'Bloody hell.'
The words are Gene's, spoken with a sort of hushed, sickened awe, and behind them, Sam hears Chris retch and stumble away to be sick somewhere. Sam doesn't blame him, and he swallows, closing his eyes for a moment and pressing fingertips to his eyelids, as if that might make the sight before them more manageable. It doesn't. Still
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He's still not certain of what it is... but it really can't be anything good.
In something of a rush, he shrugs on his coat and steps outside, pulling the door closed behind him. His motions must be little more than force of habit, as all of his attention seems focused on a device he's holding in his left hand. It bristles with oddly colored lights that are blinking in a way that no outside observer would be able to make heads or tails of... but it must mean something to the Doctor, who sets off at a brisk pace, his eyes never leaving the device.
In the end, he practically runs into the crime scene before he's noticed it's there, so intent is he on the peculiar flashing of the colored lights. A scowling police officer has moved to block his path, looking none too friendly. The Doctor slips the device into his coat pocket and gives the officer a warm smile.
"Hello! Might I ask who is in charge here?"
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He's not, though, and PC Llewellen- for that is his name- wouldn't want to bother him with it anyway. He clears his throat, pulling himself up an inch or two. 'This is a crime scene, sir, we haven't got time. Now, if you'd shove off, we've more important things to do.'
He's about to shunt the Doctor off, when a voice sounds from behind him- DI Tyler. 'PC Llewellen!' Llewellen stops with a fistful of the Doctor's sleeve, and turns to see Sam, looking, just for a moment, something like terrified, before his brow creases into simple confusion.
'What's going on here?' He doesn't once actually look at Llewellen; his gaze is pinned to the man in the cricketers' clothes.
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"Ah. Hello! My name's the Doctor and I just may be able to help."
"This fine gentleman," at this he gestures (rather awkwardly) at the officer who is still grasping his coat sleeve (because it's hard to make any move when someone is grasping your arm quite that tightly), "was just about to direct me to the person in charge of this investigation. That wouldn't happen to be you, would it...?"
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Leaving Sam alone with his hallucination.
Because of course it's a hallucination, never mind the fact that Llewellen could see him too; he'd call it someone mucking about in costume, playing the fool, were it not for the fact that the Fifth Doctor wouldn't show up for another eight years. And given Sam's childhood fascination with the man- oh, bloody brilliant time to make an appearance, Freud.
'The Doctor,' he scoffs, and then repeats himself, laughing mirthlessly. 'The Doctor? Seriously.'
The abuse of the Doctor's coat hasn't ended, because it's right about now that Sam seizes both of the lapels and pushes him against a wall, out of sight of the people attending the crime scene. 'I do not have time to entertain hallucinations, alright?' he growls, shoving just a little, as if for emphasis. 'Just bloody leave me alone, I've got enough to deal with right now without chucking madness into the bargain.'
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But the smile quickly returns and his voice stays calm, with a cheerful note to it.
"Yes, my name is the Doctor. Just the Doctor. It has been rather a long time since I was last in Manchester, but hadn't been aware that this," with his body fairly well pinned, the Doctor gestures with his eyes to indicate his current predicament, "was considered a polite way to greet strangers."
As Sam doesn't seem to be backing down, the Doctor's cheer falters again and he gives the man a hard stare. His voice quickly looses all trace of cheer.
"And I equally do not have the time to play games with you. There is something here that oughtn't be -- and whatever it is, I assure you the local constabulary is in no way equipped to deal with it. You mentioned a body. Something unusual, I imagine? Something you've never seen before? If it's an ordinary homicide, feel free to send me on my way. But if not... let me help."
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He says it as though it ought to be obvious, irate and impatient. 'The Doctor doesn't exist. Clearly, my subconscious has decided that now is an opportune time to torture me with new and inventive delusions, but I have a murderer to catch, and that poor man's widow to speak with, and I will not allow my own bloody brain impede my ability to do my job!'
Sam hadn't quite planned on letting loose with such a vehement speech, but weeks of strain will out, and when he finally falls silent, he clenches his jaw, looking down for a moment. His fingers tighten in the Doctor's lapels; he feels real enough, and Sam suppresses the man urge to feel for two heartbeats.
Absently, he recalls his words to Annie however many weeks ago- I went to see Doctor Who, he prescribed me some pills... As if. Shaking his head, he releases the Doctor and steps back, watching him warily.
'Not that I wouldn't love to hallucinate the Fifth Doctor,' he adds absently, 'but you could have picked a better time.'
