost instantly. The last stragglers in the evacuation were soon waist 
        deep, even sooner they were in above their heads. The Doctor and her friends 
        went to their rescue along with any of the villagers who could swim. “Everyone got out,” Yas noted as they sat by what looked, 
        for all the world, like a placid lake that had always been there. “Every 
        man, woman, child… every dog, cat, pig….” she smiled 
        as she recalled people trying to sort out who owned which pig that was 
        roaming in the woods later. Not that it was all that funny, really. The 
        livestock would be important until they found somewhere else to live. 
         
        But they were alive. 
        “Did we change history, then?” Ryan asked. “The poem 
        and the legend says that everyone drowned.” 
        “I was thinking about that,” Graham said. “Seems to 
        me somebody had to survive to tell any sort of story. I saw a documentary 
        once about how there are carvings some place that might have been done 
        by people who got away from the real Atlantis….” 
        “That’s the way of it,” The Doctor agreed. “The 
        people will either build a new village or be folded into another community 
        somewhere. The story will be told and retold and changed along the way 
        to something that doesn’t involve aliens and machines that turn 
        people into food for their sinister overlords… or people who came 
        along in a blue box and set their liberation in motion.” 
        “We get forgotten by history,” Ryan noted, perhaps a little 
        ungraciously. “No, I suppose that’s the best way, isn’t 
        it?” 
        “Always,” The Doctor agreed. “So… that’s 
        Semerwater explained. “What about that other one… something 
        Wold.” 
        “Oh, that’s just werewolves,” Graham answered nonchalantly. 
        “Oh, werewolves,” The Doctor replied. “Been there. Done 
        that. You’re right, this was the best mystery to get stuck into. 
        Come on. Let’s get back to modern Sheffield. Isn’t it half 
        price pizza night round the corner from your place, Graham?”       |