The Twilight Streets t-6

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The Twilight Streets t-6 Page 7

by Gary Russell


  Ianto was enthusiastic now. ‘Exactly, and maybe that’s the way to get answers from Jack. We draw wrong conclusions, hopefully he’ll correct us.’

  ‘Or let us believe ’em, cos it suits him that way.’ Owen pulled up a chair and sat down. ‘Right. He’s old. Dead old. Been here since Queen Vic was on the throne, Tosh reckons. And he can’t die, which – and I say this as the best doctor studying alien biology in the world – I can offer no grounds for. His cells just go back to how they were. I’ve studied his blood, tried messing around with it. It doesn’t reform, it doesn’t mutate or even clone itself. It just reverts back to how it was before. Which, frankly, is bloody weird and not a bit scary.’

  ‘Time Agent. When we met Captain John, he said they were Time Agents.’

  ‘Never told us what that meant though. But hang on… What if, assuming this isn’t all bollocks and they’re not conmen doing the most protracted swindle in history, what if they can travel in time. That’s gotta do something to you, I’d’ve thought.’

  ‘How do you mean?’

  Owen frowned. ‘The human body, it’s designed for certain stresses, certain events in your life. But is it designed for time travel? I’m not saying it isn’t, but we don’t know it is. We do know that Jack’s the only person actually unable to enter Tretarri, even if no one else stays for long.’

  ‘And,’ Ianto worked it out slowly but surely, ‘Jack is the only time traveller we have to hand.’

  ‘So maybe that’s the connection. Whatever makes him able to stand time travel, makes him unable to get into Tretarri.’

  ‘Which would,’ said Jack from the doorway, ‘mean that whatever is in Tretarri, is related to chronon energy of some sort.’

  Owen had his hand on his chest. ‘One day, Jack, one day, you’ll give me a heart attack, sneaking up on people like that.’

  Jack smiled, and put his hands on Owen’s shoulders, to keep him in the chair. ‘Nah, physician, heal thyself.’ He looked at Ianto. ‘OK, I like the theory, how about I give you some interesting evidence. Ianto, any names come up in your files and records that should raise our collective eyebrows?’

  Ianto frowned. ‘Dunno what you mean.’

  ‘Try this name for size-’

  ‘Bilis Manger,’ shouted Gwen as she crossed the Hub to join them.

  ‘Hell, is everyone out to get me into A amp;E today?’ Owen asked.

  ‘Phyllis!’

  They all looked at Ianto.

  ‘It wasn’t Phyllis, it was Bilis!’ Ianto threw the file about Owain Garrett to Jack. ‘Read that.’

  ‘Where’s Tosh?’ Gwen asked.

  ‘What? Who the hell is Phyllis?’

  ‘Phyllis isn’t Phyllis, she’s Bilis!’

  ‘Hello? Tosh? Remember her?’

  ‘Heart rate still really fast.’

  ‘Bilis is a cross-dresser?’

  ‘No, he thought the ghost said “Phyllis” but I bet it said “Bilis”!’

  ‘Toshiko Sato?’

  ‘Ghost?’

  ‘We have a transvestite ghost?’

  ‘It’s in the report.’

  ‘Idris told me it was Bilis. It’s all on this flash drive.’

  ‘Who the hell is Idris?’

  ‘One of Jack’s floozies, from, oh, just before you joined, I seem to remember.’

  ‘Small? Japanese? Good with alien tech?’

  ‘Is Idris a cross-dresser, too?’

  ‘What?’

  The Hub lights went out en masse.

  ‘Emergency procedures,’ yelled Jack.

  ‘Lockdown? We have thirty seconds or we’re here for six hours if it’s a complete power cut!’

  ‘Shit! My samples of Jack’s blood and DNA – I need to keep the power to them going!’

  The lights came on again.

  Gwen was standing at her workstation. ‘Next time I turn them off for good,’ she snapped.

  ‘Why did you do that, Gwen?’ asked Owen as they all left Jack’s office.

  ‘To get you lot to shut the hell up. Now then, I’ll ask again. Where is Tosh?’

  Dunno.’

  ‘At Tretarri, I think.’

  ‘She hasn’t called in though.’

  Gwen was about to say something to all this when a new voice called out.

  All four Torchwood heads turned and looked past the base of the water tower and up at the raised Hothouse.

