Subject: And one last story - 'The Crowded TARDIS'
Author:
Posted on: 2013-09-17 10:51:00 UTC

Featuring, I think, everyone who's offered a name. I'm not sure everyone has spoken lines, but we're all in there...




"Can we get some quiet in here?"

The answer, apparently, was no. The multiple conversations went on, getting louder all the time. The Strategist scowled and looked at the Speaker, who shrugged.

"I can't convince them if they can't hear me," he called over the racket. "The Acoustician might be able to rig something up."

"He's too busy arguing with the Mechanic over whose responsibility the viewscreens are," the Strategist pointed out.

"The Bluejay could probably shut them up - but again, only if they can hear her."

"Precisely." The Strategist frowned around the console room. "The Supporter... well, she'd mean well, I'm sure. Oh, now, I wonder..."

The two Time Lords put their heads together. About a minute later, a new head dropped down from the gantry, fortunately attached to a body.

"Hi!" exclaimed the Weirdo. "Anything good?"

The Strategist did his best to hide a smile. "Actually, yes. We wanted to talk to everyone, but they can't hear us..."

"Oh, that's simple," the Weirdo beamed, and then yelled at the top of her lungs: "Oy! You lot! Daleks!"

The hubbub stopped instantly as the Time Lords looked around frantically. The Strategist nodded his gratitude to the Weirdo and hopped up onto one of the seats.

"Get off that!" the Mechanic yelled. "Do you know how long it takes to build a safe TARDIS ejector seat?"

"I don't plan to break it," the Strategist assured him. "But I need to get your attention, however many of you there are-"

"Fifteen," four voices chorused from around the room, and the two Librarians, the Archivist, and the Analyzer exchanged satisfied looks.

"Or fourteen," the Analyzer went on, "if you subscribe to the belief that the Librarians are the same person."

"Fourteen or fifteen, a TARDIS has a crew of six," the Strategist pointed out. "We have a severe excess of Time Lords."

"Well, some of us aren't exactly permanent crew," the Pathologist pointed out. "If you want me to take my TARDIS and go..."

"You can't!" exclaimed the Alchemist. "Who's going to patch up my burns if you go?"

"And that's a very significant point," the Analyzer put in. "We need everyone in the crew."

"Rubbish!" the Weirdo shouted. "The Artisan? The Acoustician? Four nearly-identical bookworms? The Weirdo?" She blinked. "Wait, that's me. Who needs me? What good am I?" And she burst into tears.

"Oh, don't cry!" the Supporter exclaimed, running over to her. "It's all right, we do need you, you're an invaluable part of the team..."

"Really? Brill!" The Weirdo beamed at her.

Meanwhile, the First Librarian was tapping away at his tablet computer. He beckoned his possible later form over and pointed at something.

"And I resent the implication that I'm unnecessary," the Acoustician put in. "I mean, if you want to go back to the days of never knowing what the away team is up to..."

Now the Second Librarian, nodding in agreement with her counterpart, beckoned the Archivist over. Together they peered at the screen, and then the Archivist scurried off into the depths of the TARDIS.

"Am I allowed to object too?" the Artisan asked. "I mean, yes, in a literal view of our mission statement, I'm not 'necessary'. But what good is helping people if you turn the universe into featureless cold metal along the way? We must be artists, not just soldiers. I might even say, more artists than soldiers."

"Yes, you probably would," the Samurai agreed amiably. "But I must say, that would be jolly bad form. The fact that some of us are skilled with weapons rather than crafts hardly means you should belittle us."

The Archivist returned, carrying a thick book, and passed it to the Second Librarian. The latter flicked through the pages, hunting.

"Personally I'm amazed no-one's mentioned me yet," the Bluejay said, swinging her legs where she sat on the railing. "Aren't I pretty much the definition of a tagalong?"

"Don't lay it on too thick," the Pathologist said dryly. "Besides, even if you were, history - well, fiction - shows that quirky girls 'just along for the ride' solve a significant number of major catastrophes."

The Second Librarian, having found her page, hurried over to the Analyzer and pointed at something. The latter woman frowned, then raised her eyebrow. The Librarian whispered something in her ear.

"I think the real issue isn't 'useless in isolation'," said the Mechanic. "It's redundancy. We have - sorry, Acoustician - two engineers, four information junkies, two diplomats, three fighters... how many of each do we actually need?"

"As many as we can get," the Supporter said firmly. "What's the alternative - telling people to pack their bags and get lost?"

"If necessary," the Mechanic shrugged. "If a part is unnecessary, discard it."

The Analyzer, still frowning at the book, crossed the room to the Speaker. She ran her finger down the page, demonstrating something to him, then entered into a whispered conversation.

"You can't talk about people as parts, though," the Bluejay said, uncharacteristically serious. "They're - we're - people, with our own hopes and dreams, our own feelings and desires, our own-"

"I don't know," the First Librarian cut in. "I think we can all be defined pretty quickly. As someone said, I'm a bookworm, the Mechanic is an engineer, and you're a-"

"Manic Pixie Dream Girl?" the Pathologist suggested. "But she's right - even if you can define us in one word, that doesn't say everything about us."

"That's a bit metaphysical for you, isn't it?" the Artisan asked. "I thought you were pretty down on all that 'messy emotional business'."

"Emotional?" the Pathologist asked, bemused. "I was talking about genetics."

"Enough of this," the Strategist cut in, silencing the hubbub. "The key point here is that- yes, what is it?"

The Speaker had tapped his shoulder, and the Strategist leant down to listen. After a few moments he stood again, and shrugged.

"Apparently," he said, "a study by the United Universities of Raxacoricofallapatorius has conclusively demonstrated that, when it comes to starship crews, a larger, more varied team is always preferable. I'm quite surprised, I will admit, but the Analyzer says the proof is undeniable."

"Well, that settles it, then," the Alchemist said, grinning. "You have to let me start up my trans-temporal replication experiments again."

"I said 'crew'," the Strategist pointed out wearily, "not 'hideous abominations that should be time-locked and forgotten'."

"True enough," the Alchemist mused, "but on the other hand..."

"Don't even," the Pathologist cut in. "Remember I know where the sedatives are..."

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