This has been bouncing around in my head for awhile. It's a little reminiscent of this Smallville fan fiction I read a while back called "Chloe Sullivan: Slash Fangirl".

By the way, the rest of "Bad Wolf" is coming, I swear. I've been working on it all weekend.


Title: "The Girls"
Starring: Lucy Saxon and Martha Jones
Summary: The other women in the relationship voice their own opinions about their Time Lords.


Lucy was in love with Harold-well, the Master. He was funny, and a bit mad, yes, but very charming and entertaining. Not to mention, a great kisser.

But when the Doctor was brought aboard the Valiant, all the Master's attention turned to him, like a preteen and a celebrity heartthrob. (Well, the Doctor was very good looking.) Lucy began to yearn for the days that the Master courted her. But those days were very over. Lucy now realized that the Master had simply married her because of her family's wealth and political prestige. He wasn't even interested in her. Lucy saw that the Master was clearly enamored with the other Time Lord. He barely talked to her, and one night in bed, she swore she heard him moan "Doctor".

So, was she a jealous wife? Well, she killed the Master. And then, tried to kill him again. So…maybe.


Sometimes, Martha wished that the Doctor was gay.

She liked the Doctor a lot. A lot. But the fact that the Doctor never even gave her a second glance showed that they would never be a thing. And while the Doctor was always mooning over this Rose person, Martha liked to imagine that the Doctor was gay.

She even had reasons to back up this theory. For one thing, it seemed to Martha that if the Doctor really wanted this Rose back, he could easily save her. He had a time machine, after all. Also, Martha sometimes liked to theorize that Rose was never even real, that she was just a fictional girlfriend he made up to remained closeted. Blonde, big chested, petite? She just seemed too fabricated.

Plus, there were instances when the Doctor had seemed less than hetero. There was the flirting with Shakespeare, of course. And when he offered to kiss that American kid, Frank, in the 1930's. And of course, there was Jack, whom the Doctor got exasperated with at the slightest sign of flirtation. Some might even call it jealousy.

If the Doctor was gay, Martha reasoned, then she definitely knew who the Doctor was gay for. The way he pleaded and bickered and palled around with the Master, all while giving him those big brown puppy dog eyes, Martha could believe that they were once in a relationship. And with the innuendos and homoerotic remarks the Master made, she might even go so far as to say that they were still in one.

But when she was honest with herself, Martha knew that the Doctor wasn't really gay. But a girl can dream, can't she?