Hours later, Jenna woke up. She turned to the right and saw the doctor fiddling with his sonic screwdriver, still sitting next to her. "How long have you been awake?" she asked. He looked up from the screwdriver and looked around the room. "Maybe two hours? I have no idea." Jenna pushed herself up, moving into more of a sitting position. "What? You just sat here for two hours? Why?" she was utterly perplexed. He could've been doing anything else, but instead he just sat there. "If I moved, I would've woken you. And you needed your sleep." Jenna blushed. The only thing worse than knowing that he sat down next to her for two hours after he'd woken up was knowing that it was because of her. She stood up quickly, trying to hide her blushing face. The Doctor stood up and brushed his pants absentmindedly. "So, where do you want to go?" he asked, walking over to the control panel. "Honestly, I could really go for some chips right now." The Doctor let out a small laugh. That was what Rose had said after they saved Platform One. "Alright. Chips it is. Any particular shop you're thinking of?" Jenna was hesitant for a minute, and then answered with determination.

"Bay Café, Oregon." The Doctor didn't even hesitate, just started plugging in the coordinates.

"What year?"

"This thing can time travel as well? Of bloody course it can. It can teleport, it's massive inside, and it can fucking time travel." She shook her head. "June 18th, 2046."

"Alright."

Seconds later, Jenna opened the doors to her favourite café. She'd only been her twice, but all her memories of it were full of happiness and comfort. The small building sat on the edge of a lake and a pine forest. The first time that she'd been here was with her mother, two weeks after her mother had been diagnosed with leukaemia. The second time was on their second trip, a month after her mother had been marked as clear. Her mother was still growing back hair, and only had an inch of hair covering her hair. They had bought chips and sat by the edge of the lake, skimming stones. Even though she was 17, and couldn't really afford to miss a week of school, her family always came first. That was June 17th. Today was the day that she and her mother would be flying back.

They bought chips, and sat down at the same shoreline. "So where are you from?" questioned Jenna, keen to find out more about this mystery man. "Nowhere on Earth, if that's what you're asking." Jenna looked at him, surprised. "Are you even human?" The Doctor shook his head. "No way. You're bullshitting me." In response, the Doctor just pointed at his heart. Jenna was confused until he gently grabbed her by the wrist and placed her hand on his heart. It was beating normally. "So? Humans have hearts; don't know if you noticed that." He moved her hand to the other side of his chest, and she was surprised to find a second heartbeat. "I'm not human, but I'm not that different. My race is one of the most powerful in the universe. The only real difference between us and you is the fact that we have two hearts and can regenerate." Her brow crinkled, thinking through what he just said. "Regenerate? What does that mean?" He grabbed a rock with a sharp edge from beside him, and drew it across his finger. Jenna watched as the cut flared with yellow light, and slowly began to heal, until there wasn't even a mark where the Doctor had cut.

"Why didn't you do that in the Ayokyan city? She asked. He could've saved himself a lot of trouble if he'd just done that. "Well, there's a couple of things that you need to know first. Number one, my race, the Timelords, only really regenerate when we're close to death. And number two, I just regenerated after absorbing five nukes worth of radiation." She moved to leave, but he stopped her. "Don't worry. It's all gone now. It was absorbed when I regenerated. But it had a strange effect on me. I can no longer heal at any time, which Timelords can normally do right after a regeneration. It seems to be random. And I got a concussion after I regenerated, which never, ever happens." She looked at him, worried. "Shouldn't we get you to a doctor? You might have something seriously wrong with you." He shook his head, and threw the stone into the water.

"No, I'm alright. The TARDIS told me that there wasn't anything wrong with me, just something off with the regeneration."

As they left, Jenna thought of a question. "What did you call your ship the TARDIS?" the Doctor looked at her as if he'd had to explain this many times before. He sighed and quickly explained, "TARDIS isn't a name I gave my ship, it's what they're called. They're the main form of transport used by my species. TARDIS stands for Time and Relative Dimension in Space." Jenna just nodded, as if there wasn't anything more normal.

"So what now?" the Doctor asked as they walked back towards the TARDIS. She looked at him, eyebrows slanted in confusion. "What do you mean?" she responded, no idea what he meant. The Doctor spread his arms wide, indicating the forest around them. "Well, you might want to go home. Most people don't like to stay away from their family for too long." She just shook her head, looking reminiscent and sad. "When I joined the TTA, the government wiped away all memory of my family. I still have the memories, but I don't know who they are or what they look like. It might make me sad if it wasn't so… forgotten." The Doctor was surprised. He'd seen, even worked for governments all over the universe. But none of them had literally wiped the memories of their recruits. Most of them just politely requested that they break ties.

"Well, I always wanted an adventure." Jenna said, a mischievous glint in her eye, and a smirk on her face. "One adventure coming right up." Said the Doctor as he reached the control panel. He typed in the coordinates, pulled the lever, and the next second they were gone.