The Techteun Nightmare
The Techteun Nightmare
By Danny Nicol
EPISODE 1
FORBIDDEN JOURNEY
“He’s pinched my Ladyshave again!” exclaimed Yaz, “Just when I was
going to do my legs!”
“Well, he is the overlord of all evil, Yaz,” said the Doctor. She was curled up by the roaring fire in the
TARDIS library reading an important-looking tome History of the Time Lords. “In fact by the Master’s standards of
villainy that’s quite a come-down.”
She half rose from the sofa in
order to admire Yaz in her police uniform.
“Anyway, don’t be mardy, you look
great.”
“D’you think it’ll work, half
travelling with you, half doing my job?”
“Don’t see why not. Now you can use your skills from outer space
to sort out fair play in inner Sheffield !”
“Will you be okay?” asked Yaz.
“Yes, I’ll be fine,” she replied
breezily, rising from the sofa. “Loads to do.
People to see. Keep the Master in
order. And look forward to picking you
up Friday.”
The Doctor’s chirpy bravado did
not quite convince.
“There’s something wrong, isn’t
there?” said Yaz.
“Well, if you must know. All that stuff about me being the Timeless
Child. Preys on my mind. How could I forget? And what have I forgotten?”
* * * * *
The Master meanwhile was putting the finishing touches on his shaving efforts. His beard of evil had its merits but designer stubble made more of his boyish charms.
Evil, he reflected was a precious
flower. It needed to be pampered,
cosseted. Bit like him really. But evil was not getting a fair crack of the
whip in this TARDIS. It was time he did
something fiendish, something utterly abominable, to counter the nauseating
goodness of the Doctor and Yaz.
The Master smiled at himself in
the mirror as he admired his new stubble.
Buttoning up his waistcoat, checking his fob watch and hitching up his
trousers to reveal his trademark purple socks he quit his room as he heard the
TARDIS land. Vwooorp! Vwooooorp!
In the console room the Doctor
was giving Yaz a final goodbye as she headed out.
“Break a leg, Yaz,” chipped in
the Master, “In fact, break both. In
fact, knock yourself out”. Yaz was
inured to the Master’s nastiness. With a
wave to both, she was gone off to start her week’s work, and the TARDIS doors
slammed shut after her.
“What do we do now?” asked the
Master.
“Fast forward to Friday, pick her
up.”
“Oh Doctor,” said the Master with
a snort of contemptuous disappointment, “When did you become so gutless? You had more sense of adventure when we skived
off Borusa’s classes.”
“Oh I’ve got sense of adventure
in bucketloads, way more than you” taunted the Doctor.
“Oh come now Doctor, behind that
façade you wouldn’t say boo to a goose.”
“I’ve said boo to quite a lot of
geese actually Master,” she retorted, “Big lot.
What about the ten foot high geese on the planet Narscream. I was arguing Hegelian philosophy with
them. Got pretty heated.”
“She’s done the travel-boasting,”
commented the Master, timing the Doctor on his fob watch, “The name-dropping
normally comes next.”
“Then there was the time I played
the goose opposite Laurence Olivier.
Panto 1961. Not that I said boo
to myself. Audience booed a bit.”
A smile grew on her face.
“Tell you what. All that guff you told me about the Timeless
Child and Techteun. Could be true. Never believed you. Let’s go check it out.”
Manically the Doctor gadded
around the console entering coordinates.
“Go back that far? To a forbidden time zone? You must be mad!”
“Fine one to talk,” said the
Doctor, “Given that you’re completely bonkers.”
“Bonkers? Is that a technical, mental-health
expression?” asked the Master.
* * * * *
The TARDIS materialised in the
small hold of a space vehicle, grey, drab and metallic.
“Oh well done, Doctor,” said the
Master, “Travelling with you is sheer class.
You’ve landed us in the hold with Techteun’s luggage.”
“Stop bellyaching Master,” chided
the Doctor, “This room’s sealed off but we can simply shimmy through that air
duct to get to Techteun’s control room.
Wonderful exercise and good job we’re both titches.”
Prising open a grille she invited
the Master to crawl into the duct.
“After you,” said the Doctor with
courtesy. Giving a look of resentment
the Master squeezed himself into the duct but had difficulty making further
progress.
“Hope you haven’t put on weight,
Master,” said the Doctor.
“Ouch!” said the Master as he
pushed himself forward, “There was a knob.”
