“This,” announced The
Doctor with a flourish. “Is the planet Q’Ariiy, pronounced
‘quarry’. Yes, it looks weird. There are some very odd filters
in the atmosphere. From space its actually quite boring, like a half-sucked
gobstopper, but as you can see….”
Team TARDIS were staring around at what looked like an explosion in the
Haribo factory. The sky was brightly multicoloured. So was the lake that
reflected the sky. The grass was predictably green, but with enough shades
of it to beat the old Irish folk song and frustrate a Dulux colour chart.
Flowers scattered among the grass glittered like the candies from Candy
Crush and the trees were like the candy floss trees from the Lorax.
“This is a real place?” Graham asked. “We haven’t
accidentally taken something the Beatles experimented with in the sixties?”
“It’s really like this,” The Doctor assured him. “I’ve
been here before, in the time of the old Queen Ipthia. That was two hundred
years ago, though. I think her daughter may rule by now.”
“What’s that coming towards us?” Ryan asked. At first,
even The Doctor could only see a boxy looking object drawing closer across
the strange terrain. When they began to see detail all of them thought
it looked like Fred Flinstone’s car. They tilted their heads to
see if there were feet working it underneath.
The curious vehicle was being driven by a driver who looked like one half
of Tweedledum and Tweedledee. His round face beamed with a wide smile
as he stopped his curious vehicle beside the TARDIS Team.
“Good day, travellers,” he said in a surprisingly deep voice.
“You’re here for the festivities, of course? I am here to
convey you to the castle in comfort.”
The vehicle was fitted with silk cushions, which was an improvement on
the Flintstone vehicle, and when it set off again it wasn’t driven
by foot power.
“What IS driving it?” Ryan asked. “There’s no
engine noise, and its dead smooth.”
“I’m not sure,” The Doctor answered. “Possibly
some form of anti-gravity?”
“Magic,” Yas said. “I think this whole place runs on
magic.”
“There’s no such thing as magic,” Ryan told her. “There
isn’t, is there, Doctor?”
“Clarke’s Law,” The Doctor answered.
“Ryan was puzzled, but Graham smiled with excitement.
“I heard about that on telly. Hang on… it’s something
like … any sufficiently advanced science is indistinguishable from
magic?”
“Or the other way around,” The Doctor added. “I’m
really not sure. But don’t worry. We’re going to the ‘festivities’.
That’s got to be good.”
Everyone looked at each other, wondering if ‘festivities’
could be interpreted as anything sinister. Ryan recalled the village party
in Pendle that celebrated the ducking of a suspected witch. Yas remembered
that her grandmother’s first wedding had not been all fun. Graham
thought of a Christmas he went through before he had the all-clear from
the cancer clinic.
The Doctor smiled reassuringly at them, but they weren’t completely
convinced.
“This place….” Graham said. “It’s just unreal.
Like fairyland. And did anyone ever hear a story about mortals going into
fairyland that turned out good for them? It’s all aging a hundred
years in the real world and that sort of thing.”
“I know it looks a bit surreal,” The Doctor said. “But
this IS a real planet, in the same universe as Earth and Gallifrey. My
people visited it and wrote a report in the TARDIS database. The worst
they could say about it was that it was frivolous.”
“Frivolous?” The word made them laugh. Ryan and Yas were reminded
of their deputy headmistress who used words like that about anything non-educational
- school discos, Easter eggs, Christmas trees. Miss Gerard would certainly
agree with The Doctor’s people about this planet.
“Yeah, but doc,” Graham said. “When did we ever land
on a planet that wasn’t dangerous in some unexpected way? We can’t
help being a BIT suspicious.”
“Well, maybe this will be the exception,” The Doctor said
optimistically.
“Hey… wow!” Yas exclaimed despite her reservations.
“Look at that. Is that where we’re going?”
THAT was a castle out of everyone’s childhood dreams. It outdid
the Disney one by at least a dozen more tall, slender towers, every one
of them with a cobalt blue roof against the sherbet rainbow sky. It was
perched at the top of a steep hill that fell away as a sheer cliff on
one side.
