A/N: I may have missed a few spellings in this one, so there might be some grammar errors as well. I'll keep hunting them down and fix it as soon as I can. But until then, enjoy!
The Doctor struggled to twist his head around, checking for Kari, desperate to make sure that she was all right and that she wasn't being electrocuted like he was. When he saw her crouched by the door, ushering those who had listened to her out of the door, he let out a breath of relief.
He looked at the creatures standing before him and smirked a little. "Deadly to humans, maybe." The Doctor announced, before reaching out, the buzzing ID card in his hand, and pushing it into what looked like a collar that was around the monsters neck.
The Slitheen hissed and screeched in pain, but not just the one that held the ID card in it's collar, but also the other man standing next to it, the acting Prime Minister. The electricity was causing them pain, and it had distracted them, and that was all the Doctor needed to run over to Kari and grabbed her hand, dragging her out of the room as quickly as he could.
"Oi!" The Doctor shouted to the guards in the hallway. "If you want aliens, you've got them. They're inside Downing Street. Come on!" A hoard of armed men followed him back into the room where they had left the green creatures, with their long fat fingers and claws.
Kari hated what was going to happen next, and she had to refrain from letting out a groan at the knowledge that they would seen be running from people with guns as well as the Slitheen. Nothing was going to go how the Doctor hoped it would, but at least something good had happened, she had managed to save a few lives. She couldn't help but smile at that fact, the fact that she had done something good.
But the smile soon faded when they arrived at the briefing room, to find two men standing there, and not a big green monster. "Where have you been?" Mr Green, the acting Prime Minister announced. "I called for help. I sounded the alarm. There was this lightening, this kind of… er, electricity, and they all collapsed." He said, looking at the few bodies and then glaring at Kari.
Kari just glared back, while the officers all checked out the few bodies that were in the room. "I think they're all dead." The young Welsh officer announced, having checked a few of the bodies himself and finding no signs of life.
"That's what I'm saying. He did it!" Green shouted, pointing to the Doctor who was still holding onto Kari's hand tightly. "That man there. And she's his accomplice. Get them!"
The grip on Kari's hand tightened as everyone in the room turned to look at them. "I think you will find the Prime Minister is an alien in disguise." There were blank, unimpressed looks being shot at the Doctor. "That's never going to work, is it?"
"No." One of the officers said.
The Doctor nodded his head at the man. "Fair enough." He said, before making a run for it, Kari being dragged along as all the armed officers chased after them.
She let out a sigh as she ran with him, doing her best to keep up even though she was being partially dragged along like a rag doll. She could hear the heavy boots thumping on the floor, and she knew it wouldn't be long until they were cornered and the Doctor would have to think up a brilliant plan.
It came soon than expected, as the pair of them was faced with a mass of guns in front of them and behind them. The Doctor looked at her as he held his hands up, finally letting her hands go. They were completely surrounded, apart from the wall behind them.
"Under the jurisdiction of the Emergency Protocols, I authorise you to execute this man and woman. General Asquith bellowed, looking at the pair with absolute hatred in his eyes.
The sound of all the guns being set and ready to fire made Kari shiver a little. "Well, now, yes, you see… er, the thing is, is I were you, if I was going to execute someone by backing them against the wall, between you and me, little word of advice." The Doctor rambled, grabbing Kari's hand as a light dinging sound came from behind them. "Don't stand them against the lift!" He told them all, a mad grin in his face as he pulled Kari into the lift with him and used his sonic screwdriver to get the doors to shut quickly.
Once the doors were closed, Kari let out a small sigh of relief. "We should probably find Rose, you know. Who's to say that those aren't the only nasty green aliens hanging around in Downing Street?" She said, leaning back against the wall of the lift.
"You're right. Hope she hasn't gotten into any trouble." He replied, before the door to the lift dinged opened and they were faced with one of the Slitheen. "Hello." The Doctor said, grinning away while Kari signalled for Rose and Harriet to quickly sneak away from the monster that had been chasing them.
"Well, looks like Rose has managed to find her own trouble." Kari muttered, waving to the Slitheen before the lift doors pinged closed and they carried on their journey to the next floor.
The Doctor simply grinned at her. "Yep, loads of trouble. You were right, there are more of them, they weren't the only ones. How many?"
"Uh, how should I know?" Kari asked him, having to continue her act of knowing absolutely nothing of the whole situation. "There was the two down stairs, that one that is after Rose, so that's three already. There has to be more."
