“I want to talk to you!” he
yelled out. “Guardian, I’m talking to you. I know you can
hear me. I want to talk to you before I go any further in this quest.”
His voice echoed away into the distance and he waited.
“I’m waiting,” he called out, and tapped his foot impatiently
to indicate his feelings.
“I am here,” said a deep, sonorous voice. The Doctor turned
to see the Guardian in his ‘Man from Del Monte’ suit standing
behind him. “What is your reason for calling me? You are not yet
finished with your quest.”
“Is this for real?” he demanded. “Are you really going
to give me my life back at the end of this ‘quest’? Or is
it just a big trick?”
“Trick?”
“Why was the Celestial Toymaker involved so often?” My second
task was to complete his trilogic puzzle. Then I was tipped into a Calabi
Yau universe such as he created for his toyland. And now I’ve come
across the man himself in Blackpool. Is he involved in your plan? Are
you working with him to trip me up in some way?”
“Doctor, I am astonished by your lack of faith in the Guardians,”
the Guardian answered. “Surely you know that the Toymaster, or The
Mandarin, is a Renegade from our society of Eternals. He has no favour
with any of us. The tests are drawn from your own experiences and the
fact that you have encountered him many times in your lives caused the
coincidence of his occurring in this last test. You defeated him?”
“Yes.”
“Good. Then there is no need to worry about him any further. You
may safely go on to the next task.”
“I’ve encountered the Daleks and Cybermen many times in my
lives. Am I going to have to fight them, too?”
“I cannot tell,” The Guardian answered him. “The tests
are drawn from your own experiences in each of your lives.”
“Yes, you said. Being forewarned of the likes of those would help,
though.”
“I cannot tell.”
“Yes, all right. Don’t go all automaton on me. I get it. If
you’re sure this isn’t some plot, then you might as well toddle
off again and I’ll get on with it.”
“I am a Guardian,” The Guardian pointed out. “I do not
‘toddle’ anywhere. Nor do I usually come here on demand. I
will see you again when your tasks are complete.”
That was a brush off and a censure at the same time. The Doctor did his
best to resist saying anything cutting or sarcastic. The Guardians considered
themselves, and generally were, above even the Time Lords of Gallifrey.
Even when he was one of a multitude of Time Lords he felt inferior to
the Guardians. Now he was on his own it was even worse.
The Guardian left while he was in the middle of his introspection. He
turned and walked up to the eighth door. He inserted the playing piece
shaped like Blackpool Tower into the elaborately detailed model of Blackpool
under the glass case. There was a soft click and the door opened.
He stepped through and found the usual things waiting for him. He picked
up the globe filled with softly swirling smoke and familiar faces that
tugged at his hearts. Rose, of course, and her mother. Jack Harkness,
a thorn in his side a lot of the time, but still tugging at those hearts-strings
in his own way. Mickey, who started off a coward but came out well in
the end thanks to his example. Even Rose’s dad, Pete, who they met
in such difficult circumstances, reminded him that his Ninth life influenced
the lives of so many others.
“So where will I be sent next time, and will it rip the hearts from
me?” he asked, turning from the globe to the glass case with the
clue to his destination.
It looked like a mini arboretum with small trees growing within it. The
Doctor stared for a long time and wondered what it had to do with his
Ninth life.
“Oh!” he murmured when he finally understood. “Oh, yes,
of course.”
The TARDIS landed in a forest. In long gone times it would have disguised
itself as a tree, now. A police box was, at least, easier to find.
It was early morning. A slanting sun’s rays filtered through the
foliage. There was dew on the ground. He could almost hear the soft sighs
of the trees as their roots took in the cool liquid.
Almost, but not quite. Even on Cheem the rooted trees didn’t communicate
directly. They were, in most respects, just trees.
Except every tree was a kind of soul-mate, a symbiot, with one of the
amazing sentient wood people of Cheem whom he had first met up with on
Platform One at the ‘End of the World Party’ thrown by the
Face of Boe.
Memories of Jabe were bittersweet. Her in-your-face flirting had been
good for his ego so early into his new existence when his relationship
with Rose hadn’t quite blossomed – puns absolutely intended.
