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Doctor Who_ Deep Blue - Mark Morris [35]

By Root 419 0
days. She could remember events from ten, twenty, even fifty years ago with crystal clarity, but attempting to place recent events into some semblance of order never failed to get her into a dreadful muddle.

Had she seen him yesterday? Hadn‟t they sat down together to a supper of baked salmon and broad beans? They usually ate together, so surely she would have remembered if they hadn‟t? Wasn‟t it yesterday that he had been quiet, almost surly? Hadn‟t he left his food untouched, then stumped upstairs without a word?

She began to climb the stairs, slowed down by her aching joints. She hoped he wasn‟t in trouble. Though what sort of trouble could he be in? He never saw anyone, never went anywhere, except for the railway station on a Sunday to help out. He was a good boy, Jack. He had always looked after her. Not that she had asked him to, of course; everything he‟d done had always been his own decision.

She reached the top landing, breath wheezing thinly in her throat. Jack‟s door was closed. She moved across to it and tapped lightly.

„Jack, love, are you all right?‟

Silence.

She grasped the handle in both hands and pushed it down.

The door opened with a grinding clunk. She stepped into the room - and instantly recoiled. The smell in here was terrible.

It was like the fish market on a Friday, but somehow darker, heavier.

She looked towards the bed, across which lay a bar of sunlight from a gap in the curtains. The bed was clearly not empty, but she could not see its occupant. Something was moving beneath the brown sheet which was all Jack had been sleeping under since the nights had turned humid. The movements were slow, almost sinuous, making her think of coiling snakes. Wrinkling her nose against the awful smell, she took another step into the room.

„Jack?‟ she said uncertainly. „Jack, is that you?‟

The figure in the bed stopped moving, but it neither responded nor emerged from beneath the sheet.

Edith felt a little tic start up at the side of her eye and a nervous curling in her stomach. She wanted to retreat from the room, but a part of her was concerned for her son.

„Jack, please come out from under there,‟ she pleaded.

Still no response.

„Right,‟ she muttered, and with a flash of irritation she hobbled across the room, grasped the bed sheet and yanked it away.

Jack was sitting, naked, cross-legged, eyes closed, hands dangling loosely in his lap. Yet despite his apparently relaxed stance there was something terribly wrong with him. His fleshy, usually hairless chest, chubby arms and rounded shoulders were covered in tiny black spines which made him look like a human cactus. Even more alarming were the humps on his back, which were moving, as if something was alive in there.

„Oh Jack,‟ Edith said, her voice little more than a whisper.

He opened his eyes. They were as black as tar.

Edith tried to scream, but could manage nothing more than a squeak. She stumbled backwards, nearly fell. Jack turned his head and hissed at her.

The hump on his back surged and abruptly, with a wet tearing sound, it split open. Before Edith‟s horrified gaze, six large, long, jointed, crablike legs unfurled themselves. They probed blindly at the air for a moment before finding purchase on the walls and bed. Pain flared in Edith‟s chest; she was finding it hard to breathe. Jack gave a savage grin and, using his newly-hatched limbs, scuttled across the room towards her.

The Doctor wanted something to thump, but the lab benches were smothered with a complex array of delicate scientific equipment, so he had to be content with spinning on his heels and smiting his brow in frustration. Three hours ago he had thought that analysing the cell samples taken from the dead man in the hospital mortuary would be a relatively simple task; he had even been blithely confident of coming up with an antidote to the metamorphic processes unleashing themselves on Tayborough Sands‟s inhabitants.

But the cell samples, despite his best efforts, were stubbornly refusing to identify themselves. He‟d tried everything he could think of, using the

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