A Rose's bloom will eventually fade.
Author's Note:
Written prior to the episode "School Reunion" (Season 3, New Series)
It's
an office block. It's not what she expected. It's straight up and down,
concrete, prickly, cast-concrete, the kind that always makes her think
it needs an industrial defuzzer, and it's grey. It could practically
blend into the pavement, it's that unremarkable.
And it's in
Croydon. She didn't expect that either. When she thinks about it a bit
more, she realises she hadn't really known what to expect, just not...
this. Not a concrete office block in Croydon.
"Oh God. Please let this be the wrong address."
But
it's there on the printout in her hand. It says so in Black and White.
Paper from the papertrail. Sarah Jane Smith works in this building, as
a research assistant. Is this what she has to look forward to?
Excitement. Adventure. Reeeally wild things. Then a Nine-to-Five as the
photocopy girl?
Well, she won't find out by staring at a
building, so she pastes on a bright smile, and walks confidently in.
She's focussed and she's determined. She's so focussed and determined,
that the slightly psychic paper she nicked from the Doc convinces
security she has every right to just waltz in the front door, and on
past the metal detectors, and into the lifts. As the doors slide
together in front of her, she realises the lift has fewer floor buttons
than the number of floors she counted from the outside. Which is kind
of odd. But Floor 17 is still there, the one with Sarah Jane on it, so
that's alright then. She tugs her t-shirt down at the front, smoothes
her hair with her hand, and presses the button.
Maybe it takes
slightly longer for the lift to start than it would normally, but it's
been so long now since she's taken an office lift in London that she
can't be sure. Maybe she's measuring it by interstellar standards, or
by future ones. She can't always keep track these days. There's a lot
of information in her head, and some of the trivial stuff goes missing.
At least, she hopes it's trivial. She's taken to letting the Doctor
take care of the details. He knows everything anyway, or likes to think
he does. It's tough to shut him up, at any rate. And that irritates her
more than it used to.
There's a small moment of weightlessness
as the lift comes to a halt, falling gently and slightly back into
position for the doors to open. A tin-can pinging sound announces her
arrival.
"Hello," she smiles as she waves the paper in front of the receptionist, "I've come to talk to Ms Smith."
The receptionist gives her a slow once over, in clear disapproval of her dress sense. "Yes, well. Do you have an appointment?"
"No, but she'll want to see me anyway. My name is Rose Tyler. I work with The Doctor."
"One lump or two?"
"Two please. And some sugar as well."
As
Sarah Jane's mouth crooks slightly, fine lines appear around the edges
of her lips. "He never tires of that old joke, does he?"
"Not that I can tell."
They're
in a small coffee room. It's very, very ordinary, and boring. There's a
thin white kitchen bench, on which sits an old microwave, and even
older kettle. There's a boiler attached to the wall above the sink, but
she can tell from here it's broken. A sign hangs above the sink. It
says 'You don't have to be insane to work here, but it helps.' She
rolls her eyes. Sarah Jane starts making tea, turning her back to Rose.
Ms Smith's hair is cut into a neatly razored bob. She can't tell what
she thinks of the outfit. Bit 70's really, but maybe she's been away so
long that plaid A-line skirts and brown knee length boots are back in
fashion.
Eventually the tea finishes brewing, and Rose takes
hers, truly grateful. She's not often back in England anymore. She
misses a proper milky tea.
"So what do you want to know?"
"What..."
she hesitates, staring into the mug as she turns it in her hands. She's
not really sure how to ask, or even what she wants to know. She just
knows she has to know.
"How long have you been travelling with him?"
"Couple of years now. I think. Lost track really."
"It gets that way."
She
can sense Sarah Jane's scrutiny before she looks up for confirmation.
This is a woman who has been round the block, no, the universe a few
times. Which is why Rose is here with her now. "Why did you leave him?"
There. She's asked.
"I didn't. He left me."
"He told me otherwise."
"He's like that sometimes."
Rose juts her chin out slightly at the perceived insult, ready to be indignant on his behalf. "A liar?"
