River Song (
songofsong) wrote2014-07-29 08:31 pm
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Melody Malone and the Invisible Wife
PROLOGUE
It was another dark and dangerous night on the streets of New York. Well, it was always one of those. And that was just the way I liked it.
After all, that was my profession. As a detective, those streets were what kept me alive, and for as long as the people of New York kept giving into their paranoia and fear, I would be in business. It seemed people would pay a high price to feel safe in their beds at night, and I too slept a little easier, knowing I had the villains caught and money in my pocket.
And what villains they were indeed. For I didn't deal with wanted criminals or the occasional ruffian the police failed to catch; my customers were of a more particular variety, and too were their problems. I could say it was because these particular clients paid me rather handsomely, or that I felt some kind of noble responsibility to keep New York safe - but none of that was true.
The reason I did it, was because I loved it.
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Somehow, this woman, this is actually Melody Malone.
He continues to frown, eyes falling over the desk and the still smoking cigarette, but it's her words that pull him back. One word in particular. Another knife in his hearts.
For a moment he just looks at her, wonders exactly what to say. How much of the woman he knows remains in this woman before him now. His gaze again lingers, maybe longer than it should, eyes falling against her bared shoulder. A moment more and he moves, taking the empty seat, pulling his damp coat about himself in a way that only seems to make him colder.
"I'm not quite sure how I got here," he admits. "But I just woke up here. Earlier today. Or not even woke up. I just was here. And it doesn't make any sense. Sound like a case for you, Miss Malone?"
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"I don't have amnesia," he tells her with an empty laugh, and a silent but maybe you do thought after it. He frowns and shakes his head.
"I don't know what I have. But I know something has happened to me. I shouldn't be here. I really can't be here." He should be getting away, really far away, but then he knows something else too, and he sighs slightly. "I have nowhere to go. And earlier you gave me your card and I..." he shakes his head, a little water dropping from his hair in the process.
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"Sorry, honey. Do I look like a charity?" she asks, sighing to herself slightly as she slides off the edge of her desk, going to walk back behind it, to give off the impression that she had better things to do. But as she slides off the desk, she disturbs the file she'd quickly closed a moment before, and a photograph of Grayle's mansion slips out of the papers.
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His head drops a moment, he knows a gentle 'get out' when he sees one (even if he's not usually too good at listening to them). But it's then that he sees the corner of a faded photograph as it slips free and falls to the floor. He reaches down and picks it up. He recognises it, Grayle, the collector.
"What's this?" he asks, presses. He knows. But that's not the point.
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"Just a case I'm working on," she dismisses quietly, turning her back to him as she slides it back into the file, slipping it under a paperclip next to a photograph of a man. She touches the picture for a lingering moment before she clears her throat and quickly closes the files, going to snatch up her glass of scotch and finishing it in one mouthful.
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"Don't go there," he tells her quickly. "You shouldn't go there. It's dangerous."
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She has no reason to listen to him, of course, no reason at all, but even if she isn't River, he won't lose her again.
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Because that was how she lost him.
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"The Angels?" he asks her, two simple words, but oh he's interesting now, isn't he, Melody?
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Yes, he's most definitely interesting now.
"What do you know of the Weeping Angels?"
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"You're making quite the habit of this pointing a gun at me, aren't you?"
He's aware that doesn't answer her question, but strangely enough guns don't tend to make him chatty.
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"Oh I know about them," he says quietly. Finally. "I know all about them. And I know if you lose someone to a Weeping Angel you can't ever get them back." There's pain in his voice as he says that, it still hurts, it will always hurt.
"A Weeping Angel isn't gentle, a Weeping Angel isn't caring, it just wants every day you never had."
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When she hears that pain in his voice, it triggers something in her and she tightly swallows the lump in her throat, adjusting her hand nervously on the gun before she quickly drops it. It had been an overreaction, she knows that, but anything that came close to this case, and it set her off.
"I've seen many things, in my line of work," she tells him quietly, dropping her gaze for a moment. "But I've never seen anything quite like them."
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The Doctor has seen many things, terrible things, but the Weeping Angels are some of the worst. A Dalek he can handle, something full of evil and hate. But the Weeping Angels are something else entirely, and they ripped his family from him.
"Melody," he says her name again then. "Please help me work out what's happened to me."
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"Alright," she then says quietly, before steeling her voice, hiding that vulnerability. She lifts her head, lips drawn into a determined line. "I'll help you, if you can help me."
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"Of course. Yeah. Of course. What can I do?"
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Leaning back against her desk again, she holds it out in front of her, one arm folded, watching him through the steady wisp of smoke that joined the ceiling, forming her very own set of clouds to match the storm outside.
“So, you really don’t remember anything since we last met?” she asks casually, setting the cigarette in her mouth, pinched between two scarlet fingernails.
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Her question brings a shake of his head. "You gave me that card earlier, next thing I was in another street. But that's not the point. I shouldn't be here at all. I can't possibly be here Melody. And I have no idea how I got here."
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Still, her suggestions make him shake his head.
"No. No I don't travel that way. I don't have a wallet, and anything I do have is gone. So here I am, just me and a wet bowtie to my name. No way of getting back, no way of working it out, reel him up and let him go." He sighs, and rubs his temples, trying not to get too frustrated.
"I'm not from around here," he says evenly. "I'm from along way away."
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"Alright, calm down, honey." She waves a hand at him as if he's about to have a full on breakdown in her office, when all he's done is sigh. "We'll work this thing out. It's what I do."
She pushes away from her desk, setting a clean, empty glass on the corner nearest him. "Here," she says, uncapping her bottle and pouring in just enough to cover the bottom. She's not giving him more than he needs, it's a precious commodity.
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He looks at the glass as she lays it out, and shakes his head a moment, ready to refuse with an 'I don't really drink' comment. But he's so cold, bones hurting from shivering from the rain, his damp clothes still heavy against him. So he reaches out and takes the glass, consuming its contents in one quick swig, a slight pulled face after it. Might warm him up at least.
"If you know anywhere I could find a bed for the night..." he asks. What do people usually do? He knows what he usually does, but that seems to be off the menu. Not so easy without his old ship or a handy screwdriver to do the job.
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