Charlotte Elspeth Pollard (
adventuressing) wrote in
bigapplesauce2014-03-22 12:03 am
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the beginning of another adventure [open to all]
She’s still in the process of figuring out how to work the PT wristband oojah the Viyrans had given her. It’s got settings for coordinates and dates, but if one doesn’t necessarily know the intergalactic coordinates of any given planet, that isn’t much use. Thus far, however, she hasn’t been all that bothered by her dubious navigation skills. It’s been perhaps a fortnight since she left the Viyran ship, and there’s nowhere in particular she’s heading. Just travelling for its own sake. Having adventures. She can’t say that she doesn’t miss doing so with company, but it’s not bad, really. It’s all right.
Her first go sent her to a planet with a surface like smooth silica, and all the life underground in beautifully bored tunnels, everything opalescent whites and pinks and greens. The people were little roboty things, and Charley spent a week with them, befriending a group of-- she supposed they’d be teenagers, by Earth standards, if an inorganic alien lifeform could be said to be a teenager-- and exploring deeper into the planet than anyone had yet ventured. After that, a planet that was all seas (she’d quickly left, considerably damper than she'd arrived); after that, someplace called Malleiateos, covered with ochre-fawn-marigold-tawny fields and breathing trees, where a young triad had insisted she stay with them because she looked exhausted. She suspects they’d rather fancied her, but they’d been polite enough to keep it to themselves.
And now? Now… she’s fairly sure she’s in New York. She is; New York City. Charley can’t help it; she laughs out loud. She’s still feeling a little disorientated from her arrival, which had been unwontedly rough, like space and time had grabbed her and had to shove her through a minute gap to get her here, so perhaps a little giddiness is understandable. She feels disorientated and frazzled, but it is suddenly, unexpectedly wonderful to be on Earth.
It’s warm, it’s Spring, she’s in a park next to a lake, and she stands for a moment, squinting up at the skyline. Certainly not the 1930’s, she can tell that much. A few people pause to blink at her, but other than having just appeared out of nowhere, she doesn’t stand out much; a young woman dressed head-to-toe in practical, comfortable black, wearing a backpack. She might be anyone.
Unpeeling her wristband and tucking it away into the backpack, she slings the bag back over her shoulder, chooses a direction, and starts walking.
[OOC: She's materalised in Central Park, near the reservoir, and is going to be wandering in a generally southerly direction, more or less towards the Rebel base, so feel free to run into her]
Her first go sent her to a planet with a surface like smooth silica, and all the life underground in beautifully bored tunnels, everything opalescent whites and pinks and greens. The people were little roboty things, and Charley spent a week with them, befriending a group of-- she supposed they’d be teenagers, by Earth standards, if an inorganic alien lifeform could be said to be a teenager-- and exploring deeper into the planet than anyone had yet ventured. After that, a planet that was all seas (she’d quickly left, considerably damper than she'd arrived); after that, someplace called Malleiateos, covered with ochre-fawn-marigold-tawny fields and breathing trees, where a young triad had insisted she stay with them because she looked exhausted. She suspects they’d rather fancied her, but they’d been polite enough to keep it to themselves.
And now? Now… she’s fairly sure she’s in New York. She is; New York City. Charley can’t help it; she laughs out loud. She’s still feeling a little disorientated from her arrival, which had been unwontedly rough, like space and time had grabbed her and had to shove her through a minute gap to get her here, so perhaps a little giddiness is understandable. She feels disorientated and frazzled, but it is suddenly, unexpectedly wonderful to be on Earth.
It’s warm, it’s Spring, she’s in a park next to a lake, and she stands for a moment, squinting up at the skyline. Certainly not the 1930’s, she can tell that much. A few people pause to blink at her, but other than having just appeared out of nowhere, she doesn’t stand out much; a young woman dressed head-to-toe in practical, comfortable black, wearing a backpack. She might be anyone.
Unpeeling her wristband and tucking it away into the backpack, she slings the bag back over her shoulder, chooses a direction, and starts walking.
[OOC: She's materalised in Central Park, near the reservoir, and is going to be wandering in a generally southerly direction, more or less towards the Rebel base, so feel free to run into her]
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The Doctor smiles down at her, obviously pleased with her asking all the right questions, and pretty accurate guesses.