"Forgetful. He can get confused about what really happened."
Well,
that's true enough. She's seen a few examples of it herself. She
supposes it must be difficult to keep track over so many lifetimes.
What is 950 in Timelord years anyway? Are human years like dog years to
him? Could this be as simple as a midlife crisis? Maybe she can
convince him to buy a sports car.
"He's changed." There she is, blurting again. It all seemed like such an easy conversation in her head, before she got here.
"They all do."
"No. I mean really changed. One minute he was full of life and adventure, and the next..."
"The
next morning you woke up and his face..." Sarah Jane breaks off as
another woman enters the room. "And he wasn't the same person you fell
in love with."
She nods, unable to put voice to her fear. She
puts her cup on the table, then picks it up again, and turns it around
so the handle faces the other way. The interloper is taking her time.
"It's the way of things."
"But I thought he was different!"
"Well he is, isn't he?"
There
isn't much arguing with that really, but she tries anyhow. "Yeah, but I
thought we could, you know, get through it somehow. Talk things
through." Oh yeah. That's articulate. "Or something." She cringes.
Sarah
Jane tilts her head and peers at Rose over her glasses. "When I was
your age, I was a journalist. I was going to change the world. Women
were going to be freed from the tyranny of men, and I was going to be
at the front lines of the crusade."
"So what happened?"
"On
my first assignment, I was sent off to meet a professor. I started out
the day by trying to interview the wrong person. He wasn't who I
thought he was either." The memory seems to amuse her.
"He was upset because..?"
Well, the professor was quite polite, but she made it clear she thought I was an idiot."
"Oh."
"I
mistook her assistant for the Professor. The lesson being, you need to
check your assumptions at the door. Life is never quite as simple as we
think when we are young, and what seems to be obvious and important will often
turn out to be extremely complicated or even trivial, in the grand
scheme of things."
"You're not a feminist anymore, then?"
"No
longer a journalist." Sarah Jane moves away from the sink to allow her
colleague access, and gestures to a small, white formica table. "Shall
we take a seat?"
"Yeah, ok." Her legs are a bit tired, There'd
been a lot of running away yesterday. Something else that seems to
happen a lot more often now. Less taking a stand, more running away.
She sits on a slightly wobbly chair, placing her mug on the table, then grabs for it as it slides slowly toward the floor.
Sarah
Jane sits opposite, the Argos-cheap table forming a barricade between
them. "Sorry. I ought to have warned you about the sudden tilt."
"S'ok. I'm used to things like that." They exchange knowing glances.
The
colleague leaves. Not before time, but it means she's alone again, with
the ex, as it were. This is well strange, right here. There can't be
that many women whose boyfriends have 70 year old exes. And she'd
thought her life couldn't possibly get any weirder.
"So was his change the only reason for which I'm honoured with your presence?"
Was
it? "I don't know." She admits. "I just... There's no guidebook,
y'know? No handy references, or useful tips left behind by anyone else
who travelled with him. But I know they were there. The Tardis is full
of memories."
"How did you know I was there?"
"He kept a
room full of your things. I found them once. Asked him." It was close
enough to the truth. No point in muddying waters, explaining that the
Tardis had been inside her head, allowing her to see the Doctor's past
travels.
"My things? He kept them?" Sarah Jane's face contorts
briefly. "Maybe I should ask for them back. That's probably where my
house keys were." She looks off, apparently lost in thought. "Which
still doesn't explain why you came to me."
"You were the closest."
"Dimensionally?"
"Timewise. Geographically. Genderifically."
"Genderifically?"
"Ok. I just make that word up."
"I had no cause to think otherwise. You needed a girl talk?"
"Yes.
Well, there was this one other girl, but I don't think she and the
Doctor were ever that, um, close." Which wasn't strictly true. Ace had
been very close with the Doc. Just as close as Susan had been to him. A
very different sort of relationship. Somehow, she didn't think Ace
would be able to help her out here. Even if she can track her down at
some time when Ace isn't still travelling with him.
