Doctor Who BBCN19 - Wishing Well (11 page)

BOOK: Doctor Who BBCN19 - Wishing Well
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Martha frowned. ‘How come?’

‘Well, in its broadest sense, it doesn’t matter a jot if Barney Hackett transformed into a monster and then turned to dust, or ran around and disappeared into thin air, or was abducted by space aliens, or simply went away to spend some time with relatives. What matters is what we know happened here today – the Doctor went down the well and hasn’t come back up.’ Angela had regained some of her old spirit now. ‘In other words, he’s stuck down there and he needs our help.’

Martha felt a surge of relief. ‘You’re absolutely right.’

‘You mean let’s just forget all about Barney Hackett,’ said Sadie accusingly.

‘No!’ Angela waved a hand irritably. ‘I mean, yes. Look, there’s precious little we can do about him now – that’s what I mean. But we
can
help the Doctor.’

‘How, exactly?’ Sadie nodded at the rope drum and winch. ‘Send someone else down? Don’t be ridiculous.’

‘I’ll go,’ said Martha.

‘No you won’t,’ Angela told her firmly. ‘We’re not about to lose someone else down the infernal thing. We’ll call the fire brigade. They’ll know what to do.’ She fumbled in her pockets and found her mobile phone. Martha rather liked the idea of an 83-year-old lady having a mobile. Somehow, with Angela Hook, it wasn’t a surprise.

‘I’ve got a better idea,’ Martha said. ‘There’s no point in calling in the emergency services yet. They’ll take ages to get here and we don’t really know what we’re dealing with. At the very least they’ll just send someone else down the well, eventually.’

‘Then what do you suggest?’ asked Sadie.

Martha took a deep breath. ‘You’re not going to like it,’ she said.

79

The Land-Rover screeched to a halt in front of the gates and Angela sounded the horn. ‘I can’t believe I let you talk me into this,’ she told Martha. ‘I still think we could have just phoned him.’

‘This sort of thing is better face to face,’ Martha said. She was in the passenger seat, her fingers still digging deep into the worn upholstery.

Angela’s mood hadn’t helped her driving. She had nearly run over a local man walking his dogs on the short trip from the well to the manor.

‘Come on, come on!’ yelled Angela, hitting the horn again. A series of peremptory honks came from the Land-Rover’s radiator grille, but the gates remained shut.

They were electronic gates, and Martha thought ruefully that the Doctor’s sonic screwdriver would have made short work of them.

‘Maybe if I got out and used the intercom?’ she suggested, pointing to the metal box on the pillar.

‘Might work,’ agreed Angela. ‘But I prefer it this way.’ The horn blared again and again. Eventually the gates swung slowly open on hydraulic hinges, and Angela hit the accelerator. The Land-Rover shot forward, throwing up gravel as the heavy tyres searched for a grip on the driveway.

81

‘Well, we’re here,’ Angela said as they skidded to a halt. Through the dirty windscreen they could see the wide steps and large front door of Gaskin Manor. ‘That door could do with a new coat of paint,’ she muttered. ‘Just look at it – all peeling and what-not. Wood’s probably rotten, too, I shouldn’t wonder.’

Martha recognised diversionary conversation when she heard it.

She rested a hand gently on Angela’s arm. ‘Look, I’m really grateful you came. But I can speak to him on my own, if you prefer. . . ’

‘Not a chance!’ Angela pushed her bush hat down on her head, climbed out of the Land-Rover and stomped up the steps towards the front door.

Angela already had her thumb on the doorbell when Martha caught up. ‘After all this he’s probably out.’

‘His car’s still here,’ Martha said, pointing at the gleaming Daimler parked further along the drive. ‘And someone must have opened the gates for us.’ She winced as she listened to the doorbell ringing con-stantly inside the house as Angela kept the button pressed. With that and the car horn, Henry Gaskin was going to be in a pretty bad mood by the time he answered the door.

