Ianto shook his head. "I have absolutely no idea. I mean, we seem to be from similar places. You've got the war on over there, so do we. Cardiff apparently looks the same. There are even the same train stops and places in London between here and where you're from. I'm not sure exactly how we might be able to..." Oh. Well. He could try asking about something that happened over here. But how to ask about all of that without sounding like a madman? 'Hi, do you remember when there were ghosts in everyone's living rooms, and how the government told everyone that that was alright? No? Oh, well. Alright then.'
He took the frothed milk out from underneath the spout, wiping the mechanism down with a wet cloth before putting the mug under the spout for the coffee, before pausing for a second, seriously thinking on what to say. Oh. Well, there was that. "Has there ever been something weird with the sky, where you are? You know, like. Not being normal, like it should?" All the stars disappearing and other, unknown planets being impossibly close, much closer than the moon.
"Not... that I can recall," John said slowly, brow furrowing as he eyed Ianto. What exactly did the other man mean? Weird things? It was London. There were always weird things happening there - well, not that anyone ever noticed it, really, but. "Nothing weird enough to bear remembering, at least. What do you mean, weird, though?"
Ianto shook his head. "Well, either you just weren't paying attention at the time, then, or we really are from separate universes. Because... The sun disappeared, for a little while. And the stars. It was just sort of dark. Kind...kind of like an eclipse, only for the whole sky." And there were the planets, but if John didn't remember that, Ianto didn't really want to get into it.
He pulled the newly replaced lever, and out came the espresso that he had been brewing while they talked. It mixed with the milk, and after a few moments, Ianto had a perfectly good cappuccino for the other man. He quickly stuck his own mug under the lever, pulling it to simply fill it with straight coffee, before handing the other mug to John. "Here you are, then. A cappuccino. And a very good one, at that, if I may say so myself. It shouldn't be too hot to drink, if you wanted to give it a try..."
All... right then. This wasn't John's world. Earlier on in his time on the community and he would have thought Ianto was insane for even saying things like that, but he'd had his share of moments now that proved that anything was really possible. The sun and stars disappearing? Sure. Why not.
So, instead of being skeptical or dismissive or even suspicious, John just nodded. "All right, then, no train home after this, then." He took the proffered mug with both hands, grinning at Ianto's self-assurance. "Do you say so, now?" he asked, amused, honestly expecting something about as good as a Starbucks barrista could make. Taking a sip, he paused.
"That's... fantastic," he said, almost disbelieving.
Ianto smiled, taking a sip of his own coffee, before nodding. "I try to stay a man of my word, whenever possible. I've spent enough time learning how to make coffee and serving it to people that it would honestly be pretty hard not to be good at it," Ianto said, allowing himself to be proud of that fact. It was one of the only things he was really proud of about himself, and so why not indulge a little?
"I hope that it makes up for, well. Any sort of inconvenience or annoyance that I might have caused you. I... I really am sorry for that. It's... It's the community, the viruses and all. I never would've done anything like that, otherwise," he said, earnestly. "Honestly, sometimes it's almost more trouble than it's worth." Almost. "I'm just glad that it ended up being you and not, I don't know, someone that that might've gotten me into more trouble with, really..."
Honestly, the coffee more than made up for it, being that it was probably the best he'd ever had, but John saw that pride Ianto was sporting and, well. He didn't want to boost the other man's ego too much. Especially since he'd started an argument over rugby, of all things. "I think it'll do," he said in a fairly noncommittal tone, "As far as apologies go, this isn't half bad."
He quirked an eyebrow at the idea of someone else getting Ianto into more trouble. "Who'd you think that'd be?" He grinned, "No offense meant but if you've noticed, I don't think half of the people on the community would even know what rugby is, much less want to get into an argument over it."
Ianto smiled, recognizing that John was being that way on purpose, recognizing that he really was enjoying the cappuccino. Ianto was glad. He genuinely liked to serve people, to get these things right. Not for the first time, he contemplated having been a butler or a dresser in an earlier life, for all he got a feeling of accomplishment after seeing to it that things got done in the way they should, and that everyone was happy and the better for it.
