The Professor was waiting for us at the gas station, seemingly without a car.

"Did you walk all the way here?" Ms. Har asked, getting out of the van first.

"Yes, I took a plane from the states, so I just took a train to the restaurant," explained the Professor. I got out of the car, and found my suitcase in the back seat. "Are you ready to go, Tori?"

I turned to Ms. Har, "thank you so much," I gave her a small hug, and then walked towards the Professor. Ms. Har drove away. "So are we going to catch a train or something?"

"Well, not exactly dear… see my watch?" It was identical to… to mine. "It's called a vortex manipulator. Can teleport people through time and space."

"Time and space, are you mad?"

"No, you know- okay. Basically, this device is capable of time travel, and so is the one on your wrist," she explained. I eyed the watch, a bit nervously.

"Urm, how does it work?" She must be insane. Ms. Har let an insane woman adopt me.

"You punch in the exact time, and the coordinates," she explained, "in this case," she punched in some coordinates, and a time on mine, and did the same on her own. "It's this, and your going to press the go button when you are ready." So she pressed the button, and suddenly disappeared. Okay, here goes… I pressed the go button too, and suddenly warped to a new location. What the hell? Did that actually work?

"Oh my god," I mumbled. We were in London. Seriously. I could see Big Ben. "Wow! Is this… a teleportation device?"

"Actually, a time travel device," corrected the Professor. Well, I guess I'll call her River.

"Time travel? Did we actually travel in time?"

"Yes, it's a few days in the future," she answered. I gasped. The future?

"I can't… I can't…" I could barely form words.

"Yes dear, it's quite impressive, but we have to find a blue box. He said he'd be here, but it seems he's late," River rolled her eyes, "he's always late."

"Who's… he?"

"Your father."

"What? Like, your husband?"

"Yes, and your actual father. Biological father."

"Wait, your married to my biological father? He's… alive?"

"Yes, and it may be quite a shock- but I'm your biological mother."

"What the hell?"

"It's the truth. I'm so sorry about abandoning you, but I had to… once we're in the TARDIS I can explain better," River sighed, "just know it was for your own good."

Suddenly, a weird wooshing sound filled my ears. A blue police box materialized in front of me.

"Sorry I'm late, honey," a man opened the door. He was relatively young, with a bowtie and for some reason a fez. "Oh! Tori, right? Pleasure to meet you!" The Doctor shook my hand.

"Doctor, meet our daughter!"

"Our daughter, eh? You adopt?"

"Yes, and she's also actually our daughter."

The Doctor's smile faded, but as he looked to me it showed back up, "well, welcome to the family Tori!" I smiled back.

"Thanks," I said, but then eyed the blue box. "How exactly does that… urm, work?"

"It's too wibbly-wobbly, timey-wimey to explain," replied the Doctor, "basically it makes a wooooooossshhhhh wooooooosssshhhhh sound, I press some buttons, and it flies through the time vortex to wherever I want it to go." He paused, as if waiting for me to reply. When I didn't, he waved us in. "Come on! I'm not exactly keeping the door to invite in other pedestrians!"

And that's when I entered it. I gasped.

"It's… bigger! Bigger on the inside!"

The Doctor's face seemed to get one hundred percent brighter, "I love it when they say that," he said to River, "my favorite part of meeting new people."

"If that's your favorite part you clearly need to meet more," River said sassily.

"River, that's… that's rude!" The Doctor looked offended, and River just started laughing. I was so perplexed by the odd, sci-fi-y beauty of the machine. Everything was so… out of this world…-y.

"Is this a dream? Like a really nice dream?"

"Definitely not. Tori, welcome to the TARDIS!"

"It's amazing!" I said, way too overjoyed. The Doctor smiled.

"I know, isn't it?"

Ding! Ding!

"Why is that going ding? It's not even-" the Doctor suddenly said, going underneath the console platform. He returned with a strange device. "Like I said! It's not even on!"

"What's not even on?" River asked.

"My timey-wimey detector! There's nothing here! Just us!"

"Or is there?"

That's what made me shiver. The mere thought that something else was there. But I didn't doubt it. When your in a spaceship from another world, you really don't doubt anything spacey-wacey.

"River, Tori, there's a Silence. Don't move," the Doctor said quietly. "Silence, why are you here?"

And then it was gone.

I'm going to rewrite this again. I think. I've just taken such a break from it, and I'm not really liking writing it in the 1st POV. If you like this, check out the original. I have a lot more written on it and it's almost the exact same idea.