Her courage and resourcefulness had impressed him. Her self-sacrifice
for the sake of others was a mark on his own soul – particularly
because he hadn’t saved her.
“I couldn’t,” he told the trees around him. “If
I had tried, she would still have died and I would have lost the chance
to save everyone else.”
Of course, there was no response, not one in ordinary words. Instead,
a shower of blossom covered his shoulders. It might have been coincidence
or it might have been some deep, unfathomable response from the soul of
the tree.
He walked on until he reached the edge of the forest. He still wasn’t
entirely sure what he was meant to do. Bring a cutting or something for
the bonsai forest? If so, he wasn’t going to take it without permission.
Jabe had given him a gift of ‘a cutting from her grandfather’
on Platform One. It was a small tree now, growing in the Cloister Room
of the TARDIS where Rose had planted it after that adventure. That room
had changed itself several times, along with the rest of the TARDIS, but
plants still grew there as easily as they did in real soil.
He needed another gift like that one. He strongly felt that was the best
way to obtain a piece of Cheem without offence or harm to the people.
The forest was on the slope of a hill going down into a valley. A river
at the bottom sparkled in the sunshine. So did something much bigger.
He walked down towards what proved to be one of the biggest greenhouses
he had seen outside of the planet K’ew, the horticultural wonder
of the Milky Way Galaxy. It was a half sphere made up of thousands of
metre wide hexagonal panes of glass. The panes nearest the ground were
polarised so that the outside was matt black, but higher up they glowed
with a golden light. These were solar energy collectors providing electrical
energy for the work that went on inside.
He found a door and entered. There was no lock and no guard. People were
free to come into what he quickly realised was a huge nursery. He knew
very well that on Cheem a plant nursery and a child nursery were one and
the same thing. The saplings being grown under the clear glass roof –
the solar panels viewed from underneath – were the newborn infants
of this world.
It was a strange sight, row upon row of baby trees with legs and arms
and a face formed from a knot of wood just beneath the canopy of leaves.
Some of them were asleep, their wrinkled faces at peace and limbs folded.
A soft snoring sound came from them.
Others were awake and active, rustling their leaves and waving their twiglet
limbs around as they played.
One or two were fractious. They shook their canopies in an agitated way
and the rustle was demanding. Young tree people hurried to attend to them,
switching on cooling showers over their heads. The Doctor put his finger
under one of the showers and tasted the water. It was pure spring water
with special plant nutrients added - rather bitter to his taste, but nectar
to the tree babies.
“Hello, are you a visitor?” asked a voice like spring blossom
might have if it were imagined by somebody like Vivaldi. The young tree
smiled at him courteously, but clearly puzzled by his appearance.
His hearts lurched at the sight of her.
“Jabe?”
“No, sir,” she answered. “I am Jabin. Jabe was my mother
tree. I came from a sapling taken from her. I remember her when I was
very young, coming to the nursery to see me. But she died before I was
able to walk.”
“I know,” The Doctor said. “I was there… when
she died. She saved a lot of people with her own sacrifice.”
“I was told that by my uncles who were there with her. Are you the
man… the one she was with… The Doctor?”
“Yes,” The Doctor answered truthfully, ready to accept any
bitter recriminations the child of Jabe might have for him.
“Then you are welcome, sir. My uncles told of your courage, too.
You are honoured by the trees of Cheem. I, most of all.”
“I hope I am worthy of that honour,” he replied humbly. He
felt more than a little guilty in the presence of Jabe’s child.
Of course, Cheem families were not the simplified units that humans and
Gallifreyans defined – mother, father, children. Jabe was a beech
tree, and all other beeches were her kin. Jabin was not bereft of a parent.
Rather she was proud that one so closely related to her was renowned for
acts of bravery.
But that didn’t stop him feeling guilty all the same.
“I….” he began, trying to think of a way of bringing
the subject of tree cuttings into a conversation. “That is….”
An alarm cut off the rather lame sentence before he embarrassed himself
completely. Jabin looked at a monitor on the woven belt around her waist,
then began to run. Other trees were running the same direction. The Doctor
ran, too.
