Doctor Who BBCN04 - The Deviant Strain Read online

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  Teenager? He’d looked about ninety.

  So Jack found himself moving ahead of the soldiers. He earned sighs and glares as he advanced past them. He smiled and waved to show he didn’t care, and he carried on at his own pace.

  She was lying so still, he almost tripped over her.

  Face down, her arms extended, gloved hands gripping the base of a tree as if holding on for dear life. But there was no grip in her fingers as he gently eased them away. Jack thought she was dead, but in the quiet of the wood he could hear her sigh, could see the faint trace of warm breath in the cold air.

  ‘Over here!’ he yelled to the soldiers.

  They were there in seconds. Several stood with their backs to Jack and the others, watching behind them, alert to the possibility of am-18

  bush. Sergeyev stooped down beside Jack. He looked about twenty at most, Jack thought, as the slices of sunlight that got through the trees cut across the soldier’s face. Just a kid, really.

  ‘She’s breathing,’ Jack said. He rolled the girl over on to her back.

  Her hair was so fair it was almost white, spread across, hiding her face. He brushed it gently away with his fingers.

  Sergeyev was speaking quietly into his lapel mike. His words froze as the girl’s face appeared from under the strands of hair.

  She was nineteen, the Doctor had said. From the shape of her body, from the hair and the clothing, from the startlingly blue eyes that were staring up at him, Jack could believe it. But her face was lined and wrinkled, dry and weathered. Jack was staring at the face of an old woman.

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  He could see how she had been, how she must have looked, before whatever had happened to her.

  ‘It’s all right, we’re here to help.’

  But how would she cope – did she even know how she looked now?

  No response. Nothing. She didn’t even blink. Jack could see she was breathing – the movement of her chest, the mist from her immo-bile lips. But the blue eyes were glazed and fixated, no expression on her lined face. Nothing. He waved his hand in front of her eyes.

  Again, nothing.

  Sergeyev caught Jack’s hand with his own. The soldier was shaking his head. ‘She’s gone,’ he said. ‘I have seen it on the battlefield. Shock, trauma. You just leave them to die.’

  Jack pulled his hand away. He levered the girl upright into a sitting position. She didn’t resist, but she did nothing at all to help. Still there was no acknowledgement that they were even there.

  ‘We’re not on a battlefield,’ he said.

  ‘Are you sure?’ Sergeyev gestured for two of the other soldiers to lift the girl.

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  She swayed unsteadily on her feet for a few moments, then seemed to remember how to balance. The soldiers walked her forwards –shuffling, stubborn steps at first.

  ‘You’re taking it too fast,’ Jack told them. He moved one of the men aside and took his place, arms tight round the girl’s back as he gently eased her forwards. ‘Come on, you can do it,’ he murmured.

  There was no sign she could hear. What the hell had happened to her? He had her full weight now, and the other soldier shrugged away and looked to Sergeyev, who nodded.

  ‘Let’s get her back to the stone circle,’ Jack said.

  ‘They are already waiting,’ Sergeyev told him.

  To Sofia Barinska’s undisguised annoyance, Levin had commandeered her car. One of the soldiers was sitting in the driving seat, and Sofia was leaning against one of the stones, glaring and smoking a thin cigarette.

  Sergeyev’s message came before they drove the body away. The Doctor and Rose arrived with the other troops before Jack and Sergeyev’s contingent.

  ‘We were going to take the body over to the research institute,’ Levin told the Doctor. ‘I’d rather the medical officer there took a look at him than some quack from the village.’

  ‘You don’t think they have a decent doctor in the village?’ Rose asked.

  ‘If they had, he’d have left long ago,’ Levin said.

  He glanced at Sofia as he spoke, and Rose wondered what he had deduced about her competence. She had grown up here, Rose supposed – what training had she had, if any?

  One of the soldiers called across, pointing towards the woods. Rose could see the other troops returning now, leaving a dark trail behind them in the snow. In the middle of the group, Rose could see Jack. He was all but carrying a young woman, pulling her along beside him. As they got closer, Rose could see that he was talking to her, encouraging her every step of the way, as if she was a small child who’d just learned to walk.

