Read Doctor Who - I Am a Dalek Online
Authors: Gareth Roberts
‘The Dalek factor was triggered when this casing was disturbed by the humans digging,’ continued the Dalek. ‘Kate answered the call.
Her Dalek life force was used to bring to life a new Dalek from the data stored in the casing.’
‘Nifty,’ said the Doctor. He raised his voice. ‘But this is where it stops.’ He suddenly became more serious. ‘You have two options: destroy yourself or I will destroy you. Up to you.’
‘You cannot destroy me!’ shrieked the Dalek.
The Doctor leaned up close and whispered simply, ‘Wanna bet?’
‘There is another option, Doctor,’ it replied. ‘A choice for you to make.’
The Doctor blinked. Rose could tell he hadn’t been expecting this.
‘I offer you a deal,’ said the Dalek.
The Doctor laughed. ‘In the old days I knew a few people who did deals with Daleks. What happened to them? Let’s see if I remember.
Oh yeah, they all ended up being exterminated. In the back, usually.’
The Dalek ignored him. ‘I know of your emotional attachment to this planet. I can kill all the humans. But I am prepared to spare Earth and its people.’
The Doctor bit his lip. ‘For what?’
‘You must give me the power to escape. The means to travel in space and time. I wish to travel to another planet. I will give you the space-time coordinates for my journey.’
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‘And what’ll you do there, settle down to a quiet retirement? Or, I dunno, build a new race of Daleks perhaps?’
‘The Daleks will be reborn,’ said the Dalek. ‘But I will spare Earth. I will spare the woman Rose and all the other humans.’
‘And some other planet, they all get killed,’ said Rose.
‘There is no choice. In a crisis, impure creatures care only for the ones they know. This is a weakness.’ The Dalek was speaking to the Doctor. ‘The Doctor will not allow me to destroy your planet. To kill your family.’
The Doctor turned pale. He looked over at Rose. ‘It’s right. It can play me like an old fiddle.’
‘You’re gonna give it what it wants?’
The Doctor nodded. ‘Nothing else I can do. I can’t let Earth be destroyed.’
‘But this other planet and all the others out there. . . ’
‘They will be exterminated!’ the Dalek exulted. ‘And the new race of Daleks will be born. Daleks of my creation!’
55
THE DOCTOR WALKED SLOWLY into the TARDIS. It was clear that he wasn’t happy. Rose followed, slamming the door quickly after her.
‘How convincing was I?’ she said. ‘I deserve an Oscar for that.’
The Doctor looked at her grimly. ‘I wasn’t bluffing.’
‘I know you. You’re gonna fix up some booby trap, send the Dalek flying off into the space-time vortex or something, kill it.’
The Doctor shook his head and said gently, ‘Rose, that Dalek is a genius. An expert in space-time engineering. If I try any kind of trick, it’ll see it a mile off.’
Rose watched as he strode over to a shadowy corner of the TARDIS
and pulled out a huge, old-fashioned trunk. ‘But you can’t actually do it!’
‘I can save Earth,’ said the Doctor. He swung open the lid of the trunk. ‘For a Dalek, that’s a good deal.’
‘People who do deals with Daleks. . . ’ Rose reminded him.
‘Even if I was the sort of person who liked pulling triggers, do you know anything that could stop that Dalek? It’s fully formed now. I can’t just throw a brick at it again. It’s got a tough, radiation-proof casing. It’s immune to every infection. It’d just blink at a nuclear explosion. If it could blink.’ He rooted through the trunk, which contained a weird collection of jumble.
Rose came up close to him. ‘We destroyed them before,’ she said seriously. ‘I destroyed them.’ She remembered becoming the bad wolf, looking into the time vortex, wiping away a million Daleks with the wave of one hand.
‘Try that again and you could take the whole universe down with you,’ said the Doctor. ‘This is the only way. Here.’ He’d found what he was looking for in the trunk and held it up for her to see. It was a thick metal bangle decorated with a strange seal. ‘It’s old, but I reckon 57
I can get it going.’ He buzzed the sonic screwdriver over the seal and it glowed gently. ‘Time Ring, it’s like a personal TARDIS. Could take you anywhere.’
Rose stared at him. ‘So we’re really selling out? Letting it go?’
The Doctor looked down sadly. Then he gently stroked her cheek.
‘Either option is a nightmare. But the Dalek was right.’ He gazed over her shoulder, looking into the past. ‘We go back a long, long time.
The Dalek knows me. It knows I can’t stand back and watch it destroy your home.’
