Doctor Who And The Tenth Planet

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Doctor Who And The Tenth Planet Page 12

by Gerry Davis


  Dyson nodded and hurried back to his console. All over the room, the men had now resumed their normal positions and were starting the complicated splash-down procedure.

  Ben looked from one to the other in bewilderment. ‘Hey,’ he said, ‘what about the Doctor and Polly? They may have killed them.’

  But both men, utterly engrossed in their routine jobs, were oblivious to his words.

  Without waiting for a reply, Ben rushed over to the dead Cybermen, picked up one of the fallen weapons and dashed out of the door.

  Again the base loudspeakers crackled into life. ‘ Snowcap , Geneva here.’

  Immediately Barclay leant forward, pressed the switch down and responded. ‘Hello Geneva— Snowcap here—fully operational.’

  Wigner’s voice came over. ‘ Snowcap . Who is that? Dr Barclay?’

  ‘Yes. We’re getting full power back. The danger is apparently over. What is the global situation?’

  ‘The Cyberman menace has ended all over the world. We’re just picking up the pieces. Let me have a full report as soon as you can.’ Wigner’s clipped voice cut off abruptly as he moved on in his round-up of the I.S.C. bases.

  Barclay leant back for a moment and grinned across at Dyson. ‘We certainly will!’ he said, speaking to no one in particular. ‘Did you hear that?’ He laughed ironically for a moment. ‘He wants a full report.’ He raised his hands in the air in a desperate gesture. ‘Where exactly do we begin?’

  The Cybership had also been affected by the energy loss. The vibration had died away—and a great flash had lit up the forward compartment—followed by the unpleasant smell of burning plastic—as Mondas disintegrated. The Doctor and Polly were struggling to get out of their bonds—but the silver bands held them.

  ‘If you could only reach that control.’ The Doctor nodded over the wall beyond, where the controls activating the bands were situated.

  Polly tentatively stretched out one of her long legs, but it was quite impossible to reach it from her chair. ‘It’s no use, Doctor,’ she wailed despairingly.

  Already the Arctic cold had begun to seep into the abandoned spacecraft. The bright alloy walls seemed to be loosing their lustre. It was as though several years of slow corrosion were being telescoped into as many minutes. The only lights still working were the phosphorescent emergency lighting panels.

  Polly saw something. She held her breath. The door was opening slowly. ‘Doctor! Doctor! Look!’ she called.

  The Doctor jerked his head around. The muzzle of a Cyberweapon was poking through the doorway at them. The sudden shock seemed to prove too much for the Doctor. His head slumped forward, eyes glazed, just as Ben stepped into the room.

  ‘Ben!’ Polly burst out in a great explosion of relief. Illogically, she seemed almost angry. ‘Did you have to give us such a shock? And what took you so long?’

  Ben grinned down at her. ‘Sure you want to hear it right now, Duchess? Well...’ He leant back against the wall. ‘There’s nothing I like better than a captive audience, so here goes...’

  ‘Don’t you dare!’ Polly squealed. She nodded over to the wall unit. ‘The controls are over there. Just press them—and make it quick!’

  ‘Will do.’ Ben glanced at the Doctor—but the Doctor didn’t look up. He went over to the wall and pressed the button. The straps receded into the chair and Polly jumped up. She started rubbing her cramped wrists.

  ‘Oh boy!’ Polly said. ‘I’m frozen. I’ll never grumble about the TARDIS’ heating system again after this!’

  But Ben wasn’t listening. He was looking down at the Doctor. ‘What’s happened to him?’

  ‘I don’t know,’ said Polly. She came closer.

  The Doctor’s head was slumped forward, his eyes open. ‘He seemed to faint when you came through that door.’

  Ben bent down and snapped his fingers in front of the Doctor’s face. ‘Hey, Doc. Come on. Wakey wakey. It’s all right now—it’s all over.’

  His words seemed to rouse the Doctor. He slowly stirred and raised his eyebrows. ‘What?... What did you say? It’s all over? Is that what you said?’

  He shook his head. His eyes gazed past Ben—it was as though he was seeing ahead a great way into time. ‘That’s where you’re wrong, my boy. It isn’t over. It’s not over by a long way.’

  ‘What are you on about, Doctor?’ said Ben.

  For answer, the Doctor stood up. ‘We must get back to the TARDIS immediately.’

  ‘Are you all right, Doctor?’ said Polly.

  The Doctor shook off her supporting arm. ‘We must go now.’

  ‘What’s the hurry?’ asked Ben. ‘Mondas has broken up. There’s nothing more to fear from the Cybermen. Aren’t we going to go back to the South Pole base to say goodbye?’

  The Doctor shook his head impatiently. ‘No, no. We must go, I say.’ The Doctor drew his borrowed parka around him and hurried out through the door.

  ‘What’s happened to him?’ Polly looked at Ben.

  ‘Search me! He doesn’t seem to know where he is.’

  Polly shivered. ‘Please Ben, let’s get out of here.’

