“YOU
CANNOT ESCAPE ME DOCTOR. I WILL HAVE YOUR POWER” I could hear the tentacle
writhing below, scraping its way up again and shuddered. The Doctor took my
hand again and pulled me towards the door. Ben-Ged was shaking himself awake as
we ran past, trying to find his gun. We ran through the door and the Doctor
locked it. (read the first episode here)
*opening credit music* oooooooooweeeeeeeeeeeeeoooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
“That should give us a bit of time!” The Doctor said,
fishing a torch out of one of his many pockets.
“Why didn’t you use the torch on the way down?” I
asked accusingly. “I don’t want to know how many rats I stepped on!”
The Doctor grinned at me as he started running down
the tunnels, picking paths at random as we came to intersections, the torch’s
light skittering as he ran. After a couple of minutes we came to a door set
into the wall. It looked new and recently used. The Doctor looked at me.
‘Shall we give it a go?’
‘Please! I want out of these tunnels!’
The Doctor zapped the lock and pushed the door open
slowly. We walked out onto a fire escape, with stairs leading up to street level;
there was another door down to our right which the Doctor made for.
‘So not up and out to the safe outside world?’ I
asked sarcastically.
The Doctor ignored me and pushed through the door
back into the museum and we entered the Temple Courtyard. I remembered being
here 2000 years ago, the first time that we met Apulia. Back then it was
fantastic in its magnificence, flanked by pillars and statues. Now it was dark
and damp from being underground for too long. The walkway beneath our feet rang
out loudly as we moved along it. The Doctor paused opposite the head of Sulis
Minerva, a remnant of the once sacred site not preserved in its glass case. I
looked at it and the Doctor started monologue-ing to himself
‘He, it, whatever Malum Sanatore is, controls
everything in this building. Don’t touch anything. Especially the water. Remember
when we were by the Great Bath? Did you get a strange urge to touch the water?
He is attempting to control everyone who enters this site. Seeping their power
away from them, with or without, their consent.’
I thought I saw something move out of the corner of
my eye, but when I looked back to the statue nothing had changed. I had a bad
feeling.
‘Doctor...’ I said.
‘I need to figure out what to do. How to stop this.
He can’t have the Tardis. I’ve hidden it away, put the shields up as they would
say. But if he gets me, he gets the tardis, and that can’t happen.’
‘Doctor!’
‘What?’
‘That head, just moved.’
The doctor turned to look at the bronze head of
Minerva. And it turned to look at him.
‘Errr yes now that is not right.’
The floor shook and the room was filled with laughter.
‘YOU CANNOT ESCAPE ME DOCTOR. YOU ARE IN MY DOMAIN.’
The glass surrounding the statue’s head cracked and shattered, the
casing which appeared to be holding it up broke away and the head rose up on a
mechanical body.
‘MY SERVANTS HAVE DONE ME
PROUD. FITTING EXTRA DEFENSIVES IF THEY WERE EVER NEEDED.’
With a groan Minerva wrenched free from the ground and stepped towards
us.
‘I think this is the time
when you normally say run!’ I said grabbing the Doctor’s hand and pulling him
away.
‘The technology is absolutely
fascinating! In order to do that he has fused modern technology with his
knowledge of alien craftsmanship.’
‘Yes, yes the killer robot is
awesome now let’s please get away from it!’
As we ran away from the temple courtyard I heard the door to the
tunnels smash open as Ben-Ged came out. Shots fired and we ducked as the walls
around us were filled with bullet holes.
‘Where are we going?’ I said
as we ducked into a corner to catch our breath.
‘The Sacred Spring. There
must be something there!’
‘Isn’t that the other way
though?!’
‘Yeah, but the museum is all
linked up, sort of like a figure of eight, if we keep going back through the
museum we can find some stairs down to the Great Bath and from there to the Sacred
Spring.’
‘How do you know all this?!’
‘I have a good head for
directions!’ The Doctor grinned. ‘Come on. Just a bit more running to do!’