Come to think of it, the door did look a bit shabby. The paint-work was badly maintained and some of the glass in the windows was cracked or the beading was in need of replacement. It seemed odd, somehow. Martha expected a big country manor like this to be in tip-top condition. The Daimler certainly was, and Gaskin himself hadn’t looked like the kind of man who tolerated second best.

At last the door opened and Gaskin glared down at them. The bristling black brows and deep-set eyes already seemed familiar to Martha. ‘Oh, it’s you,’ he said drily, as he saw Angela. He didn’t sound in the least bit surprised. ‘Couldn’t you use the intercom like anybody else?’

‘Would you have let me in?’

‘No.’

‘Well, then.’

Gaskin turned to Martha. ‘What’s going on here, if you don’t mind me asking? I do have work to attend to, you know.’

82

Martha pulled on her most man-dazzling smile. ‘Look, we’re really sorry to disturb you, Mr Gaskin, but it really is important and we need your help.’.

‘I really am very busy,’ Gaskin told her, addressing Martha with a modicum of genuine regret. ‘I’m sorry.’

He began to close the door but Angela got her foot inside first. ‘Not so fast, Henry!’

‘It’s my friend,’ Martha interjected quickly, sensing her opportunity was going to vanish fast. ‘He’s had an accident – he’s fallen down the well.’

Gaskin switched his dark eyes back to Angela for the first time. ‘Is this some sort of joke?’

‘Of course it isn’t,’ she snapped. ‘What do you take me for?’

‘You’d better come in.’

It was a beautiful house. Even in the present circumstance, Martha was impressed. The ceilings were high, the furniture sumptuous, the walls lined with old paintings and sculptures.

Gaskin took them into the drawing room, and the first thing that struck Martha was Jess. The Border Collie literally leapt up to greet her as she entered the room. The dog was friendly enough, just a little enthusiastic, almost pushing her over. Martha patted the Collie and gave her ears a rub and fancied she’d made an instant doggy friend.

Gaskin, however, wasn’t in the mood for any canine fun. He made a few abrupt noises and Jess had to settle for running around everyone’s legs with her tail wagging madly.

‘Get out, you daft thing,’ grumbled her master, and the dog obeyed.

Gaskin excused himself for a moment as he ushered Jess away with a tight, embarrassed smile and shut the door. ‘Wretched dog,’ he said without malice. ‘Always getting under my feet.’

There was a grand piano in one corner, covered with framed pho-tographs, presumably of the Gaskin family. Although there were a number of comfortable, expensive-looking armchairs in the room, they weren’t invited to sit. Gaskin simply stood by the ornate Adam 83

fireplace and glowered at them. ‘Please be brief,’ he instructed them.

‘I really am pressed for time.’

‘So is the Doctor,’ said Angela bluntly. ‘He could be injured at the bottom of the well for all we know. Or worse.’

‘I said he shouldn’t have gone down the well,’ Gaskin replied with a shake of his head. ‘It was madness. You’re all mad.’

‘We don’t actually know what’s happened to him,’ Martha said, in what she hoped was a calm and intelligent manner. ‘We lowered him down and everything was going all right. But when we tried to pull him up – he wasn’t on the end of the rope.’

‘Are you in contact with him in any way?’

‘No.’

‘Then may I ask why you have come here to see me, rather than doing the obvious thing, which is to call in the emergency services?’

‘The Doctor said that if anything went wrong, anything at all, I was to come and see you.’

Gaskin raised his bushy eyebrows. ‘Did he, indeed? And why would he say that?’

‘Well,’ Martha confessed, ‘I’m not sure. But I think it might be because you said something about a monster.’

‘Monster?’

‘Look, I know it doesn’t make sense, but the Doctor’s in terrible danger and I really need your help.’

Gaskin straightened up. ‘Well, I’m very sorry to disappoint you, young lady, but I don’t see what I can possibly do to help. I mean. . .

monsters? We all know the stories, my dear, but really. . . ’

‘Stop prevaricating, Henry!’ ordered Angela, her voice resounding in the room. ‘We need practical help, not waffle. You’ve got climbing equipment, haven’t you?’

