[ For
timeforamy ; Air-Paris ]
Jun. 28th, 2010 12:42 pm[ OOC: Follows this ]
There are approximately 400 billion stars in the Milky Way. A respectable number, for any galaxy. But that's small potatoes when compared to the number of stars found in the entire universe -- something like ten to the power of twenty-four -- which is a very pragmatic, comfortingly mathematical way of saying that space is big.
Really big.
Bigger than your whole town, much bigger than the little flat you have in the city, with the leaky shower head and the upstairs neighbors who like to stomp around wearing wellies filled with bricks. Space is bigger than your township, your borough, bigger than all the places you have ever been, combined and multiplied by themselves until the math makes you dizzy and you have to lie down for a while. Big. Ten to the power of twenty-four. Countless suns, all burning out in the black. Of those, maybe a little more than half have planets. Of those, approximately half have some form of life. Of those, approximately sixteen-million-five-hundred-and-forty-seven-thousand-one-hundred-and-eighty-six have intelligent life, or some variation of it. Comparatively speaking, that is a depressingly small percentage. But, then again, "intelligence" is relative, especially across star systems.
The Doctor is in the TARDIS's control room, hunched over the console, his nose inches away from a chronofribrilator feed that, apparently, requires up close and personal inspection in order for it to function properly. He's muttering to himself, soft space-themed mutter. Once in a while his eyebrows will jump, as if he's just thought of something, but then he will return to his work, subdued. He left Amy in his bed down the corridor, asleep. He does not quite know what to think about that.
He does know that he needs to take her somewhere -- somewhere spectacular -- and he needs to do it right away. What are you doing, old man? You can't honestly expect to carry this off. Not when you're not even being entirely honest with her. Not when she's only just lost her --
He hears bare feet on the catwalk above his head. "Pond!" he announces, "glad you're finally awake. Listen, we're just about to make landfall. Oh, er', well, spacefall, I suppose you could say. Air-Paris: the entire City of Lights, replicated perfectly, floating in the Sunset Constellation of Ursa Minor Minor. Sort of like Starship U.K., but with much more wine and cheese."
There are approximately 400 billion stars in the Milky Way. A respectable number, for any galaxy. But that's small potatoes when compared to the number of stars found in the entire universe -- something like ten to the power of twenty-four -- which is a very pragmatic, comfortingly mathematical way of saying that space is big.
Really big.
Bigger than your whole town, much bigger than the little flat you have in the city, with the leaky shower head and the upstairs neighbors who like to stomp around wearing wellies filled with bricks. Space is bigger than your township, your borough, bigger than all the places you have ever been, combined and multiplied by themselves until the math makes you dizzy and you have to lie down for a while. Big. Ten to the power of twenty-four. Countless suns, all burning out in the black. Of those, maybe a little more than half have planets. Of those, approximately half have some form of life. Of those, approximately sixteen-million-five-hundred-and-forty-seven-thousand-one-hundred-and-eighty-six have intelligent life, or some variation of it. Comparatively speaking, that is a depressingly small percentage. But, then again, "intelligence" is relative, especially across star systems.
The Doctor is in the TARDIS's control room, hunched over the console, his nose inches away from a chronofribrilator feed that, apparently, requires up close and personal inspection in order for it to function properly. He's muttering to himself, soft space-themed mutter. Once in a while his eyebrows will jump, as if he's just thought of something, but then he will return to his work, subdued. He left Amy in his bed down the corridor, asleep. He does not quite know what to think about that.
He does know that he needs to take her somewhere -- somewhere spectacular -- and he needs to do it right away. What are you doing, old man? You can't honestly expect to carry this off. Not when you're not even being entirely honest with her. Not when she's only just lost her --
He hears bare feet on the catwalk above his head. "Pond!" he announces, "glad you're finally awake. Listen, we're just about to make landfall. Oh, er', well, spacefall, I suppose you could say. Air-Paris: the entire City of Lights, replicated perfectly, floating in the Sunset Constellation of Ursa Minor Minor. Sort of like Starship U.K., but with much more wine and cheese."
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Date: 2010-07-10 05:11 pm (UTC)"Come on." He gives her shoulder a bump. "Something cheerier. Chime in when you know the tune." He puts his fingers to the keys and begins to play the lower half of "Heart and Soul".
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Date: 2010-07-10 05:47 pm (UTC)Amy touches her fingers to the keys and begins on the higher melody. She knows this well, it's something else she enjoyed playing.
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Date: 2010-07-10 11:51 pm (UTC)Incidentally, the Doctor had far less success with being a childhood prodigy when, before he was accepted into the Academy at the age of eight, his parents made him take music lessons. The Doctor lasted one session, after which he took apart the teleharmonium he'd been playing and was politely asked not to return.