  Tosh was there, unconscious on the grating. Beside her, hands behind his back, cool as a cucumber, was Bilis Manger.

  ‘Good evening,’ he smirked.

  The click was almost deafening as four guns – three Torchwood pistols and Jack’s Webley – were drawn, aimed and cocked in unison.

  Bilis just smiled more. ‘Oh really, surely you know by now that you don’t get rid of me that easily. You may all be very fine shots, but I’m not sure you’d actually open fire and risk hitting Ms Sato when faced by a harmless and desperately unarmed old man.’

  ‘Harmless,’ sneered Owen.

  ‘We don’t know you’re unarmed,’ Ianto pointed out.

  ‘Not convinced you’re as old as you seem,’ Gwen added.

  ‘But I’ll give you “desperate”.’ Jack smiled, lowering his gun. The others followed suit.

  ‘Oh Jack, Jack, Jack. Poor, sweet, time-lost Jack. How you wound me with your cynicism. Such ingratitude when I’ve gone to all this trouble. For you.’ Bilis looked at Gwen. ‘How nice to see you again, Gwen. And I’m so glad to see your Rhys is looking better these days. And Owen Harper. No, wait, Dr Owen Harper – one must subscribe to the social niceties. I really wanted to thank you. After all, it was down to you that my Lord was able to escape his shackles. And Ianto Jones, without whom nothing would ever really get done at Torchwood these days.’

  ‘What do you want?’ spat Jack. ‘Kinda bored of you now.’

  ‘Simple Jack. You destroyed Abaddon. You closed the Rift. It reversed time, repaired all the so-called damage that was done. And so I am left wondering: if all those people out there came back to life, like dear Rhys, what happened to my Lord?’

  ‘It was destroyed,’ Jack said quietly. ‘I destroyed it. That was what closed the Rift, sealed the breach. He’s not coming back.’

  ‘Ah,’ Bilis said, still smiling, ‘you would say that, wouldn’t you?’ He gestured to the Rift Manipulator housed in the base of the water tower. ‘This marvellous device, this wonderful creation affects the Rift itself. Who is to say that someone with experience of manipulating time couldn’t find a way to go back a bit further? To take my Lord out of harm’s way?’

  ‘Me actually,’ said Jack. ‘I don’t know if you can do that, but I doubt it. A lot. But even if I didn’t doubt it as much as I do, you’re not going to get the chance to try.’

  Bilis nodded. ‘I imagined that that would be your response. Hence my borrowing of your technical genius here. Oh, you don’t mind if I hang on to her, just for a little while longer?’

  ‘Know what? I do,’ said Jack. ‘Funny little thing, loyalty, but she’s part of my team. And I rather like her, too. So work needs plus friendship needs equals me not really willing to part with her.’

  ‘Trade?’

  ‘Offer?’

  ‘I’ll exchange Toshiko for a day in your Hub, access all areas, and I promise not to let the Weevils out.’

  Four stony faces greeted that request.

  ‘Well, it was worth a try,’ Bilis said. ‘Au revoir.’

  Before anyone could react, Bilis and Toshiko had vanished again.

  ‘Damn,’ said Owen.

  ‘Gwen,’ snapped Jack. ‘Records, now. I want any trace of Bilis found. Start with this.’ He threw the USB flash drive to her. ‘I want to know everything there is to know, and extrapolate the rest.’

  He looked at Owen. ‘If your hypothesis about me is correct, I’m useless in Tretarri unless you can find a way to overcome it.’

  ‘Gotcha,’ said Owen disappearing down into the Autopsy Room.

  ‘Ianto. You,
my office. I want to know everything you’ve gleaned about Tretarri from your research. I’ll be back in five.’

  ‘Jack?’

  Captain Jack Harkness turned back to Gwen and smiled. ‘I’ll get her back safe and sound, Gwen. I promise.’

  Gwen held his look for ten seconds, and smiled.

  ‘I know you will.’

  ELEVEN

  The Vaults had been the cornerstone of Torchwood for ever. They represented the good and the bad side of everything Torchwood stood for, both modern Torchwood and the Institute set up by Queen Victoria nearly 130 years earlier.

  Bilis Manger stood on the sensible side of the glass that formed the cell door.

  Within, the Weevil stared up at him from the floor, mewling slightly in fear.

  Bilis tapped on the transparent, if somewhat stained, strengthened plastic. ‘I wonder what use I could make of you, my friend.’