“Neuschwanstein,” Graham said. “Castle in Bavaria….
I saw a documentary about it. Built for a mad king who loved opera and
theatrics. The Nazis hid loads of art in it during the war. Disney got
their castle from it.”
“Ludwig wasn’t mad, just misunderstood,” The Doctor
said. “I should take you all to meet him sometime. He would certainly
love this place, though.”
She turned to their driver.
“Who is the monarch of Q’Ariiy at this time? So that we may
greet her appropriately.”
“Queen Schilde,” answered Tweedledum. “She who rides
with the wind.”
The Doctor turned back in tine to see the two men sharing rather childish
smirks about ‘wind’. Yas was already giving both of them ‘grow
up’ glares.
“So… it’s a royal castle, then?”
“Why wouldn’t it be?”
“One where nobody is expecting trouble,” Ryan commented. “All
those windows, and the towers are in no way defensive. I watch documentaries,
too. Castle building through the ages is interesting. Nobody, including
Just a Bit Misunderstood Ludwig built castles like that until they were
sure they wouldn’t be attacked.”
The Doctor nodded. Ryan was perfectly right about that. This was a castle
for showing off royal privilege, not for defending a territory.
It all boded well, so far. They watched in anticipation as the Flintstone
car swept under an archway into a huge courtyard festooned with multicoloured
flags. A red carpet was rolled up to where they alighted, and they followed
it up a sweeping set of steps and into a grand ballroom lit by huge crystal
chandeliers.
They stared around the room, taking in the incredible collection of guests
of every shape, size, number of limbs, eyes, heads.
“It’s like Never Ending Story,” Yas said. “The
castle where all the different people go to petition the princess. Or
Alice in Wonderland… maybe both.”
“I was thinking the arrivals lounge at Men in Black Central,”
Ryan suggested.
“The Star Wars Cantina,” Graham added, not to be outdone.
“And I think that bloke over there is related to Zaphod Beeblebrox.”
“There was a two-headed bloke in Men in Black,” Ryan pointed
out.
“Yes, but Zaphod looks more intelligent,” Graham countered.
A herald who fitted Yas’s fairy tale idea rather than the Sci fi
one approached and told them they needed to be presented to the Queen
and her consort. He brought them to the far end of the long room where
a tall, slender woman sat on a gilded throne on a raised dais. She was
silver haired and her complexion powdery white. Her lips and eyelids were
silver and so were her long, manicured fingernails. She wore a thin silver
crown with an emerald set in it over her forehead. Anyone not thinking
of one of the elves from Lord of the Rings was missing some cultural capital.
Her consort stood beside the throne, though there was an elaborately carved
chair with silk cushions set for him. He was a good seven feet tall and
his skin really was as black as ebony, a term even Ryan thought was either
fanciful or a touch racist but seemed completely appropriate here. Together
he and the queen were like the opposite numbers in a game of chess.
“Your Majesty,” said the herald. “I humbly present The
Doctor, Ambassador from the Time Lords of Gallifrey, and the Lady Yasmin
of Earth, with their companions, the lords Graham and Ryan of Sheffield.”
The Doctor took Yasmin’s hand and guided her to the top step to
curtsy in the manner they had practiced to meet Mary, Queen of Scots.
Graham and Ryan bowed from the lower step. This was the custom in the
court of Queen Schilde of Q’Ariiy – women first, men second.
“You are welcome Ambassador Doctor, Lady Yasmin,” said the
queen in a voice like quicksilver. “Please enjoy the feast and the
dancing. Tomorrow we will ride.”
“I look forward to that,” The Doctor said. After a few more
pleasantries they bowed and curtseyed as appropriate and stepped back
as the next invited guests came forward.
“Is this what they call a matriarchal society?” Graham asked.
“I couldn’t help noticing that the Queen talked to you and
Yas and ignored me and Ryan. And there’s Sonny Jim beside her with
not much to say,”
“Yes,” The Doctor answered. “And there’s no point
in complaining about it. There are plenty of royal courts where it’s
otherwise, after all. Draconia.... They don’t even let women speak.