He has not played many instruments until now, but he finds he's getting the hang of accompanying Amy. 'Not hard, really, when she's carrying the song with that kind of smile. "That's it, Pond! Put your --" he cracks a grin "-- well, your heart and soul, into it!"
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Date: 2010-07-11 12:56 am (UTC)Amy's fingers dance across the keys with purpose, tossing back her hair so she can look at him with her bright, shining eyes.
"Then best put both of yours into it, Doctor!" She's grinning at him in a disarming way, whether it's meant to have that effect or not is unknown, but the truth is that Amy has little else to think of now other than the music, and her companion.
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Date: 2010-07-11 02:57 am (UTC)"A little faster, then?" He rolls his shoulders, shaking down the rough tweed to give his elbows some room, thumping out the joyful tempo. He could forget everything but the happiness in her face. "Come on, Pond! Do keep up!"
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Date: 2010-07-11 03:01 am (UTC)Amy breaks into a faster pace that runs right along with him, her painted nails flying across the keys in little, coloured streaks.
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Date: 2010-07-11 03:13 am (UTC)He reaches over her to tickle the high range of the piano, then drags the sides of his fingers down the keyboard in a sliding glissando. "Big finish!" he announces, rattling the keys in expectation before plunging into a final, thumping revisit of the major melody.
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Date: 2010-07-11 03:23 am (UTC)The song comes to its final ends and Amy laughs again, her shoulder bumping against his in time with the last notes.
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Date: 2010-07-11 03:31 am (UTC)"Well done, Pond!" He brings his palms together for some appreciative applause. "We should get you doing vaudeville in the '30s. You could play piano and I could, I don't know, spin plates or something. We'd be the hit of the boardwalk."
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Date: 2010-07-11 03:50 am (UTC)"People wouldn't give us coins, they'd throw full bills!" she cried. "It would be amazing!"
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Date: 2010-07-11 06:43 pm (UTC)He thumps a final chord on the piano and swivels his hips on the bench. "Let's go. Plenty more to see. Can't waste a moment of it."
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Date: 2010-07-11 06:52 pm (UTC)Her words are cut short by her backwards collision with a man's tall figure. Amy whirls around in surprise and embarrassment, immediately offering forth apologies.
"I'm so sorry, I didn't mean -"
The man doesn't seem perturbed. In fact his words, while in another dialect, seem...appreciative?
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Date: 2010-07-11 07:27 pm (UTC)Oblivious, he peels off from her and bounds over to the bar, producing a large map from the interior of a jacket pocket, which he lays flat on the counter to consult.
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Date: 2010-07-11 07:36 pm (UTC)- is he flirting with her?
"I'm -"
He cuts her off with a white-toothed grin and a shake of his head. Amy's small, white hand is scooped into his palm and a kiss is placed firmly on the back.
Well, then.
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Date: 2010-07-11 07:43 pm (UTC)The Doctor, meanwhile, has the oversized map stuck up in all directions on the bar and has somehow managed to make it look like he is being strangled by a large bit of origami. He rubs his fingers across his brow and flattens a crease in the map, shaking out the Rupert Murdoch XIII Champs-Élysées.
"-- Amy, come here a moment, will you? I need you to hold the map while I get my bearings."
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Date: 2010-07-11 07:51 pm (UTC)"Here," she says, taking edges of paper in her hands and trying to help him right them. "Bit of a mess, isn't it?"
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Date: 2010-07-11 08:01 pm (UTC)"Ah ha I'm brilliant. I knew it. We're just about --" he pokes a map point over the bottom of her ribcage "-- here. And we need to be --" he draws a line over her stomach to the other side of her abdomen "-- here." He grabs the top of the map, peeling it downward. "Come on, let's go. Time, time, time."
He folds the map back into his pocket. 'Miracle that it still fits. It is at this moment that he notices the blush on Amy's face. "You're blushing," he observes bluntly.
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Date: 2010-07-11 08:27 pm (UTC)But she was, and she could feel the heat in her face. Amy runs her fingers through her hair and regards the Doctor with her best fierce expression.
"I think he was flirting with me, but I couldn't understand him. Why couldn't I understand him?" She's talking fast because she's flustered. And the funny truth is that Amy couldn't much care about what an Air-Paris man thinks of her. She's too enthralled by her raggedy Doctor.
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Date: 2010-07-11 08:35 pm (UTC)"Why would he flirt? --" He gives Amy a quick up-and-down. "-- With you?"
Yes, quite a while since charm school, apparently.
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