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"Excuse me... but did you just call me the 'Fifth Doctor?'"
He keeps his voice calm and even, though that particular piece of knowledge is something no one, certainly no one on Earth, should have. To hear it casually blurted from the lips of a stranger makes him the slightest bit nervous. Had they met before? But even then... Even if they'd traveled together at some point... The fact that the Doctor was presently in his fifth body was not something that tended to come out in casual conversation.
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'Yes,' he prompts, slowly, as he occasionally might speak to Chris about filing. 'Fifth incarnation, Pharos Project, Castrovalva, etc etc, nasty regeneration, one of my favourite Doctors- but then, you know all that.'
Because he really does have things to do here, and he's damned if the Doctor, hallucinatory or not, is going to waylay him. (It's clear that he still thinks him a hallucination- if he didn't, he'd be much much excited.) He heaves a sigh. 'Oh, come on, come with me, then, if you must, I have to talk to the former Mrs. MacIntosh.
And that'll be Sam off, striding back towards the main thoroughfare.
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This is wrong. Very, very wrong. He runs to catch up with him.
"Pharos Project? Castrovalva? Regeneration? There's no reason for anyone to know all of those things. How...? We haven't met before... or later... have we?"
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He's moving again, which helps keep him calm. Always move, always fight, always forward, forward, keep going because if he stays still, he doesn't know what'll happen to him. And he can't risk that. Sam glances back, a bit chagrined to see the Doctor rushing to his side, cream-coloured coattails flapping. He looks... well, he looks like the real thing. Sam could very well imagine himself as Turlough or Tegan (though he'd prefer Turlough) if he was less sensible.
'The Doctor is a fictional character; I grew up watching you on telly.' And then, as if to drive home how really totally cool with this situation he is, he fishes his radio from a coat pocket, clicking it on and holding it to his mouth. 'Phyllis, I need an address.'
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It's not just every day that someone denies the Doctor's existence quite so readily and he's more than a little flummoxed. And, really, this is a new one on him... and it's rather rare that he has the opportunity to say so.
"I'm not sure where you're coming up with this, but I'm as real as anyone."
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Which is to say, he's going to require some pretty intensive proof if he's ever going to believe the Doctor isn't just a figment of his imagination.
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Well then, on to business. He walks along-side Sam and asks, matter-of-factly, as though he has every right to know -- which, of course, in the Doctor's mind, he does.
"So there has been a death? Tell me about it."
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He turns to look at the Doctor, quite serious, now, before relaying clinically, as he might do for a file, 'Caucasian male, 36, Peter MacIntosh, found a couple of hours ago back there-' he jerks his head in the direction they'd come from- 'disemboweled. Literally. Back broken, torn in half, all the visceral organs removed, as well as the lungs.' But even that professional tone can't save him a twist of the stomach, and he grimaces. 'I've never seen anything like it.'
'And I suppose,' he says after a pause, and this time, there's the tiniest bit of challenge, of mockery in his voice, 'it's aliens, is it? Some kind of supernatural force you've been tracking?'
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"I was tracking something. But I'm not sure what, exactly. Something... unpleasant... it should seem."
He pulls the strange, light-covered device from his coat pocket once more. Its colored lights are rather muted now, hardly flashing at all. Whatever he was tracking was far away now... he'd have to go back to the TARDIS to see if he could get a clearer signal. He drops it back in his pocket with another frown and looks up at Sam again.
"No other forensic traces? I'll need to look at the crime scene... perhaps I can pick up on something you haven't."
The Doctor is quite certain he can pick up on a good many things the local authorities would miss, but may as well be polite.
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Wait, what is he talking about? He's not real.
Sam shakes his head. He can't think too hard about this, or he'll end up even madder than he is already. 'Come on,' he sighs, 'and put that away, you'll attract attention.' Not, of course, that he won't anyway, dressed in cricketers' whites, if anybody else can see him at all (Llewellen could), but there's not much Sam can do about that.
The MacIntosh house isn't too far away, brick-faced with a blue-painted front door, set in a row of nearly identical houses, each with their brick walls and meagre gardens, and when Sam knocks, a woman whom he presumes to be Mrs. MacIntosh opens the door. Youngish, prettyish, and hassled looking, and Sam always, always hates this part of the job.
'Mrs. MacIntosh? DI Sam Tyler, and... this is Dr. John Smith, from UNIT. Could we have a word inside?'
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