This Donna Noble, the Doctor had decided, was a harpy; vile-tempered, hot-headed, and decidedly intemperate. Not to mention the sheer cheek of the girl! The gall not only to criticise his sartorial sense but to mock his indisputably elegant way with words, and completely discount the wisdom he had to share about the universe.
... He could see why
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The salesman making his way over to them, however, would probably disagree. Clad in a black suit himself, crisp black shirt underneath and tie and pocket square matching deep red, the look he briefly levels at the Doctor is deeply dubious. As anyone working in retail knows, though, the customer is always right, and he quickly shapes up, offering the two of them a toothpaste-advert smile.
'Good afternoon; are you, ah, in need of assistance at all? Looking for a suit for the gentleman?'
The Doctor clears his throat significantly. 'I think you'll find you can defer any questions of judgement to the lady. For the moment, I am but a puppet on a string.'
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"Exactly, thanks." She gives the Doctor a brief, thoughtful glance, adding, "Something in a nice dove grey, perhaps."
The salesman, following Donna's gaze, nods with all of the solemn concern of a funeral director. Addressing Donna, he says, "Of course miss. Did you have any specific, ah, style in mind?"
Donna, still smiling, says, "I think near on anything would be an improvement."
He keeps his face carefully neutral, nodding crisply. "If you'll just follow me, I'm certain we can find something that will be to your liking."
He leads and Donna -- still pointedly ignoring the Doctor -- follows, tugging at the Doctor's arm.
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That is, until she specifies the colour, and he can't hold back a splutter. 'Grey?! On me? I-'
They've decided to ignore him, though, apparently, and he shuts up with a sniff. When Donna drags him off, he doesn't bother saying anything. Honestly, imagine dressing him in grey. The sales associate leads them around racks of clothing, jackets and trousers in various (dull) colours and fabrics presented as pristinely as if they'd been in a museum.
'If you're looking for a something casual in a lighter colour,' Silk Pocket Square is saying, 'Might I recommend something like this? Single breasted, three piece, in a very nice gabardine fabric.'
The Doctor, as per the rules he's set down, says nothing. He does, however, press his lips together and exhale, audibly, through the nose. Let them make of that what they will.
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"It's different, but worth keeping an open mind, don't you think?"
She smiles, and there's no guile to the expression; only a smile for her best friend.
"Besides, I rather think grey would suit you. Have you ever tried a nice grey?"
She reaches out to smooth one of his garishly colored lapels.
"Can't know you won't like it if you never give it a try."
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His dignified and disapproving (or whatever it is) look fades somewhat when Donna turns to him with a gentler expression and a softer voice than he's seen from her thus far. The touch at his lapel is fond, and the Doctor realises with a little shock that she really does care for him-- or, will care for him. That's one of the odd things about meeting people from his own future, and it's something he's rather apt to forget in this regeneration; Donna Noble is not just someone from his future, she's a travelling companion. She's developed some sort of relationship with his future self, whatever that may be, and it's still there now, even if he doesn't know about it yet.
Another thing about this particular regeneration that he's apt to ignore is how it has the occasional tendency to go embarrassingly soft. Hmmph, honestly. Very briefly, he returns Donna's smile, before conceding, with extra bluster to compensate, 'Oh, very well. Dress me up like a clown if you must.'
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And if the words are a biting, they're at least delivered with a smile.
In the time it's taken them to have this conversation the salesman has darted off and returned, a dozen or so ties of vividly colored silk draped over his arms. They're in colors bold enough to have come from the Doctor's coat, even if they trend more towards solids or subtle patterns.
"Perhaps the gentleman--" he begins, but Donna cuts him off with a smile.
"Those are all lovely, thanks --" and they are, really, a tasteful consideration to the Doctor's rather eccentric color choices "--but perhaps we could see how he looks in it, yea?"
The salesman nods crisply, "Of course. If you could just come with me?"