The Master was unaccustomed to male genitalia over the last few years
and gave a pained expression.
“You should never have junked the
upgrade, Missy,” said the Doctor, “Get a move on! I need to get in.”
Just then the hologram of a huge
face materialised in front of the Doctor.
It was a face she knew: Gat, a particularly ruthless Time Lady whom the
Doctor had recently encountered.
“You have entered the
foundational time zone of the Time Lords,” said Gat, “Your presence in this era
is strictly prohibited by Gallifreyan law.
You will now be returned to your previous point of departure in time and
space. You have ten seconds to re-enter
your time capsule.”
“Yikes,” said the Doctor, “Quick,
Master”. The Master had made some
progress down the air duct and only his ankles were visible.
“Come on, old purple socks,” said
the Doctor, grabbing his ankles and pulling him willy-nilly out of the duct,
the Master wingeing at her rough manhandling of his person.
“Chop-chop, into the TARDIS!” she
said. The time travellers only just made
it before a roar of power filled the ship.
The Time Lords were throwing the TARDIS back through time and space.
* * * * *
“This is fascinating,” said the
Doctor, “the TARDIS being dragged through time and space by the Time
Lords. S’pose we’ll end up where we
dropped Yaz off. Let’s have a dekko on
the scanner.” She flipped the necessary
switch.
To their astonishment, the Doctor
and Master saw not only the time vortex but an ashen-faced Techteun steering
her ship precariously through it.
“How is that even here?” asked
the Doctor, “The Time Lords have channelled us down a time eddy but Techteun’s
ship got sucked in too. Gallifrey was
never that incompetent.”
The Master gave a look of
perplexed sweetness and shrugged his shoulders. Shades of when he was masquerading as “O”. For the Doctor, nothing was more suspicious.
“Don’t play the innocent,
Master. Have you done something? What the hell’ve you gone and done?”
“It’s your fault really,” explained the Master, “I had to keep myself
awake while you were going on about geese.
I may have fiddled a bit with the console, y’know, just to ease the
boredom. I guess I may possibly have subconsciously hooked the hybrid intersectionality loop to the
culture-cancel vortex transgressor. It’s
like putting the handbreak on.”
“You blunderer, Master!” accused
the Doctor, “That would stimulate the
non-binary amino-filters in Techteun’s ship and attract her nucleo-negative
reassigners! Thanks to you Techteun’s
ship is being dragged along for the ride.
We’ll end up back in Sheffield in the
twenty-first century – and so will Techteun and the Timeless Child!”
* * * * *
Police Constable Yasmin Khan knocked
assertively on the front door of the council flat. Stoical Yorkshire
folk, the residents of David Blunkett Mansions did not complain lightly: a
grievance from them was not to be taken lightly.
An unkempt middle-aged woman
opened the door. She was sporting a
bizarre headgear with goggles. Behind
her the flat was unlit and dark.
“Hello,” said Yaz, “Are you Mrs
Hollis?”
“Who wants to know?” snapped the
woman.
“”I’m Police Constable Khan,”
said Yaz presenting her ID. “We’ve had
complaints of children squabbling rather loudly, but we understand the Hollises
are elderly and have no children.”
“They’ve gone,” barked the
woman. “Only one child here. Very well behaved.” She made to shut the
door.
Suddenly something emerged from
the gloom beyond.
“Mama, should I shoot the nasty
lady?” said a child’s voice.
“No, I want to shoot her” said
another child’s voice.
“Just one child?” quizzed Yaz.
Emerging from the semi-darkness, advancing
menacingly on Yaz, was a small figure brandishing what looked like a ray-gun…a
child…with two heads…
EPISODE 2
BEYOND THE UNKNOWN
A leap of faith…of faith in the
Doctor …of faith in life with the
Doctor…of faith in herself… A leap….
With all her strength, Yaz leapt. She rugby-tackled the Timeless Child,
bringing her down, tolerably softly, onto the hall carpet. Despite the gentle landing both its heads
burst into tears. The ray gun slipped from
the Child’s grasp. Tecteun made to
retrieve it, but Yaz, swiftly back on her feet, managed to get hold of it
first.
“Don’t like pointing guns at
people”, gasped Yaz doing just that, “Only idiots carry guns. But I just need to call back-up.”
She felt in her tunic for her
second mobile phone, the one with the hotline to the Doctor.
