“Wow, the smog is bad here,” Jean commented
as she stepped out of the TARDIS behind The Doctor. He bounded out enthusiastically
and didn’t seem at all bothered by the air being nearly so thick
he left an impression of himself in it. He looked back over his shoulder
as he strode off down the cobbled alleyway towards the faint glow of street
lamps and told Jean not to dawdle.
“It’s London in the late Victorian age,” he replied
in explanation to her first comment. “Every house, big or small
is belching out coal smoke, every factory chimney, every office or church
hall…. Your ancestors are polluting the atmosphere and calling it
progress.”
“Not my ancestors. Mine are all Scottish Islanders. They destroyed
peat bogs for fuel. That was their contribution to the destruction of
the ozone layer.”
She spoke lightly of what was a very seriously matter mainly because she
knew perfectly well that the problem was going to be redressed in the
future, roughly fifty years after her own lifetime, when common sense
and technology combined to ban fossil fuels and repair the damage.
Right now, it made for a strange, almost alien world that frightened her
a little even with The Doctor at her side. Knowing this was London didn’t
help when she didn’t have any idea what part of London it was.
At least not until they came out of the alleyway and she saw St. Paul’s
Cathedral looming in the smog. Gas lamps made the street level orange
rather than black, but by the time her eyes had turned as far as the great
dome she was looking into darkness again.
“In your day it is uplit at night by strategically placed lamps,
of course,” The Doctor told her. “Come along. Paternoster
Row is this way.”
“And what’s at Paternoster Row?” Jean asked.
“Some friends of mine who want to talk to me. I had a message from
them.”
Paternoster Row was a narrow but substantial street in the shadow of
the great cathedral. One side was mostly bookshops with two or three storeys
of rented apartment space above. On the other side was a terrace of very
fine town houses, the sort with three main floors and windows in the attic,
too, iron railings around steps going down to a basement, and steps up
to a wide door with a fan-shaped window above it.
Jean wondered what sort of friends of The Doctor lived there. She thought
of several important people of this era – Darwin, Dickens, Disraeli
came immediately to mind. The fact that their names all started with a
‘D’ was completely coincidental. She tried to think of other
famous Victorian Londoners with different initials. Arthur Conan Doyle,
who might have been a ‘C’ if Conan was a double-barrelled
surname rather than a middle Christian name, also sprang to mind. It occurred
to her at the same time that 13 Paternoster Row was quite a lot like 221b
Baker Street in just about every TV or film adaptation she had ever seen.
Despite the very late hour – a clock somewhere struck One as they
waited – there was a light inside the house and very soon the door
was opened by a maid in a neat black dress who didn’t look as if
she had just tumbled out of bed.
“Good morning, Jenny,” The Doctor said. “I apologise
for the lateness of the hour, but you know what the TARDIS is like. She
can land on a ha’penny, and locate any point in time and space,
but she has trouble with distinguishing AM and PM. I meant to arrive just
after lunch.”
“Of course, Doctor,” Jenny answered. “Her Ladyship is
waiting for you in the drawing room.”
She invited them both in and led them to the comfortable drawing room
where a lady in a purple dress sat drinking a cup of tea. Jean tried not
to stare, because the lady was very distinctly not Human. Her face was
green and scaled like a crocodile. Her eyes were dark and her lips thin.
When she spoke, a forked tongue was visible inside her mouth.
“Jenny, bring refreshments for our guests, please,” she said.
Jenny at once scurried off to do her bidding.
“You… drink tea?” Jean asked. “Is that…
usual… for… aliens?”
The reptilian lady growled in the back of the throat and glared at Jean.
“Madam Vastra, please forgive my friend,” The Doctor said
hurriedly. “She has never been introduced to one of your kind before.
Jean, this is Madam Vastra, of the Silurian race who were masters of Earth
long before your species evolved. She tolerates humans as long as they
remember that she is not, in fact, an alien, but a native of this world
and superior in breeding and intelligence to your upstart ape race.”
“I am very sorry,” Jean apologised. There was nothing else
to say.
“I never understood The Doctor’s obsession with your species
until I met Jenny,” Madam said with a smile that might have been
false or real. “She is one of the more tolerable of your kind, a
very able housekeeper and a thoroughly good wife.”
“Wife?” Jean glanced at The Doctor and wondered what she ought
to say next.