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So he follows the salesman into a fitting room, of the sort with both a private booth and a dias in front of a trio of mirrors for a tailor to go about adjusting and making sure the garment drapes precisely as it should. The Doctor is shooed into the booth to get into the suit, which he does, not at all reticently; crisp white shirt, trousers, waistcoat, and jacket over that, a single-breasted affair which could be buttoned or not- the Doctor leaves it open. That done, he returns to the main body of the room to endure the scrutiny of the salesman, who seems to have slipped into the role of the tailor for now, and produced a measuring tape from somewhere.
He nods at first, taking in the Doctor's appearance with a scrutinising eye, though the sight of the shoes the Doctor is still wearing- green with orange spats- gives him momentary pause. 'Ah, if you could get up there for me, sir?' A nod to the platform. 'I'll call the lady in, if you don't mind.'
'Oh no,' the Doctor says airily (and not at all sarcastically) 'By all means, bring her in.'
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"You clean up well."
She glances up at him, still smiling.
"But I'm sure you have your own opinion."
She's never seen the Doctor without an opinion on... well... anything, really.
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Fastidiously, the Doctor plucks one of the ties from the salesman's outstretched arm, a silk confection in teal, orange, and pink stripes, and threading it around his neck, knotting it neatly in a double Windsor and tucking it into the waistcoat. 'It fits well enough,' he concedes huffily after a moment. And it does. It suits him to a t, in fact, to coin a phrase. There's not much need for Silk Pocket Square to be buzzing around with his measuring tape, making tick marks and hmming to himself. The cut is flattering and slimming, and the grey, if he's honest, nicely tempers his occasionally ruddy complexion.
But of course, he's not honest. Hastily, he chances another look at Donna. 'Doesn't hold a candle to my suit, though. A man's clothes should express the man wearing them, that's what I say! What the devil does this say about me? That I'm a recherché but heinously dull businessman?'
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Donna crosses her arms over her chest, giving the Doctor a level stare.
"Are you trying to tell me that you're not fully capable of expressing your personality without the help of a gaudy patchwork coat?"
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And that stern look should tell her precisely what he thinks of that.
'There is nobody and nothing in the universe capable of suppressing my personality, Miss Noble, but wearing something like this is like... false advertising!'
No-matter how good it looks on him (which, alright, he does cut rather a dashing silhouette), one must stick to one's principles. It would hardly do to let her know that she'd been right, after all; the Doctor doesn't really know her yet, but he can just wager that he'd never hear the end of it. Silk Pocket Square isn't helping, eyeing him up and down in a fashion which just dances on the unbearable edge of supercilious.
'It does suit you admirably, sir, I have to say. The lady has excellent taste.'
'Yes, thank you very much,' snips the Doctor, cutting him off before he has a chance to say anything else, and turning back to his reflection to readjust the tie.
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"You know what I think?" she says, not taking her eyes off her work -- or pausing long enough to give him time to respond. "I think you look perfectly handsome. And I think you're clever enough to realize the same."
Her eyes dart up to his, something of a smile playing across her lips. "But you're entirely too stubborn to admit it."
She pulls the knot tight, taking care to straighten it and smooth the tie after tucking it back into his waistcoat. "There now. That's better."
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... But he's never a man to turn down a compliment, and he tries out a rather smug little smirk when Donna tells him he looks handsome. 'Well, naturally, my dear; it would be hard to make a man of my bearing and physique look anything else.'
It's clear enough that he's pleased by the remark, though, despite his conceit, and there's the tiniest hint of warmth underneath the egotism that threatens to peep through if he's not careful.
The salesman is now eyeing the two of them up on the dais with an attitude that suggests he wishes he'd never taken on this particular pair of customers. Undoubtedly he's thinking all sorts of things about the nature of their relationship which are patently untrue. Not that the Doctor notices, of course. Delicately (or not so delicately), he removes Donna from the platform with him, and swivels once before the mirror, surveying his reflection.
'Hrm. Well. Is this to be it, then, Miss Noble?'
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"Oh, it's a definite improvement. Mind you, the shoes... but still an improvement."
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'Something shiny in black leather, do you think? Spats don't quite go with this style.'
It's the spats, you see, not the fact that they're green and orange.
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"That would work nicely, I think."
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