* * * * *
The phone rang on the TARDIS
console.
“Oh hello Yaz,” said the Doctor,
“What’s up?”
“I’ve a lady here whose child’s
got two heads”, whispered Yaz, “I have reason to believe the household may
conceivably be of extra-terrestrial origin”.
“Hmmmm,” nodded the Doctor
thoughtfully, “Yes, that does sound
conceivable. We’re homing in on your signal. Don’t let them out of your sight!” Ringing off, the Doctor adjusted the
console’s co-ordinates.
“Master, you are a scoundrel of
the highest order.”
“Why thank you Doctor,” said the
Master, genuinely moved and placing a hand over his hearts in gesture of
sincerity, “That means so much to me.”
“Thanks to you, Yaz is in hot
water. Sounds like she’s having to deal
with Techteun and the Timeless Child – somehow they’ve materialised ahead of
us. And guess what: the Timeless Child’s
got two heads!”
“They do say two heads are better
than one,” said the Master, “Anyway, unlike you, my confidence in Yaz knows no
bounds. I am intensely relaxed about her
facing mortal danger.”
Vwooorp! Vwoooorp!
The TARDIS materialised high up
on the flat roof of David Blunkett Mansions next to Techteun’s small battered
spacecraft. The Doctor and the Master
exited the TARDIS: before them spread the buzzing metropolis and beyond the
greenery of Sheffield ’s famous hills. The Doctor phoned Yaz.
“Yaz, we’re on the roof, could
you bring ‘em up?”
Before long the Timeless Child
and Techteun emerged on the roof, Yaz taking up the rear with ray-gun in hand. In clear light of day the Timeless Child was
an extraordinary sight. Berobed in a
cloak of oriental finery she had the perfectly normal body of a girl. Above, however, her bizarrely thick neck
bifurcated to accommodate two heads: one Black, the other South East Asian.
“You’re forever bleating for more
diversity Doctor,” chortled the Master, “Behold – built-in!”
The Child’s mother followed
behind, a scruffy woman sporting a strange hat of flaps and goggles, long hair,
a homespun tunic, trousers and boots.
Her eyes however spoke of intelligence – energy – action!
“Hello Techteun, hello the
Timeless Child,” said the Doctor artlessly.
“Sorry we blew you off course.
My, erm, friend the Master here was fiddling with my ship’s controls and
we ended up dragging you in our wake.
Unforgiveable! But we’ll make amends. Fly you straight back, promise!”
“What strange world is this?”
asked Techteun dreamily surveying the bustle below.
“Planet Earth. Twenty-first century.”
“You don’t mean we travelled in time?
That strange space tunnel…”
Techteun’s voice tailed off in
wonderment. The Doctor smiled and
shrugged.
“Come into my TARDIS, we’ll sort
everything.”
As she led them into the TARDIS
she draped her arms round the Master’s shoulders and whispered in his ear.
“Master, we need to be very, very discreet. Remember the Bootstrap Paradox. Don’t go
giving Techteun any ideas. There’s no
Time Lords yet, no time travel, no regeneration.”
“Doctor, you can rely on me,”
replied the Master before bursting into a maniacal cackle. The Doctor gave him a hard stare.
* * * * *
“We need to return to the exact
point in time and space from where the Time Lords plucked us,” explained the
Doctor as she reprogrammed the console, “Except
this time I’ll try to plonk the TARDIS slap bang in your control room,
Techteun. Delicate operation. Materialise the TARDIS around your spaceship
- it can be in the swimming pool, I drained it the other day after the Master
built a neutron bazooka out of toilet roll to massacre my plastic ducks. Then
I need to go back to Techteun’s time and space.
Then eject Techteun’s
spaceship whilst materialising the TARDIS inside it. Good job I’m a genius.”
Whilst the Doctor scurried round
the console, pressing buttons here, adjusting levers there, both heads of the
Timeless Child were watching her every move, mesmerised by the hyper-activity. For her part Techteun became voluble, her
principal victims being Yaz and the Master.
“As a scientist this fascinates
me. Different dimensions in the ship to
outside it. So that’s how to conquer
time travel: build a craft which transcends dimensions. If only we Shabogans could produce something
like this!” she lamented, “Fat chance.
My planet will never amount to anything. Gallifrey, it’s called. Hardly anyone lives there and those who do
give mediocrity a bad name. Not even
second raters: third raters!”