"There's two, actually," he answers. "A group called ROMAC who cooperates with the government, and a group who just call themselves the Rebels, but who aren't quite as rebellious as they like to pretend. They handle that sort of integration. It's not all that selfless, mind you, they seem to treat it almost as recruiting. And both seem to be up to pretty shady things, so be careful not to trust them too much."
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'What sorts of shady things?' she asks, and if the Doctor imagines he can hear a certain amount of eagerness in her voice, he wouldn't be mistaken. It's not that she's glad, exactly, that there might some kind of clandestine supra-governmental conspiracy going on, but it does sound terribly interesting.
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"Now now, miss Pollard," he says. "Our priorities here is to get everyone home to their own universes safely. You don't want to go inciting anything. There's a lot of powerful people in this city, and a lot of collateral damage to be had. Besides, we're stuck here, remember? You don't want to get yourself a reputation as a trouble-maker."
And if Charley imagined that that's exactly what the Doctor's been doing, she wouldn't be mistaken either. But there are still a lot of factors to be considered, and she doesn't want Charley to get hurt, either.
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Honestly, Doctor, what do you take her for?
And then she grins at him, hand tightening in his for a moment as she veers to the left to knock into him with her shoulder. 'And if you try to tell me you've been keeping your head down this whole time and not getting into trouble, I shall laugh in your face.'
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"Alright, there may have been a few scrapes," he admits, then points out quickly, "But I know what I'm doing." Which is also debatable, of course, but he does have a slightly better frame of reference than Charley does.
"Right here," he adds, going around a boulder, and suddenly getting the TARDIS in sight. Slightly different than she's used, of course - bigger, cleaner, different coloured sign - but unmistakably the TARDIS.
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'Of course you do.'
The TARDIS, when it comes into view, gets a brilliant smile, and Charley bounds over to it, pressing her palms flat to the wood and feeling the faint hum from within. She turns on the Doctor. 'You've cleaned her up! Very neat-looking, I must say.' And then, as a thought occurs to her, she snorts. 'Don't tell me you got the chameleon circuit working again and just used it to turn her into a slightly nicer-looking police box.'
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...Or, he would've, if the door would open. He gives a faint 'huh', and pulls out his key.
Which won't go in. He looks at the keyhole and... there's no hole. The key won't fit because there's nowhere to put it. "Hey!" He looks up at her windows, knocking on the door. "What's that about?"
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Which Charley had always privately thought was rather unfair; after all, it wasn't as if she'd asked to be made the centre of a universe-rending paradox. And she'd appreciated the TARDIS, and always gone out of her way to be polite to her. ... At least, she had after she realised the full extent of the TARDIS's sentience. Mostly. But even Mila had said it; that was why she'd been able to infect Charley, because the TARDIS hadn't protected her the way she'd done for the Doctor's other companions.
And now it occurs to her, even if the Viyrans had erased the Doctor's memories of her, they'd done nothing of the sort to the TARDIS; the ship must have known about her as soon as the Doctor had brought her back from the R101. Two paradoxes, not just the one; no-wonder she'd taken against Charley as much as she had.
Still, it hardly does wonders for a girl's ego, and Charley frowns up at the ship. 'Oh, come on! I'm not paradoxical anymore, honestly!' The shouting probably isn't necessary, really, but she does it anyway.
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For a moment he's worried, that something is wrong and she doesn't mean to lock him out. He places his palms on the door and reaches out for her telepathically, only to be rebuffed with what feels like a distinct huff, and even shut out from her mind. That stings a little, actually.
He pulls back, frowning, then turns to Charley. "Can I borrow the wristband again?" he asks, holding out his hand.
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'You're not going to try and teleport us into the TARDIS, are you?'
She knows it's technically possible for things to breach the TARDIS's shields to appear inside, but she can't imagine, if the ship's refusing to open her doors the conventional way, she'd be much more inclined to allow them in like that.
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This time he makes sure she's ready before he teleports them both, ending up in a garish souvenir shop in Chinatown.
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She takes the Doctor's arm when he makes ready to teleport them, and comes out the other end much more steadily than she'd managed the hop into the Ramble. For a moment, the transition from the quiet woods to the miasma of colour and music and the sounds of people shouting is overwhelming, but Charley quickly recovers herself, looking around with interest.