“It really is unfair of you to expect Jenny to run around after
you,” The Doctor said to Madam Vastra, ignoring Jean’s silent
search for the politically correct words. “And having people think
of her as no more than a servant is unkind. A marriage should be about
equals.”
“Nowhere on this ape-infested planet is marriage about equality,”
Madam Vastra replied with absolute truth. “And inter-species marriage
is utterly unacceptable socially. This outward appearance of things suits
us.”
Jean wondered if the inter-species aspect of the marriage was the only
sticking point in Victorian London, but she thought she had already put
her foot in it enough tonight.
When Jenny returned she sat with her wife/mistress and took tea along
with their guests.
“Strax is on his way,” she said.
“Good,” The Doctor responded. “We can discuss the matter
of concern when he gets here.”
“Though given Strax’s lack of comprehension of subtleties,
I don’t know why we bother,” Madam Vastra added. “His
solution to any problem involves large amounts of armaments and a full
frontal assault, even though we don’t have the armaments and no
target to launch an assault against, frontal or otherwise.”
“He is learning, though,” The Doctor conceded.
“He has stopped strangling people with his bare hands and mastered
most of the Queensbury Rules,” Madam conceded.
“He’s amateur heavyweight champion of the St. Pauls district,”
Jenny added with a soft laugh. “Unopposed, too. His last opponent
leapt out of the ring halfway through the first round, ran out of the
hall and hasn’t been seen since.”
Jean was wondering what sort of man this Strax was when there was a resounding
knock at the door – indeed, a hammering that might easily have taken
the door right off its hinges.
“He hasn’t yet mastered the bell,” Madam Vastra sighed.
She poured tea in a large pewter mug ready to give to the new arrival
while Jenny showed him in. Jean did her best not to stare at the inhuman
face of the squat figure with no obvious neck that looked as if he had
been squeezed into the wide-fitting suit he was wearing.
The Doctor introduced Jean to him. He seemed friendly enough, but he called
her ‘lad’. Jenny gave her a ‘don’t ask’
shrug as Strax sat in the widest chair and drank his tea.
“I asked The Doctor here to assist with a case that is quite beyond
the powers of Scotland Yard to investigate,” Madam Vastra announced,
passing from small talk to important matters immediately. “Nor do
we wish that new Torchwood organisation to be involved. They would be
too much of a nuisance.”
“I couldn’t agree more,” The Doctor responded.
“Four women and a man have been declared missing in recent weeks.
That is the official position, because the police do not want the Press
to speculate about what has really happened to them.”
“What HAS happened?” Jean asked. “Oh dear, it isn’t
Jack the Ripper, is it?”
“No,” Madam Vastra assured her. “I ate him three years
ago.”
Jean was the only one who found that statement surprising. She did her
best to look as if she took it as lightly as the others.
“The bodies are being kept in the mortuary at St. Bartholemew’s
hospital, in a basement room to which only Jenny and I, a pathologist
from the hospital and one senior officer of Scotland Yard have access.
It is imperative that the state of the bodies does not become common knowledge.”
“What state?” The Doctor asked.
Jenny went to the mahogany dresser next to the window and took out a file
from the drawer. She brought it to The Doctor. Jean leaned closer to look
at the photographs contained within the paper cover. Photography had been
around for some years by the mid-1880s, and it was possible to produce
very well defined images by now.
These were very well-defined pictures of some very strange corpses.
The Doctor asked who had taken them since this was such a closely guarded
secret.
“I took the pictures,” Madam Vastra said. “If you had
refused to come, I would have found a way to send them to you in order
to convey the urgency of the matter.”
“I’m here,” The Doctor reminded her. “And I understand
the urgency. Five altogether… that’s bad, very bad.”
Jean had nothing to say for the moment. She could guess what The Doctor
was going to suggest next, though.
“We need to go to St. Barts. I have to examine these bodies myself
– to formally identify them.”
“I thought you would,” Madam Vastra said with a knowing nod.
“We shall wait until first light. Strax, I shall be needing my carriage
at six, sharp.”
“Yes, Madam,” he answered. “How many will be travelling
with you?”
“Just The Doctor,” Madam told him. Jean looked mutinous about
that. “It will be difficult enough persuading the staff to allow
him into the locked basement. If there is a crowd, it will be impossible.”
“I’m hardly a crowd,” Jean protested, but Madam Vastra
was determined and The Doctor did nothing to persuade her that Jean should
come along.