The lift dinged again and the pair of them charged out of the lift. "Well come on, we need to find out who they are and what they want." The Doctor told her, once again dragging her around like a rag doll.
Kari groaned once more. "Seriously, Doctor? Do you always have to drag me around like this? It does actually hurt, you know, having my arm yanked on all the time. Your legs are longer than mine, I can't keep up." She moaned at him, wishing that he would let go of her arm so that she could run at her own pace without feeling he was going to yank her arm out of its socket.
He surprised her by stopping in his tracks, and turning to face her. "Sorry." He whispered to her, before surprising her by gently pressing his lips against hers. "I'll try to be a little more gentle from now on."
"I just don't want to keep being dragged around, Doctor, there's no need for it. I can run perfectly well all by myself you know." She told him, rubbing her shoulder a little. He had tugged on it pretty hard at one point, which had sent a shooting pain across her shoulder blade. "Anyway, we should probably head down and go help Rose out. I got a feeling that she isn't enjoying the little game of hide and seek she's playing with that monster."
The Doctor nodded at her, and the pair of them took off once more, only this time Kari wasn't being dragged. He was still holding onto her hand tightly, but he was going at a slightly slower pace, which meant that Kari could keep up with ease. It was nice for her, to be able to run at her own pace, especially without the Doctor getting irritated at her for not keeping up.
"So, you having fun then?" He asked her, taking it slower on the stairs than he would have liked, but not wanting Kari to trip and fall.
"Hmm, yeah, bundles of fun." Kari replied, rolling her eyes at him. "Running around Downing Street while it's full of big green aliens, got to be the most fun thing I have ever done." She told him sarcastically.
"After this we can go and…" He stopped as they made their way through the corridor, hearing the lift dinging, signalling that it had arrived on the floor they were on. He quickly pulled Kari back into the hallway, hiding around the side, pressed up against the wall where the doors separated the two hallways.
Kari held her breath as the Doctor held her tightly against his chest. It was a bit of a squeeze, but she wasn't really going to complain about it. In fact, she ended up smiling at it a little. It wasn't very often she got to spend time that that particular regeneration and not be arguing and fighting, and she wished that she could spend more time with him.
"It does us good to hunt." A raspy voice called, getting Kari to refocus on what was going on. "Purifies the blood."
"We'll keep this floor quarantined as our last hunting ground before the final phased." Both Kari and the Doctor had to hold their breaths, as the big green aliens came strolling past them, luckily too busy in conversation to notice them. Kari had even squeezed her eyes shut, and she could hear her hearts pounding in her chest.
They both waited until they had passed, the Doctor watching them closely, before they snuck out of their hiding place. "They're heading to where Rose is." Kari whispered, knowing that there was now three Slitheen in the room where Rose and that older woman were hiding.
"Well then, we better go and save her then, hadn't we?" The Doctor replied, a huge smile on his face as they moved quickly in the same direction as the aliens. They came across a fire extinguisher, and he grabbed a hold of it before they carried on moving.
A scream came from the room, and in an instant Kari knew that it was Rose. "No! Take me first! Take me!" A female voice shouted, just before the Doctor and Kari charged into the room, the Doctor brandishing the fire extinguisher.
He wasted no time in spraying the Slitheen with it, causing them to screech slightly. "Out! With us!" The Doctor called, waiting for the women to get past the creatures. Rose ripped the curtain rail from the wall, letting it draped the curtain over the monster that was standing in her way, giving her ample time to charge past and to the door where Kari was waiting for them all.
"I thought I told you to stay out of trouble, Rose." Kari said to her, giving her a small smile. Rose just chuckled at her before giving her a quick hug.
The Doctor turned his head to the other side, where the woman that Rose had been with was standing. "Who the hell are you?"
"Harriet Jones, MP for Flydale North."
"Nice to meet you." The Doctor replied.
"Likewise."
Kari simply rolled her eyes and gave the Doctor a nudge, looking pointedly at the fire extinguisher. "Right, yes." He said, remembering what was actually going on in the room and spraying the creatures some more before running out of the room, a large grin on the Doctor's face. "We need to head to the Cabinet room." He called, taking a hold of Kari's hand as they ran through the corridor.
"The Emergency Protocols are in there. They give instructions for aliens." Harriet informed them all, making Kari chuckle a little. The way the woman said it made it sound as if the instructions were made to be given to the aliens, not what to do about aliens.
The Doctor gave her a quizzical look before responding to the woman's comment. "Harriet Jones, I like you."