Ianto sat back against the counter. "Well, honestly, if I'd picked someone else, I don't really think I would've started an argument about rugby, but. I probably would've picked a fight about something else, and maybe they wouldn't have taken it nearly as well as you did. People can do some pretty stupid things when they're drunk." And when they're looking to vent frustrations, apparently, if Ianto's drunkenly picking fights with strangers was anything to go by. "You'll... You'll have to excuse my behavior. Someone showed up on the community that I honestly didn't think I'd ever see again, and well. It stirred up some unpleasant memories that apparently I had less control over than I might've thought. I'm not... Not usually one to pick drunken text fights with people, as it is."
"Fair point," John said, knowing full well how stupid things could be when you were drunk. He had, after all, been stationed with a bunch of soldiers in the Middle East, and then there was university... And weddings. And the bachelor parties that came before said weddings.
All of that had stopped when he'd returned from Afghanistan, but he still remembered. He raised an eyebrow at Ianto's comment, taking another, larger sip of his coffee. "You don't look like the sort, no. So, this someone... is bad, I take it? Or, well. Bad for you. Could be a perfectly nice person, I suppose." Could be someone Ianto'd serial... murdered. Oh, stop it. He was over that, really he was. He was drinking the man's coffee, after all.
Ianto sighed. "No, he's not... He's not bad. He's not a particularly nice person, but he's definitely not bad. He's just... Someone from the past. Someone that died a while ago, but now he's on the community, from the past, and well. It's hard to deal with, is all. It's making Gwen and Jack, my coworkers, pretty upset. They're on the community too, and well. When someone dies, you don't usually expect to see them again, and all, especially well." He motioned around the tourist office. "Especially when you work in a place like this," he lied.
As if sensing that now would be an excellent time to make Ianto look like an idiot, the door to the secret passageway swung open, and Jack strode out, looking down at a contraption in his hands. "Ianto, did you do something to this laser scalpel the last time you used it? I can't seem to get it to..." And that's when he noticed that Ianto wasn't alone. Shit. Ianto had said something about having a visitor, hadn't he. "Whoops," Jack said, sheepishly.
Ianto looked like he wanted nothing more than to disappear in that moment, or to strangle Jack. He couldn't make up his mind which, so he just stood there, clutching his coffee mug tightly, his knuckles white with the effort of not freaking out about this right there and then. Well. Guess the cat was out of the bag.
John had just about asked how somebody dead could show up on the community, when - the wall was moving. John allowed himself a moment of bewilderment, staring at the man who looked like he'd just walked out of a 1940's film about World War II, then the thing in his hand, then the wall that had opened up. All of that was out of place in this frankly shady looking tourist office, and the way Ianto's face had dropped, John figured he wasn't supposed to know about it. Which made sense.
Then, he raised a brow. That... "This explains a lot," he said slowly, taking a sip of his coffee before looking from Jack to Ianto. "I thought this place looked a bit skeevy, all the unappealingness, but. That - the whole in your wall, that... would explain why." Okay, so. Thankfully, his time with Sherlock had helped him create an unshakable mask, but he figured he was going to have to let that go in just a minute. Well, then, best be as nonchalant as possible until he turned into a blathering fool. He turned to Jack again, and quirked his lips. "Hullo. John Watson."
Jack quirked a smile right back at him, shifting on his feet. If you had to mess up, might as well do it in style, he decided. "Hey, there. Captain Jack Harkness," he said with a smile, in that easy drawling American accent of his. "And well." He nodded back to the opening, leading to the passageway to the stairs and the lift down to the main section of the Hub. "Welcome to Torchwood, I guess."
He turned and smiled at Ianto. "So. I... I guess this is your civilian guest that I was supposed to be steering clear of, then, yeah?" Ianto nodded, his expression unchanging, still clutching his mug in a death grip in front of him. "That... That would be about the size of it, yes, Jack," he said, trying to keep his voice steady and not yelling at Jack.
Jack stuck his hands in his pockets, grinning awkwardly. "Well. At least he's cute. You seem to have excellent taste in visitors, Ianto, I'll give you that much." He sent a little wink in John's direction. Ianto looked like he might just die on the spot.
That ingrained bit of learned knowledge they'd given him in the army almost made John salute at the title, but he knew better than to make an ass of himself just then. There'd be time for that in a minute. After the shock of there being a secret... base, he supposed? In Cardiff. Cardiff, of all places.