“What’s happening?” he asked as he watched the trees
begin to move the young out of one section of the nursery. These ones
were all crying out loud in a tone that suggested pain. The Doctor grabbed
two of the pots and ran with them into the safe area where they were being
given comforting showers. He turned back and noted how very bright the
light was in the evacuated section. The solar panes were much clearer
than elsewhere, letting in far too much direct, unfiltered sunlight onto
the saplings. They were being sunburned.
As he looked, the panes darkened slightly and the alarm went off again,
indicating a problem elsewhere. Again the nursery staff ran to bring the
young to safety.
“What’s causing this?” The Doctor asked when the second
group of baby trees were having a refreshing drink. “The panels
must be controlled somewhere? What could cause a breakdown like that?”
“I don’t know.” Jabin answered his second question first.
“The control computer is in the sub-basement.”
“Just promise me there aren't any weird revolving blades and impassable
chasms to cross,” he said. “And show me the way.”
“Revolving blades?” Jabin was shocked. “Blades are the
weapons carried by the enemies of Cheem,” she said. “They
are never found here, nor are flames of any sort, except by accident.”
“I hope so,” The Doctor said to her. He followed her onto
a small platform that proved to be a lift down to the lower basement she
spoke of. It smelt something like a potting shed, of damp compost, and
was dark except for ultra violet spots every few metres. They illuminated
a place where seedlings were raised.
“The incubators for new plantlings,” Jabin explained. “Not
yet ready to be exposed to the full sunlight.”
“Yes,” The Doctor acknowledged. “You know, on Earth,
where your species evolved a very long time ago, people would find this
hard to believe.”
“So I understand,” Jabin responded. “We who are too
young to have travelled offworld find the idea of flesh and blood beings
incredible, but we accept the truth of other kinds of sentient life.”
“Glad to hear it.”
The Doctor wondered, idly, what Jabin’s people might make of Human
fairy tales featuring heroic woodcutters with their axes, or even the
likes of Jack and the Beanstalk. Those wouldn’t be tales told in
her nursery – more like horror stories for the Cheem equivalent
of Halloween.
“The central control is ahead,” Jabin said. “It is watched
over by Hogan, the old man of the Mahogany family. He is one of our wisest
elders. He designed this nursery when he was still a young tree.”
“I should very much like to meet him,” The Doctor said.
But when they passed through a door – made of thick, opaque glass,
not wood, of course – they were both shocked to find Hogan lying
amongst a pile of splinters, his body horrifically gashed by edged weapons
of the sort that should not have been permitted on Cheem.
“Hang in there, old man,” The Doctor said, kneeling at his
side. “I think you’ll be all right. Your central root isn’t
damaged. We’ll have you on your feet in no time.”
The old tree man tried to raise his gnarly, twisted arm, but there was
a lot of damage at the place where it branched off from his trunk. The
Doctor used a length of bandage in the bottom of his bottomless pocket
to make a temporary repair.
“Sabotage,” he managed to say. “Please help the little
ones.”
“I’m on it, now,” The Doctor promised. He left Hogan
in the care of young Jabin and pulled up a chair to the screen of the
semi-organic computer databank. He could see immediately what had been
done. A virus programme had been fed into the system making the panes
of glass alter their opacity and radiation filtering randomly. He opened
the machine code and searched for the bad programme. It stuck out like
a sore thumb to somebody who could read machine code as easily as Egyptian
hieroglyphics or Ancient Gallifreyan, but editing it out, cleaning the
programme, was harder. His fingers flew over the four-hundred character
keyboard, but the virus was writing itself almost as fast as he was deleting
it.
Almost, but not quite. The Doctor was chasing it all over the stream of
code, and catching up rapidly. At last he deleted the last string and
the data was clean. He checked the programme and was satisfied that the
nursery was working normally again.
He turned, triumphantly, only to see Jabin kneeling upright, very still
and quiet. A hatchet was pressed against her neck. One swing would decapitate
her.
“Why?” he asked the young pine who held the hatchet. “Why
do something so terrible to your own kind?”