This seemed to please the woman. "And I like you too." She said, as the four of them continued to run.
The Slitheen had managed to pull themselves together and were chasing after them, their large green bodies pounding through the hallways. This was the bit that Kari was getting a little fed up with, the running. Most of the time she wouldn't complain, but for some reason she just wasn't in the mood to be running all over Downing Street.
It would appear that the Doctor had noticed her lack of enthusiasm. "What's the matter with you?" He asked her, frowning at her with a hint of concern on his face.
Kari let out a sigh as they charged through another room and into yet another hallway. "Getting a little tired of running around, Doctor. This isn't exactly how I planned to spend the day with you. I thought we could curl up on the sofa and watch a movie or something, but oh no, aliens have to come to London." It really did sound like she was moaning, but there was some truth behind it all. She really did want to just spend some time with him, with that version of him, without all the fighting.
"Well then, how about we watch that movie later? Any one you want." He was doing his best to try and perk her up, because he knew there was something more that she wasn't telling him.
"If I'm still here." She grumbled in response, knowing that there was every chance she was going to just be pulled elsewhere the moment she set foot inside of their TARDIS. "Could really do with a nice cuppa right now."
The Doctor rolled his eyes at her, before stopping at the door to the Cabinet room, having to use his sonic screwdriver to get it unlocked. They only just made it there in time, as the Slitheen came barrelling towards them. Kari didn't waste a second in picking up a decanter from the side and shoving it in the Doctor's hands.
He stood in the doorway, the decanter in one hand and his sonic screwdriver in the other. "One more move and my sonic device will triplicate the flammability of this alcohol. Whoof, we all go up So back off." He ordered, sounding rather menacing. The large creatures took a step back, bringing a smile to the Doctor's face. "Right then. Question time. Who exactly are the Slitheen?"
"They're aliens." Harriet answered, before anyone else had the chance to say anything.
The Doctor rolled his eyes at the woman's response. "Yes. I got that, thanks."
"Who are you, if not human?" The Slitheen who had once been the acting Prime Minister, Mr Green, wondered.
"Who's not human?" Harriet asked, somewhat confused.
"They're not human." Rose said, nodding to the Doctor and Kari. She was standing right beside him, a slight grin on her face.
Harriet looked at Rose, clear disbelief on her face. "They're not human?"
Kari just shook her head while the Doctor turned his head a little. "Can I have a bit of hush?" The older woman quickly apologised, and the Doctor carried one. "So, what's the plan?"
"But he's going a Northern accent." Harriet pointed out to Rose in a not so hushed tone.
"Lots of planets have a north."
The Doctor was getting more and more irritated now, the only person who was keeping quiet was Kari. "I said hush." He told the woman once more, before getting back on track with the Slitheen. "Come on. You've got a spaceship hidden in the North Sea. It's transmitting a signal. You've murdered your way to the top of government. What for, invasion?"
"Why would we invade this godforsaken rock?" The Slitheen who claimed the identity of General Asquith said. Apparently he was disgusted by that idea, the idea of trying to take it over.
"Then something's brought the Slitheen race here. What is it?" All the Doctor wanted was some answer, and so far, nothing was making very much sense. He couldn't understand what they wanted if they weren't there to invade.
Kari cleared her throat a little. "Not a race." She said quietly, knowing that Slitheen was far from the race of those creatures, even though she had a habit of just calling them Slitheen as if it was.
"Slitheen is not our species." Green scoffed. "Slitheen is our surname. Jocrassa Fel Fotch Pasameer-Day-Slitheen at your service."
At last, an answer to one of the Doctor's questions, something that he could build on. "So, you're a family." There was something at the back of his mind, scratching away, telling him that Kari hadn't been completely truthful about how much she knew, after all, she seemed to know that they Slitheen wasn't the name of their race.
"A family business." One of the raspy voices reply.
Something that the Slitheen said made a connection in the Doctor's head. "Then you're out to make a profit. How can you do that on a godforsaken rock?" It still didn't make complete sense to him, but things really were starting to fall into place.
"Ah, excuse me? Your device will do what? Slitheen General Asquith asked, a hint of amusement in his voice. "Triplicate the flammability?"
Kari let out a sigh, and the Doctor realised that he had been caught out. "Is that what I said?"
"You're making it up."