  They trudged across towards the TARDIS, now half snowed up. The wind had died; the moon was casting a luminous glow over the gleaming Polar wastes.

  Polly paused for a minute. Ahead of them they could see the Doctor trudging through the last few yards of snow to the door of the TARDIS. Polly looked around. The drifting snow had completely covered the dead bodies of the Cybermen. The Polar scene had an incredible purity and innocence—like a dream landscape.

  ‘It’s beautiful here,’ said Polly. ‘I don’t suppose we’ll ever see it again.’

  ‘We’ll become part of it if we don’t keep moving! Come on, Duchess.’

  He grabbed Polly’s arm and led her on towards the TARDIS. The Doctor had already opened the door and walked inside.

  As Ben and Polly entered and began stripping off their furs, there was no sign of the Doctor. They went through into the TARDIS’ equipment room, and hung up their heavy International Space Control parkas.

  ‘We should really return these, you know,’ said Polly, practical as ever.

  Ben shrugged his shoulders. ‘I reckon we’ve earned them. Anyway, they’ve got ours!’ His face looked set and preoccupied. Polly peered at him anxiously.

  ‘Aren’t you glad to be back inside here?’ said Polly. ‘I never thought I’d get so used to this place that I’d call it home! But, after the last few hours, it seems like paradise.’

  She turned to walk out into the main TARDIS Control room—but Ben stopped her: ‘Half a mo’, Duchess. It’s the Doctor. I don’t think he’ll last much longer.’

  Polly turned a little pale. ‘What do you mean?’

  ‘Haven’t you noticed? He’s put on a score of years during the last few hours. How old did he say he was once? Hundreds of years? Looking at him now, I’m inclined to believe every day of it!’

  Polly shook her head despairingly. ‘What can we do?’

  ‘That’s just it,’ said Ben. ‘There’s not much we can do, except...’

  Suddenly, a long wailing cry came from the control room. The voice was not the Doctor’s.

  They rushed out.

  They hurried over to a long couch-like arrangement with a folding metal cover over it. The use of it had never been fully explained to them. The Doctor had simply told them that it compressed sleep. The cry seemed to be coming from this apparatus.

  ‘How does it work?’ said Polly, struggling with the catch.

  Ben pulled back her hand. ‘Let me, Duchess.’ He turned and pulled down a lever standing beside the apparatus. The hood slid silently back to reveal the long stretcher-like couch.

  To their relief, they saw the Doctor’s familiar cloak and body. The corner of the long cloak was drawn over his face.

  ‘He’s been sleeping,’ said Polly, relieved. ‘Using the sleeping compressor.’

  But Ben was staring at something.

  ‘Hold on, Poll. Loo
k!’ He pointed at the Doctor’s hands, which were folded over his chest. The Doctor had long, thin, sensitive, rather boney hands. Of late, they had become white and transparent, the blue veins showing through the skin : the hands of a very old man.

  But Ben was pointing in amazement at two completely different ones. They were shorter, thicker set, reddish—the hands of a much younger man.

  Polly drew back, hand to mouth. ‘Oh Ben! Do you think...’

  ‘We’ll see,’ said Ben grimly. He reached forward gingerly and pulled back the edge of the cloak. The face under the cloak was not the Doctor’s. It was the face of a much younger man—a man in his early forties. The Doctor’s long, silver locks had been replaced by short dark hair, and the newcomer had a swarthy, almost gypsy, appearance.

  As Ben and Polly drew back aghast, the man slowly opened his eyes and turned to looked at them.

  ‘Hello,’ he said. His eyes were blue-green—like the sea. Although friendly, they had an elusive, slightly mocking quality. ‘You must be Ben and Polly?’ he continued.

  Ben nodded.

  ‘And who are you?’ asked Polly boldly.

  The man stretched himself and swung his legs over the edge of the cradle. He stood up and looked down at his hands and legs with a certain pleasurable satisfaction.

  ‘Hum!’ he said. ‘Not bad!’ He flexed his arms. ‘Not bad at all.’ He turned to Polly. ‘You haven’t got a mirror by any chance?’

  Polly looked at him in amazement. The one thing the old Doctor never had any time for was mirrors. The only mirror on the TARDIS was, in fact, a small, battered metal one in her back pocket. She drew it out and handed it over.

  The man took the mirror and held it up. He examined his face. ‘Yes,’ he said. ‘Pretty fair, all told!’ He nodded and smiled pleasantly. ‘I think I’m going to rather like it.’

  ‘You didn’t answer her question,’ said Ben, plucking up courage and moving forward, his fists bunched. ‘Who the heck are you? And what are you doing here?’

  The stranger looked at him in slight surprise. ‘You ask me that, Ben? Don’t you recognise me?’

  The Doctor’s two companions shook their heads.

  ‘I thought it was quite obvious,’ Again, he smiled his gently mocking smile and winked at them with his blue-green eyes. ‘Allow me to introduce myself then. I am the new Doctor!’

 

 

 


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