“They are not my own kind,” he replied in a cold, prickly
voice. “The deciduous tribes look down on the evergreens. We are
passed over for promotion. We are under-represented in every canton, and
at the planetary parliament. In winter, we endure the harshest snows.
In summer, when drought threatens, water is diverted to them at our expense.”
“I don’t know if any of that is true,” The Doctor told
him. “I don’t know enough about Cheem politics. But even if
it is true, murdering trees is not the answer. Terrorism is NEVER the
answer to any grievance. You must find a way for varieties of tree to
live in peace with each other.”
The Doctor felt as if that was the strangest sentence he had ever uttered.
On every planet he had ever tried to make peace between factions, he had
never thought of the trees as belligerent parties. Nature was usually
in harmony with itself, at least.
But this was Cheem. The trees were sentient, and sentience always seemed
to go hand in hand with belligerence and grievance of some sort.
“It’s not true,” Jabin said in a frightened voice. “Evergreens
are given every opportunity to advance. But they spurn our help. They
break down the nurseries and the schools we build. They refuse to integrate
into the wider tree society, keeping to their own coppices and their own
traditions.”
“Be quiet or I will break you in two,” the pine told her,
moving the hatchet closer to her neck. “You… foreigner with
fleshy body… open the communicator over there. Tell the government
in Oak-City that I have you three as hostages and bombs planted in four
places around the nursery. If my demands are not met, I am not afraid
to die for the cause of Pine Equality.”
A fanatic! The Doctor sighed wearily. They were the worst. Any kind of
freedom fighter might be reasoned with apart from the ones who were prepared
to die for their cause.
“No,” he said calmly. “I’m a stranger, a nobody
here. If I call the government it would be meaningless. Let her do it
– one of their own – and take me in her place. My neck will
come off just as easily as a wooden one.”
The pine hesitated briefly, then pulled the axe away from Jabin’s
neck, before pushing her forward. The Doctor stepped towards him. He bent
to kneel where Jabin had been, but in a swift movement, while the axe
was still away from his body, he swept the feet from under the pine and
knocked him to the ground. The axe fell just out of reach as The Doctor
grappled the terrorist, wondering exactly how to subdue a tree person.
Were the pressure points in the same places as they were for flesh beings?
He was still working that out when two security guards arrived, alerted
by Jabin as soon as she was free of the axe. They took over the arrest
of the pine, and arranged for medics to come for Hogan.
“Was he telling the truth about the bombs?” Jabin asked.
“I don’t know,” The Doctor answered her. “But
we need to find out. Infant lives could still be in danger. Can you evacuate
the nursery quickly?”
“Above, yes, but not the incubators. The seedlings would die in
the light.”
“Do what can be done. Get as many out as possible – in case
I can’t do it in time.”
Jabin nodded and hurried to gather her colleagues together to start moving
the hundreds of tree young from the dome. The Doctor turned back to the
computer that monitored and controlled the environment within the nursery.
He searched quickly for the tell tale signs of the bombs. It was surprisingly
difficult. Many of the organic compounds used as plant nutrients had chemical
factors in common with explosive materials. But he located the four likely
places.
The first was in the food preparation area, almost hidden by those natural
chemicals stored there. It was, indeed, a crude, hand made device. The
pine equality fanatics were not well equipped for their campaign. That
made it all the harder, though. A hand-made bomb was unstable. He had
to work both fast and carefully, not always an easy combination.
He disarmed the first and raced to find the next on the other side of
the dome, in the chamber where the new cuttings were first potted –
in essence the delivery room for new tree life. Again, there were the
natural and normal chemicals present, but The Doctor had located an unnatural
concentration hidden in a cupboard. He quickly worked to make it safe.
The evacuation of the dome was complete as he raced across the now eerily
quiet floor to the waiting room where visitors came to see their new sapling
kin. Again disarming the bomb was a delicate and dangerous operation.