Yaz dared interrupt the rant.
“And, er, is this your
daughter? Erm, why the two heads?”
“Don’t talk to me about the two
heads!” barked Techteun, evidently longing to hold forth about the two
heads. “She’s not Shabogan. Found her abandoned on a planet. At a portal to another universe, dimension,
whatever. Anyway, I don’t hold with mollycoddling
children. Give ‘em some latitude, that’s
what I say. I perfectly innocently let
her play on the clifftop….”
“Parent of the year,” whispered
the Master to Yaz.
“…and her so-called friend only
goes and chucks her over the edge. Well,
he insists she tripped. Anyway, found her at the bottom of the cliff
– fit as a flea - two heads! Neither of
them the one she started out with! We
were on our way to consult Professor Querilous at the Intergalactic Medical
Centre when you lot diverted me. And
appointments are hard to come by these days.
The Doctor looked up from the
controls.
“No worries, Techteun” she said,
“We’ll get her to Professor Querilous in time.
I’m great at keeping medical
appointments. Did I mention I may have
accidentally invented the medical appointment?
Plague of boils, ancient Egypt ,
793 BC.”
“No Doctor,” said the Master,
“Oddly enough that hasn’t yet featured among your increasingly implausible
boasts.”
* * * * *
The Doctor was as good as her
word. Within minutes Techteun, the
Timeless Child and the TARDIS crew were strapped into their seats aboard the
cramped and shabby spacecraft as Tecteun steered it towards the Medical
Centre’s space station. The TARDIS sat
in the corner, its power turned completely off to shield it from Time Lord
surveillance.
“Give it some welly, Techteun!”
said the Master who was seated next to her.
“I don’t need a man to tell me how to pilot my ship!”
she snapped back.
“”Like most thwarted tyrants the
Master’s a very good backseat driver,” chipped in the Doctor, who was sitting
with Yaz and the Timeless Child in the back row. Both the Child’s heads were asleep.
“And you’ll be laughing on the
other side of your face, young man, when my race develops time travel,” said
Techteun.
“Oh, if that ever happens, your
species should award itself a collective peerage!”
rhapsodised the Master.
“Pipe down, Master!” said the
Doctor.
“Although my first priority is to
spread regeneration to my own people,” continued Techteun, “Assuming that child
of mine really did regenerate.”
“Oh, I’d be careful, Techteun,”
cautioned the Master, “Regeneration could make people awfully arrogant. If I were you I’d limit it. Dunno,” he continued with contrived
vagueness, “Ermm, say, something between eleven and thirteen times, something
like that.”
“Put a sock in it, Master!” said
the Doctor.
“So,” asked Yaz sotto voce, tilting her head towards the
Timeless Child, “is she you?”
“Hope not,” replied the Doctor
softly, “The Master says that the Matrix says so. Two impeccable sources! It’s a theory,” she pulled a face, “But I
don’t like it.”
“Why not?”
“Well, she’s unique y’see, and she
can regenerate endlessly. But I always
liked the idea of being dead ordinary. Least, one of hundreds. Hundreds of Time Lords, y’know: thousand,
peak. Yes, a silly old Time Lord who
stole a magic box. Love the idea that
anyone can be a hero, you don’t have to be born to it. Don’t want to be a super-special space
god. No offence, Timeless Child,” she
whispered, addressing the sleeping infant.
“Yes, I like your version best,”
said Yaz.
* * * * *
“Vell, I cannot verk it out,”
intoned Professor Querilous, “zur child appears to be an entirely new
species. Perhaps vee have to accept zat
she sometimes has vonn head, sometimes has two. I suppose zat I could alveys do
a DGI test on her.”
“DGI test?” queried Techteun.
“Deep Genetic Identification
test,” explained the physician, “it vill identify an individual regardless of
regeneration”.
“Remarkable!” said Techteun.
Suddenly an idea came into Yaz’s
head.
“Can we all have one of them?” she blurted out. The others looked at her quizzically. “Well, it would be useful. Erm, iron out parentage, perhaps.”
“Vell yes of course, zat is all
easily done,” said the Professor as mauve-skinned orderlies arrived to perform
the DGI tests, a simple procedure of cutting a hair from each person’s head.
Meanwhile a plot was hatching in
the Master’s mind. He’d had his fill of
the Doctor’s and Yaz’s sickening lovability!