We started running again, through the museum, past the Gorgon’s head
and up the stairs towards the start of the museum.
‘This way’ The Doctor said
pushing through a door concealed in a wall.
‘Wow the people who designed
this place sure like secret wall doors!’ I said closing the door quietly behind
me and followed the doctor down the metal staircase to the Great Bath.
‘Hopefully they won’t realise
that we have back tracked…’ the Doctor said as he hurried to the sacred spring.
The Sacred Spring was dark, lit only by the emergency lights from the
building around it, even so, you could still see the steam swirling over the
surface. The heat coming from the surface was warming after the cold of the
night.
There was a bang as the door to the back stairs was flung open and the
sound of metal on metal rang out as Minerva started making her slow way down
the stairs.
‘Damn. That didn’t work.
Quick, climb over the top of the arch into the spring. But stay on the sides.
Don’t touch the water itself.’
The Doctor helped me climb over the top of the wall and lower myself
down onto the small ledge surrounding the spring. When I had edged myself down
and over to the floor around the side the Doctor followed. He pushed me round
the spring until we were hidden from sight in one of the alcoves. The floor was
damp and covered in bird poo so slippery under foot. The Doctor motioned me to
be quiet as he saw Minerva’s head appear over the top of the wall. There was a
metallic grating sound as the head turned to look over the spring, but thanks
to the angle of the archway we were hidden from sight. Minerva slowly moved
back down again and continued on towards the exit of the museum, still
searching for us.
‘What now?’ I mouthed.
‘We’ve escaped Minerva but I
doubt Ben-Ged will be so easily fooled.’ The Doctor whispered. ‘We need to stop
Malum but I can’t figure out how yet’ He hit himself in the forehead with the
flat of his hand. ‘Come on think! How many plans have I foiled? How many times
have I come up with solutions? Don’t fail now!’
‘Think it through.’ I said.’
What is Malum trying to do? Get power in order to get back to his home planet
to take over and most likely enslave them as that is what most evil masterminds
want to do. How is he doing that? By stealing their energy or ‘power’ from
people by either drawing them into the water or absorbing them whole, through
mind control. So, first off get rid of the water and then knock out the mind
control..?’
The Doctor stopped and looked at me.
‘That isn’t a bad idea.
Right! I remember Rosa saying there was an overflow system for the spring. We
just need to get to that and drain it into the river. Once it is out of this
site and away from Malum it should become harmless. I can’t touch the water
though so not sure how to do that…’
‘I’ll do it.’
‘Are you sure? It’s pretty
dangerous.’
‘Doctor being with you is
pretty dangerous! And yes, you said yourself you can’t touch the water or all
will be lost so it is up to me! I think I can see the over flow point anyway.
You go back to the issue desk and figure out a way to stop that beacon.’
‘Sounds somewhat like a
plan!’ The Doctor grinned. ‘Keep your head down, Ben-Ged is still about, once
you’ve done it, don’t stick about and come find me in the reception hall.’
‘Will do.’
The Doctor gave me a long look before turning and making his way back
over the top of the wall into the museum. I watched him go and then looked
around me; I saw a long metal bar lying on the floor nearby, most probably left
behind by the operations team earlier in the day. I went over and picked it up,
not too heavy which was useful. I moved around the spring until I could see the
dark shape of the gate in the water. I needed to shut the gate into the Great
Bath and open the one to the overflow system. This was going to be easier said
than done. I walked back around the spring till I was standing above the sluice
gate to the Great Bath; I raised the metal bar above my head, shifted my
footing slightly and then rammed the bar down. And missed. The bar hit the edge
of the spring and bounced off jarring my hands.
‘Ahhh!!’ I dropped the bar
and jumped up and down rubbing my arms to relieve the pain. ‘Right, retarded
moment over. Try again.’
I repositioned myself and held the bar over the edge of the spring this
time. Raised it once more and brought it down heavily onto the top of the gate.
This time it hit on target and I felt it shift under the impact and was
rewarded by a heavy grating sound as it moved and then fell into place,
shutting the stream off.