The Doctor shrugged his shoulders. "Ah well, nice try. Harriet, have a drink." He said, reaching back and holding the glass bottle with alcohol in it behind him and towards the woman. "I think you're gonna need it"
She, however, already had her hands full with the red briefcase containing all the Emergency Protocols. "You pass it to the left first." She replied, keeping her forward and focused on the green aliens.
"Sorry." The Doctor said, before bring the decanter back around and holding it to the other side, right in front of Rose. She promptly took it from him and thanked him.
Kari couldn't stop the frown from forming on her face. "What, not going to offer me a drink? Oh, well isn't that just nice." She grumbled. She was starting to feel a little left out now, like the Doctor and everyone else didn't even notice that she was there.
"Now we can end this hunt with a slaughter." General Asquith said, clanking his extremely long claws together. It was clear that he was trying to be threatening and scary, but the only one who seemed to actually be scared was Harriet, and the expression on her face proved that.
But the Doctor just stood there, folding his arms across his chest while Kari put her hands on her hips. "Don't you think we should run?" Rose asked, not understanding why the pair of them were just standing there, like they didn't have a care in the world.
"Fascinating history, Downing Street. Two thousand years ago, this was marsh land." The Doctor explained. "1730, it was occupied by a Mr Chicken. He was a nice man. 1796, this was the Cabinet Room. If the Cabinet's in session and in danger, these are about the four most safest walls in the whole of Great Britain. End of lesson." He said, a smug grin on his face, as Kari lifted a panel by the door and pressed the button that was situated inside of it.
Thick metal shutters suddenly blocked off the doorway. The windows all ended up having the same thing happen to them, solid metal shutters slamming down and blocking them off from the rest of the world. "Well, that went well." Kari announced when everything stopped clanging.
"Installed in 1991. Three inches of steel lining every single wall. They'll never get in." The Doctor did seem rather pleased with himself, and Kari couldn't wait for Rose to point out the obvious.
"And how do we get out?" The blonde asked him, clearly not all that impressed.
The look on his face just showed everyone that he hadn't thought about that at all. "Well, no point worrying about how we get out." Kari said, wandering over to the table. "He'll think of something eventually, he always does." She had the confident, because she knew that they would make it out of there in the end, and all in once piece.
She refused to look around the room, because she knew there was a dead body sitting there, which the others would soon notice. The Doctor strode over to her, watching her closely as she kept her eyes firmly fixed on the table. "Kari, what's wrong?" He asked her, just knowing that something was troubling her.
She closed her eyes and let out a sigh. "Over there." She said, pointing without actually looking.
Everyone followed her finger, and both Rose and Harriet gasped at what they saw. "Oh…" Was all the Doctor managed to say as he spotted the body of the man who had given them their ID cards back downstairs.
"Yeah, oh." She muttered, not waiting to look for herself. He hadn't deserved to die, none of those people had. But she was a least a little proud that she had managed to save some people, some of the experts who were friends of the Doctor.
The Doctor stood behind the chair she was sitting on and planted a kiss on the top of her hair, before walking over to the man's lifeless body. "What was his name?" He asked no one in particular as he carefully dragged the body over to the cupboard, the same one where the skin of the late Prime Minister was also placed.
"I don't know. I talked to him. Brought him a cup of coffee. I never asked his name." Harriet said, sounding a little ashamed of herself for not actually bothering to find out.
"Ganesh." Kari told them all quietly. "His name, it was Ganesh."
It was clear that she was upset, and the Doctor made sure to take note of that. "Sorry." He said to Ganesh, before leaving him in the cupboard and joining the other three. "Right, what have we got? Any terminals, anything?" He asked, while Rose searched the place for something of use to them. Kari wasn't bothering because she already knew that there was nothing there that would help them.
"No. This place is antique." Rose informed him, as Harriet went through all the documents in the red briefcase. "What I don't get is, when they killed the Prime Minister, why didn't they use him as a disguise?"
"He's too slim." Kari mumbled at the same time that the Doctor said it. She looked up and saw the other three all staring at her. Harriet seemed freaked out, Rose looked confused, while the Doctor seemed worried. "Sorry, carry on, Doctor."
"Pardon me, but who are you, exactly?" Harriet asked her. She knew who the Doctor was, and obviously she was now acquainted with Rose, but she had no idea who Kari was.
Kari shifted in her seat a little and looked down at the solid wood desk that filled the room. "Kari." She answered simply.
But the Doctor wasn't happy with that answer. "My wife." He called as he sonicked the metal shutters, just making sure that they were secure and that there wasn't a way out for them.