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  Except that when they got closer still Rose could see that the girl had the face of an old woman. She stumbled, almost fell – dragging Jack with her. He regained his balance with difficulty and pulled her along again.

  ‘Well, help him,’ Rose called out. Were they worried she might be infectious or something?

  Two of the soldiers with Levin ran to help. But Jack snarled something at them and they stepped aside. Well, that answered that one.

  Rose ran over, the Doctor beside her.

  ‘Don’t be so proud,’ she hissed at Jack. ‘You’re exhausted.’

  He pushed her away with his free hand. But the Doctor eased him aside and took the girl’s weight. ‘I know,’ he said gently. ‘She has to do this on her own. Or as much as she can. It’s OK. Really, it’s OK.’ He might have said this to Jack or to the girl.

  Grudgingly, Jack allowed the Doctor to take over. But he stayed beside the girl, and asked, ‘What’s her name? Who is she?’

  It was Sofia Barinska who answered. She pushed herself off the stone she had been leaning on and flicked away the stub end of her cigarette. ‘Her name is Valeria Mamentova.’ The policewoman crossed herself quickly and muttered something.

  ‘What happened to her?’ Rose wondered.

  The Doctor and Jack leaned Valeria against the stone where Sofia had been. Jack was breathing heavily.

  ‘Same as happened to the boy, Pavel, I’d say. Only a less extreme dose,’ the Doctor guessed.

  ‘What could do this?’ Jack asked.

  By way of reply, the Doctor turned towards Sofia. ‘What do you think?’

  She shrugged. ‘Some disease or infection.’

  ‘Yeah, right.’ The Doctor nodded. ‘And what do you really think?’

  The woman turned and held his gaze. ‘Vourdulak,’ she said. Then she gave a snort of anger and waved her hand dismissively. ‘What do I know?’

  ‘You’ll come with us to the institute,’ Levin told her.

  ‘If I must.’

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  ‘I can’t make you,’ he said. ‘But I am asking.’

  ‘Very well. But I shall drive.’

  She walked over to the car and opened the driver’s door. After a moment, the soldier sitting there got out.

  ‘Let’s get her into the car,’ the Doctor told Jack. ‘Maybe they can help at this science base.’

  ‘Or not.’

  ‘So what did she mean by Vourdulak?’ Rose said. ‘Or is it just me who’s confused here?’

  ‘The Vourdulak is a creature from Russian folklore,’ the Doctor explained. ‘It’s a vampire that takes the form of a beautiful young woman, though it’s really an ancient and evil monster.’

  Rose held open the back door of the car as Jack helped the girl inside. Valeria’s wrinkled face still showed no expression, her eyes still stared sightlessly ahead.

  ‘So, what? She reckons the poor girl was got by this vampire thing?’

  Jack didn’t reply. He climbed into the back beside Valeria.

  ‘Am I missing something here?’ Rose demanded.

  The Doctor led her a few steps away from the car. ‘Or it could be she thinks the poor girl is the vampire thing.’

  There was a medical unit at the base, but no doctor.

  ‘There’s only the four of us now,’ the Head of Projects explained.

  ‘We’re lucky if we
can get sticking plaster, never mind staff.’

  His name was Igor Klebanov and he was a short, dark-haired man who, despite his protestations about the lack of comforts, was tending towards stout.

  All four of the staff were gathered in the small medical unit, evidently excited to have company. A tall man with thinning grey-streaked hair introduced himself as Alex Minin. ‘I’m not a scientist,’

  he apologised. ‘I stayed on to handle the admin side of things.’

  ‘Not being a scientist, they didn’t transfer poor Alex,’ Klebanov put in. ‘And Boris and Catherine are only here for two years as part of their university training.’

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  ‘Monkeying about,’ Boris Brodsky said. He grinned as if it was a joke, and Rose saw that Alex Minin glared back at him, as if he was on the receiving end of it. Boris coughed and added, ‘Two years is more than enough.’ He was in his mid-twenties, with red hair and freckles, and he seemed unable to stop grinning. ‘I shan’t be upset to leave. I don’t know why you stayed.’ This was to Klebanov, but again Rose felt there was a dig at Minin.