‘Yes! Right now for the other
gate.’ I got down onto my belly and shuffled to the edge of the floor, looking
over the spring. The sluice gate to the overflow system was already open but
not nearly open enough to drain the water quick enough. I lowered the bar into
the water onto the top of the gate and began hitting it downwards in order to
open it more. It wouldn’t budge. I tried again and again, getting more worried
about the amount of noise I was making and hoping Ben-Ged wouldn’t turn up. I
tried raising the bar up above my head to give some more weight behind the
hits. As I brought it down I was caught off guard by a seagull flying overhead,
breaking the silence with its raking call which made me jump and I dropped the
bar into the spring and it sank noiselessly to the bottom, the steam swirled
over the place where it had sank almost mocking me.
‘No!!’ I groaned. I looked up
and tried to see if there was anything else I could use to open the gate.
Nothing. I sat up and started to think, and then I heard the almost soundless
noise of approaching boots on the steps behind me. Ben-Ged-Bentovin. I was in
full view with nowhere to run, if he looked over the top of the spring I would
be a goner. I looked around me desperately and then my gaze settled on the dark
waters of the spring. I know the Doctor said not to touch the water but what
choice do I have? If I stay here I will be shot by Ben-Ged, and fed to Malum.
Game over, no second chances, no questions asked. But if I get into the spring
I could kill two birds with one stone; hide from Ben-Ged and shift the gate
open.
My mind made up I slipped into the dark waters. The heat of the waters
took my breath away. I felt down with my feet until I could feel the gate
directly underneath me. I took a deep breath and ducked under the surface of
the water just as Ben-Ged’s head appeared above the wall of the spring. The
heat of the water was over powering. I felt like I was in a cooking pot. The
water slowly tugged at me as it flowed past me into the partially open gate. I
lowered myself down, using the wall of the spring to steady myself, until I
could feel the top of the gate. I pushed down with all my strength. It wouldn’t
move. I kept pushing until I thought my lungs would burst. I needed to go back
up for air. I couldn’t breathe. I had no way of knowing if Ben-Ged was still
there, hopefully he had moved on, but right now I didn’t care, I needed air. I
slowly worked my way back up to the surface of the spring, holding my face
towards the top so it would only be my face that broke the surface. I gulped in
mouthfuls of air, trying to keep my ragged breathing quiet. I risked a quick
glance towards the arch of the spring, and there to my horror stood Ben-Ged
smiling at me.
‘Hello.’ He said and raised
his gun.
I took another deep breath and quickly re-submerged into the hot
water. There was a muffled bang as Ben-Ged fired and I felt a bullet skid past
me in the water and nick the top of my shoulder. I screamed, pain flooding
through me, releasing precious air. That
was far, far too close. I positioned myself above the gate of the spring,
crouching so my feet were on top of the gate and my arms were in the opening. I
pushed, straining, feeling my strength slowly fading as I put everything into
opening the gate, the wound on my shoulder burned. I looked up and saw a dark
presence looming over the water. Ben-Ged had climbed over the spring wall and
was stood above me, taking his time to line up the perfect shot. In my
frustration I let out another cry, releasing more bubbles and giving away my
position even more. Suddenly I felt a jolt beneath my feet; the gate gave way
with a rust groan, and fell away from the wall. The water rushed through the
new gap dragging me through it. I tried in vain to cling onto the wall and was
pulled through into the dark swirling mass of water.
I woke, coughing and gasping to find myself half in a pool of fast
flowing hot water. I got my breath back and looked around to find that I had
gone through the overflow system but had, thankfully, been stopped from going
down the drain and into the river by a large boulder blocking the water’s path.
The water flowed around it regardless but I had been saved. My whole body ached
as I moved, the wound on my shoulder had closed, (a saving act from Malum
perhaps?) but my shirt was stained with blood. I picked myself up and climbed
over the barrier back into the museum, watching my footing in case I slipped
and ended up further down the drain. I ran back up the stairs, (how many times
must I run around this museum tonight!?) and made it back to the reception
hall.