Kate the human Dalek watched the Doctor and Rose emerge from the TARDIS. She was filled with devotion and righteous anger. It was time for her master to leave this pathetic planet and secure the true destiny of the Daleks.
‘One Time Ring,’ said the Doctor, twirling it casually round his finger. ‘So, where do you want to go?’
The Dalek scanned the bangle. ‘The device is acceptable. Attach it.’
The Doctor slipped the bangle over the sucker arm.
‘I cannot operate the control panel,’ said the Dalek. ‘It is designed for human operation. The one called Kate will set the coordinates.’
Kate stepped forward eagerly. Her finger touched the seal of the bangle and instantly her Dalek brain recognised its design and its workings.
‘I am ready,’ she said.
‘Seven zero five nine galactic north by eight eight point five galactic west,’ said the Dalek. ‘Time factor: Earth date AD 500 million.’
Kate’s fingers danced over the seal, setting the coordinates.
‘Very smart,’ the Doctor said, nodding. ‘The most peaceful time in future history,’ he added for Rose’s benefit.
The Dalek lowered its eye-stalk. ‘The impure creatures of this future time care about peace. They know nothing of war, nothing of the Daleks. The one called Kate will come with me. She will plead for materials to rebuild my race. The creatures will supply them without asking questions. When we are ready, we shall emerge to conquer and destroy!’
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Rose took the Doctor’s arm. ‘No,’ she said firmly. ‘It sounds far away.
It gets us off the hook, but those people in the future are just like us.
We can’t do it!’
The bangle began to pulsate with golden light. ‘Stand back,’ barked the Dalek.
The Doctor and Rose obeyed.
The Dalek fixed its eye in the Doctor. ‘You will not follow.’
‘Never crossed my mind,’ said the Doctor innocently.
‘You will not follow. Because you will no longer exist.’ The Dalek raised its gun, aiming right at the Doctor. ‘The last thing I see before I depart will be your extermination!’
‘Of course,’ said the Doctor simply. ‘I made a deal with a Dalek.
What do you think I expected? A handshake and a box of Terry’s All Gold?’
‘Activate the Time Ring!’ screeched the Dalek.
Kate’s fingers moved over the controls.
She heard Rose’s voice. ‘Kate, please. What’s inside you – fight it. I know you can!’
‘You waste energy,’ said Kate. ‘The Dalek factor is too strong.’
Rose ran to Kate’s side. ‘Listen. All that stuff in your head. All the millions of planets and billions of years. I know what it’s like. Forget it. This morning, you missed the bus. What was the number of that bus?’
‘That is not important,’ said Kate. But she saw the bus, the silly rural single-decker, turning the corner on to the green. The number was 354.
Rose carried on desperately. ‘Toby, your ex, the one who spent all the credit on your card. What did he look like?’ Kate saw Toby, thin-ning hair and paunch, the kind of man you settle for when there’s nothing else going. ‘What did you have for tea last night?’ Rose cried.
‘Custard?’ It was the first word that came into her head.
Custard. Gloopy, yellow, pointless, tasty custard. Kate had never thought about custard before. Not thought hard about it. The Dalek part of her dismissed it. The human part imagined it pouring thickly 59
over bread and butter pudding. She realised she hadn’t eaten for hours.
But it was too late. The Dalek fired. ‘Exterminate the Doctor!’
A glowing sphere of light formed around the Dalek. The blast fizzed harmlessly inside it.
The Doctor clapped his hands together. ‘Custard!’ he cried. ‘She’s put a force field around the Dalek! Humans get hungry. What else do they do? Small things, big things, anything! We can reach her, get her to destroy it! Rose!’
Rose took his cue. ‘
The X Factor
,’ she gabbled. ‘Floor polish. Contact lenses. Waiting for home delivery, some time between eight and six.
Gas bills.’ She tried desperately to think. ‘People talking too loud on their phones in trains. Pointless internet arguments, with people you don’t even know. Kylie. When they ask “Do you have a Boots advantage card?”’
The Doctor took over, speaking quickly and passionately. ‘Then there are the best human qualities. They’re inside you, Kate, and I’ve seen them. The potential that is bursting from every human. The explorer, determined to see something nobody’s seen before. Writing home to tell his wife he’s never coming back, he knows he’s gonna die, but he must tell her he loves her.’ He gestured to Rose. ‘More!’
‘My mum,’ she said, ‘waiting up for me in her dressing gown till gone three, then pretending she just got up to put the kettle on.’ She grabbed another example from her own life. ‘When your mates are talking, and you close your eyes and it’s the most beautiful sound in the world, just people you love talking rubbish!’