“I’m left out of it, too,” Jenny pointed out. “Strax,
also, except as carriage driver. I’ll make up the guest bedroom
and you can get some sleep. They’ll have plenty for us to do later,
I am sure.”
Jenny smiled reassuringly, and Jean accepted the offer of a place to sleep.
After all, it was two o’clock in the morning. If The Doctor and
Madam Vastra were going to sit up drinking tea and reminiscing about past
adventures until dawn it would be a long night.
Reminiscing about past adventures was exactly what they did. As dawn
broke through the smog and a grey morning light spread through the streets
of London, Madam got ready to go out. That meant putting on a thick veil
that disguised her face and lace gloves over her long, slender but reptilian
fingers. The Doctor had no such preparations to make. His clothes fitted,
more or less, in almost any era from the mid-eighteenth century onwards.
He climbed into the carriage beside Madam and they set off through the
still quiet streets of London.
St. Bartholomew’s, fondly known as St. Barts, was a hospital, so
it was occupied by day and by night. The Doctor and Madam were admitted
through a side entrance by a night watchman who might have been part Vampire.
The Doctor let that pass. There were one or two of them around, taking
jobs where blood was easy to come by.
Besides, Vampires didn’t do the damage he was here to see. He walked
quietly beside Madam to the locked room in the mortuary where the five
unusual bodies were being kept. He looked at them with careful detachment
before examining each corpse with the sonic screwdriver in ‘autopsy’
mode.
“Each body reduced to a dry husk,” he commented. “Even
the bone marrow has been sucked out of them. The dry remains shrunk to
a quarter of the normal size, non-Human features such as the double nostrils
and third eye revealed in death beneath the facial tissue.”
“Yes,” Madam commented.
“Five of the Twelve Exiles murdered in this way. Have the remaining
seven been warned of the danger?”
“They have,” Madam Vastra answered. “The Crown Prince
himself is at Balmoral as a guest of the British Royal Family. Their security,
and the fact that it is so far away ought to be enough to ensure his safety.
But the others are vulnerable. If this is a Satyr attack….”
“It can’t be anything else,” The Doctor confirmed. “The
nature of the death. Only a Satyr Dehydration Pistol can do this. Even
a vampire or a haemovore only takes blood, not every other fluid in the
body. Irisians take the water from the body, but not blood cells or bone
marrow. Dirisi only want the iron and salt from the body. They don’t
dehydrate.”
Even Madam Vastra was surprised at how well The Doctor understood the
methods by which various races preyed upon others. He was uncommonly serious
about it, too. It disturbed her not to have him making quips about the
situation.
“They have been safe on Earth for nearly fifty years,” he
added. “Now this. Were the Satyr lucky or have the Twelve been betrayed?”
Madam Vastra shook her head. She didn’t know.
“It was a rhetorical question,” The Doctor assured her. “But
one we WILL need to find an answer to if we are to prevent the annihilation
of the whole family.”
“Indeed,” Madam agreed. “But where to begin?”
“With a working breakfast back at your place,” The Doctor
answered. “We’ll bring Jenny and Jean in on what we know so
far and then talk to the Six remaining in London.”
“Agreed. What of these bodies? Shall I tell Scotland Yard they can
be released to their families for burial?”
“Yes,” The Doctor answered. “There is no further need
for them to remain here. An autopsy would reveal nothing of use to Human
medical science and even less to us. We already know the three things
any investigator needs to know about a murder – who, how and why.”
A Satyr with a dehydration pistol because they were sworn to annihilate
the Twelve Exiles.
“Who EXACTLY are the Twelve Exiles?” Jean asked as The Doctor
outlined the situation over a breakfast of porridge, bacon and eggs and
toast with as much coffee as anyone could eat. Madam Vastra ate the porridge
only reluctantly, but she had three helpings of bacon from her own serving
dish – the rashers only partially cooked for the sake of appearances
in front of Human friends.
“They were the ruling family of Satyri,” The Doctor explained.
“There was a revolution. The family managed to escape before the
palace was stormed. They have been living on Earth in secret ever since.
We thought the Satyr wouldn’t find them. They have a limited shape-shifting
ability. They disguised themselves as Human and slipped into Earth society
– specifically the aristocratic class of London. The Crown Prince
is believed to be an exile from one of the smaller German states subsumed
by Prussia, a minor royal, vaguely related to the late Prince Albert –
and therefore accepted at Court. The others call themselves Duchess this
and Viscount that. The men belong to the right clubs, the women have tea
with the right sort of people and fit right in despite losing their royal
status.”