‘Doctor?’ I whispered.
The Doctor’s head popped up over the top of the desk and he gestured
me over.
‘What took you so long? What
happened are you ok?’ He said, noticing the blood on my clothes.
‘I got into a bit of trouble with
the spring and Ben-Ged… but I’m ok, the water did its trick.’
‘You went in the water? Why
does no one listen to me!’ The Doctor started grumbling.
‘Ok, so enough of my
failings, have you got anywhere with your part of the plan?’
I stepped up behind the desk as the Doctor popped back down again. He
had ripped up part of the floor and had dragged wiring out from the floor and
the audioguide boxes and was busy ‘sonicing’ them.
‘I have isolated the main
beacon and have rigged this audioguide to stop it.’ He said, pointing to an
audioguide which was covered in wires and plastic, all seemingly held together
with a series of elastic bands.
‘Ok so that is the mind
control issue. What are you going to do about the evil alien living under the
city?’
‘That is an issue I have yet to get to.’ The
Doctor said fiddling some more.
‘Err Doctor?’ I said
‘Yes?’
‘I think I just heard
something…’
Simultaneously we both slowly raised our heads above the desk and saw
not only Ben-Ged at the entrance, but also Minerva-Robot.
‘Fantastic!’ I said quickly
hiding back behind the desk as they both started moving towards us. ‘You better
knock that beacon out now!!’
‘Trying, trying!’ He said
zapping the audioguide and changing settings. ‘Does Ben-Ged still have a gun?’
he asked me.
I snuck a quick look back over the top of the desk and jumped back
down as an audioguide box exploded above our heads.
‘You know what? I am going to
take that as a yes!’ I said ducking from flying plastic. ‘How long do you
need?’
‘What?’
‘To get that working? How
long do you need?’
‘Two minutes should do it.’
‘Ok, diversion central here
we come!’ I said, diving to the right and scrabbling along the floor.
‘Be careful!’
‘Don’t worry, he’s already
shot me once, he isn’t that good a shot!’ I laughed.
I looked around me for something to distract them with and settled on
a box of audioguides. I ripped open the doors and started pulling the guides
out of their sockets. I lobbed the first one over at random and heard it smash
on the floor. The footsteps stopped. I sneaked a peak over the top of the desk
and saw it had done the trick; both were looking away from the Doctor and
towards me.
‘That’s right; you jumped up
piece of metal! This way!’ I flung another audioguide and hit Minerva in the
face with a clunk. The robot reeled but then started walking again. I threw
another one at Ben-Ged but he ducked and it glanced off his shoulder, he fired
his gun again and more audioguides exploded in a shower of plastic and purple
string. I moved further back down the desk.
‘How’s that coming along
Doctor?’
‘Just a little bit more
time!’
‘Ahhh!!’ I jumped back over
lobbing a stapler I found on the side. ‘Hurry up!’
Ben-Ged strode up to the desk raising his gun, aiming at me. And
fired. It jammed. Ben-Ged growled and fired again. Still jammed. He threw it
away and lunged over the desk; I jumped out of the way and clambered over the
desk, knocking a till over in the process. Ben-Ged grabbed my foot and dragged
me back down again.
‘Got it!’ The Doctor shouted.
‘And…. Stop!’ He said, pointing the audioguide at the World Heritage symbol.
Ben-Ged froze, his hands towards my throat, he blinked, his lifeless eyes
widening as Malum’s control over him was gone for the first time in ages. His
arms lowered.
‘What the…?’
I looked at him and then punched him in the face. Taken by unawares he
fell back unconscious into the desk.
‘What on earth did you do
that for?’ The Doctor asked.
‘Big security guard with a
gun who has no idea what is going on. I think he would be safer not being
around to ask all the questions…’
The Doctor paused.
‘Good point.’ He said moving
round the desk to where Minerva lay. Whilst being caught up by Ben-Ged I hadn’t
realised what had happened to her. She lay just in the door way of the desk.