  ‘Not a lot, I’d guess,’ said Jack from the main doorway. ‘I knew you’d be here. Revisiting the scene of your last crime. The murder of Rhys Williams.’

  ‘You took longer getting down here than I expected, Jack.’ Bilis smiled, without looking away from the Weevil. ‘I may call you Jack, I assume. It’s just that they all do, so it seems sensible.’ He paused for a beat, then continued. ‘I was going to ask if you ever used your own name any longer. Or indeed, if you even recalled it.’

  Jack said nothing, but his hand edged closer to his holstered Webley.

  ‘Oh, do stop relying on your toys,’ Bilis said. ‘We both know you can’t hurt me.’ He pointed at the Weevil. ‘How long have they been on Earth, then?’

  ‘No one really knows,’ Jack replied. ‘The Torchwood Archives are… curiously vague.’

  ‘Almost as if someone has gone through them, I imagine, erasing odd bits of information.’ He smiled again. ‘Archivists are a funny sort. So dedicated to their work, their accuracy, yet not above the odd bit of subterfuge when necessary to protect… whatever they’ve individually chosen to protect. That’s the joy of life, Jack. To protect what we love. Remember love?’

  Jack shrugged. ‘I remember you did everything you could for a demon from God knows where that almost destroyed Earth. Was that out of love?’

  ‘Love. Passion. Belief. Duty. The lines blur sometimes. There are over fifteen recognised major religions on this planet. One religion believes something different from another, and yet so often it’s just the same thing with a different name, or a different form of worship, or a different headdress. But they will fight to protect what they believe in, no matter the cost. You’ve been here a while Jack. How many wars, how many lives squandered on religion? On belief? On that blurred line between love, duty and belief. Then we get to science. Science versus creationism for instance. Two opposing stances on the same subject, neither of which has any real evidence to back it up. What a bizarre time you washed up in.’ Bilis finally looked at Jack. ‘Happy here? You used to have so much more… freedom.’

  ‘You know so much about me. I know so little about you.’

  Bilis turned back to the Weevil. He placed his hand on the transparent plastic and the Weevil echoed the action from within the cell. ‘What do you know about the Weevils? Only what you research. You’re exactly the same as that Weevil to me, Jack Harkness. A savage beast, worthy of investigation, nothing more.’

  ‘What do you want?’

  ‘I’m on a mission. Redemption. Atonement perhaps. A way to show those who matter that I can make up for my errors, and the tremendous pain you cost me.’

  ‘What do you need from me? If it’s about me-’

  ‘Oh yes, it’s certainly about you.’

  ‘Then why involve Tosh?’

  ‘Ms Sato is personally… immaterial. She’s just the clichéd hostage. It might have been Gwen, or young Ianto. But I’ll tell you one thing, Jack, I wouldn’t have wasted my time with Owen.’

  ‘He’d have fought back, you mean.’

  Bilis shook his head sadly, looking down at his feet now.

  And Jack saw, lying there, a gun. A pistol. Not a Torchwood-issue one, just an average revolver. It was smoking from the barrel, as if it had recently been fired.

  ‘No, he just isn’t worth it.’

  Jack looked back down, but the gun had gone.

  Bilis looked at him, and Jack realised the vision of the gun seemed to have surprised Bilis as much as it had him. ‘Some things are beyond our control. Yes, even yours and mine, Jack.’

  ‘So, where’s Tosh?’

  ‘Safe in Tretarri for now. Number 6 Coburg Street.’ He ran his finger around the cravat he wore, loosening it fractionally. ‘Ask Ianto. He’ll get the reference if he’s as good in the Archives as he should be by now. By the way, he’s picked up Torchwood’s history very quickly. I’m impressed. You should be, too.’

  Jack said nothing, just kept watching.

  ‘So, what is all this about? You still need an answer, don’t you? Even though I have told you.’

  ‘OK, so you’re pissed at me over Abaddon. Big deal. You set a ninety-foot demonic “great devourer” on the streets of Cardiff, Torchwood take it down. That’s life. Deal with it.’

  Bilis swung round, and Jack took an involuntary step back. For the first time, Bilis’s face was twisted in anger, in hate. And something else, something Jack couldn’t quite identify. Fear? Panic? Anguish?

  ‘Revenge, Jack. Revenge for the future!’

  Before Jack could speak, a hoarse voice behind him gasped out.

  ‘Jack. Help me!’

