Subject: Continuity: Keys (Part 5)
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Posted on: 2019-07-25 20:51:00 UTC

((Asynchronous narrative: go!))

Morgan and the Notary came up behind the Aviator as she stared out of the doors. "That... does not look like Soho," Morgan managed.

The Notary sniffed. "Really, Tigereye Castellan; I thought better of you." Her slender finger stabbed out, indicating a dozen different points in the view before them. "Compare the major points of interest with the key features of Soho, and I think you will find there are far more similarities than differences. Ergo, the sensible conclusion is that this is, in fact, the concisely-named region in question."

Morgan stared at her, but the Aviator got there first. "I already regret asking, but why do you have an encyclopediac knowledge of the districts of London?"

The Notary made a sound best described as tsk. "Because, unlike some everybody else, I spent the trip here on research."

"You spent it bickering with White," Morgan pointed out. "And seriously-"

"I never bicker," the Notary said primly. "I correct."

"-seriously," Morgan repeated, "how can you look at that sky, and those... those things, and say this is Soho?"

The Notary leant past the other Time Ladies and peered up at the shattered reflections that made up the sky. "I understand the 2020s were a troubled time on Earth," she said. "This seems about right for human incompetence."

The Aviator gave her a long, level look, then turned deliberately to Morgan. "Could it be some kind of paradox effect?" she asked. "Xan did say 'watch the mirrors'."

"If it is, it's a weird one." Morgan put a foot carefully out through the door, testing the ground for solidity. "Well, it feels like tarmac... come on, no good standing about here." She tightened her sash, checked her pistol was in its holster, and stepped out into the street.

It was quiet - even quieter than the cliche 'too quiet'. The agents walked slowly along what should have been a bustling road, past parked and abandoned cars. None of them looked at the sky. Apart from them, the only movement was the shifting, twisting things dotting the pavement.

"Have-?" The Aviator winced, and softened her voice. "Have either of you ever seen anything like them before?"

"Vardans," Morgan replied instantly. "They attacked Gallifrey once - you might remember, Grey. They had a form that looked similar - sort of like crumpled tinfoil."

"Not... that similar," the Notary said, uncharacteristically subdued. "These look more like... well, like broken mirrors."

"'Watch the mirrors'," Morgan recalled. "These things?"

"It seems likely," the Notary agreed. "What do you suppose they've done with the populace?"

"Ah... Orange?" The Aviator had lagged behind, and was scanning one of the kaleidoscopic forms with her sonic. "I think... I think they might be the populace."

She fiddled with the screwdriver's settings for a moment, then flicked it on and pointed it at the thing. The lazily whirling shards slowed to a crawl, then stopped; in their silvery surfaces, the trio saw the shattered reflection of a man in a suit, holding a paper coffee cup. The steam from the cup hung in the air, frozen with its owner. The man's expression was blank, vacant - peaceful, in the way a graveyard is peaceful.

"At least they don't seem to be suffering," Morgan said after a long, contemplative pause. "That's got to be better than the alternative."

"Well, yes, I should say so!"

The new voice came from behind them, and the trio whirled to see a man standing there: big hair, big eyes, big smile, and a very big scarf. The Aviator's jaw dropped; Morgan coloured and looked away; the Notary did her best to project polite indifference.

"It's not saying very much, though, is it?" the Doctor went on, seemingly oblivious to their surprise. "I mean, a cooking pot is better than a fire, but you wouldn't want to live there."

"Er... no." The Aviator glanced at the other two, then took a half step forward. "Which is why we're here, to try and fix the... paradox." She did her best to avoid turning the statement into a question, but her voice still drifted up a little at the end.

"Weeeeeell, hardly a paradox," the Doctor demurred. "Not a patch on the sort of paradoxes we used to get when I was small, at any rate. No, I'd say this is something far more sinister. Sarah and I were-" He stopped and looked around, his eyebrows rising in surprise. "Sarah? Where has she got to?"

Morgan coughed and stepped up beside the Aviator. "You were saying, Doctor, that something sinister is happening?"

"What?" The Doctor kept scanning the street. "Oh, yes, of course." He turned back to the trio, but his eyes remained troubled. "I'm terribly sorry," he said, "but I seem to have misplaced my companion. Sarah Jane Smith - lovely girl, very good at running. You haven't seen her, have you? I'd hate for something to happen to her; it would be awfully inconvenient."




((Obviously we're Some Time ahead of the Reader here, or at least in some form of altered temporal state. I too have a few ideas; Zing, I'll bounce them to you now, and maybe we can set up a notes doc for Iximaz and anyone else who wants to get in on the writing?))

((And yes, hopefully it's clear that's the Fourth Doctor. ^_^))

hS

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