Dangerously close to where the Doctor had been working. I got up and joined him
looking down at it.
‘So that knocked out all
Malum’s control of the site?’
There was a loud rumbling and the room shook.
‘DOCTOR! YOU WON’T BE ABLE TO
GET AWAY WITH THIS! I STILL HAVE THE UPPER HAND!’
‘I’m going to say yes!’ The
Doctor grinned at me.
‘Ok, so I ask again, now
what?’
The Doctor was sat on his haunches and was thoughtfully poking the
robot.
‘The audioguide blocks out
the beacon but only in a limited area. He can’t control anything in the museum,
but the tunnels will still be his. If we put Ben-Ged back down there it would
be evil kill-y robot again.’
‘Ok, so let’s not do that
then.’
‘But, if we use Minerva,
re-program her, attach the beacon cancelation to her and march her back to her
‘master’ and…’
‘He’ll be stuck!’ I finished
for him. ‘But what if he gets around it?’
‘I could wire up something…’
the Doctor said half-heartedly, running a hand through his scruffy hair. ‘But
just because there is an alien living underneath it, doesn’t justify blowing
this whole place up!’
‘Can’t you temper it? Not use
quite so many audioguides…? I don’t know’ I shrugged. ‘But an audioguide bomb
does sound cool!’ I grinned.
‘We’re talking about blowing
up a world heritage site because of a killer alien! …and yeah it is pretty
cool.’ He grinned back.
The Doctor ripped open the chest area of the robot, revealing a
complicated jumble of wires and flashing lights. The Doctor grinned again.
‘Oh aren’t you pretty’ The
Doctor purred. ‘Almost a shame to blow you up…’ He leant over and grabbed some
wires and audio guides from the side. I slumped down on the floor next to him.
‘Are you alright?’
‘Yeah, just all this running
and being shot at has made me pretty tired, and I have a bit of a headache.’
The Doctor looked over his shoulder at me, pausing in his work,
concern showing on his face.
‘How long were you in the
water for?’
‘I don’t know, I think I
passed out when I went through the drain…’
‘The drain?! I’m surprised
you made it out alive!’
‘All in a good days work!’ I
smiled.
The Doctor went back to twiddling and fiddling and five minutes later
he sat up and clapped his hands together. I had fallen asleep momentarily and
jumped with the sudden noise.
‘Done! Pass me that
audioguide’ He gestured over behind me.
‘yeah, umm yeah, ok’ I said,
getting up and passing it to him, shaking my head to try to clear my head.
He took it and pressed some of the buttons and some lights in her
chest cavity flashed in response.
‘Awesome! Right seeing how
taking the whole robot there seemed a bit excessive I have managed to use her
technology to boost the cancelation signal and also wire it up to blow when we
press this button.’ He pointed to the ‘play’ button on the audioguide which he
then passed to me. He bent back down and put his hands in amongst the wires and
pulled them out of the casing. ‘One portable alien bomb. All we need to do is
chuck this down into the well and then run.’ He said smiling.
‘ok, so we have the bomb, we
have the control. What are we waiting for?’
‘Nothing, lets get going!’
Once again we started towards the entrance to the museum, I remembered
back to the morning when I was excited about seeing the changes, now I was
filled with a sense of dread along with excitement, of what will happen in the
next half an hour. We made it back down into the tunnels, even without the
threat of a mad-mind-controlled-alien/human/robot it was still ominous going
back into the dark.
The Doctor led the way through the door, carrying the jumble of wires
in front of him, he had given the audioguide to me which I carried around my
neck for safe keeping.
‘Even if Malum has any more
nasty things under his control down here, the beacon from Sulis should cancel
it out long before they reach us.’
‘Reassuring!’
The floor rumbled and the walls shook.
‘DOCTOR YOU STILL THINK YOU
CAN STOP ME. WHY? I HAVE BEEN HERE FOR MILLENNIUM, WHAT MAKES YOU THINK YOU CAN
MAKE ME LEAVE?’
