- Adams Guy
- The House That Jack Built
- Torchwood_The_House_That_Jack_B_split_032.html
TWENTY-FOUR
TORCHWOOD CARDIFF: INCIDENT
REPORT
Unexplained Conflagration
Penylan, 17th March 1906
Visited the site of last night's
explosion, found residue of non-contemporaneous explosive material
and signs of temporal flux. (Gaskell's Chronometer Device threw a
fit, solely, it seems, by virtue of being in the same street as the
bomb damage!) Bizarrely, the target seemed to be nothing more than
a building site, nothing of imaginable value. Harkness proved
little help – one had hoped his knowledge of futuristic methods
might have helped to shine the light of clarity on some of the more
outré elements of the incident, but he pleaded ignorance so well
that one might be inclined to believe him, were it not for the fact
that he lies with such ease. No matter; no civilians were hurt and,
while the evident intrusion of foreign agents in our jurisdiction
is alarming, there is some consolation to be found in that. Our
investigation will, of course, continue.
AG
Ianto smiled and dropped the sheet
back into its folder. Alice Guppy's writing about Jack always
reminded him of a strict teacher's report on an errant
student.
He glanced over at his workstation,
where his screen was a blizzard of files and news reports, history
rewriting itself both physically and digitally as things settled
into their own neat time line. He would be a few hours yet, trying
to cover Torchwood's traces in the matter of Penylan.
Still, his efforts were nothing
compared to those of time itself, the ultimate cover-up as people
vanished or reappeared, new histories establishing themselves
seamlessly over the hundred years or so of Jackson Leaves's
influence. Those of them that had been at 'point zero' still had a
perfect memory of the night's events – though he, Gwen and Jack had
been working hard since then to alter that fact.
Some things had still played out the
same. Joan Bosher had still lived – and died – at Jackson Leaves
before bequeathing it to her niece. Rupert Locke's face still
stared from the grainy print of old newspapers on his desk as the
police took him into custody for his crimes (though there was no
mention of where he'd lived), and his statement had become a more
honest – if sordid – admission of guilt due to 'his needs'. There
were others, though, who had avoided their fates, Kerry Robinson
for one. No longer a suicide victim, she had moved to America, and
Ianto had tracked her a little as she had worked as a singer for a
few years, before family and middle age had tamed her
ambition.
At least a few had got
away...
Alexander looked up at the cloudy sky
and, for the first time since his arrival on the planet, found
himself wishing for home. Not that he would be welcome there, of
course, but then, the last twenty-four hours had seen him become
distinctly unwelcome here, too.
'Mr Martin.' Nurse Sellers was
walking across the lawn towards him. 'Perhaps you'd be good enough
to tell me why you're getting all this extra
attention?'
'What are you talking about, you
silly woman?' He wasn't in the mood for her insinuations
today.
She bristled at his tone. 'That
doctor's here again,' she explained. 'You know, the one from the
Council. Says he's got to follow up on a few things. I do hope you
haven't got anything terminal.'
'Ha!' Alexander laughed to see her
drop all pretence of kindness. 'Don't you wish, my dear?' He
watched Jack Harkness walking towards him. 'Now bugger off inside
while we grown-ups talk business.'
She made an exasperated noise in her
throat and stormed off towards the house.
'You do love to make friends,' Jack
said as he drew up alongside Alexander.
'It's a skill. I take it this is you
firing me from my temporary position?'
'It is.'
Alexander nodded. 'Thought as much.
That girly didn't take a liking to me in the end. Can't think why.
We got out safely, didn't we?'
'Not all of you.'
'That was always a risk,' Alexander
sighed, 'and you know it. Your gallivanting about altering history
was far more cavalier and life-threatening, but nobody questions
you, I notice.'
'You'd be surprised.' Jack began to
push Alexander towards the oak tree.
'You'll go too far one day, my boy,'
Alexander said. 'And when you do you'd better hope they're more
forgiving of you than they were me.'
Jack didn't reply. They stayed in
silence beneath the shadow of the tree for a few minutes, each
thinking their own thoughts.
'How is that young boy, Joe?'
Alexander asked.
'You care?'
'Not particularly,' Alexander
admitted.
'He's fine. Had a bit of good
fortune, actually. Won a car in a magazine
competition.'
'One he doesn't remember entering, I
assume?'
'Oh, he remembers it. That and more –
doesn't mean any of it happened.'
