Subject: An edited version & 'The Two Librarians'
Author:
Posted on: 2013-09-12 10:21:00 UTC
The Mechanic stuck his head out from behind a hatch and pushed his goggles up onto his forehead. "All fixed," he said. "Well, moderately fixed."
"You're making me twitchy," the Librarian muttered, not glancing up from his tablet computer. "Would it hurt you to at least look at the manual?"
"I had to construct a whole new temporal transfer junction and bypass the entire neutron flow system to get her working again," the Mechanic pointed out. "I'm writing the manual. This isn't a repair job – by the time I'm through, this TARDIS will be a whole new ship."
"And where's the fun in reading the manual, anyway?" the Artisan piped up, scrambling down a ladder from the upper gallery. "Running a TARDIS is an art, not some complicated science! You have to feel your way through it. If you don't love your TARDIS, you-"
"Oh, spare me." The Alchemist walked into the console room, white coat billowing behind him. "All this 'art and science are totally separate' business - the trick is to synthesise them. Logic and emotion aren't antithetical, no matter what Doctor Spock says."
"That's Mister Spock," the Librarian corrected, "or if you want to get technical, Science Officer Spock. At least until he became Ambassador Spock, and-"
"Yes, yes." The Alchemist tapped a button on the console and peered at the screen. "The stabilisers are still reading as down..."
"Really? Let me see." The Mechanic frowned at the data printout, then pulled a large rubber mallet from his toolbelt and tapped the screen sharply. "That should do it."
"Great!" exclaimed the Bluejay from where she perched on the railing. "So are we ready to go?"
"Not until the Betrayer gets here," the Librarian informed her.
"You really shouldn't call him that," the Speaker chided him, standing up at last from his position by the main doors. "It's exceptionally rude to refuse to use the name someone has chosen in favour of an insulting epithet."
"Oh, not more preaching!" the Bluejay protested. "I thought you got over this when you regenerated!"
"This is important," the Speaker told her. "I know what it's like to be forcibly given a nickname-"
"Well, they're accurate," the Artisan put in. "You like to give presentations, he betrays people all the time…" She trailed off in the face of the Speaker's glare.
"I ask you," the Speaker said, looking around the console room, "each of you - how would you feel if no-one would use your chosen name? If people kept calling you 'the Flighty'," he nodded at the Bluejay, "or 'the Oil-stained'," to the Mechanic, "or 'the Explosive'," to the Alchemist.
"Well, speaking for myself, I wouldn't mind-" the Alchemist began. Then one of the doors swung open, and the Strategist strode in. He was, as usual, dressed all in black, and already scowling.
"Well?" he asked in the sudden silence. "What are we waiting for?"
"A TARDIS requires a crew of six," the Librarian pointed out. "You were absent."
"I was planning," the Strategist corrected, "and you already have six crew members here."
"Oh, I'm just along for the ride," the Bluejay called chirpily. "Don't mind me."
"Hm." The Strategist crossed to the console and took his place in front of one of the six segments, standing next to the Alchemist and the Mechanic. "But I am here now," he pointed out. "So, I ask again - what are we waiting for?"
And later on…
The Librarian walked the corridors of the TARDIS, scowling at his computer, trying yet again to pin down the solution to the Riddle of the Osirians. So absorbed was he that he failed to notice the other person in the corridor until he walked into her. Books went flying everywhere, and the Time Lord was barely able to catch himself in time.
"My books!" exclaimed the women he had run into, scrambling to collect them all. She straightened up and glared at the Librarian. "Why don't you look where you're going?"
"Why don't you?" the Librarian retorted. "I'm hardly the only one who can be held responsible here."
"No, but you had the most choice," the woman said, flicking a hand at his computer (and nearly losing her stack of books again). "I can barely see round this lot at all – you just had to stop working for half a minute until you got where you were headed!"
"… fair enough," the Librarian agreed. "I apologise. The Librarian, by the way."
The woman looked puzzled. "Yes? What of it?"
"That's me," the Librarian clarified.
The woman snorted. "Don't be ridiculous," she said. "I'm the Librarian. Now who are you really?"
"But I'm the Librarian," the (male) Librarian protested. "You can't steal my name!"
"I'm stealing your name?" the (female) Librarian exclaimed. "More like the other way round! Look at you – you're still on your first body!"
"Due to careful preservation of myself against danger, yes," the male said. Then he frowned, as a horrible thought began to dawn on him. "You don't think…?"
"No." The female shook her head. "No, that's ridiculous. Unthinkable."
"Absurd," the male supplied. "Inconceivable."
"Nonsensical," the female agreed. "To think that I could regenerate from-"
"That I could regenerate into-"
"Someone like you!" they finished together.
The male glared at the female, who returned the expression with equal distaste. "But no," he said at last. "Surely you'd remember if you'd ever been… well, me."
"Surely," she replied, but looked uncertain. "Except… well, there was a bit of trouble with my regeneration, actually. I was dead for a bit too long, and my memories… aren't what they used to be."
"That's awful!" the male Librarian exclaimed. "Losing your memories - that's like… like…"
"Like the burning of the Library of Alexandria," the female supplied. "I know. I've been trying to get them back, but nothing seems to work."
The First Librarian frowned and peered at his tablet. "You know," he said slowly, "I've been working on this riddle… the Riddle of the Osirians. And it seems to have something to do with memory…"
The Second Librarian's eyebrows rose. "The Osirians?" she repeated. "I have a book on them here somewhere – maybe it will help. Is there a table nearby…?"
Two notes:
-I'm not making a statement that the two Librarians are the same person - but I'm also not ruling it out. These characters are presumably not the same as any hypothetical PPC agents by the same names.
-I hope I've got everyone's gender right! This applies across both stories, naturally.
hS