"Fiancée." Kari corrected, causing him to roll his eyes at her. It wasn't actually annoying her, him keep saying that she was his wife, it was annoying because she wasn't actually his wife yet. "Anyway, you were saying, husband-to-be?" She ended up saying mockingly.
"Slitheen, they're big old beasts. They need to fit inside big humans." The Doctor said, as if there hadn't been a single interruption.
Rose followed him as he went and scanned another window with his sonic screwdriver. "But the Slitheen are about eight feet. How do they fit inside?"
"That's the device around their necks. Compression field. Literally shrinks them down a bit." The Doctor explained to her, risking a quick glance at Kari, who was still staring at the table. "That's why there's all that gas. It's a big exchange."
"I wish I could a compression field. I could fit a size smaller." Rose joked.
Kari wasn't happy with Rose's comment. "Rose!" She said, as if scolding a small child for saying something inappropriate.
"Excuse me, people are dead." Harriet reminded her, also not impressed with what the young blonde had said. "This is not the time for making jokes."
Rose looked over at Kari, who was giving her a very firm and very disapproving look. "Sorry. You get used to this stuff when you're friends with…" Kari raised an eyebrow, which stopped Rose in her tracks. "… him."
"Well that's a strange friendship." It was clear that Harriet completely disapproved of it all, even though she didn't fully understand everything.
But there was something that was still bothering the Doctor. "Harriet Jones. I've heard that name before. Harriet Jones. You're not famous for anything, are you?" He asked, stopping and looking at the woman.
The older woman scoffed a little. "Oh, hardly."
"Rings a bell." He said, frowning as he looked at Kari, hoping she could help him out. All she did was shrug her shoulders at him, knowing exactly who she was and who she would become. "Harriet Jones?"
"Lifelong backbencher I'm afraid, and a fat lot of use I'm being now." Harriet said, getting frustrated. "The protocols are redundant. They list the people who could help and they're all dead downstairs."
Kari was quick to correct the woman. "Not all dead. Some of them listened, some of them managed to get out with their lives still. But still, we're on our own in here."
"I want to ask you about that." The Doctor said, walking towards her. "Those ID cards, how did you know?"
"I… I didn't know. I was just getting a really bad feeling about them, that feeling I sometimes get when something terrible is about to happen. I wanted to make sure that on the slightly chance that I was right and something was wrong with them, that people wouldn't get hurt. But not everyone listened to me, some of them still died." Kari wished that they had all listened to her, and that no one had died. She didn't like to see the death, even though she knew it couldn't be stopped some times, it didn't mean she liked it.
"And that's all it was? A bad feeling?" Kari knew that the Doctor didn't believe her, she could tell by the way he was looking at her.
"Doctor, please, can we just focus on everything else." She asked him, wanting him to just drop it and leave it alone. She wanted to pretend she didn't know what was happening, to forget that the Slitheen were trying to do something devastating.
He simply gazed at her, and the other two women in the room just watched the pair before Rose decided to get the Doctor to focus. "Hasn't it got, like, defence codes and things?" She asked Harriet, who still had all the documents in front of her. "Couldn't we just launch a nuclear bomb at them?"
Harriet looked at her, once again with a look that was disapproving. "You're a very violent young woman."
"I'm serious, we could." Rose protested, waiting for the Doctor or Kari to jump in and help her out, but they were still locked in a staring contest.
"Well, there's nothing like that in here. Nuclear strikes do need a release code, yes, but it's kept secret by the United Nations." Harriet admitted. For just a backbencher, she did seem to know quiet a bit about how things worked and the different protocols.
"Say that again." The Doctor finally said, breaking his stare and causing Kari to let out a sigh of relief. He had been giving her that pleading look, the look that told her he was worried and just wanted her to talk to him. But she held her ground and kept quiet.
The older woman looked at him blankly. "What, about the codes?"
"Anything. All of it."
"Well, the British Isles can't gain access to atomic weapons without a Special Resolution from the UN." Harriet explained to him, wondering why he wanted to know and if he wanted to know any more.
Rose laughed a little. "Like that's ever stopped them."
"Exactly, given our past record. And I voted against that, thank you very much." Harriet was definitely a very strong-minded woman, who had her own set or morals. "The codes have been taken out of the government's hands and given to the UN. Is it important?"
"Everything's important." The Doctor told her, clearly thinking. His mind was racing, so many things running around in that head of his, so many thoughts, as well as concerns for Kari.
