elisi: Edwin holding a tiny snowman (Not The Last by kathyh (not sharable))
elisi ([personal profile] elisi) wrote2010-01-04 01:22 pm
Entry tags:

Fic: The Problem with Boxing Day. (4/4)

Aaand here's the final part. Hope you like it, even though it is rather full of introspection. :)

Part 1 & notes here.

Summary: Alexander Saxon hated Boxing Day.
Setting: Boxing Day 2015. (AU post-Sound of Drums.)
Spoilers: S3. (Are spoilers even an issue?)
Rating: PG.
Characters: Ten, Lucy, the Master (Simm), OCs.
Feedback: Pretty please?

Chapter 4

Two Years Later. (Christmas 2015.)

The boy known to the world as Alexander Saxon was woken on Boxing Day by his mother knocking on his bedroom door. He curled up under his duvet for a moment, wishing to hold onto the last wisp of a dream... A strange sort of dream, where his Uncle was sitting by his bed, telling him a bedtime story. Except it was a very sad story, about a thousand little space ships - sharp and pointy like needles - falling towards the Earth and Uncle trying to catch them - folding and refolding time over and over - but he still couldn’t save them all. It had to be a dream because Uncle didn’t come visit at all yesterday, and when he focussed he couldn’t sense the TARDIS nearby.

Finally he gave up trying to remember any more details, pulled himself together, and got out of bed.

Opening up his wardrobe he lingered only for a moment by the beautiful silk robe within - so much more comfortable than stupid, constrictive human clothing - before carefully putting on his new ‘best’ clothes (slightly too big), and then pulled a face at himself in the mirror, because he always looked like his father’s Mini-Me when he was all dressed up.

Pondering the problem, he dug out a jar of hair gel that he’d ‘borrowed-without-permission’ from his Uncle and made his short, blonde hair stick up in many many spikes. It made him look not entirely unlike a Vinvocci hybrid, but it’d certainly made Aunt Emily frown...

Standing up straight, he studied himself with mock-seriousness.

“I am the Seeker - and I seek a family that doesn’t suck!”

No, it didn’t really have a very good ring to it. Well, maybe the next generation would grow up sensible and amicable - or the one after that. Or the one after that... He had time, after all. So, so much time - centuries and centuries stretching out in front of him, making his poor human relations’ lives seem horribly short and muted in comparison. It wasn’t fair really, but then life wasn’t fair, full stop. Funny that he’d needed the Schism to learn that lesson - it seemed so obvious in hindsight.

For a moment he entertained himself with imagining what Uncle George’s reply would be, if he responded to the annual ‘So how old are you now young man?’ with ‘Eight Uncle George. And for my birthday I got to see eternity!’

Poor Uncle George, he’d get all befuddled. And Aunt Emily would think it a hidden insult of some mysterious sort and be even more horrid. It still made for a funny scene. Then he noticed that he was hungry - and that there were delicious smells coming from downstairs - and bolted down the stairs so fast that it made his mother tell him off.

She didn’t say anything about the hair, but he could tell she wasn’t pleased.

As he started tucking in he heard the front door open, and a second later his Uncle’s voice rang out, declaring that he could murder a full English breakfast.

After hanging up his coat - which was wet from snow or rain or goodness knew what, even when craning his neck the Seeker couldn’t quite tell - Uncle sat down at the table, smiling widely at the plate that was put in front of him.

“You smell like burnt metal and ozone,” the Seeker said suspiciously, remembering his dream, and then wrinkled his nose.

“...and lipstick?”

His Uncle’s head snapped up, and he stared at the Seeker with the strangest look on his face - amusement and sadness and exasperation all mixed up, and the Seeker felt sure that he’d never get the hang of his Uncle’s weird Christmas moods.

He almost asked what had happened - why was Uncle so late, and had his dream been real after all - but decided against it, since he didn’t like stories with kissing in. It was OK when it was Mum and Dad, but he’d once walked in on Uncle snogging River and had seriously contemplated trying to do a mind wipe on himself.

“Did someone say murder?”

His father’s voice cut through his thoughts, and he saw Uncle roll his eyes.

“Morning Master,” Uncle said, as the Seeker turned happily.

“Good morning Dad!”

His father grinned, and made a great show of very carefully pretend-patting his head, not touching any of the spikes.

“Ready to face the dragons, Seeker my boy?”

“Oh yeah,” he answered. “Piece of cake. They don’t even breathe real fire or anything.”

“That’s the spirit!” Dad smiled, taking a seat.

