Sadder Things (Alternate Ending)
"Did you hear? About the detective who fell from St. Barts?"
Captain Jack Harkness spun around in seconds, gun torn from its holster and ready to fire. It wasn't every night that he was confronted with random strangers in the middle of an abandoned parking lot, but it happened often enough for him to be well prepared. But what he was faced with was not what he expected. He expected a thug or alien or something…not friendly that required negative reinforcement. That was in his job description after all; no one usually wanted him around for anything else.
What he got instead was a young man - and an attractive man at that - wearing a ridiculous tweed jacket, suspenders, and a bowtie, staring him right in the eyes. His glinted like obsidian due to the shadows he was immersed in as they steadily read Jack's ice blue ones.
"Well? Did you hear?" the man's deep voice repeated, and brought Jack back to the present.
He questioned exactly why the man was there in the first place. Jack wasn't the kind of person people just stopped to chat with…well, that wasn't exactly true. He could be charming and charismatic and funny, but during times like now, when he was on the prowl for alien activity, he was downright cold, uncaring, and fairly intimidating.
But this man didn't look the least bit afraid. He didn't even seem to register the handgun aimed at his forehead. Not one blink, like the gun bored him. Like it was expected.
But the man didn't seem like much of a risk either. Jack was sure he could take down that scrawny frame in less than two seconds if he had to. Might as well keep company as he waited for the rest of the Torchwood team to arrive, no matter how strange. So, he answered the man, acting as casual as one could be in the situation.
"Yeah, everyone's heard of Sherlock Holmes. Why?"
Jack was still holding his gun at attention when the man moved, shifting his body so that the light fell across his drastic cheekbones. Jack was astonished to see how old he looked, not physically but just in the way he carried himself – like he bore too much weight on his shoulders for far too long.
Too much guilt.
And for a moment, with all that age in his bones, the man reminded him of his friend long-gone. But that was impossible. He knew that the Doctor, or at least the Doctor he had known, had left. He knew the moment he saw the impossible man in that hellhole of a bar looking as devastated and resigned as ever.
The young man in front of him wasn't the Doctor. He was just some lost bloke in a funny suit without anywhere to be. Probably buggered out of his mind as well…
"Do you think it's true, what they said about him?" the man inquired, his voice still low and unwavering.
Jack was now starting to get where this man was getting at. So, he was a fan of the "great detective". Perhaps he wanted Torchwood to investigate his death? Part of him, a very tiny, vain part was a little disappointed at the notion.
"I don't know," Jack sighed, shrugging his shoulders. "Not my problem. Look, I don't really deal with that kind of thing-"
"I'm not asking for your help. I just want your opinion."
His eyes steeled until they were darker than they were previously, and for a moment Jack thought that the man was actually something dangerous. But the anger passed faster than a flash of lightning, stripping away everything except the deep-seated anguish in its wake.
"Do you think it's true?"
This was unsettling to Jack, and he chanced a glance around the lot to make sure they were really alone and no one was waiting around the corner to jump him.
"Yeah, yeah I do," Jack finally replied defensively, his voice carrying its telltale authority - as if every word out of his mouth was gospel. "That man was a fake, and there are a thousand and one people out there writing up a million different ways to prove it."
The younger man recoiled unintentionally, but did not change his expression in the slightest. It was almost as if he had anticipated Jack's answer, but it didn't change how much it hurt. Why would it hurt?
"Is that really what you think?"
The words were slow and purposeful, full of double meaning, as if to be a test. And there was something new in that man's eyes now, something so out of place and far too disheartening seeping out of the cracks of what Jack was beginning to recognize as a very complex mask.
Disappointment.
Jack had never really thought about Sherlock Holmes before. He was one of those stories in the morning paper that was skipped over on the way of reviewing the obituaries. A few clips here and there possibly; enough to know that he was a complete arse and a madman. Maybe the man across from him knew that Jack was poorly informed, but something in Jack was sparked that he didn't even know had been, and suddenly, he felt the urge to defend his ignorant answer. He rose to meet this man's unspoken challenge, like he needed to prove that he was right. Because at the moment, lost in that obsidian gaze, his entire being stripped down into nothing at the intensity of that man's stare, he wasn't quite sure he knew anything at all.
"No one could ever be that clever. No one human that is," Jack continued, reminiscing about the one man who actually was that intelligent, that crazily brilliant. But that man was long gone, and he sure as hell wasn't of Earth. "No, I've seen genius. I've seen what clever looks like, and it was not Sherlock Holmes. He was too afraid to face the world, so he left it - and his supposed 'best friend' - in pieces. Innocent men don't run; they fight for what's right. Even when it seems like there's no other option, nowhere to go! Even...if it…kills them…"
And instantly Jack's blood ran cold, freezing over in his veins as the point of the man's words finally broke through his mind in crystal clear definition, blinding him. He stumbled back a step, his hands now shaking, lowering his gun as the dread set in. His internal flame that was blazing not even three seconds ago was snuffed out by the sinking feeling in the pit of his stomach. His throat closed; his skin clammed up, and he swore he could be sick.
The guilt that wasn't even his to bear crashed over him in waves that threatened to drag him under the dark current and drown him. And he would welcome it.
Because he was so wrong. Always wrong.
And the man sighed, his long brown hair falling over his eyes, casting shadows over his face. He looked so tired, so pitying. He looked Jack down with the most solemn look of regret, as if he really hated tearing him down like that.
Why couldn't people just think?
And Jack felt like screaming, like lashing out at this messenger who just stood there so pompous and all-knowing. Surely, with all of his supposed knowledge, he could've done something! But Jack knew that fighting with this man would bring him nowhere. Neither of them had pushed Sherlock Holmes off that rooftop, but they sure as hell were guilty of leading him there. They were guilty of not noticing what was so painfully obvious.
Guilty of letting the whole world perpetuate a lie.
The man snorted after a moment of tense silence, his whole body shaking with the melancholy breath of laughter that followed.
"Human…" The way he rolled the word off his tongue, like the term was alien, like it had upset him, made him all the more a mystery. He cast a forlorn look aside, forcing out a pained smile, before turning to go.
"And isn't that the saddest thing?"
His words echoed from behind him, his steps muting away down the empty lot, shadows stretching and fading into the street lamps until he vanished, leaving Jack completely alone with shivers running down his spine.
Because the public had condemned an innocent man to shame and forced him to jump to his death without any hesitation, so ready to believe the worst. A society so focused on the corrupt that they miss the wonderful and tear what they do manage to get their crooked little hands on to shreds without a second thought.
They were supposed to be the best of humanity.
But how wrong they were…
That man – a complete stranger – knew it, but Jack, the one person in the entire universe who should've known how it felt to be an outcast, the one person who was supposed to be wiser than the rest, was too dense to see the truth.
Because in the very end, after Torchwood and the immortality and the aliens were stripped away, he was only human.
And isn't that the saddest thing?