It’s going to be very awkward if I visit there. I'm meant to be
an honorary nobleman of the court. Anyway... Off you go. Eat, drink, mingle.”
The eating and drinking had worried Yas since the feature part of the
catering was a whole ox on a spit and unlikely to be Halal, but she found
assorted cheeses and lots of exciting kinds of bread and huge seafood
platters that didn’t cause any difficulties as well as tables groaning
under heaps of sweet delicacies.
And mingling with amazing people was fun. She didn’t even mind when
a man who looked like he was made of cement, probably in an industrial
scale mixer, mentioned that he didn’t know humans were 'two-tone'.
Looking around at people with red, blue, green and puce coloured faces,
one lot actually resembling unripe conkers, she knew the remark wasn’t
in any way racist or even spiciest. It was just a comment about diversity.
Graham was happily chatting with a pair of tall, slender men who seemed
to be descended from trees. Yasmin thought about Dryads, tree spirits
who would die if their tree was felled. Was that in Narnia or Tolkien?
She couldn’t remember, certainly something she read at school. Later,
The Doctor told her that they were representatives from the planet Cheam,
and, yes, they did have a tree half of themselves that could die when
they did or vice versa.
Ryan had talked with a couple of indigenous men, the tall, slender, ebony
figures like the queen's consort. These were aristocrats of the world,
but not so powerful as their wives. Ryan felt a sympathy for Prince Philip
he had never had before and wondered if 'men's lib' would ever come to
this planet.
What all of them talked about, as they discovered later when they drank
a nightcap in their guest suite in one of the fairytale towers, was the
'great race' that began tomorrow afternoon. It was a horse race over thirty
miles of territory, returning to a finish line at the castle. It was open
to all female visitors to compete. The Doctor was entered in the one-woman
chariot category.
“It’s my first time competing,” she said. “I didn’t
qualify before. My last visit I was accompanied by a lady Time Lord who
came second in the category so I have something to beat.”
If the phrase 'lady Time Lord' struck anyone else as odd they were too
polite to say so.
“I was talking to a couple of gendermorphs,” Yas added, smiling
at the very idea of using the term so casually. It meant a member of several
races who could switch gender at will, which meant that the two ambassadors
she had talked to were equally safe on the aforementioned Draconia or
any of several matriarchal worlds, many even less tolerant of men than
this one.
“They’re in the chariot class, too,” Yas continued.
“The two-woman chariot.”
“Isn’t that cheating if they’re not really women?”
Ryan asked.
“You’ve not read the South Yorkshire Police detain and arrest
procedures for transgender suspects,” Yas told him. “’Really
a woman’ is complicated enough even for humans.”
“it doesn’t work like that for gendermorphs anyway,”
The Doctor said. “Their DNA changes with the gender. I came across
a burglar once who got away with it because HE did the burgling at night
and SHE was questioned by police in the morning. Though most gendermorphs
are more honest than that.”
The three humans looked at each other, all wondering if they dared ask
The Doctor about her DNA and deciding against it.
“Well, I heard that sunrises are special on this planet,”
Yas said diplomatically. “I’m for an early night and even
earlier morning.”
The Doctor agreed. When they were gone Ryan and Graham looked at each
other again with one thing on their mind.
“A planet where women are the bosses...” Graham said. “I’m
all for women's equality. Grace would come back and haunt me if I didn’t.
But women in charge.... I can remember what it was like under Thatcher.
It's just not natural.”
Ryan agreed, but he was sure of one thing.
“We don’t say things like that around those two.... ever.”
Yas was up before dawn and drank a milky, fruity drink left by her bedside
before heading out into the palace grounds. The Doctor was already up
and joined her as they stood and watched the sun come up, making the multi-coloured
sky look like a neon disco ceiling with swirls of impossible colours.
“There ARE still only three primary colours in nature, even here?”
Yas asked. “Red, blue, yellow, making up all the other shades?”
“That is a universal constant,” The Doctor agreed.
“The universe is brilliant,” Yas conceded happily. And well
might she be happy. Nothing was trying to kill them and this planet was
full of amazing surprises.