“But five of them are now dead.”
“Yes.”
“That’s not good, is it?”
“Not good at all.”
“So what do we do, then?” Jean asked.
“We’re going to protect the six of the Twelve who are in London,”
The Doctor explained. “Strax will be bodyguard to the Crown Prince’s
brother, Balric, known to his fellows at the Reform Club as Viscount Ballina.
Madam Vastra and I are going to visit the prince’s four sisters,
Eri, Glan, Neila and Bess, in their charming house in Kensington. Jean,
you go with Jenny to see the youngest surviving member of the family,
Kel, known locally as The Reverend Kenneth Layton, Succentor of Saint
Pauls.”
“There’s an alien posing as a reverend in St Paul’s
Cathedral?” Jean asked in surprise. “I mean… it is OK
to call THESE people aliens, isn’t it?”
“It would be better not to call anyone such a thing,” Madam
Vastra said. “Even Strax has lived in London long enough to understand
Cockney Rhyming slang – although don’t encourage him. It really
doesn’t sound right coming from his lips. As for the Twelve, they
fully integrated themselves into Human society fifty years ago. They are
merely migrants who have become a part of the fabric of London life.”
She had put her foot in it again. Jean was glad her assignment was away
from the acerbic Madam Vastra. Jenny was all right. She had chatted to
her while she prepared breakfast for everyone. Apart from being married
to a female reptile she was reassuringly normal and that on its own was
a good reason to like her.
“All right, the Reverend it is,” Jean decided. “Only,
somebody explain what a Succentor is before we go.”
A Succentor is a clergyman responsible for the music within a Cathedral.
Jean and Jenny walked across to St. Paul’s Cathedral with that information
in mind, and the fact that the Succentor in this case was a man from another
world who’s life might be in imminent danger from an assassin. They
waited quietly at the back of the knave until the first service of the
morning was done then politely asked about Reverend Layton.
He turned out to be a round faced, round armed, generally round man of
fifty years by Human standards – if such could be applied to their
race. He brought them to a small drawing room-cum-office where he had
tea and toast brought for his guests. They had already breakfasted well,
but they ate a little toast and drank the tea as they told the Reverend
what had happened to his kinsfolk.
“It’s bad,” he admitted. “We thought ourselves
safe here on this planet with its teeming millions. If the assassin succeeds
in getting to the Crown Prince, we are all doomed.”
Jean explained Madam Vastra’s belief that the Crown Prince was safe
in Scotland with the cream of the British Army protecting Balmoral and
its occupants. The Reverend was surprised to learn that the elder of his
Exiled family had left the City, but agreed that he was almost certainly
out of reach of the murderer, there.
“You think it is just the one murderer?” Jenny asked, picking
up on his words. “It’s not a group of assassins?”
“I think the fact that my siblings were killed individually, at
separate times and places, confirms that,” he said. “It is
one man. I shall be vigilant, of course. Though my work here makes it
difficult. People visit St Pauls at all times of the day from Matins to
Evensong. To keep a close eye on every one of them would be near impossible.”
“Yes, I see your problem,” Jean told him, feeling utterly
frustrated by her inability to help in any way.
“Forewarned is forearmed, of course,” the Reverend added.
“I shall be on the lookout for those who do not have holy pilgrimage
on their minds.”
And that was as much as they could do. They drank another cup of tea out
of politeness and then left quietly. The Reverend Succentor returned to
practicing the sung responses for the main service of the day.
“He didn’t seem VERY upset that three of his sisters and an
uncle had been murdered,” Jean said as they walked back through
the narrow streets of St Pauls district.
“Victorian men don’t show emotions,” Jenny answered.
“They are stoic.”
“Even so… I don’t know. Something wasn’t quite
right. I can’t put my finger on it. I feel very sorry for him. It
must be dreadful knowing that somebody wants to murder him and it might
happen at any moment, right there in the Cathedral. But I can’t
say I warmed to him as a person.”
Jenny laughed softly. Jean wondered why.
“I am married to a cold-blooded species. Warming to people…
easy when I’ve warmed to a Silurian and she has warmed to me.”
Jean smiled politely. She still wasn’t quite sure what to make of
Jenny and Madam’s relationship. She had always thought of herself
as open-minded and having a live-and-let-live attitude to other people’s
life choices. But this was her first inter-species marriage and she was
still getting used to the idea.