‘Heroes!’ snapped the Doctor, as he stepped forward, eyes alight.
‘Running into a fire to save someone else’s child. People struggling, surviving, together. There was a time, thousands of years back, when there were only a few hundred humans left – I saw them – I saw them say no, we will go on, and they made it, and filled the world!’ He gasped for breath. ‘It’s the whole messy, glorious human thing!’
‘The Dalek factor will triumph!’ shrieked the Dalek. It fired again and again, the beams dissolving into the sphere of light.
Kate’s mind was divided. Down the middle.
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On the Dalek side there was power, glory, calm. Cities made of steel and oceans of ooze, stretching away into infinity under red moonlight.
There was anger, purpose, absolute devotion.
On the human side there was muddle. Daftness, regrets, accidents. Headaches and lost tickets and scratched CDs out of their cases and missed appointments and embarrassment. Apologies and blown chances. Being ill. Christmas. Half-hearted sex. Wogan and his non-sense.
But there was more to that muddle. There were beautiful buildings, all different, jammed together any old way under nights full of dia-mond stars. There was the thrill of making a new friend. There was music that never stopped changing. There were new ideas, new jokes, new discoveries, pouring out of that human chaos.
And Mum and Dad, taking her back in, giving her chance after chance after chance.
For one second Kate rejected the Dalek factor. In that vital second her fingers, with all their Dalek knowledge intact but with human resolve, flickered across the control unit of the Time Ring.
And instead of disappearing, the Dalek started to vibrate. A thick buzzing hum filled the air.
‘I dunno what I just did. . . ’ Kate told the Doctor and Rose.
‘Never mind now. Come on!’ shouted the Doctor.
Kate suddenly felt very confused, as if this strange day was finally catching up with her. Then something clicked in her head. ‘Self-destruct. I’ve set the Time Ring thing to self-destruct.’
‘Yes!’ cried the Doctor. ‘And on the other hand, no! Warp implosion!’
He grabbed Kate and Rose, pulling them towards the TARDIS. ‘Run!’
He couldn’t resist one last look back at the Dalek.
‘You cannot escape!’ it ranted. ‘Exterminate, exterminate –’ It was rattling uncontrollably now, becoming a wobbling golden blur.
‘You got it wrong,’ the Doctor sneered. ‘Your great plan failed. It was a balls-up. And you know why? Because who wants to be a Dalek, when they could be a human?’ He waved jauntily and said, ‘Goodbye,’
with quiet, satisfied contempt.
Then he ran into the TARDIS after Kate and Rose.
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The door slammed shut. The TARDIS faded away, ancient engines groaning.
The Dalek gave one last roar of anger before it imploded, its atoms blasted into nothingness. There was a mighty boom and every single window in a twenty-mile radius blew out.
Then there was only silence, and a smoking black patch in the quiet market town where the last Dalek had stood only moments before.
62
‘THAT WAS BRILLIANT!’ CRIED the Doctor. ‘Come here!’ He picked Kate up and whirled her round the TARDIS.
‘Stop it! Please put me down,’ said Kate a little crossly.
The Doctor obeyed with a joyful bow, as if he was finishing a dance.
Kate looked round at the weird, gloomy room. ‘Where is this? There was just a box. . . ’
Rose was intrigued. Kate seemed to have forgotten everything. As a Dalek, she’d known all about the Doctor and the TARDIS. ‘She’s lost it?’
The Doctor nodded. ‘No Dalek, no Dalek factor. Just a lot of harmless, useless genes going back to sleep.’
Kate touched her head. ‘What about my hair?’
Rose handed her a mirror from the jumble in the trunk. ‘Red.’
Kate sighed. ‘No offence, but that’s how I prefer it.’ She yawned.
She was exhausted.
But the Doctor wasn’t going to let her rest. ‘You are a hero! Hero!
Hero!’ he said.
‘OK, Doctor,’ said Rose. ‘Leave her alone.’
‘She’s just prevented a disaster for the universe! She played a blin-der!’ He turned back to Kate. ‘What can I do for you?’
‘I’d really like to go home,’ said Kate in a small voice.
‘Yeah, that’s easy, we’re doing that. There must be something else, though,’ said the Doctor. ‘Come on. You’re not gonna get the chance again.’
Rose stepped forward. ‘Got your credit card on you?’
Kate handed it over to Rose, who gave it to the Doctor. ‘You could pay off this.’