Author's note: Just another story I wrote in a hurry while trying to get out of an English paper—different paper this time. My English professor is a sadist! It sucks, but the plot bunny bit. It must have had a cold… I think I'll go through and edit some time when brain doesn't hurt. Happy Valentine's Day!
Disclaimer: Own the story, not the Doctor. Pity shame.
Haunted
He had never felt so tired, so old in his entire life—and that was saying something. Ageing was something almost foreign to him, but he guessed that it might feel something like how he felt. Sighing deeply, he half-heartedly pushed some buttons and pulled some levers on the TARDIS. Blowing out his cheeks he looked around, hands in his pockets. With a deciding nod of his head he sat down, leaning against one of the TARDIS's pillars. "I just need a little rest," he told himself as he closed his eyes. He had barely done so when the TARDIS was filled with the sounds of soft snoring.
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He
awoke with a start. Someone was relentlessly shaking his shoulder.
"I've never seen you sleep so long," Rose said, smiling
down at him. He took her offe and jumped to his feet.
"How long
was I out?" he asked, walking over to the TARDIS controls.
"Long
enough for me to snap a couple blackmail pictures," Rose teased. "A
Time Lord, drooling—how undignified." The Doctor gave her a
disbelieving look.
"I do not!" he cried, apparently horrified
by the thought.
"You did!" she laughed, obviously amused at
his expense. But the Doctor just brushed it off and shook his head,
trying to ignore her.
"Oh come on," she smiled, nudging him
with her shoulder. He glanced at her out of the corner of his eye,
and then turned back to checking readouts and pulling levers.
"So
where are we off to anyway?" Rose asked, brushing her fingers over
a cluster of buttons.
"I thought we might make a quick stop to
your mum's." The Doctor said, pulling out his glasses as he took
a closer look at the TARDIS's screen.
"What for?" Rose
asked. The Doctor looked up at her.
"Oh, just figured she might
like to see that you're all in one piece," he said. Rose
laughed.
"Sure you did," she said. "No really, why do you
really want to take me home?"
The Doctor rolled his eyes.
"Well
if you must know I fancy a nice cuppa."
"Is that so?" Rose
"And my mum's the only one who can fix you one?" He
shrugged.
"How insulting," she concluded, feigning offence.
The Doctor just grinned cheekily to himself. Standing up straight he
led the way to the door and opened it with a flourish.
"Rose
Tyler, welcome home!" he announced as she stepped out behind him.
Rose looked around her with a grin.
"Same as ever," she
said.
"Just what did you expect to change?" he asked, reaching
for her hand and heading in the direction of Jackie's flat.
------------------------
"Hey
mum, you home?" Rose called as they entered the apartment. They
heard a squeal from the kitchen as Jackie made her way to the door.
"Where have you been, love?" she cried, pulling Rose into a
hug. "Seems like forever since you've been back."
"It's
only been a couple of weeks at most," the Doctor calculated, making
his way past mother and daughter.
"You ain't a mother though,
are you?" Jackie retorted.
"I should hope not." The Doctor
was in the kitchen now, setting a kettle to boil.
"What's he
doing?" Jackie asked her daughter, perplexed. "Not trying some
strange alien experiment in my kitchen are you?" she directed at
the Doctor, who was busy looking about her cupboards. He turned
around with a bewildered look on his face.
"Actually, I was just
wondering if you would mind making one of those wonderful cups of tea
you do so well." Jackie, who apparently hadn't been expecting
this, looked confused.
"Is that all you want?"
"Well,
Rose might want a bit of beans on toast or something, but I'm fine
with just the tea, thanks." He said smiling.
"Oh all right,"
Jackie conceded, shooing them out of the kitchen. "You lot get out
of my way then."
"Gladly," said the Doctor, leading Rose to
the couch and plopping down unceremoniously.
"You're a real
bum, you know that?" Rose said as she watched the Doctor made
himself comfortable. He smiled cheekily and winked at her.
"Even
I need a bit of rest now and then, love," he yawned. "I feel as
if I've been running on nothing for this past little while." Rose
nodded her head in understanding.