The Seeker smiled back, before finishing off his breakfast, silently contemplating just how different he was now to the boy who had hated Boxing Day so intensely - new name, new outlook, new everything. No - that wasn’t quite right... It was more that he’d become himself, completely. Like the creation of a diamond: His whole being crystallised and thrown into proper focus. Or something like that. He really ought to give up on trying to find a good metaphor, linguistic acrobatics weren’t his forte.

Still, the main point remained - things were different now. For starters, this year he had A Plan.

As they were getting ready to leave, he turned to his Uncle.

“Uncle... you know you forgot to make it snow yesterday.”

Uncle looked like he’d been hit very hard. “I’m sorry Seeker, I- there were these-”

“It’s okay,” he cut in, because Uncle rambled when he got into apology-mode. “But I was going to ask... Could you instead make it warm today? Not hot, just warm and dry enough to play out?”

His Uncle hesitated. “I’m not sure that’d be very good for the environment...”

“Oh the humans are screwing that up anyway. Go on - please?”

Uncle looked unsure, but then Dad joined in, just like the Seeker had known that he would.

“You absolute misery-guts. You don’t turn up for Christmas, you don’t make it snow... The boy just wants a bit of nice weather; won’t kill you, will it?”

“Well...” Uncle started, looked from one to the other, and then folded. The Seeker hugged him happily, profuse in this gratitude. Sometimes it was almost too easy...

As he and Mum stood outside the train station a little while later, waiting to be picked up (the Seeker worriedly checking up on his spikes - Leia had been poking around), Mum caught his attention.

“Alexander. You will remember not to say anything-”

“Mum!” he countered, reproachfully. He never slipped up anymore, she knew that. Balancing two worlds wasn't a problem anymore, since those worlds were now properly defined, and it was impossible to confuse who they saw (Alex), with who he really was (the Seeker) - the human ‘mask’ he had to wear as simple and easy to slip on and off as the bracelet that concealed his second heartbeat, and just as effective.

Then he unbuttoned his coat, because it was indeed getting warmer.

As he’d predicted, Aunt Emily did think his hair looked atrocious. Of course what she said, was “Well that certainly is an interesting hairstyle,” and smiled with deep insincerity.

The Seeker responded with a “Thank you Aunt Emily” so polite it would have done Ianto Jones proud.

Anything they could do, he could do better...

At dinner he had been positioned with Aunt Margaret on one side, a hedge fund manager uncle on the other, and Aunt Emily across the table - none of them paying him the least bit of attention.

But the food was good - really good, why had he never noticed that before? - and, despite the usual endlessness of the meal, boredom was never an option anymore.

Every moment - every waking second - he saw Time. All of time: Past; present; future. Endless timelines, endless possibilities - an infinitely complicated and intricate web, mesmerising and extraordinary.

It had been tricky to get used to, if he was honest... It was entirely too easy to get lost, to drift away in the sheer joy and wonder of forever. He knew his school reports said that he’d become inattentive, but then he was so far ahead anyway that it didn’t matter. And here he didn’t even want to pay attention to life around him.

However, the problem with being a million miles away became apparent when Great Aunt Margaret had to ask him repeatedly for the salt, before finally tapping his arm to catch his attention. As he handed it over - his only thanks being mutterings about 'young people these days' - he saw Aunt Emily shooting him evil looks, and in return smiled his widest, most enigmatic Saxon Smile (TM), which caused her to falter for just a moment, before covering up her discomfort with a patently fake smile.

Picking up his fork, he wondered what would happen if his family ever let loose and had a proper big argument, the way Martha's family did sometimes. Would it clear the air - or just make things worse? Humans were such surprising, unpredictable creatures, that either option was as valid as the other...

When dinner was finally done, and all the children were herded off, the Seeker stopped Geoffrey in the hallway.

“Listen - it looks like a nice day. How about going outside and playing cricket?”

Geoffrey studied him suspiciously.

“You like cricket?”

The Seeker nodded. “I’m brilliant.”

Geoffrey’s eyes narrowed - the inbuilt competitiveness of sportsmen everywhere rearing his head - and then looked out the window.

“Yeah... why not?"

An hour later, and the Seeker was so engrossed in the game that it took him a moment to take on board Geoffrey’s appreciative “You’re not half bad, Alex!”

“Told you!” he replied, and resolved to do something really spectacular and tricky to impress his cousin further.

192 seconds later precisely, he broke a window.

A terrified silence fell over all the cousins, as they turned to look at the black hole that had appeared in an ancient windowpane.

“My Mum,” Geoffrey said, voice low with terror, “is going to kill you!”

But the Seeker had two simultaneous thoughts, neither of them about Aunt Emily:

One, this would be the perfect way of getting home early.

Two - he didn’t want to go. He was having fun. On this, the most hated day of the year. His plan had been an even greater success than he’d expected it to.