And it was apparently captained by someone who didn't know when it was appropriate to flirt. And who was flirting with him. A man. Not that that was a problem, it was just. "Right," John said slowly, putting his cup down on the counter. "Cute. Yes." And... there went the unshakable mask. "...You have a secret entrance to, I'm going to guess, a military post. In a tourist office. In Cardiff." He turned his head to look at Ianto, disbelief obvious in his expression and voice, "You're a secret agent?" A pause. "In Cardiff?"
Jack recognized a military man when he saw one, and he smirked as he saw that telltale twitch of John keeping himself from saluting him. He wouldn't have minded, honestly. It'd been a while since he'd last been saluted, after all. "Yeah," Ianto said. "In a very manly, British way," he explained. "Don't worry about it."
Ianto put his mug down very slowly, biting his lip. "I'm...something like that," he said, looking to Jack for permission. Jack shrugged. "Might as well go all out, at this point," he said. Ianto sighed.
"I'm... I'm an archivist for a top secret organization. In a tourist office. In Cardiff, yes. I... We're called Torchwood. I, well. I really don't suppose you would've heard of us, anyway, but. We... We're a sort of specialized organization, I guess you could say. Ehm. Beyond the government, outside of the police and the United Nations and all that. We. We're sort of the resident authority on, well..." God. How to break it to someone that what he'd been trying to pass off as a job for a tourist office was actually a job for a top secret organization that defended the earth against extraterrestrial threats...?
"I never worry about it," John said, still a bit too hung up on the whole "secret organization under Cardiff" part of the conversation to really care that Jack had called him anything less than handsome. Dashing would've been nice too, but that wasn't his side of the spectrum. Not that he was paying any attention to words at the moment.
He blinked at Ianto's explanation, listening to how he trailed off and, as any man who had to deal with a mad detective would do, scrambled to pick up the pieces that had been scattered about their otherwise benign conversation. Torchwood, all right. Never heard of it, that's right. Why wouldn't he have heard about it? Their worlds were practically the same. Except for the weird things in the sky. Sun disappearing, stars disappearing. And Ianto was assuming he wouldn't know of Torchwood because... Well. Because it was secret. And also because it had to do with the things he didn't know about, and those things probably meant...
"Ah," he said in comprehension, because really, it had to be either a NASA type thing, which wouldn't be outside of the police, or. Well, something like SETI, maybe? Who knew. Ianto was going to have to explain it - or this Jack fellow. Either of them. ...Lord, if they could. He really should have left a note for Sherlock.
Ianto recognized John's 'ah' as what it was--John trying to figure out what the hell he meant by all of it. Honestly, he wasn't surprised that the other man was confused, especially with him rambling on like he was. He was flustered, though. He hadn't really had any intention of bringing Jack or Torchwood into the mix here. He really just had wanted to bring the other man over for coffee, have some pleasant conversation, redeem himself, and then see him off. Had that really been too much to ask for?
"Yes, ehm. Well. You see. There's the Doctor. And well. He met Queen Victoria. When she was alive. And well, she didn't like what he was doing. And. I don't suppose you've met on the community, have you? The Doctor that is, not the Queen. But, ehm. Well. She... She sort of founded Torchwood then, and well. It..."
Jack could see Ianto floundering, flustered, and really, it was charming. He decided that he could step in and pick up the slack, though. After all, it had been his error that had lead to this John finding out about Torchwood, might as well explain himself. "What Ianto means to say is that there's a rift in space and time running through the center of Cardiff. Our job is to keep an eye on this rift and monitor whatever goes into or comes out of it, anywhere from household appliances from the past or future, to well. Alien life. See if it's a threat, and deal with it if it is."
There. Direct and to the point. Ianto winced at how blunt Jack was, and turned to look at John, trying to gauge his reaction to it. If he was going to run, or not. Because the door to the tourist office sort of bolted shut, when the passageway door was open, so. No chance of escape, really.
John hadn't exactly been expecting a secret government agency for space rocks or... little green men (that was probably racist, wasn't it?) in this coffee break of his, either, so at least Ianto wasn't the only one out of their comfort zone at the moment. Small graces, and all.
He saw Ianto's wince at the words coming out of Jack's mouth, and John took a moment to process the whole thing. He opened his mouth, then shut it. Scratched the side of his head.