One more. It had been the hardest to detect on the sensors, and when he
went down into the huge storeroom where composts and plant nutrients were
bulk stored, he knew that it would be sheer luck if he found this one
in time. His eyes and his ears were the only senses he could use. He stood
quietly, holding his breath, and listened for the very faint tick of the
bomb mechanism. Having worked out a general direction, he then needed
to search with his eyes for the device. His superior Gallifreyan eyesight
helped him process the small amount of light in the cool, dark storage
and allowed him to spot the deadly metal box. He looked at it carefully
and realised this was the prime bomb. This one would have set off all
the others, ensuring complete destruction of the dome. This one might
still collapse the roof of the incubator level and kill the seedlings.
He couldn’t let that happen. He pulled the cover off the bomb and
examined the mechanism carefully. This was a little more sophisticated,
as if the fanatics had stretched their budget to one really good bomb.
For all that he was a pacifist who hated guns and bombs, The Doctor was
proficient with both. He had been a soldier and a freedom fighter at various
times in his life. He had defended his own world and countless others.
He knew both how to make and dismantle bombs. He recalled grimly the first
adventure of his Ninth incarnation, when he had planted a bomb in the
shop where Rose worked in order to destroy the Nestene transmitter there.
He remembered the desperate fight on the Gamestation when every gun, every
possible way to fight the Daleks was employed, including the terrible
weapon of mass destruction he had made himself and had been, for a while,
prepared to use.
He was closer to the ideals of the Pine Faction than they might have realised,
but murdering infants wasn’t his idea of waging war.
“Can I help?” Jabin’s soft voice sounded close by his
ear. He had been concentrating so hard he didn’t hear her come in.
She stepped closer and he heard her sharp intake of breath when she saw
the bomb.
“Put your finger on that metal screw,” The Doctor said. It
was too late to tell her to go away. In the next half minute he would
either disarm this bomb or blow up with it. She had no time to escape.
But an extra pair of hands, even twig-shaped hands with knots for knuckles
might just be the edge he needed.
“Oh no,” he murmured as he got through the primary circuit
and looked at the wiring directly connected to the packed explosives.
“Not the old red wire, blue wire….”
In fact, the wires were purple and yellow, but the principle was the same.
Cutting one would disarm the bomb. Cutting the other would blow it up
instantly.
“I trust you, Doctor,” Jabin said, reaching out the hand that
wasn’t still holding down the trigger screw. He grasped it in his
spare hand, wood fingers entwined with flesh fingers as he reached to
clip the yellow wire. He paused and looked at Jabin. Her mother would
have said the same, even though she had only known him for a few hours.
He cut the wire.
They looked at each other and both breathed out. The Doctor embraced Jabin
and kissed her on the forehead. That was an odd experience, but one he
was thoroughly glad to be alive to experience.
“Let’s get your nursery back to normal,” he said. “You’ll
have a devil of a time settling them all back to sleep after all this
excitement.”
There wasn’t much he could do to help. It needed experienced tree
nurses to look after the babies. The Doctor spent his time on a video
conference with the Cheem government. He asked them searching questions
about the treatment of the Pines, but he was satisfied there was no real
inequality and that this had just been the work of fanatics.
“Try to make sure ordinary, law abiding Pines are not hurt by this,”
he said. “People will be angry. They will lash out at those they
perceive as responsible. That will only drive moderates towards extremism.
Make sure that all trees live in harmony and understanding of each other
and you will defeat the terrorists far better that way.”
“Your wisdom is known throughout the galaxy, Doctor,” said
the Prime Elder of Cheem. “We will try to do as you say. It will
be hard work, but we will try to bring about the unity we all desire.”
“Good man,” The Doctor replied.
“How can we reward you for your courageous efforts on our behalf,”
the Prime Elder added. “Name your price, friend of Cheem.”
That was easy. When The Doctor bid farewell to Jabin and the nursery staff,
he brought with him a cutting from Jabin’s father, Holly. Male cuttings
were not fertile, and could be used purely for decoration or as very personal
gifts for friends.
This was a very personal gift and he was fully determined to get it back
when the quest was over. Meanwhile he brought it to the ninth door and
set it among the other cuttings in the arrangement under the glass. The
door clicked open.
“Here we go again,” he whispered. “For the tenth time.”