“Vastra is a kind and attentive woman,” Jenny told Jean, as
if she knew what was on her mind. “And a very sensitive lover.”
Jean decided she wasn’t going to think about THAT any more than
she had to and changed the subject. The complex story of how The Doctor
and the Paternoster Row Three came to know each other saw them home and
through yet another pot of tea while they waited to hear from the others.
The Doctor and Madam Vastra were received graciously in the richly appointed
home of the four exiled princesses. They were known to their society friends
in the wealthy Kensington and Hyde Park area as Duchess Erica of Stockholm,
Countess Gertrude of Glamis, the Dowager Duchess Theresa O’Neill
and The Honourable Elizabeth Bessant. The three eldest claimed to be widows
and the youngest a spinster, living on their inheritances in the style
to which they were accustomed.
Tea was served in a fine bone china service and the spoons were silver.
The cakes that accompanied them were hand-made violet macaroons. The Doctor
ate one slowly, and resisted the urge to sneak a couple into his pocket
for later.
The princesses were devastated by the loss of five members of their family.
They didn’t cry, because their species didn’t have tear ducts,
but they keened softly. The low sound of grief tore at the double hearts
of the Time Lord and even touched the cold blood of Madam Vastra, who
reached out a comforting hand to Lady Elizabeth.
“I, too, have lost family,” she said, remembering the deaths
of hibernating members of her tribe when the London Underground system
broke through the habitat. “The loss is inconsolable, but the comfort
of friends is a blessing.”
The Doctor drew in breath and thought he couldn’t have put it better
himself. He went through all the stages of grief enhanced a million times
after the death of his planet. He raged against the injustice, cried in
grief, sank into a funk of self-pity, and eventually found that being
with people, especially the maddening yet impossible Human race, softened
the blow.
“The worst of it is, the three sisters were our best hope of continuing
our line,” Erica, the eldest, said. “We know inter-marriage
with humans is possible, and they were young enough to breed. As it is,
now Elizabeth is the only one of us of child-bearing age. Of course, either
of our brothers might marry. But the chances of OUR bloodline being carried
in the offspring are stronger if it comes through the female.”
Just like all aristocrats, anywhere, The Doctor noted. The continuation
of the line was important. But to the Exiles, it was all the more vital.
Their greatest hope was that one day a king or queen would be restored
to the Satyri throne when this republican nonsense was past. In the event
that it took a generation or so, they needed heirs.
“We don’t know who the killer is,” The Doctor reminded
them. “Or what he looks like in a Human form. So you must be vigilant.
Might I suggest that you review your social engagements and avoid those
where you might be exposed.”
“My dear Doctor,” Countess Gertrude protested. “How
might we introduce Elizabeth to an eligible man if we are not able to
attend the right social functions?”
“It may not be for long,” The Doctor promised. “Madam
and I are investigating the matter. You can be assured we will do all
we can to bring the assassin to justice.”
“Thank you,” the Duchess said on behalf of her sisters. The
sentiment was genuine. But whether she felt reassured by The Doctor’s
words was another matter.
“I’ve never seen you so earnest,” Madam Vastra said
as they travelled back to the City afterwards. “Not a single quip
or foolish remark from you, Doctor.”
“The fate of the Twelve is no laughing matter,” he sighed.
“You and I both know that. We both know what it is to live among
this Human race without hope of the company of our own kind again. We
share their grief, their loss. We have to help them.”
“We will, Doctor. We will.”
Strax was finding his role as a bodyguard to the Viscount Ballina surprisingly
simple. He merely had to stand with the other butlers, valets, batmen
and personal secretaries in a straight line against the wall of the Reform
Club members drawing room where their masters were all relaxing after
a strenuous lunch in the members dining hall. Standing in a line dressed
in an identical uniform to everyone else was what he had been doing since
he left the hatcheries and trained as a Sontaran trooper. It came naturally
to him.
His fellow servants didn’t consider him to be especially out of
the ordinary, even though he stood a foot shorter than the man beside
him and was wider than two of them put together. Servants were servants.
Nor did the members think him unusual.
Servants were servants.
Yes, being one of a crowd, all dressed alike, standing in line, waiting
endlessly, was all familiar to a Sontaran. He felt oddly at home in the
Reform Club – a fact that would almost certainly have surprised
and disturbed that institution’s founders.