  ‘I don’t like to leave things unfinished. I was here during the Cold War years,’ Klebanov explained to the newcomers. ‘I was chief scientist when the base was all but closed down.’

  ‘You must have been very young,’ the Doctor said.

  ‘Perhaps I am older than you think?’

  ‘P’raps we all are,’ the Doctor joked.

  Bored with the male banter, Rose stepped aside to chat to the only woman on the base. Catherine Kornilova told her that she was a mature student, studying for a higher degree in nuclear physics.

  ‘So you’re quite at home here with the submarines and stuff,’ Rose guessed.

  The woman smiled thinly. ‘Quite the opposite. I know how dangerous it is. Like Boris, I can’t wait to leave. I just hope I can find another job. Otherwise I’ll be stuck here like poor Alex.’

  ‘Can’t he just transfer somewhere else?’

  ‘Maybe.’ She shrugged. ‘He was the political officer here. With that on his record, it’s difficult. But I sometimes think it’s even harder for him to stay.’

  ‘Why?’

  ‘Because everyone who was here back then – everyone except me and Boris, I suppose – they remember who he was and what he did.

  How he watched and reported everything. And they hate him for it.

  Even Klebanov. Even Boris, I think.’

  Rose looked across at Alex Minin, and found that he was looking back at her. For a moment their eyes met, then the tall man looked away, running his hand through his thinning hair to make it seem as if he wasn’t watching them at all.

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  ‘Right, then,’ the Doctor announced, clapping his hands together.

  ‘Everyone out. I need a bit of peace and quiet to examine the patient and the body.’

  That jolted Rose. Talking to Catherine, she had almost forgotten there was a dead body under a sheet on the other side of the room.

  And a young woman whose mind had been emptied and her body aged, sitting silent and helpless beside the corpse.

  Levin gestured for the few of his men who were with them to leave.

  Most he had already sent to patrol the village or guard the base, though against what threat no one asked. Others were helping themselves to equipment from the base stores.

  Sergeyev paused on his way out. He looked over at Jack, standing beside Valeria. ‘I guess the captain likes older women,’ he said to the soldier beside him. They both laughed and turned to go.

  But Jack was across the room in a moment, grabbing Sergeyev’s shoulder and turning him round. His eyes were blazing angry.

  ‘Sir?’ Sergeyev said. ‘I assume I call you “sir”, even though you are in Intelligence.’

  The mockery in his voice was plain, and the room was suddenly silent around them. Rose swallowed, hoping Jack would let it go, but knowing he wouldn’t.

  ‘Yes, you call me “sir”,’ Jack said, his tone dangerously controlled.

  ‘And you show some respect.’

  Sergeyev smiled. He glanced round – checking Levin was nowhere to be seen, Rose guessed. ‘Oh, I’m scared, sir.

  Jack smiled back. But the smile didn’t reach his eyes. ‘Know what scares me?’

  ‘Everything, sir?’

  Jack ignored him. ‘I used to think I was scared by death. Or by facing death – by combat and action and the uncertainty of the battlefield. Not any more. No, now what scares me is the possibility I might live to grow old. I might wake up one day tired and wasted and unable even to open a beer. I might need crutches and a hearing aid and help getting dressed. When and if I get to that point, it’ll be my memories that’ll keep me going. The fact that I’ve lived through 26

  so much, survived so much, to get there. Do you want to get old?’

  he asked, prodding Sergeyev in the chest. ‘Do you want to end up with only your memories to make up for the loss of your faculties?’

  He pointed across the room. ‘Look at her. Look! She’s there already.

  Nineteen, and she can barely walk on her own. She should be looking forward to her whole life, not staring at the end of it and wondering what happened. If she can wonder at all.’

  Sergeyev didn’t reply.

  Jack held his gaze for a moment more, then turned away. ‘Get out,’

  he said. ‘Go and do something useful, while you still can.’

