~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Morality? A dissertation on morality? You stand here and give me
Me! A dissertation on morality, Zoe? It should rather be legality, young lady. Something might be illegal, but it can be as far
from immoral as can be. Do not confuse the
two. Illegal is a commentary on a species
ability to level laws to construct their society; immoral is something like a crime
against self. Society- self two concepts as
different as your Sun and your Moon. Now, run
along
find Jamie.
-
Second Doctor to
Zoe.
Smith back wheeled
as he came around the corner into the personnel wing.
Trenton followed him into the wide corridor and skirted to one side. A simple gasp and not a physical recoil, however,
managed his shock. The corridor, and what
rooms they could see, were torn apart. Items
of errant clothing, broken furniture, and scattered food supplies all spilled from the
doors and littered the hallway like the remnants of a wild party.
Or a ransacked and
seized castle.
Trenton ran
forward, passing Smith who still stood his mouth agape.
"Angela!"
Smith followed
suit. At the other end of the hall the other
door slid open to show the rather small, but efficient security force that was stationed
on the Genesis Project. Trenton waved to them
and continued down the hall. With an equally
loud voice, Smith was calling for his wife: "Georgie!"
The corridor
filled with men scrambling along, carrying guns and sticking heads in various doors. Smith made for the third door on the left
immediately, wedging open the door with his body weight.
The lighting was sparse and the hallway was washed in red as he stumbled
back into the space leading his wife by the hand. She
was as tall as he was, her brown hair matching the dull jumpsuit that she wore. Georgia held her head in her free hand, and her
face was a mask of pain.
A short search of
the area produced ten wives and three complete couples.
But no children.
And one
unconscious strangely dressed stranger.
**
"Through
here, Trisk, move it."
The solider
bringing up the rear waved his gun over the heads of the children and all but prodded them
with the business end of it as they piled through a service corridor. Four of the twelve children were crying, two were
in hysterics and the others appeared to be too much in shock to do much more than march. The last child, the unaccountable, as Elaine Trisk
had come to call the child, was the strange one. It
walked with an air of calm and arrogance that only the most arrogant young children
possessed.
"Ah
hold
up, Marw."
Marw reached down
to grab one of the young girls about the shoulder and nearly threw her over the door
threshold. "Too much heart, that is what
you have. Move it!"
"But
"
"But nothing,
Trisk
the only thing that matters is the Great Plan
the Great Assistance, which
these chattel will help us accomplish."
Trisk nodded. She
had signed onto this mission because she believed in the Plan. She believed in the Church
Eternal Light. She believed it with all her soul.
Looking down at
the children she tried to forget their small questioning faces and trust. They were abominations. Cursed. Chattel,
indeed.
Turning, Elaine
glanced over her shoulder to check their backs and shoved one of the children over the
door threshold.
**
"If I
remember correctly," the Doctor called over his shoulder to Tegan and Turlough. "The bridge is either at one end of the
station or the other. We will just have to
take our chances that it is at this end and not the other."
Tegan was just
getting used to the lessened gravity and the ease with which she was able to accomplish a
six foot stride. Her pride bubble was burst as
the Time Lord turned a particularly quick right angle by holding onto a railing. She flew past the corridor turn only to be grabbed
by the Doctor to anchor her and turn her with ease. He
smiled and asked in what she thought was his infuriating manner: "Are you all right?"
"Perfectly. Just remember that I was not raised in space,
Doctor."
"Its not a
hard thing to do," Turlough called, landing from a stride and holding onto the
railing. "You'll get used to it after a
while."
Tegan frowned and
balanced for a moment before joining the men in striding down the hall. As they turned another corridor, the Doctor tilted
back his head and held a finger to his lips. "Shush."
"But we
weren't saying anything," Tegan pointed out unnecessarily.
"Quiet,"
he warned and waved his hand in the air. Turlough
tilted back his head as well, holding both hands in front of his crotch. After a few seconds he rolled his eyes. He heard it as well
the sound that the
Doctor's stronger auditory system was hearing with increased acuity: a red alert alarm.
"Not
us," he turned to the Doctor.
"I sincerely
hope not," the Doctor answered, sighing. "But
it could be my other self."
"Lord,"
Tegan whispered. "But why isn't that
alarm sounding here."
The Doctor began
to stride again and then slowed under a deactivated alarm speaker. With a smile, he fingered the sparked and blackened
casing. "That, Turlough, looks to have
been done with a sonic device."
Turlough glanced
up at the casing and moved aside a slightly hanging panel.
"A powerful one."
"Yes,
quite," the Doctor answered, jumping slightly to bring his eyes level with the panel. "Looks rather like the damage caused by a
sonic screwdriver."
Tegan brightened. "Like yours
er
used to be
"
"Yes, well
"
the Doctor looked pained. "That's neither
here nor there."
"But if it is
a sonic screwdriver then that means it is one of your former selves, right?" Tegan
pressed.
"Or one of my
future selves, Tegan." He held up a
finger before turning to walk down the hall again. "Mine
might have been destroyed, but that does not mean that another did not make one or acquire
one later."
"Wonderful."
The Doctor reached
out and pulled on Tegan's arm to get her moving down the hallway. "Come on, you two. This is obviously the way."