‘Malum?’ The Doctor shouted
back. ‘You say you are all powerful so I am assuming you can hear me. ‘You may
have been here for millennia but what gives you the right to kill these
people? You are bored and tired of being stuck here, I get that. Normally I
would offer you a lift away, anywhere you like, but you pose too great a risk
for me and my ship. So I offer an alternative alternatum. Leave these people
alone. Stop killing them, stop controlling them. Take what you need to power
your ship and leave. If you have been here so long you must have taken enough
to power part of your ship if not the whole craft. You can escape and that
should be enough. If not I will stop you.’
‘HMMMM. SOUNDS TEMPTING
DOCTOR. BUT ALSO BORING.’ Laughter filled the tunnels and the walls began to
shake uncontrollably.
‘Come on’ The Doctor said to
me, ‘Looks like we are having to stick to the original plan.’ He took the audioguide
from around my neck and pressed a few buttons then gave it back to me. ‘Ok,
bomb is primed.’ He shook his head. ‘Hopefully it will be enough and not too
much.’
‘Will it kill him?’
‘No, from what I figure he
and his ship is buried right down near the core of the earth, we need to throw
this down the well and hopefully that will collapse the area he is in and also restrict
his access to the spring, he will be trapped, but Bath will be safe again.’ He
started along the tunnels again and it didn’t take us long to find the doorway
into the room where Ben-Ged had taken us earlier.
‘Ready?’ He asked me.
‘Yep.’
‘Ok, on the count of three we
burst in, I run in and get this down the well and you – ‘
‘Distraction central! I got
it!’ I said cutting in.
The Doctor grinned.
‘One… two…. Three!’ The
Doctor kicked the door open and the lock burst with a smash. He would have
liked to say he ran in, but it was more falling in after the force used to open
the door.
‘WELCOME BACK DOCTOR!’
Tentacles whipped up and out of the well and came speeding towards us.
I ducked as one sped past my shoulder, and hit the floor with a thump. The
Doctor had similarly dived out of the way, skidding along the floor until he
came up against the wall on the other side of the room to me. He looked up to
check I was alright and I nodded. Right diversion central! I checked the
position of the tentacles and stood back up.
‘Hey Malum! You big tentacle
alien. What are you? Some sort of Hentai reject?!’ I ducked as more tentacles
rushed my way, leaving the Doctor open to run across the room.
‘WHAT DO YOU THINK YOU ARE
DOING?’
The Doctor was suddenly swept off his feet by a low swinging tentacle.
‘I WILL HAVE YOUR POWER
DOCTOR.’
‘Not if I have anything to do
about it! Catch!’ He threw the wire bomb towards me and I jumped up and caught
it and started running towards the well. A sudden sharp pain filled my whole
head stopping me dead in my tracks. I screamed and dropped the bomb, bringing
my hands up to cradle my head.
‘Doctor!! Ahhhh Doctor, what
is happening!’
Malum laughed. ‘YOU CAN’T EVEN KEEP THOSE CLOSE TO YOU SAFE. HOW DO
YOU INTEND TO DO SO FOR AN ENTIRE PLANET?’
The Doctor tried to get up to get to me but a tentacle had grabbed his
legs.
‘It’s because you went in
the water. Somehow he is finding a way to get past the beacon and he is trying
to control you. You have to fight it!’