It was time to spread a little chaos.
Imagine if he were to kill Techteun.
No regeneration, no Time Lords, no
Doctor! The idea was too sweet,
too tempting. He saw that Yaz had stowed
away that ray gun in her pocket…
As soon as she was distracted by
an orderly, he grabbed it!
“Farewell, Techteun!” he
hollered. And he pointed the ray gun at her.
But Yaz had turned sharply. As he was poised to discharge the firearm she
shoved him off his feet. The Master fell
heavily to the floor. The ray gun
discharged.
“If a female member of the TARDIS
crew shoves me to the ground one more time, I’m off to a refuge for battered
Masters,” protested the Master, feeling thoroughly oppressed.
Yaz gave him a furious look.
“Look what you’ve done, Master!”
she said, pointing to the Timeless Child who had collapsed in a heap, “You’ve
shot her.”
“You can’t arrest me, Yaz. Crimes committed in outer space would be
laughed out of court.”
The lifeless body of the Timeless
Child lay in the corner of the room. But
a golden glow now surrounded the little mite.
With fiery force the two heads disappeared; they were replaced by a
single head, that of a young South Asian girl.
“Phur! It was an accident,” said the Master, “Anyway,
look: I’ve solved the two-heads issue, haven’t I? The problem that baffled the boffins. Do feel free to give me a round of applause.”
He scrutinised the newly regenerated Child more carefully. “And don’t you think she looks like me? You could always call her Masterella.”
“You tried to kill me!” raged
Techteun.
“I think we’d best get out of
here,” said the Doctor, “Job done. Cheerio
Techteun, ‘till the next time, Timeless Child. Fam, leg it!”
Techteun, ‘till the next time, Timeless Child. Fam, leg it!”
The trio ran out of the room as
Professor Querilous entered with the results of the DGI tests. The Doctor snatched the piece of paper from
him as she ran, thanking him. Within
seconds they were back in Techteun’s ship, piling into the TARDIS.
Vwooorp! Vwoooooooorp!
In the console room the Doctor
had a bone to pick with the Master.
“Master, if you won’t curb your
homicidal tendencies, there’ll have to be a parting of the ways.”
“Oh I like that!” replied the
Master sarcastically, “I cure the two-heads, you find fault!”
“Now let’s take a look at these
test results. We’ve only got them thanks
to the brilliance of Yaz. Well done
Yaz,” The Doctor scanned the sheet of paper for her readings and those of the
Timeless Child. They were quite different. “Oh, what a relief, what a blessed relief: I’m
not the Timeless Child after all.”
She smiled. The Master looked over her shoulder.
“Don’t blame me, I was only
telling you what was in the Matrix. Cross
my hearts and hope to die.”
He examined the report more
carefully.
“No, but that’s incredible. Look. You’ve got exactly the same DGI as me, Doctor!”
“What does that mean?”
“You and me, we’re not just both
Time Lords. We’re the same Time Lord!” The Master cackled then gyrated around her like
an overexcited little boy.
“No, I’m not having that. This is the biggest pile of baloney since
your last one Master!” said the Doctor.
“Oh Doctor, all my Christmases
have come at once. You don’t suppose I’m
a later version of you? Must be.
The Master replaces the Doctor!”
“Glad this codswallop makes you
happy, Master.” There was no puncturing
his elation.
“May I have the pleasure of a
dance, Doctor?” asked the Master, at his most gallant, half bowing and kissing
her hand.
“Oh go on then,” said the Doctor,
“Could you put The Shepherd’s Boy on
the gramophone please Yaz; it’s on the Classic Gold album?”
And as the Doctor and the Master
spun around the console room the Doctor reflected that, for once, everyone in
the TARDIS had reason to be cheerful. She
could rejoice at being a common-or-garden Time Lord; Yaz could be proud of her
resourcefulness and derring-do; and the Master could revel in his new crackpot
theory.
Yet the Doctor also felt
unease. She’d been a mere bystander,
aware that the forced regenerations of the Timeless Child were a fixed point in
time which no power in the universe could refashion. But there must come a time when the Timeless
Child’s body yields up all its secrets, when she is child no longer. There must come a moment when the Timeless
Child outlives her usefulness to the Time Lords. The Doctor shuddered at what might be done to
her. That must be the Doctor’s mission:
to save the Timeless Child.
THE END.
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