"If we only knew what the Slitheen wanted." Harriet said, before it hit her. "Listen to me! I'm saying Slitheen as if it's normal."
Kari just hummed a little, not really paying too much attention to what was going on. She wasn't really feeling like part of the group, but she knew that was her own fault, she was deliberately keeping her mouth shut. She didn't realise that that was the reason why the Doctor was so concerned.
"What do they want, though?" Rose was trying harder than Kari was to be involved with everything.
"Well, they're just one family, so it's not an invasion." The Doctor informed them, trying his damned hardest not to glance at Kari. "They don't want Slitheen World. They're out to make money. That means they want to use something. Something here on Earth. Some kind of asset."
"What? Gold? Oil? Water?" Harriet suggested, trying to be helpful.
The Doctor looked up at her and smiled a little. "You're very good at this." He said, complimenting her and surprising her a little. "Harriet Jones. Why do I know that name?" It was something that was going to keep bothering him until he worked out what it was and where he had heard her name before.
As he pondered that, something in the room beeped. "Oh, that's me." Rose admitted, grabbing her mobile phone out from her pocket.
Harriet seemed surprised that the young blonde woman had received any form of communication. "But we're sealed off. How did you get a signal?"
"Kari zapped it." Rose said, looking down at her phone and walking around the table. "Super phone."
"Then we can phone for help. You must have contacts?" The MP for Flydale North was constantly trying to come up with solutions and ideas.
The Doctor shook his head at her. "Either dead downstairs or no where contactable." He had thought of it, because he knew that Kari had a super phone as well, and hers was most likely working perfectly fine as well.
"It's Mickey."
The Doctor rolled his eyes. "Oh, tell your stupid boyfriend we're busy." He said, earning a glare from Kari. If she had been in reach, she would have smacked him for that comment, and he knew it.
"Yeah, he's not so stupid after all." Rose tome him, before showing him the picture that Mickey had sent. The screen showed a big green Slitheen, surrounded by an electrical current.
While the Doctor looked at that, Kari's phone decided to start ringing. She let out a groan as she pulled it out from her pocket. "What is it, we're busy?" She snapped at the person at the other end of the line.
"Well, hello to you too, Princess."
"Seriously, really not a good time." Kari told her brother, before mouthing that she was sorry to the Doctor.
"Tosh told me you were at the hospital."
Of course she had, and now Jack was calling to check up and her and find out what was going on. "Good, so you'll know that the alien was just a pig and that the whole crash was faked. But right now I am really busy, so can this wait until another time?" Kari was getting irritated, she didn't want to be explaining everything to Jack, not while she was stuck in a room with three other people, one of whom she barely even knew.
"Wow, something tells me that you are in a really bad mood, Princess." Just like the Doctor, Jack knew when she was having one of her little moods. "Are you okay? I just want to know that you're safe."
"Safe as can be, with three inches of solid steel lining all four walls. Can't get much safer than that."
She heard Jack let out a sigh at the other end of the line. "Okay, you're in a bad mood and you're busy trying to save the world. But you better give me a call once you're through, you got that?" Kari knew he was only calling to check up on her, to make sure that she was all right.
"I will, I promise." She told him, before letting out a sigh of her own. "And sorry for being snappy, long day and all that. Lots of running and aliens and stuff, the usual." Jack quickly said goodbye to her before ending the call and leaving her to explain what her phone call had been about. "Uh, yeah, my brother was just checking up on me. You know how he likes to worry. Anyway, we should probably call Mickey, find out what happened at his end."
The Doctor nodded at her, knowing that they needed to find out how he had managed to get a picture of the Slitheen and where. At least he knew he wasn't the only one to be worrying over Kari, her big brother was constantly checking up on her, especially when they were on Earth. But right now they had to focus, they had to work out what the Slitheen wanted, and how they could stop them. It was going to be a long day.
A/N: I know, I couldn't help but put a little Jack in there, but I hope you all enjoyed the chapter!
With the third episode of the new series having been aired, I'm starting to get a good feel for Capaldi's Doctor, and I'm really kind of excited about it all now. So, I am going to get my backside into gear and get a Clara episode up very soon.
So, hello and welcome to all the new readers who have favourtied/followed he story recently. And those wonderful, fantastically brilliant people who take the time to review, thank you all so so much. I know most people say this, but reading them does give me that little more 'get up and go' to continue writing.
Well, I got big plans in the works, which only one person is partially aware of. But you shall all just have to wait and see what it all is. Until next week!
Pippa.