‘I’m trying! It hurts so much’
I said through gritted teeth, sinking to the floor. I could see nothing but
white due to the pain, which was increasing, becoming unbearable. It felt like
there was a white hot grip on my brain, which was crushing it mercilessly. The
Doctor’s voice was getting fainter as he shouted at me to fight through it. I
had a sudden urge to stand up and walk forward. If I could only get up and move
forward the pain would go. All thoughts and fears of Malum and the tentacles
faded as I picked myself up and started walking forward. I thought I heard the
Doctor shouting behind me but I didn’t care, the pain was fading into a dull
blank space, my thoughts with it. I didn’t need to think, just keep walking and
it will be ok. I moved forward, still blind but managing to keep my balance,
each step forward brought eased the pain. I felt something come up against my
legs, I thought it might have been a small wall. All I needed to do was climb
over it and I would be ok, the pain would completely gone. I put my hands out
and felt the top of the wall, I smiled, it wasn’t high at all. I picked up one
leg in order to climb over, a gust of cold air from the floor came up and hit
me in the face smelling of damp and dark. It was strangely soothing, just a little
further and I would be ok, I knew it. My leg brushed the top of the wall,
making my trouser leg damp and then there was a piercing scream inside my head,
the soothing presence I had felt before was gone and all I could think was pain
once more. I felt a pair of hands pulling me backwards, I struggled against
them, if I just made it over the wall I would be ok! I heard someone shouting
but couldn’t make out who or what they were saying. The screaming had stopped
now but pain still filled my head. I was being dragged across the floor, the
cold and damp seeping through my clothes was helping me to come back around. What
was happening? My vision was slowly returning and I could make out someone
bending over me.
‘Doctor? Is that you?’
‘You’re back!’ My vision was
back fully now, but the pain in my head made keeping my eyes open difficult. ‘come
on’ he said pulling me to my feet, ‘we need to get moving, we have one minute
before this place blows!’
The Doctor started pulling me along, I felt weak and sick from the
pain but the further we went the more it faded.
‘Wait, what happened? How’d
you get the bomb in the well?’
‘Malum was controlling you,
your time in the water meant he had a grip on you, and when we were next to him
I underestimated his power. You nearly walked into the well.’
‘What? What happened? I don’t
remember anything other than pain and the idea that it would go.’
‘I managed to get free by
stabbing the tentacles with a piece of rock and then whacked up the controls,
careless of me and it nearly resulted in you going over.’
We had reached the door to the fire exit, and the Doctor made for the
stairs going up to the street.
‘This way now, we need to get
as far away as possible, altering the controls may have altered the strength of
the bomb.’
‘DOCTOR!!!!!!!!!!!!!!’ Malum
screamed.
‘Aaahhhh!’ I screamed,
dropping to my knees as Malum’s full rage and anger filled my head.
‘come on! Keep with me!’ The
Doctor shouted, basically carrying me up the stone stairs. We reached the
double doors of the fire exit, the Doctor leant me against a wall as he pulled
off the metal bar which secured the doors shut, pushed them open and then
dragged me through and down the steps. We started running again but weren’t
quick enough as a massive bang and explosion through us off our feet. Rubble and
smoke filled the air. The screaming in my head abruptly stopped and blessed
silence took its place. The Doctor was mouthing something to me and I realised
that I couldn’t hear anything from the explosion. Sound slowly returned, car
and house alarms were going off, dogs barking. The night was filled with noise
and light, much different to how it had been when we were first brought to see
Malum. We walked back around the building to see what damage had been caused
and to the Doctor’s great relief the terrace around the Baths seemed mostly
intact. A few of the Victorian statues had fallen off due to the blast though.
The surrounding buildings on the other hand were not so lucky. It seems that
Malum’s tunnel was situated underneath the surrounding shops and it was these
that had taken the brunt force of the blast. A crater was all that was left of
what used to have been Debenhams. We stood staring for a short while until the
noise of fire engines and police started coming close.
‘Come on, we don’t want to be
here.’ The Doctor said taking my hand. ‘How’s your head?’
‘Ok I think…’ I said putting
a hand to my forehead. ‘He stopped, like I mean, I could hear him screaming and
then it was silence. Did you kill him?’
‘No, I don’t think so, just
trapped him. He won’t be able to control people here anymore. His access to the
outside world has now been broken.’ He looked at me. ‘Come on, lets get you to
the Tardis and I can look over you properly.’
‘They may not realise it, but
the people of Bath are a lot safer now than they have been for a very long
time.’ I said looking back on the museum as people came out to witness the destruction
and we made our slow way back to the Tardis and on to more adventures.


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