'We're still in New York?' She laughs. 'It looks like Singapore!'
No-one in Singapore or Chinatown would likely appreciate that assessment, but despite her years and travels, Charley does still have a lot of the posh English girl from the 1920's stamped into her.
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"I've got some apartments round here. Bit further north though," he explains, leading the way out of the shop and looking around to orient himself. He's not entirely certain about the coordinates around the city, but he's managed to get them to the right neighborhood. And if Charley's going to live here, she might as well see a bit of the area.
"I... may have unveiled an underground crime ring to come into possession of them," he admits, taking her hand once he's oriented himself.
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She happily takes his hand and allows him to lead the way, and his slightly awkward admission gets a laugh. 'Of course you did,' she teases, because of course he did. 'You couldn't keep your nose clean of trouble if you tried. Go on, tell me about it, then.'
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He's leading her up one the street, though they seem to be heading away from the most touristy part of Chinatown. "And I didn't say I use the apartments, just that I own them. But you don't really get any rift activity this far south, which is a bonus."
He actually owns apartments and houses all over, in different times and places (though Earth is of course a favourite), but they tend to stay empty a lot of the time. Sometimes he'll come back to sqatters. (Which can sometimes be really nice, having a tea party with them, and sometimes be a real inconvenience.)
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'Oi, you, no sulking just because the TARDIS has gone and got herself into a snit.' She doesn't know it's about the TARDIS, but given the Doctor, it seems fairly likely. 'Do you do a lot of that in this body? The sulking, I mean. And you know you're going to have to tell me eventually something of what you've been up to. Foiling crime rings, getting mixed up in super-secret shady government organisations...'
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"Well, what about you? You've clearly been through a bit since we last met," he says, raising his eyebrows. Met the Viyrans, for one thing.
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She's been waiting for that question, and yet somehow, she still doesn't know how to answer it. 'I've been-- travelling,' she hedges. She's never been an awfully good liar, and she knows it. 'Look, perhaps we ought to get to your flats first? And then we can both give each other the run-down. I'm-- well, I'm not actually sure how much I ought to tell you, to be perfectly honest.'
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He does agree that they should cover the important bits in private, though. Thankfully it's not terribly far.
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It's all in this Doctor's past, of course, so it's not as if she'd be revealing anything from his future that he shouldn't know, but what if telling him... retroactively woke up the memories the Viyrans had repressed? Or something. Charley doesn't know how this all works, but she does know like hell is she going to be separated from him again, after she's found him against all odds.
'It's complicated,' she says, rather uselessly, letting go of the Doctor's hand to fiddle with the straps of her backpack, crossing her arms under her breasts in an unconsciously protective posture. 'It's-- well. Suffice it to say that the TARDIS didn't only dislike me because I lived when I ought to have died. I want to tell you, I do, I'm just-- I'm not sure it won't ruin everything if I do.'
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"Well, I'd say I could ask the TARDIS, but she doesn't want to talk to me at the moment," he says, still frowning deeply. "Ruin everything because... I'm not supposed to know, because it's pertaining to my future or something of that nature, or just because I won't like what I hear?"
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She pulls another face, awkward and uncertain. 'Well, it isn't about your future, not anymore, I just--' It's only been a few weeks since she left the other Doctor, since she told him everything, and that was harder than she'd ever imagined it would be. She's still hurting from it, from having to leave him, from the soft resignation in his voice when he asked which one she was. She supposes there's probably some part of her that thinks if she tells this one, she'll lose him too.
Forcing a smile, she huffs a laugh. It has a definite hint of her earlier hysteria in it. 'Seems like nothing can ever be simple with me.'
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And he's not so clueless as not to notice this is distressing her, and he doesn't want that. He holds his hand out to her again, a quiet way of letting her know he's not upset with her, that he's still here for her. (He definitely does note the 'not amymore', though.)
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When she's drawn enough calming breaths that she reckons she'll be able to speak without it sounding suspect, she does. 'Sorry.' And she was quite right; there isn't so much as a quiver in the word.
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"It's just up here," he says, turning them around a corner and pointing at a building ahead. This side street is a lot more quiet, but it's still close to the more bustling market areas.
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