“I’m going to the stables to pick out a horse for my chariot,”
The Doctor said when the sun had risen enough to leave the sky the ordinary
abstract mural of daytime. “Want to come with me?”
Yas liked the idea. The police HQ in Sheffield included the stables and
parade ground for the mounted division. She had given sugar lumps and
kind words to the beautifully groomed animals from time to time.
But nothing prepared her for the royal stables. It was a palace for horses
in a white marble baroque style. Individual stalls ran the length of at
least two football pitches and a battalion of grooms were attending to
their needs.
Yas wasn’t sure, but she felt they were all far bigger even than
the police horses. She didn’t know enough to talk about ‘hands’
and all that, but these were giants with rippling muscles beneath glossy
coats.
“Beautiful,” she whispered as The Doctor reached up to stroke
the nose of a chestnut coloured stallion. The horse leaned down and nuzzled
her hair.
“Q’Arriy horses choose their rider,” The Doctor explained.
“This chap is called Valeed and he has definitely chosen me. Or
he likes the taste of my collar.” She signalled to a groom who placed
The Doctor’s race number on the stall.
Yas walked on past each inquisitive and bright-eyed creature. She wasn’t
one of those girls that featured in pre-teen girls’ comics who couldn’t
live without horses, but she was experiencing some true animal love just
now.
Then she stood very still. Her mouth opened in astonishment. She looked
into a pair of big brown eyes. This horse….
…. Wasn’t a horse.
“If this isn’t fairyland, why am I being nuzzled by a unicorn?”
she asked.
“Oh,” The Doctor whispered with something like awe. “It’s
Trident. He was the old Queen’s mount. I didn’t expect to
see him.”
“He’s a UNICORN,” Yas repeated. “Look at the horn….”
If she had ever thought about unicorns they were small, white and friends
with My Little Pony and other such childhood dreams. This magnificent
beast, glossy black with a single white star on his forehead, just below
the foot and a half of twisted, tapering horn, was something else entirely.
As she glanced at the horses either side of him, she realised that, far
from being a fantasy, he was possibly the most REAL creature she had ever
touched. She would have had a hard time explaining what she meant to anyone
else, but she knew it in her heart.
“The horse chooses its mistress,” said a groom who stepped
beside her. “What is your race number, Madame?”
“Me?” Yas was astonished. “But I….”
She had never ridden in her life. It wasn’t something she fretted
about missing out on, but the opportunities had never come up in the world
of Sheffield council flats she grew up in.
Yet the more she looked at the beautiful creature and the more it looked
back at her….
She opened the stall and the unicorn stepped forward. She put her hands
on his shoulders.
“Where is his… his tack.”
From somewhere the proper word for the saddle and bridle and other straps
and buckles associated with riding came into her head. At once a quartet
of grooms, like a motor racing pit crew began assembling the ‘tack’,
including, Yas noted, a side saddle for a lady.
Riding side saddle had to be harder than ordinary riding, surely?
But Yas felt no fear, no hesitation, as she put her foot in the stirrup
and pushed herself up. She put her legs in the right position and lightly
held the reins. Trident the unicorn walked sedately the length of the
stable and into the paddock where other riders were exercising. There
he broke into a trot, then a canter. He turned towards the practice jumps
and Yas felt instinctively how to relax some muscles and tense others
as the unicorn jumped. She felt a thrill as they hung in the air together
for a split second before landing safely.
By the fence, Graham and Ryan watched with mouths open in sheer astonishment.
“Yas never mentioned she could ride,” Graham commented, ignoring,
for the moment, WHAT she was riding.
“She can’t… she doesn’t. Where the heck would
she do that at our comprehensive? And she could hardly keep a horse in
a council flat. Besides….”
There was something Ryan wanted to say, but he wasn’t sure how to
phrase it.
“You know… what they say about unicorns…. About them
being tamed by women… ladies… girls… with the right
qualifications.”
Graham nodded, hardly daring to say anything.
“Does this mean Yas is qualified? I mean… I never… never
really thought about her that way… I mean….”