  There was an embarrassed silence as the others slowly followed Sergeyev from the room. Klebanov paused to clap his hand on Jack’s shoulder, as if to say he understood.

  ‘Help yourselves to whatever you need,’ he told the Doctor. ‘If you want anything else, talk to Alex and he’ll do what he can.’

  Soon only the Doctor, Rose and Jack were left. And Valeria.

  The base had been built to house fifty scientists and their equipment.

  With just four, it was virtually empty. Levin found several large storerooms packed with filing cabinets, which, Alex Minin explained, con-tained all the records from when the base was fully operational – and fully funded. Everything from payroll details to equipment requisitions and original schematics for building the place.

  Minin had suggested the soldiers use the lecture hall as their base since it was the largest room. Levin took an office on the same corridor as his headquarters. Not that he’d got anything to put there apart from his pack. But he had Minin bring him pads of paper and pencils and a large-scale map of the area.

  The Doctor found him half an hour later.

  ‘You’re finished?’ Levin said, waving for the Doctor to sit down opposite the desk. ‘That was quick.’

  ‘I’m not a medical man. Just a quick examination.’

  ‘So you can tell me nothing.’

  ‘I can tell you why there are no biros,’ the Doctor said, nodding at the pencil that Levin was tapping on his fingers. ‘The ink freezes in 27

  winter.’

  ‘Then I’m glad it’s only autumn. I intend to be long gone by the time winter arrives.’

  ‘Think you’ll have finished?’

  ‘I’m only here to investigate the energy spike. We find something, we’re gone. We find nothing, we’re gone. This death, that poor girl –a separate matter.’

  ‘You sure?’

  ‘Aren’t you?’

  The Doctor leaned back and crossed his legs. He was an odd one, Levin thought, not for the first time. If the phones worked he’d call Moscow and get some background on him. But his paperwork seemed in excellent order. Someone must think highly of him. So Levin said,

  ‘Tell me.’

  ‘The dead kid – jellified. As we thought.’

  ‘That’s hardly a medical term.’

  ‘But it’s accurate. All the energy drained from the body and the bones dissolved. The calcium seems to have been sucked out or something. Same with the girl, only to a lesser extent. I’d guess her bones are weakened and brittle. But the process is less far gone. Something
interrupted it.’

  ‘But what caused it?’

  ‘Thought you weren’t interested.’

  ‘Not professionally.’

  ‘Then you should be.’

  ‘Oh, yes?’

  ‘Oh, yes. Think about it. The energy was sucked out of those kids.’

  Levin was getting bored with this. ‘So?’

  ‘So. . . ’ The Doctor uncrossed his legs and leaned forwards. ‘Ask yourself. Where did it go?’

  And now Levin did see. ‘That energy spike? But surely there’s not enough energy in two human bodies – one and a half, actually – to show up like that?’

  ‘No, there isn’t.’

  ‘So that wasn’t the source.’

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  ‘Not all of it, no. There must be something else.’

  ‘As I said, another unrelated source.’ Levin leaned back, to show the matter was closed.

  ‘Possibly. But it might not be instead, it might be as well. Something we haven’t found yet.’

  Levin felt cold – even colder than he did already. ‘Like. . . ’

  The Doctor was nodding encouragingly.

  ‘Like more bodies,’ Levin said.

  There were two Jeeps, or the rather clunky Russian equivalents, at the base. Jack demanded a driver to take him and Valeria to her home in the village. He specifically asked for Sergeyev, though he wasn’t sure why he’d done that.

  He was sorry to admit to himself that if he was honest he’d be glad to get rid of the girl. OK, he felt sorry for her – no one should have to go through whatever she’d been through. But it wasn’t as if she knew anything about it. Her hurting was done and there was nothing that Jack could do now. Best get her home and let her parents worry about it and sort her out.

  Maybe he wanted Sergeyev to see him dust his hands of her, to see he was one of lads really. Then Levin had agreed that Jack would help organise the group taking readings with their Geiger counters and stuff. Intelligence officer was an easy role, he decided, as he sat in the back of the Jeep with the motionless girl.