Finally, he said. "...You deal with aliens." He knew that was exactly what Jack had said, and, well. Compared to the ghost ship, the drunken bar full of community members, and the crazy things he saw with Sherlock? It really wasn't that surprising. But still. Everyone he'd talked to, they'd all been, well, from Earth. Or, some version of it. So it would take a few moments for it to sink in.
Idly, he said again, "Really does explain the tourist office being so dingy." He glanced at Ianto, "No offense, the interior's fine." Ever the gentleman.
He took the frothed milk out from underneath the spout, wiping the mechanism down with a wet cloth before putting the mug under the spout for the coffee, before pausing for a second, seriously thinking on what to say. Oh. Well, there was that. "Has there ever been something weird with the sky, where you are? You know, like. Not being normal, like it should?" All the stars disappearing and other, unknown planets being impossibly close, much closer than the moon.
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He pulled the newly replaced lever, and out came the espresso that he had been brewing while they talked. It mixed with the milk, and after a few moments, Ianto had a perfectly good cappuccino for the other man. He quickly stuck his own mug under the lever, pulling it to simply fill it with straight coffee, before handing the other mug to John. "Here you are, then. A cappuccino. And a very good one, at that, if I may say so myself. It shouldn't be too hot to drink, if you wanted to give it a try..."
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So, instead of being skeptical or dismissive or even suspicious, John just nodded. "All right, then, no train home after this, then." He took the proffered mug with both hands, grinning at Ianto's self-assurance. "Do you say so, now?" he asked, amused, honestly expecting something about as good as a Starbucks barrista could make. Taking a sip, he paused.
"That's... fantastic," he said, almost disbelieving.
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"I hope that it makes up for, well. Any sort of inconvenience or annoyance that I might have caused you. I... I really am sorry for that. It's... It's the community, the viruses and all. I never would've done anything like that, otherwise," he said, earnestly. "Honestly, sometimes it's almost more trouble than it's worth." Almost. "I'm just glad that it ended up being you and not, I don't know, someone that that might've gotten me into more trouble with, really..."
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He quirked an eyebrow at the idea of someone else getting Ianto into more trouble. "Who'd you think that'd be?" He grinned, "No offense meant but if you've noticed, I don't think half of the people on the community would even know what rugby is, much less want to get into an argument over it."
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Ianto sat back against the counter. "Well, honestly, if I'd picked someone else, I don't really think I would've started an argument about rugby, but. I probably would've picked a fight about something else, and maybe they wouldn't have taken it nearly as well as you did. People can do some pretty stupid things when they're drunk." And when they're looking to vent frustrations, apparently, if Ianto's drunkenly picking fights with strangers was anything to go by. "You'll... You'll have to excuse my behavior. Someone showed up on the community that I honestly didn't think I'd ever see again, and well. It stirred up some unpleasant memories that apparently I had less control over than I might've thought. I'm not... Not usually one to pick drunken text fights with people, as it is."
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All of that had stopped when he'd returned from Afghanistan, but he still remembered. He raised an eyebrow at Ianto's comment, taking another, larger sip of his coffee. "You don't look like the sort, no. So, this someone... is bad, I take it? Or, well. Bad for you. Could be a perfectly nice person, I suppose." Could be someone Ianto'd serial... murdered. Oh, stop it. He was over that, really he was. He was drinking the man's coffee, after all.
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As if sensing that now would be an excellent time to make Ianto look like an idiot, the door to the secret passageway swung open, and Jack strode out, looking down at a contraption in his hands. "Ianto, did you do something to this laser scalpel the last time you used it? I can't seem to get it to..." And that's when he noticed that Ianto wasn't alone. Shit. Ianto had said something about having a visitor, hadn't he. "Whoops," Jack said, sheepishly.
Ianto looked like he wanted nothing more than to disappear in that moment, or to strangle Jack. He couldn't make up his mind which, so he just stood there, clutching his coffee mug tightly, his knuckles white with the effort of not freaking out about this right there and then. Well. Guess the cat was out of the bag.
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Then, he raised a brow. That... "This explains a lot," he said slowly, taking a sip of his coffee before looking from Jack to Ianto. "I thought this place looked a bit skeevy, all the unappealingness, but. That - the whole in your wall, that... would explain why." Okay, so. Thankfully, his time with Sherlock had helped him create an unshakable mask, but he figured he was going to have to let that go in just a minute. Well, then, best be as nonchalant as possible until he turned into a blathering fool. He turned to Jack again, and quirked his lips. "Hullo. John Watson."