“Modern girls… you just don’t ask.”
“And I’m not going to,” Ryan firmly decided. “But…
wow. She looks good.”
“She’s not the only one.” Graham looked around as a
new horsewoman entered the paddock, this time riding a gilded chariot.
Neither Graham nor Ryan had been educated ‘classically’, but
somewhere, sometime, both had seen images of Freyja, the Norse goddess
riding her chariot. If Freyja wore mauve culottes and a striped jumper
with braces and wore Doc Marten boots on her feet, then the vision before
them would have been perfect.
The Doctor looked as if she had been born to drive a one-woman chariot
just as Yas looked born to ride side saddle on a unicorn.
“There must be something in the air of this place,” Graham
decided. It was the only explanation for any of this.
The race was due to start after lunch. The Doctor and Yas, as competitors,
were allotted places at the queen’s table. Graham and Ryan, as mere
men, were at the far as and of the great hall. The food was the same,
so they had no real complaints, but the segregation rankled just a little
with all the men around them.
“I wouldn’t mind,” said the man with two heads whose
wife was at the top table eating with one mouth and talking with the other.
“But I’M the Ambassador.”
“They can’t imagine a man in such a role,” answered
a tall man with blue skin and fire engine red hair. “One day there
will be such a revolution on this planet.”
“It may come sooner than they think,” said a man whose skin
was red and hair blue in contrast to the other. “You know the queen
has five sons and no daughter. That’s them over there at the table
even lower than ours…. Four of them, anyway. I’m not sure
where the eldest is.”
Ryan glanced at the ebony coloured men wearing solemn black and silver
in contrast to the motley of colour around them.
“None of them can inherit the throne?” he asked.
“No man may rule Q’Ariiy. The Queen will sooner choose another
woman from outside her family line than allow a king to follow her.”
“I knew there had to be a downside to this place,” Graham
said. “But at least its somebody else’s problem. Just remind
me never to disparage Charles and Camilla ever again.”
The men were not invited to the grandstand to see the start of the race,
either. Graham and Ryan found themselves watching from a roped off terrace
alongside the same four of the five sons of the Queen and the male Ambassadors
of other worlds. Despite that, they were excited about the race. They
watched as the riders lined up and the chariots behind them. They easily
spotted Yas mounted on the black stallion unicorn. Wearing a riding skirt
and jacket of deep red satin and velvet, she looked proud and confident,
even though she had ridden for the first time only a few hours ago.
“There’s the Doc.” Graham pointed to the gold trimmed
chariot where a real vision was mounted. The haphazard charity shop clobber
was replaced by something that really did look inspired by Wagnerian opera,
from the winged helmet to the flowing cloak with a golden breastplate
and leather skirt that completed the ensemble.
“Wow!” Ryan commented. Then his attention was caught by a
huge globe that might have been glass or might easily have been soap.
It floated above the starting line, and after shimmering with all the
colours of several rainbows for a second or two the image of Queen Schilde
appeared in High Definition to make a Sony executive weep. Her voice filled
the air as she called the competitors to order and raised her hand clutching
a silk handkerchief. When her hand fell, the race began.
The bubble stayed in the air as first mounted riders then the charioteers
faced away. As they quickly disappeared from view it became a camera giving
a birds eye view of the race. Ryan and Graham debated whether drone technology
was known here, and decided that a world with racing unicorns might just
as easily have actual birds following the race and somehow transmitting
the image.
In any case, what mattered was that Yas on her unicorn was in the lead
after the first half mile. Several strong contenders kept a cracking pace,
including a grey mare ridden by a woman with golden wings folded across
her back to reduce air resistance who came close to catching up and another
black horse on which a tall, richly dressed woman was mounted. Ryan noticed
her because she was a female yet with skin the ebony of the males of Q’Ariiy.
He assumed that she was from another world where gender and colour were
more arbitrary.
The Doctor was holding her own, too. She stood with one foot forward on
the front edge of the chariot, her hands firmly holding the reins and
guiding the chestnut stallion with ease. The two-woman chariot of the
gendermorph couple was keeping pace. Graham half expected blades on the
wheels to cut down the opposition, but there was nothing so unsportsmanlike.