"I see." Sarah Jane's stiffens suddenly at the hint that Rose
knows.
God.
They could go on all day like this. "I love him. I know he loved me,
but now he's changed and I can't work out what he wants anymore." She
shifts, uncomfortable in her seat. "And there's someone else as well."
"There often was."
"Oh.
Oh!" This is news, although... no, there it is. That itching memory
she's been trying desperately not to scratch. She'd already known and
not wanted to. She hesitates, unsure if she should reveal the other
complication. "So Jack wasn't..?"
Sarah Jane gives her A Look,
which could be pity, or might be exasperation. Difficult to tell. "I found
it easiest not to judge him by our standards. Companions come and go.
Best just to get used to it really."
The inside of her mug suddenly seems very important to Rose. "And how do you tell when it's time? To go, I mean."
"Are you happy with him?"
"Define happy."
Sarah
Jane snorts. "I think you just answered your own question. I doubt very
much he's the only one in the Tardis who has been changed by their
journey."
Rose is beginning to think that coming to see this woman
was a mistake. It would help, possibly, if she was sometimes wrong
about things. "I was running. When I met him."
"Toward what?"
"More kind of what from."
"From what, then?"
Dead
end jobs. Department stores. A life split between working, washing and
reality television. "Me, mostly. And the Autons of course, but they
were mainly after him."
Sarah Jane raises an arched brow at the mention of Autons. "And are you still running now?"
"All the time. Sometimes it seems like we never stop."
"Yes, but are you running from, or to?"
It
had been her choice to come here. Hers. Not the Doctor's. Not Jack's.
She'd whined. She'd wheedled. She told him she was running out of
mascara. She'd got her way.
"To." And then, because Sarah Jane is looking expectantly at her, she elaborates. "To me, finally. I think."
Grey hair ruffles slightly as Sarah Jane nods.
"But
I still love him!" Even to her it sounds like whining. This wasn't
quite the comforting conversation she'd hoped for. The one where Sarah
Jane told her it was all going to turn out alright and they would all
live happily ever after.
"You may still love him, but are you
happy with him? How old are you? 20? 21? Been getting out of breath
lately? Are you finding it more difficult to keep up with him?"
Rose bites her lip, not wanting to answer.
"He
can give you anything you want, you're aware of that already, I
believe. Anything at all. Galaxies at your fingertips, the beginning
and end of creation, but he'll never be able to give you the one thing
you need most right now."
"And what's that?" she asks quietly.
"Stability."
Rose
coughs as her tea chokes in her throat. "Cheers!" she says, finally
managing to swallow what now seems like iron shards. "Like you said,
I'm only 21. I'm hardly looking for china patterns yet."
"Who
said anything about getting married?" The table tilts back the other
way as Sarah Jane thumps her mug firmly on the surface. "Look you silly
girl, everyone needs some stability. It might be family to live with,
the same house to live in, or even just the same job for 30 years."
Rose
looks up sharply. Just how long has Ms Smith been working in this same
building? "Built up a good supply of paper clips have you?"
"Stability,"
says Sarah Jane, ignoring the sarcasm, "is how we manage to stay sane.
We don't need it in every aspect of our lives, but we all need
something to stay the same for us, no matter the circumstances. One
thing we can rely on not to change without notice."
Rose thinks
of the Tardis. Thinks of walking its corridors, discovering rooms that
probably hadn't been there the day previous, and might not be there
tomorrow. Recalls the gleaming white halls morphing out of beige
Victoriana. Bedrooms filled with the ghosts of companions long gone,
but who were never quite allowed to leave.
The Tardis takes her
a new place each day. Another world, another star system, another era.
The first place he took her? The end of the Earth. His idea of a first
date. She should have known.
"No stability." She looks away to the window, because she knows this is also true.
"Not as long as you remain with him, no." Sarah Jane reaches over and hands her a handkerchief.
She
looks down just long enough to accept the offering, which she dabs
under her eyes. Wet black mascara streaks its pristine white surface.
She moves to return it, then flounders, realising she should probably
clean it first.