  And crouched down by the door was someone Jack hadn’t seen in over sixty-five years.

  ‘Greg? Greg Bishop?’

  ‘Sorry, Jack – not strong enough… Can’t fight the light. Can’t fight Bilis. Or the darkness. Can’t help you any more…’

  And Greg was gone.

  Jack touched the bare Vault wall where he’d been, both a second ago and in 1941.

  ‘I’m sorry, Greg,’ he said.

  He straightened up and turned back towards the cell, but he was not surprised to see Bilis had gone.

  Stuck to the Weevil’s transparent door with a piece of sticky tape was a note in red ink.

  No. Not ink. Blood.

  REVENGE FOR THE FUTURE.

  TWELVE

  When Toshiko woke up, she found herself lying on a cold, hard floor. She gently sniffed the air – nothing distinctive, but not airless. No chemicals, so not anywhere industrial. No damp, nothing stale.

  She slowly opened her eyes.

  The first thing she saw was a chair. A basic wooden seat, like at a desk. Oh yeah, and that thing there, that was a desk. OK. Not immediately threatening.

  ‘Hello Ms Sato,’ said a voice.

  There was someone sat in the chair, she could see the legs. Male. Suit.

  Oh God, it was Bilis Manger, wasn’t it?

  Hang on – he’d hit her or something.

  ‘Stop pretending, Ms Sato. You have been fully conscious for five minutes and… wait… thirty seconds.’

  She rose slowly, keeping an eye on Bilis, who had his back to her.

  He didn’t seem particularly threatening. But then, he was just an old man who could travel in time, walk through walls, disappear into thin air and, oh yeah, tried to destroy the world with his precious devil-thing.

  No threat there, then.

  He held out an arm and clicked his fingers. Almost instantly, as if someone had switched on loud music, Toshiko heard clocks ticking.

  As if previously they’d been on pause…

  ‘Where am I, Bilis?’

  He turned and looked at her, resting an arm on the back of the chair, to all intents and purposes regarding her as a schoolteacher would a mildly intelligent pupil that had passed a test.

  Kind of patronising.

  He smiled. ‘Welcome back. I do apologise for needing to… temporally disable you, but it was important.’

  ‘I felt nothing,’ Toshiko said, trying to be as emotionless at possible. ‘So
you didn’t even hurt me.’

  Bilis shrugged. ‘I wouldn’t waste time hurting you, Toshiko. If I’d wanted to do that, I could just as easily have killed you. That would have been neater.’ He turned back to his desk. ‘I need you. For now. If you’ll excuse the pun.’

  Toshiko couldn’t see the pun, so she ignored it. Instead, she tried to get her bearings. Instinctively she tapped her ear.

  ‘You are a little out of range,’ Bilis said, again somehow knowing what she was doing. ‘You’ve done it thirty times so far,’ he added. ‘I’ve viewed every permutation of every action. Such is my curse.’

  ‘Curse?’

  ‘I see time, Toshiko.’ He sighed. ‘I made a deal once, and I am still paying the price. I can cross into history, and into possible futures. Not far into the future obviously, that would be catastrophic, but I see enough.’ He stood still, with his back to her, then reached his arms out. ‘Everything.’

  Toshiko was in a shop, she realised that now. A Stitch in Time, she remembered Gwen saying it was called. Timepieces repaired and restored. Or stolen in the past and brought to the present to be sold as antiques.

  ‘How far back can you go?’

  ‘I don’t know. I do know, however, that it would be foolish to go back too far. Every action has an opposite reaction. I learned that to my cost a long time ago.’ Arms still outstretched, he finally turned to face her.

  His eyes were gone – in their place were tiny orbs of burning white light, tendrils flickering around the lids and the bridge of his nose.

  ‘Right now,’ he continued, ‘we’re in that tiny splinter between now and then, next and last, here and here. And this is where I met them. And they gave me a task, something to do while I grieved for my Lord, who you took from me.’

  Toshiko was getting lost. ‘Why did you knock me out? What did you do when I was unconscious?’

  And Bilis smiled a horrible, cruel smile. ‘As I said, I needed to disable you temporally. I fear you misunderstood. I meant exactly that. You are outside time as you know it, Toshiko Sato, because I have a task for you.’

  ‘Which is?’

  He grabbed her hands so she couldn’t wriggle free. ‘Let me show you your true potential.’

 

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