“Your lady is superb,” said one of the queen’s sons
as the unicorn found an extra spurt and left his closest rival behind.
“She’s not… our lady,” Ryan answered. “She’s
our friend.”
“She is magnificent,” said another. “Is she betrothéd?”
Ryan had never heard anyone outside of school Shakespeare pronounce the
‘é’, but that didn’t mean he was impressed.
“She is not, but hands off, bruv,” he answered as fiercely
and proprietarily as somebody who was definitely not betrothed or even
betrothéd could muster.
“That goes for the Doc, too,” Graham added as he saw her swing
her chariot on one wheel around one of the race markers some five miles
out and skilfully bring it back down again.
There were casualties in such a wild race. The gendermorphs narrowly avoided
crashing into a pair of single chariots that had run into each other on
a tight turn. The two riders were shaken but unhurt, and perhaps more
importantly, the horses were fine once they were released from the tangled
traces, but that was two less competitors for the chariot competition.
Then the lady with the golden wings slid head first from her horse as
she tried to make a jump over a rushing purple-watered brook that was
a quicker way than the bridge Yas and the ebony rider had both taken.
She landed in the brook and emerged covered in bright orange weed and
looking extremely sorry for her lost dignity. The chestnut horse waited
for her to remount, but the possibility of winning the race was gone.
By the halfway point another six riders and eight chariots had met with
misfortunes. All of these happened way behind Yas and her closest rival,
though. They stretched their lead to at least a half mile as they turned
towards the setting sun and the way back to the castle. The Doctor was
still amongst the leaders of the chariot racers, but it was the two mounted
horsewoman who were the centre of attention.
“It’s ridiculous,” Graham murmured. “How can she
really be that good after learning to ride this morning?”
“Magic,’ Ryan had decided. “There’s no other explanation.
Never mid Clarke’s Law or anything else. She’s riding a unicorn
and everything we ever heard about them in fantasy worlds is true. It’s
giving her the ability to stay up there on its back and win this race.”
“Not yet,” Graham said. “The other lady is doing well.
It could end up as a photo finish.”
Indeed, for a mile, at least, Yas and the ebony lady were nearly neck
and neck. For a furlong or two, only the unicorn’s horn was ahead
of the smooth face of the other stallion. Ryan and Graham debated whether
a horse race could be won by a ‘horn’.
“A nose, maybe,” they decided. But a horn would surely be
cheating.
Finally, there was no need to follow the race on the bubble. The two front
runners were in plain sight. The excitement grew among the spectators
as they reached the home straight, none shouting louder than Ryan and
Graham. For a heart stopping moment they really thought that the ebony
lady had pushed ahead, then Yas swung one leg over the side saddle to
ride in the ordinary way and leaned forward almost flat against the unicorn’s
neck. Whether she cut some wind resistance or the creature managed an
extra spurt, they pulled ahead together and crossed the finish line the
clear winners.
Graham and Ryan did a slightly embarrassing dance of joy with each other
then pushed through the crowds to the winner’s enclosure where Yas
and the ebony lady had dismounted and were congratulating each other while
patting their noble steeds gratefully. The grooms might have prevented
two males from entering the enclosure, but Graham and Ryan were a force
to be reckoned with and they backed away.
“Yas!” Ryan hugged her fondly, lifting her off her feet with
excitement. “That was fantastic.”
“It felt fantastic,” he answered. “Trident did all the
work, of course. I just had to hang on.”
“Magic,” Ryan said again. Then a new cry of excitement made
them look around. The Doctor had just won the one-woman chariot class.
“Not sure about that, though. I think she won by stubbornness.”
Whatever reason, The Doctor came to join them with a massive grin on her
face. She warmly congratulated Yas before the two of them as well as the
runners up went to be presented to the Queen in the throne room.
And that was when the chariot wheels came a little unstuck. Queen Schilde
presented trophies to the champions and then stood to make an important
announcement in front of the whole assembly.