"Losing someone will do that
to you, I hear." The Doctor looked at her confusedly, but she said
nothing to explain herself. For a moment everything shifted in front
of his eyes. Blinking, he wondered if he'd imagined it.
"Oi!
Jackie! About done with that tea yet?" The Doctor called towards
the kitchen, fully expecting a rude response. When she didn't call
back he thought perhaps he'd better go butter her up.
"Jackie,
do you think you could—" he started but stopped
abruptly.
"Where's your mum gone?" he said, turning back to
Rose. She stared blankly back at him.
"Jackie?" He called into
her bedroom. No answer. She was nowhere to be found. He found himself
out in the corridor outside the flat.
"Excuse me," he stopped
a woman who was passing by. "Did you happen to see Jackie Tyler
walk by here?" The woman gave him an evil glare.
"Think you're
being funny, do you?" The woman said, sounding
disgusted.
"Pardon?"
"Jackie Tyler's been on the dead
list these past two weeks," the woman said, walking past him with a
shake of the head. Rose came up behind him and put a hand on his arm.
Gathering him in a hug, she wiped a tear from her eye.
----------------------------
"I'm
confused," the Doctor started mumbling, pulling at his hair. They
were back in the TARDIS again and the Doctor was pacing back and
forth. Rose just stood there, watching him silently. After several
minutes of this the Doctor finally looked up.
"What?" he
asked. Rose just smiled sadly at him.
"Why aren't you more
upset about this?" he demanded, looking her in the eye.
"Oh
come off it, Doctor," she started towards him. "You knew it
couldn't last forever."
"What are you talking about?" The
Doctor bristled. It was starting to feel very warm and he could feel
the sweat collecting on his brow.
"Wake up, Doctor," Rose
cried passionately, tears filling her eyes. "Stop pretending. It
will only drive you mad. I'm gone and I'm never coming back."
She finished, turning her face down—anywhere but at him. He shook
his head.
"No." His face was set. He was determined. "No,
no, no, I won't let you." He closed the distance between them by
enveloping her in an embrace. He was seemingly holding on for dear
life, not even bothering that she probably couldn't breathe.
"I
won't let you go again, Rose Tyler," he murmured into her hair.
"But you don't understand," Rose's voice echoed
throughout the TARDIS. "It's too late." With a lurch the Doctor
fell forward onto his face. As he looked up he saw Rose—or was it
Rose? It seemed more like a ghostly figure—standing above him, her
hand stretched out to him.
"Oh Doctor," she seemed to cry.
"Who will hold your hand now?"
His vision went blurry before
everything went black.
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The
Doctor awoke slowly, moaning softly. He opened his eyes to find
himself on the floor of the TARDIS, sweat gathering on his brow. It
had all been just a dream, he concluded—a pleasant dream at first,
which made the ending all the more painful. Sighing deeply he wiped
away the sweat and tears, stood up, and made his way to the TARDIS
controls.
It had all been just a dream—the teasing, the familiar
feeling of her hand in his, Jackie yelling at him. A wonderful,
beautiful, terrible dream. For the first time in, oh, as long
as he could remember, he felt the overwhelming urge to allow the
tears to come, to welcome the sobs that would undoubtedly rack his
frame. Because tears could be healing, he had heard, though, he
doubted that they could heal the hole inside of him that grew as time
passed.
He suddenly remembered why he hardly ever slept anymore.
He had almost forgotten during the short time that Rose was with him
because he had had very little want for sleep, and even when he had,
the dreams were almost always pleasant. Filled with planets they were
visiting, his complex mind trying to figure out the mysteries as he
slept. But it was now that he remembered why he had avoided it
before. Scenes of Gallifrey and Daleks had filled his head every time
he had closed his eyes—for decades. Rose had aided in the healing.
Now she haunted his every thought, both waking and sleeping.
"There's
an easy solution to this, I suppose," he said as he reached his
shaking hand out to push at a button. The TARDIS roared to life as
the Doctor picked a destination. "Never go to sleep." The sound
of the TARDIS arriving was soothing to the Doctor, and even succeeded
in putting a smile on his face. Gathering up his coat, he made his
way to the door of the TARDIS.
"If only I didn't feel so
tired."