**
The future self
that had caused the damage was, at that moment, slowly coming around. Before he opened his eyes, he could feel blood,
both dried and wet, on his face, around one eye and down the bridge of his nose. His arms were also in a most uncomfortable
position: tied behind his back across the spine of the metal chair.
"Doesn't look
much like a space terrorist," one the guards said.
"I don't care
what he looks like, I want answers as to what happened to my boy. And I'm quite sure that Smith wants answers about
his daughters and the other guards want to know about their children as well. If he is responsible, I won't care what he looks
like
"
"I've had
that said before
learned a long time ago that looks really hold no weight, although
"
the Doctor opened his eyes slowly. "
in
certain circles
look, can you let my arms free so that I can tend to my wounds?"
"Your
wounds?" Trenton shouted, leaning forward
into the Doctor's face. "Your wounds? My child is missing and you are talking about a
head wound?"
"Well, it is
rather hard to keep my eyes open to talk with you with blood dripping into them," the
Doctor muttered. "I understand about your
emotions. They took my child as well."
"Your
child?"
"Well
one
in my charge who does mean a great deal to me. Not
my biological child," the Doctor answered, blinking to keep the blood at bay.
"I don't
believe him!" Smith shouted, pulling the gun and shoving it the Doctor's face, making
him recoil ever so slightly.
"Believe the
truth!" the Doctor answered loudly, the muscles and veins in his neck standing out. "They took Michael as well as your children. I only just arrived here when
"
"Arrived?" Another guard pressed. "Arrived then?
We have had no docking orders
no
communications
"
The Doctor
grimaced, his brown hair falling into his eyes. He
blew out a breath and arched his back a little. The
gun, however, did not move from his face. "The
TARDIS, I'm afraid, never asks for permission." He
grinned widely. "Quite a lot like me, the
old girl is."
"He's
daft."
The Doctor blinked
his eyes again; his grin did not waver. "Look
release
me and I'll show you I am telling the truth. I
have pictures
.er
old fashioned ones
"
Trenton groaned,
but a guard next to him grabbed his arm to pull Smith and he back. "Wait."
"Is the
Captain on his way down?" Smith croaked.
"As fast as
he can. He should be here any moment,"
the guard answered, shaking his head. He was
the only unmarried, non-parent of the crew. "But
I am going to recommend that we throw this man in the brig.
He might have information."
"Information! He might be responsible." Trenton growled.
"But if we
kill him," the guard said, logically and sanely, "we will not find out anything
anyway. Calm down
if we want to find your
children, we have to keep calm."
"And you are
a security officer, Johnson?" Smith spat out.
"Original
schooling in philosophy and religion, sir." Johnson
answered. "I won't let us kill him, but
I'm not going to release him either."
**
Turlough rounded
the corner only to be collared and pulled back by the Doctor. Ahead was a small group of men and women
surrounding a man who was tied to a chair. The
man wore a longish green coat and gray pants.
"Hmm
seems
we have found the party," the Doctor stated under his breath. The corridor looked in shambles with papers,
furniture and weeping men and women.
"The reason
for the alarm?" Turlough asked, whispering back as he regained a place at the wall
next to the Time Lord.
Tegan wormed past
the two men and glanced around the corner much to the Doctor's chagrin. After a second, she leaned back around. "The one in the chair has got to be you, Doc
he's
got your dress sense. Regency clothes in space
"
The Doctor
grimaced. "Quiet. What do you think happened here? Why did the alarms sound? What happened in that corridor?" he asked
quietly, not really expecting an answer. He
removed his hat and wrenched it between his hands. "And
if you are correct, Tegan, what am I doing there and what I have got to do with this
mess?"
Tegan shook her
head. "And why are most of the adults
crying? Something momentous must have
happened."
"Exactly
why
indeed," the Doctor half-pursed his lips in contemplation.
"So?"
Turlough asked, glancing sideways at the Time Lord.
"We explore
and investigate," the Doctor answered, turning around.
"Oh will we,
mate?" answered a guard right behind him, holding a gun up in the Doctor's face. "Not on my watch, let's move."
Turlough
immediately turned to walk along the corridor, his hands behind his neck. The Doctor glanced at Tegan as he went to do the
same and found her glaring at the man with the gun. He
twisted her by a hand at her back and sighed: "Now is not the time to show your
spirit, Tegan. Later. Our friend wants us to attend their little soirée
and so we shall. Move along."
**
The man in the
chair looked up at Turlough as he approached. There
was a short flash in the man's eyes that showed recognition.
Turlough seemed taken aback, and his worries were reinforced when in the
next breath the man called out: "Turlough! So good to see you again!"
The fifth Doctor
squinted and lowered his hands from his neck. The
man behind him shoved and the tall Time Lord stumbled a few steps. He drew himself up as he neared the band. "Oh no."
Tegan appeared
around the fifth Doctor and glanced at the Doctor in the chair. "You?"
"Most
definitely."
"Undoubtedly."
The stranger in the chair said quietly. After
a tight swallow, he continued: "Hello
again, Tegan."
The Captain, who
had arrived minutes before shook his head as if to clear it.
"I want these four prisoners in the Central Brig five minutes ago. I will be in to interrogate them soon."
The eighth Doctor
glanced up at the fifth and with a small nod to the side asked: "I don't suppose they will employ the mind
probe, do you think?"
**