“I have decided,” she said. “Lady Yasmin of Earth shall
be my heir.”
“What?” Amidst the susurration of whispers and murmurs around
the court, Yas managed just one word of exclamation. “No…
no… I can’t. I have to go back to Sheffield….”
She thought of Sheffield, her parents, the council flat they lived in,
her sister she more often bickered with. For a split second she wondered
why she would give up being the future queen of a fantasy world for all
of that.
But, yes. Sheffield was where she belonged. When she finally stopped travelling
with The Doctor, she expected to go back there, to go back to being a
police officer, a job she loved even at its most irritating. She expected
to go back to being human and ‘normal’ for a given measure
of ‘normal’.
She couldn’t be a nominated princess. She just couldn’t.
“No!” cried the ebony lady in a strangely husky voice that
gave everyone food for thought. “No, mother!”
“Mother?” The question mark was almost audible as the word
passed around the throne room. Ryan glanced around and saw the four sons
who had watched the race with them in the men’s paddock. They stood
next to the ebony ‘lady’ and at once something clicked into
place.
“Yes, mother. I am your eldest son,” said the lady, pulling
off a long-hatred wig. “And I all but beat this woman. I almost
certainly would have done if she had not been mounted upon my grandmother’s
great unicorn. Nobody could have raced against Trident. So you have to
concede that I am as good as a woman. I beat all the rest, after all.”
“He certainly did,” The Doctor said in quiet but insistent
tones. “Your Majesty…..”
“It cannot be!” the Queen snapped angrily. “Take this
imposter and put him in chains.”
“No, mother, I think not,” said her second son, placing a
hand upon his elder brother’s satin covered arm. “Mother,
the time has come for you and all of Q’Ariiy to accept that sons
are as important as daughters. My brother is your true heir. If you do
not proclaim him so, there will be terrible consequences for you. We do
not stand before you alone. The men of Q’Ariiy have been ignored
for long enough. They will support us in deposing you if you do not agree
to our terms.”
There was a long silent moment. The Court of Queen Schilde held its collective
breath. Then the proud head bowed in acquiescence.
“Very well, I shall name my eldest child as heir, regardless of
gender…..” she paused and frowned in concentration. “What
IS your name?”
“You called my Adler,” said the prince in satin. “But
if you please, I should prefer to be called Alice, and I shall choose
my own gowns.”
“Ohhhhh!” It was Graham who found a voice in response. “THAT
sort of queen.”
The Doctor elbowed him into silence, but he wasn’t far wrong. It
seemed to be a new concept for Q’Ariiy, but the Queen didn’t
seem altogether displeased with the idea that one of her princes might
be a princess after all.
Later, when a banquet was held to celebrate both the result of the great
race and the proclamation of the Queen’s heir, ‘Princess Alice’
wore a gown that was stunning even on a planet with a multicoloured sky
and indigenous unicorns. There were obviously going to have to be new
ways of thinking about everything from the royal succession to the kind
of issues about which South Yorkshire Police had procedural documentation.
Life on Q’Ariiy was going to change in a lot of exciting and hopefully
positive ways.
But the Doctor and her companions weren’t going to get involved.
The two gendermorph ambassadors had quickly offered their services, planning
to draw up a new constitution granting equal legal status to all citizens.
The Doctor was confident they would be enough.
The only difficulty was getting Yas to say goodbye to Trident. She went
to the stables especially to do so, and when she was done she was just
a little tearful.
But as they took their places in the Flintstone car for a lift back to
the TARDIS she smiled brightly and waved to the second eldest prince.
“He made me an offer,” she admitted. “To be a princess
by marriage… to him. He offered me a palace of my own, and a stable
full of unicorns.”
“Did you think about it?” Ryan asked her.
“The unicorns were a really good offer,” Yas admitted. “But…
on the whole… really… I think I SHOULD go home to Sheffield.
It IS the right decision. There may be days… Friday night chucking
out time with some Drunk and Disorderly throwing up on my shoes…
when I might regret the decision… but… no…. I think
I had to turn him down.”
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