Then the assembled servants, stewards and members alike were startled.
Strax broke ranks and hurled his bulk across the room, tackling a man
to the ground. In the midst of the uproar two of his fellow servants managed
to persuade him not to twist the man’s head off and eventually he
was persuaded to let him up from the ground.
“He has a Satyr Dehydration Pistol,” Strax insisted. “He
must be detained at once under the sanctions of the Shaddow Proclamation.”
“This… is a… a… telescope,” stammered the
young Lord Highbury, demonstrating the bronze instrument in his hands.
“It… belonged to… to… my grandfather who…
who….” His lordship steadied himself before continuing. “My
grandfather was aboard HMS Victory at Trafalgar, alongside Nelson. This
was a gift from the Admiral himself. I brought it to show to Lord Salford
who has an interest in such things.”
“My apologies,” Strax murmured. “It is an easy mistake.
The Dehydration Pistol is very similar in size and length.”
He bowed his head in deference to his accidental victim and withdrew from
the drawing room. Viscount Ballina followed and there was a very strongly
worded altercation in the privacy of the Reform Club’s cloakroom
before Strax was dismissed from the Viscount’s presence and ejected
from the Club.
He walked home to Paternoster Row dejectedly, wondering why these humans
made such a fuss about being knocked about in such a way. In the Sontaran
barracks no trooper would feel aggrieved about hand to hand combat. One
who went down so easily would have to issue a challenge and prove himself
worthy, but nobody would think of apologising. Indeed, there wasn’t
even a concept of ‘apology’ in Sontaran culture, let alone
a word in their language.
Worst of all, though, his mission had failed. He had exposed himself as
a covert bodyguard and could no longer protect the Viscount. If he was
assassinated now it would be all Strax’s fault.
He would have to do an even greater penance than the one that found him
performing service as a nurse to humans in the first place.
“Wet nurse to the children of the Venussanian Brood Queen,”
he thought grimly. Nothing could be more humiliating than having to provide
lactations daily for fifty yellow-skinned infant invertebrates.
Jean and Jenny were home first. They talked over their experience in
the drawing room while they waited for the others. Strax was the last
to arrive, and his explanation of the disaster at the Reform Club was
met with a mixture of responses from the rest of the group.
“Don’t worry, Strax,” The Doctor assured him. “They
will forget about it soon enough. Anything that isn’t in the rule
book of Club Discipline always is.”
“Even so, I have let you down,” Strax opined. “I should
be flayed to within an inch of my life.”
Jean wondered just how much flaying it would need to cause damage to Strax’s
hide-like skin, but since The Doctor deferred the punishment she would
likely never find out.
“There’s still something nagging at me about Reverend Layton,”
Jean said. “Something odd….”
“They don’t blink as often as humans,” Madam Vastra
pointed out. “But neither does The Doctor, so that should not strike
you as out of the ordinary by now.”
“No, it’s not that. It’s something he said.”
“Oh!” Jenny exclaimed. “Oh… Jean… we have
been stupid, both of us. We should have thought of it much sooner.”
“Perhaps you lads should also be flayed for your error,” Strax
suggested.
“Nobody is being flayed,” The Doctor answered. “Go on,
you two, think it through.”
“We told him about the five deaths,” Jenny continued. “But….”
“We never told him where or when they were killed.”
“Because we didn’t know. You never told us.”
“But HE said it had to be one assassin because they were all killed
separately at different times.”
Jean and Jenny looked at each other as the penny dropped for them both.
They didn’t dare look at The Doctor or Madam Vastra, and certainly
not Strax who was still working it out on his own.
“Kind Hearts and Coronets,” The Doctor said.
“What?” Everyone looked at him curiously. Jean was the only
one that the cultural reference meant anything to, and she took a few
seconds to understand completely.
“Can it really be so simple?” Madam Vastra asked.
“Let’s go to see Reverend Layton.”
Choir practice was in full voice when they entered St. Paul’s.
The five, one Silurian, two humans, one Time Lord and a Sontaran, were
hardly regular churchgoers, but they respected the sanctity of the building
and even when they closed in on the Succentor they did so quietly.
When he saw the five coming for him, though, the Succentor gave a scream
of rage that echoed through the whispering gallery around the famous dome.