Oh he was brilliant!

A wide, triumphant grin spread across his face as he swung his bat onto his shoulder, and then turned to his cousin.

“She gets to try, Geoffrey! After all, I’m sure she doesn’t want to ruin Boxing Day...”


The End

[identity profile] adoxerella.livejournal.com 2010-01-04 03:32 pm (UTC)(link)
You know, in the other stories with Alex in them, I often notice how he has picked up the traits of the Doctor and Jack. Here, besides seeing those influences, I am also reminded that he is very much his father's son as well. Which is disquieting to see in an eight year old, but subtle enough it blends in with normal childhood bravado (especially male childhood bravado). It is a nice bit of rounding to an OC that I am already terribly fond of.

Also, I love how Tosh looks so terribly bad-arsed in your mood theme.

[identity profile] zanthinegirl.livejournal.com 2010-01-04 10:13 pm (UTC)(link)
Nice ending! I like Alex here as he's figuring out who he is. I'm amused at the idea of "hair that will annoy the relatives"-- it's just possible that I might have dyed mine odd colors for exactly that reason- though I was probably 10 years older that Alex!

Alex and his cousin bonding over cricket is a nice moment. And I'm amused by the broken window!

[identity profile] revdorothyl.livejournal.com 2010-01-07 09:23 pm (UTC)(link)
Ahhh! Lovely!

Thanks for posting the "in case you missed it" link -- I hadn't really read my f-list at all earlier this week, and I'd have hated to be left out of the conclusion to another "Seeker" adventure.
ext_423802: ([dw] Roda: Art)

[identity profile] the-redjay.livejournal.com 2010-06-25 08:34 am (UTC)(link)
“Did someone say murder?”

His father’s voice cut through his thoughts, and he saw Uncle roll his eyes.

“Morning Master,” Uncle said, as the Seeker turned happily.

---

oh, thank you. This made me laugh, people in the room gave me funny looks. XD And the Master cajoling the Doctor into doing nice things for Alex was absolutely perfect, too. I'm glad Alex the Seeker likes Boxing Day now! Lovely fluff fic!

[identity profile] flowsoffire.livejournal.com 2013-06-25 06:12 pm (UTC)(link)
I loved the way you described Alex's dream—sounds like Planet of the Dead? And the fact that he looked so strikingly like his father when he was all dressed-up—lovely. I giggled at the spikes he adorned and his little phrase about the Seeker and his family. That little rebel! ♥ I loved his new awareness of time so much. Consequences, consequences. Of course it made him see his family in a wholly different way—I was quite entertained by his imagining their reactions. And ohhhh, you showed that right from the first line, of course—I'd just taken it in my stride but it's obvious in hindsight.
River! *shrieks* !!!!!!!!!!!! *looks frantically for any hints of regeneration I might have missed* Nope—River/Ten, then? Oh, I'm so curious about when exactly this is set regarding the Doctor's adventures, now. *reads on, eyes wide open for any and all hints* (And can I mention that if you make/have made River pop into this fic sometime I will spontaneously combust?)
I laughed at the Master's picking up on the word "murder", and his interaction with Alex :D Simply lovely.
I loved the way Alex acknowledged the change in himself. It was beautifully handled.
It was more that he’d become himself, completely. Like the creation of a diamond: His whole being crystallised and thrown into proper focus.
Stunning.
Or something like that. He really ought to give up on trying to find a good metaphor, linguistic acrobatics weren’t his forte.
And ha! I love it :D
And he had A Plan! :D *thrilled* I loved the Doctor in rambly!apology!mode, Alex's request, his casual comeback about the environment and the Master supporting him.
I have to get the habit of calling him Seeker, since that's his proper name now. *concentrates*
I liked how easily the Seeker was finding it now to pretend—how everything had become so much more defined, the reveal of who he really was making it obvious what he should pretend to be. Two parts of him, separate.
I loved Aunt Emily's reaction to his hairstyle, the casual mentioning of Ianto. I loved the line Anything they could do, he could do better... And the way you described how he could always see Time now. Oh. My. God. It was simply amazing. So complex and fascinating. Of course it would have been difficult to adjust to it, all that added awareness, so wide—I can imagine he'd have attention issues. You really showed that very vividly, once more.
Saxon Smile (TM) Goodness, I love you.
I loved his wondering about his family having an argument, and comparing it to Martha's… Their families couldn't be more different though, but still—what could have been ;) I liked his wondering about the effect it would have had on the atmosphere.
:D Seeker and Geoffrey playing cricket! I love it—that kid is lovely! Evil plan of doom ftw—and he managed to have such fun with his cousin, that was perfect. Lovely closure :D