"Keep it. No, on second thoughts, don't. Give it back to him."
"The Doctor uses white hankies?"
"No. Some old travelling friend named Victoria. I never met her, but it should probably go back with her things."
Rose stares at the smears of jet. "Why's he keep all the mementos, do you think?"
"I suspect he needs some stability too." Sarah Jane's nails suddenly seem to interest her. "We keep leaving him, you see."
The handkerchief stills in Rose's hands. "I could stay on for a bit. See if things change."
"You might. But you won't."
"How do you know?"
"Because you're both running in different directions now."
She
breathes deeply, but it feels like her lungs are filled with sawdust.
Why is it that simple truths always hurt so much? She looks at Sarah Jane. "No.
You're right. I won't."
"You will go back and let him down
gently though, won't you? I hate to think of him hurting. He was always
more fragile than he liked to appear."
"Hmm. That'd be the stable part then."
That gets a barking laugh out of Sarah Jane. "Where will you go?"
"Don't
know. Can't go back home now. I can visit, but it's not the same. I've
seen too much and they're still rabbiting on about 'Big Brover'." She
shudders.
Sarah Jane misreads her distaste. "Yes, I know what
you mean. I loathe those reality shows. Someone's going to be badly
injured on one soon, you mark my words."
You have no idea, she thinks. "I
guess I'll move back into The City, find a job, find a flat." She
grimaces. "God. That sounds so mundane. I can't believe it's all over."
"Hmmm." An aubergine coloured nail taps against mauve lipstick. "Why don't you see the receptionist on the way out?"
"Um, 'cause she didn't like me very much?" What's this now?
"I'm sure we can bring her around. It's just in her job description to be suspicious."
"And here's me thinking it's just in her nature."
There's
that lopsided smile again. "That too. There's probably going to be an
opening coming up soon, in this office. Your skills and experience
could be just what we're looking for."
She pulls a face. "What,
convincing rich tarts they need more slap? Oh!" She covers her mouth
with her hand, to prevent more stupid comments leaking out. "Sorry. I
didn't mean..." She shrugs. "I just meant, I only ever trained as a
sales girl. You're right, about me wanting a more quiet life now, but I
don't think I'm really cut out for an office."
Sarah Jane peers
over her glasses and smiles. "How do you know? I haven't yet told you
what the job is." She stands suddenly, forcing Rose to crane her neck
if she wants to look at Sarah Jane's face. "But first, there's the little matter
of you making a break for it. Time to make a decision, young Rose
Tyler. Do you prefer to keep running in his shadow, or would you like
to make a name for yourself on your own terms?"
It's no contest
really. The Doctor may still love her, but she can't compete with Jack
anymore for mystery. And the one thing the Doc loves more than anything
else, is a good mystery. "For everything, turn, turn." She mutters.
Rising,
she grabs her own mug, and Sarah Jane's and takes them to the sink. She
rinses them briefly, a faint scent of coffee drifting to her as she
watches the leftover brown liquid swirl down the drain. It had tasted
awful.
She laughs. "If you expect me to work here, you'll have to provide better coffee. This stuff was rank."
"Take
it up with the boss, if you join us." Sarah Jane smiles that strange
lopsided smile again, and Rose suddenly realises where she's seen that
smile so many times already.
"You have some of his mannerisms you know." she says as they leave the tea room.
"There's a piece of everyone we've ever loved in each of us. We never really leave them behind."
"And some are harder to leave than others, right?"
"Right." Sarah Jane nods toward a grey metal door, past reception. "My break is over. I'd best be going."
"Yeah.
Me too. Be going. And all that." She nods, and heads toward the lifts
in reception. Just as that same tinny bell announces the lifts arrival,
she spins back round. "What was her name?" She calls out.
Sarah Jane calls back over her shoulder. "The Professor? I'll tell you about her if you like. Next time I see you."
"I'll
hold you to it." The lift doors close in on her as she steps into the
box. And then she's on her way, her mood sinking along with the lift.
She's going to have to tell him it's over.
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