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He turned and smiled at Ianto. "So. I... I guess this is your civilian guest that I was supposed to be steering clear of, then, yeah?" Ianto nodded, his expression unchanging, still clutching his mug in a death grip in front of him. "That... That would be about the size of it, yes, Jack," he said, trying to keep his voice steady and not yelling at Jack.
Jack stuck his hands in his pockets, grinning awkwardly. "Well. At least he's cute. You seem to have excellent taste in visitors, Ianto, I'll give you that much." He sent a little wink in John's direction. Ianto looked like he might just die on the spot.
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And it was apparently captained by someone who didn't know when it was appropriate to flirt. And who was flirting with him. A man. Not that that was a problem, it was just. "Right," John said slowly, putting his cup down on the counter. "Cute. Yes." And... there went the unshakable mask. "...You have a secret entrance to, I'm going to guess, a military post. In a tourist office. In Cardiff." He turned his head to look at Ianto, disbelief obvious in his expression and voice, "You're a secret agent?" A pause. "In Cardiff?"
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Ianto put his mug down very slowly, biting his lip. "I'm...something like that," he said, looking to Jack for permission. Jack shrugged. "Might as well go all out, at this point," he said. Ianto sighed.
"I'm... I'm an archivist for a top secret organization. In a tourist office. In Cardiff, yes. I... We're called Torchwood. I, well. I really don't suppose you would've heard of us, anyway, but. We... We're a sort of specialized organization, I guess you could say. Ehm. Beyond the government, outside of the police and the United Nations and all that. We. We're sort of the resident authority on, well..." God. How to break it to someone that what he'd been trying to pass off as a job for a tourist office was actually a job for a top secret organization that defended the earth against extraterrestrial threats...?
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He blinked at Ianto's explanation, listening to how he trailed off and, as any man who had to deal with a mad detective would do, scrambled to pick up the pieces that had been scattered about their otherwise benign conversation. Torchwood, all right. Never heard of it, that's right. Why wouldn't he have heard about it? Their worlds were practically the same. Except for the weird things in the sky. Sun disappearing, stars disappearing. And Ianto was assuming he wouldn't know of Torchwood because... Well. Because it was secret. And also because it had to do with the things he didn't know about, and those things probably meant...
"Ah," he said in comprehension, because really, it had to be either a NASA type thing, which wouldn't be outside of the police, or. Well, something like SETI, maybe? Who knew. Ianto was going to have to explain it - or this Jack fellow. Either of them. ...Lord, if they could. He really should have left a note for Sherlock.
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"Yes, ehm. Well. You see. There's the Doctor. And well. He met Queen Victoria. When she was alive. And well, she didn't like what he was doing. And. I don't suppose you've met on the community, have you? The Doctor that is, not the Queen. But, ehm. Well. She... She sort of founded Torchwood then, and well. It..."
Jack could see Ianto floundering, flustered, and really, it was charming. He decided that he could step in and pick up the slack, though. After all, it had been his error that had lead to this John finding out about Torchwood, might as well explain himself. "What Ianto means to say is that there's a rift in space and time running through the center of Cardiff. Our job is to keep an eye on this rift and monitor whatever goes into or comes out of it, anywhere from household appliances from the past or future, to well. Alien life. See if it's a threat, and deal with it if it is."
There. Direct and to the point. Ianto winced at how blunt Jack was, and turned to look at John, trying to gauge his reaction to it. If he was going to run, or not. Because the door to the tourist office sort of bolted shut, when the passageway door was open, so. No chance of escape, really.
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He saw Ianto's wince at the words coming out of Jack's mouth, and John took a moment to process the whole thing. He opened his mouth, then shut it. Scratched the side of his head.
Finally, he said. "...You deal with aliens." He knew that was exactly what Jack had said, and, well. Compared to the ghost ship, the drunken bar full of community members, and the crazy things he saw with Sherlock? It really wasn't that surprising. But still. Everyone he'd talked to, they'd all been, well, from Earth. Or, some version of it. So it would take a few moments for it to sink in.
Idly, he said again, "Really does explain the tourist office being so dingy." He glanced at Ianto, "No offense, the interior's fine." Ever the gentleman.
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