'Ah... You continue to rewrite
history, even now. What are you going to do to me?'
'I don't know,' Jack said
softly.
'Yes you do. You just haven't got the
balls to do it. You don't know if you can trust me any more, and if
you were half the secret soldier you pretend to be you'd act on it.
You'd identify me as a problem and take the appropriate action.
Given that you can't make me forget – and rest assured you can't;
Torchwood may be far more progressed scientifically than the rest
of these monkeys, but you're a long way from having sufficient
skill to get around my physiognomy – there really is only one way
you can solve a problem like me. I'm just interested to know if
you're strong enough to carry it out.'
'Maybe I'm not as pragmatic as you,'
Jack said, walking away.
'Don't kid yourself,' Alexander
called, stretching in his wheelchair and closing his eyes for a
doze.
Jack cut across the lawn, avoiding
Trudy Topham's waving arms as she pretended to be a butterfly
amongst the sparse blooms. There were times when his inability to
age or die was a blessing. At least dementia would never get him.
Lunacy, perhaps, given his lifestyle, but never
dementia.
'Is he ill?' asked a voice from the
patio. He looked over to see an elderly man straining over his
stout walking cane and glancing between Alexander and
Jack.
'Nothing serious,' Jack said, walking
over to him. There was something very familiar about the man, but
nothing he could place.
'Shame!' the old man chuckled, and
the ghosts of twenty Capstans a day rattled around the brittle cage
of his chest.
'He doesn't seem to have many friends
here,' Jack replied.
'Or anywhere,' the old man agreed.
'Nobody visits him either. Mind you, there's nothing unusual in
that. They shove us in here to forget, don't they? Not like in my
day. My mother, bless her, lived with us until the day God took
her, and I would never have had it any other way...' The old man's
voice wavered as he thought about his past. Jack recognised the
look only too well, lost in memory...
'I'm sure she appreciated
it.'
The old man nodded. 'She did, she
did... Poor woman had been abandoned altogether too many times in
her life. I certainly wasn't going to add to it.'
'You were a good son.'
Jack smiled, and kept wracking his
brain to place the old man. There was definitely something
recognisable there, something in his smile... He stuck out his
hand. 'Doctor Harkness.'
The old man took it. 'Gordon
Cottrell. Pleased to meet you.'
A cold feeling ran through Jack, his
skin erupting in gooseflesh. He would have said someone had walked
over his grave – he'd certainly had enough of them.
'Cottrell?' he asked. 'What was your
mother's name?'
'Alison,' Gordon replied, rather
befuddled by the question. 'Why? You're rather young to have known
her, I suspect!' Jack nodded. 'Of course...' He fixed a big, false
smile in place. 'Best be off! Patients to see.'
'Aye, well, good talking to you.
Maybe see you around again.'
'Maybe.'
Jack had to fight the urge to run as
he made his way back towards the car park. He took off his white
coat, got back in the SUV and stared out of the windscreen, heart
pounding and his breath coming in shallow bursts. After a moment,
he pulled a medical tin out of his pocket, opened it, took out the
syringe filled with an overdose of anaesthetic he had intended to
give Alexander and squirted it out of the window. He put the
syringe back in the tin and drove away from Mercy Hill Care
Home.
'Hello there,' Gwen said, as Julia
opened the door of Jackson Leaves. 'Sorry to disturb you, but I'm
from the Council and I just need to ask you a couple of
questions.'
Julia checked the identification Gwen
was offering and nodded reluctantly once she admitted it all looked
in order.
'It's a bit of a mess at the moment,'
she said, letting Gwen in and leading her through to the kitchen.
'I still haven't finished unpacking.'
'Never fun, is it?' said Gwen,
sitting down at the kitchen table.
'No,' Julia admitted. 'Especially
when you're by yourself.'
'Just you then, is it?' Gwen asked.
'Big place for someone on their own.'
'I inherited it from my aunt,' Julia
said. 'She rattled around in here for years. I don't think I
will.'
'Oh?'
'No... Can't say I like the place
much. I'm planning on letting it out. Students,
maybe.'
'Oh yes? Why not, eh? Plenty of
room.'
'Yeah. I've advertised, but no takers
yet. If nobody turns up, I might just sell it, get one of those new
apartments at SkyPoint.'
Gwen squirmed. 'I hear they're not
all they're cracked up to be.'