He ran, dodging Strax’s rugby tackle and The Doctor’s simultaneous
lunge, leaving them in a tangled heap together. The three women continued
the chase up the long central aisle of the nave, expecting him to burst
out through the main door. Instead he headed towards the small wooden
door into the South-West tower. Madam Vastra was significantly faster
than her Human companions and was running up the spiral staircase within
the tower, gaining on the portly and distinctly unfit Reverend now that
he had lost the element of surprise that put them at the first disadvantage.
“Wow!” Jean exclaimed as she looked up from the second turn
of the spiral to see Madam Vastra lean out over the dizzy drop and turn
her face upwards. A long forked tongue struck out and Reverend Leyton
gave a sharp cry of pain.
“Now you see what I mean about her,” Jenny said with a wicked
smile. Jean remembered she was in a Cathedral and kept several possible
replies to herself.
“You’re not dying,” Madam Vastra told the Reverend as
the two Human women caught up with her. “But my venom will make
you very lightheaded and nauseous. I suggest you stop running and give
yourself up.”
“No,” he answered. “Never.”
He struggled up the rest of the steps onto the arched gallery called the
South Triforium and tried to run, but his bulk and the venom coursing
in his veins brought him down. He collapsed against the wrought iron railings
overlooking the magnificent nave and gasped for breath.
“You did it,” Jean accused him. “You’re the one
who killed your own sisters and uncle. You planned to kill them all, right
up to the Crown Prince….”
“Not all. My aunt Elizabeth would be spared,” he answered,
as if expecting that he might be praised for such kindness. “She
is good breeding stock.”
“Quite apart from the disgusting thought of marrying your own aunt,”
Jean said. “That was ok for the Ancient Egyptians, so never mind….
Apart from that, you wanted to murder them all to be Crown Prince…
to be head of the family.”
“What family, if he had them all bumped off?” Jenny asked.
“He wanted to water the blood by intermarriage with humans,”
the Succentor explained. “My father, the Crown Prince…. He
was in negotiation with some inferior family of red-bloods from Bavaria
who had a woman of marriageable age. My sisters were being introduced
to ‘suitable’ men. I offered to mate with all three, but I
was refused. My father said that our blood must mingle with the aristocracy
of this adopted world so that we may secure our place here. He said that
we would never return to our homeworld, never rule there again. But our
descendents might yet rule the nations of this world.”
“That makes perfect sense,” Jean conceded.
“It is abominable. We must preserve the blood. We must remain separate.
But none of them agreed. That is why I had to kill them.”
“You’re mad,” Jenny told him. “Absolutely mad.”
“Stark raving bonkers,” Jean agreed.
“Your quest for blood purity is a noble one,” Madam Vastra
said. “My own species is quite incompatible with the ape-descendents,
and the thought of reproducing with them repugnant. But fratricide…
the very idea is appalling. My people would cast out one such as you.”
The Succentor struggled to stand up and move away from Madam Vastra, whose
tongue flickered between her half-opened lips. He leaned against the railings
as he backed away from her venomous ‘kiss’. There was an ominous
creaking noise and Jean called out a warning, but even as the echo of
her voice died away it was counter-pointed by a sound of metal giving
under the weight of the succentor’s well-fed body and his scream
as he fell to the nave below.
Madam Vastra, Jean and Jenny all looked down and saw The Doctor and Strax
examining the body. The Doctor looked up and made a gesture confirming
that he was dead.
“Kind Hearts and Coronets,” Jean said as they sat in Madam
Vastra’s drawing room and considered the consequences of what they
had learnt. “It’s an old film… I mean… in my time
it will be. Film isn’t even NEW at this time… about a poor
man who wants to become rich by killing off all his relatives in line
to a Dukedom. Reverend Leyton, the youngest of the Twelve… his idea
was even madder than that. It’s going to be a terrible shock to
the rest of his family.”
“I’ll break it to them gently,” Madam Vastra promised.
“The Crown Prince is right,” The Doctor said. “There
is no hope of a return to Satyri. Their future lies within the British
aristocracy, mingling their blood with Human. Do you know, they ARE actually
BLUE blooded. In their line the term will actually be true.”
“I’m glad you waited until now to tell me that,” Jean
replied. “I really don’t think I could have carried on if
I had known.”
“Sontaran blood is green, the true colour,” Strax pointed
out. “All other species are weaklings. The mixing of their bloods
will make them no more or less inferior to the Sontaran might.”
“Yes, Strax,” The Doctor told him. “You keep on believing
that.”