'Really?' Julia sighed. 'Just fancied
something a bit more modern. Place like this, it's just
too...'
'Full of ghosts?' Gwen
smiled.
'Something like that.' Julia wiped
pointlessly at the kitchen worktop, nervous and wanting something
to distract her. 'Well, whatever I decide to do, I need to smarten
the place up a bit. Don't suppose you know anyone cheap and
reliable, do you? I'm hopeless at that sort of thing. My ex used to
do it all, but he's...'
'Yes?'
'Accident at work... I'd rather not
go into it.'
'Of course,' Gwen said, getting to
her feet. 'I quite understand, and it really is none of my
business. Look... This is obviously a bad time. Maybe we can do
this over the phone in a couple of weeks?'
'That would be better. Thank
you.'
They walked back along the hall to
the front door, Gwen stepping outside and smiling as she handed
Julia a fake business card. 'I'll call you next month,' she said.
'It's nothing major, just some work we're doing in the area. Oh...'
She bent over to pick something up off the gravel. 'Don't leave
that lying around. You never know, do you?' She handed the lottery
ticket to Julia.
'That's not mine,' Julia said. 'I
never do the lottery.'
'Well, it's definitely not mine,'
Gwen said. 'I always play the same numbers, my husband's
birthday... You may as well hold on to it – never know your
luck!'
'I suppose.' Julia didn't seem at all
convinced but put the ticket in her pocket anyway.
'Maybe you won't have to worry about
finding workmen after all.' Gwen smiled and walked down the drive,
waving goodbye over her shoulder.
'Well?' Jack asked as she moved past
him and headed for the SUV.
'She's fine. False memory's
holding.'
'Good.'
'Excuse me,' came a voice from behind
him.
Jack turned to see a young woman
jogging towards him.
'Help you?' he asked.
'Hope so!' the girl replied. 'I'm
looking for a place that's advertising rooms around here. Nina
Rogers...' She stuck out her hand.
'Pleased to meet you, Nina Rogers!'
Jack smiled, shaking her hand.
'I'm at the Uni, you wouldn't believe
how difficult it is to find somewhere to stay.'
'I can imagine—'
'They're all really expensive or
really grotty, or both, I went to this one place, and I swear there
were things living in the walls.'
Jack glanced towards Gwen, neither
quite sure if they should be worried.
'Like cockroaches or something,' Nina
added, her eyes never leaving Jack's face. 'The old guy there
probably breeds them, he smelt like the sort, y'know... mouldy...
He wore this cardigan that I swear would have stood up on its own,
weird guy, wouldn't have stayed there even if the place had been
nice, you just can tell about some people, can't you? Not the sort
of people you want calling for the rent, if you know what I
mean...'
'And breathe...' muttered Gwen with a
smile.
'Sorry!' said Nina, rolling her eyes.
'I go on, don't I? Anyway, I've got the advert somewhere...' She
dug around in her bag. 'I don't know you, do I?' she said, still
looking at Jack.
'Wouldn't be surprised,' Gwen told
herself in the SUV's wing mirror.
'I don't think so,' Jack replied with
a slight frown.
'He gets around.' Gwen
added.
'Here it is!' Nina pulled the advert
out. 'Julia Wallace, place called Jackson Leaves.'
'Full, I'm afraid,' Jack said
quickly.
'Oh no!' Nina sighed.
'I know. We've actually just come
from there. Known the place for years... Hope you find somewhere
nice, though.'
Jack headed quickly towards Gwen and
the SUV.
'Why did you say that?' Gwen asked.
'You know Julia's looking for tenants.'
'I'm sure the place is OK now, but
let's not take the risk. Besides, it's not like Julia will need the
money once she cashes in that ticket. It's all worked out just
fine, hasn't it?'
Gwen frowned as she glanced at a
'lost' poster on a nearby lamp post – Hannah Ogilvy smiling in an
old Christmas photo, paper hat on her head and Christmas-tree
earrings that were as jolly as her smile. 'Not for everyone,' she
said.
'No,' Jack replied, 'but sometimes
you just have to settle for the majority— Watch it!' he shouted as
a teenaged boy shoved past him and ran off up the road. 'Wait a
minute...' he began checking his pockets.
Gwen was laughing. 'Did you not see
who that was?' she asked.
'He took my wallet!'
Jack began to run after him, but Gwen
didn't think he stood much of a chance. From what she could see,
Danny Wilkinson was a fast runner.