‘I hope you’re not suggesting I go down the well after your foolish friend?’

‘Well that would never happen, would it?’ Angela demanded, nostrils flaring. ‘Oh, what’s the point? Martha doesn’t know the sort of man you are, does she? She doesn’t know that it’s useless trying to rely on you for help.’

84

Gaskin opened his mouth to reply but changed his mind.

Martha tensed, realising that the interview had taken an ugly turn in a personal direction which had nothing to do with saving the Doctor. Angela gave a derisive snort and turned to leave. ‘Come on, Martha, we’re wasting our time here. Let’s go.’

And with that she marched out of the drawing room. Martha hesitated, and then turned to Gaskin. ‘I’m sorry,’ she said, only to find that he was saying exactly the same thing to her.

He shrugged. It was a curiously helpless gesture for such a self-confident man. ‘What can I say? Angela and I. . . we haven’t exactly been on good terms for many years, as you can probably tell.’

Martha felt sorry for him. He looked so miserable and not a little lost; nothing like the arrogant bully she had first seen on the village green. ‘It’s about her husband, isn’t it?’

‘Roger. Fine man. A good friend – the best.’ Gaskin’s speech became clipped as his upper lip stiffened. He picked up a picture frame from the piano, and showed it to Martha with a heavy sigh. ‘That’s Roger and me, twenty years ago. I had more hair then.’

Two rugged-looking men smiled out of the photo, arms slung around each other’s shoulders. They were wearing outdoor clothes and climbing gear. They looked happy and carefree, despite clearly being near retirement age. Roger Hook had white hair, and a neat, slightly piratical beard. Gaskin looked thinner and fitter than he did now.

‘Switzerland, 1987,’ Gaskin explained. ‘Ready for one last go at the Jungfrau. God, those were the days!’

Martha kept thinking of the Doctor, but it would have been too rude not to say something about the incident. ‘Sadie Brown told me there was an accident and Roger died.’

‘There is slightly more to it than that. Roger wasn’t a well man.

He’d been diagnosed with a heart complaint ten years before that photo was taken. He took it hard, as might be expected of a man who had led a life like his. We were in the Parachute Regiment together, you know. Saw action all over the world in our younger days.’ Gaskin smiled fondly at the memories. ‘Roger always said he didn’t want to 85

die in bed like an old man. He was still determined to live life to the full. He implored me to go with him on one last climbing trip. The Swiss Alps were always his favourite. I tried to talk him out of it – to think of Angela – but he wouldn’t have it.’

Martha smiled sympathetically as Gaskin returned the picture to the piano. ‘What happened?’

‘The climb went well. We reached the summit without a problem.

Glorious view – ice-white peaks all around us, nothing but unbroken blue sky above us. Roger was in his element. But on the way back down he began to experience chest pains. I suspected the worst, of course. Told him to take one of his tablets. . . ’ Gaskin took a deep breath and shivered, as if he was back there in the snow and ice.

‘He didn’t have his tablets with him. He said he’d forgotten them, left them at the chalet – but I suspect he had left them behind deliberately.

The strange thing was I think he was almost relieved. He’d been waiting for a heart attack for years. He was just glad it happened on the way down.’

‘Poor Angela,’ said Martha.

‘Indeed. She took it very badly, I’m afraid. She was very much in love with Roger and completely devoted to him. She was convinced I’d persuaded him to come on the trip and blamed me for his death.

That’s about all there is to it.’

‘And she’s never forgiven you?’

‘Never forgiven herself, more like,’ Gaskin said gruffly. ‘Because she knows deep down that it was what Rog I’ wanted, and I think she’s cross with him – and feels guilty about feeling that way. We’ve hardly spoken since. That little exchange was the most we’ve said to one another in twenty-odd years.’

‘I’m really sorry,’ Martha said, without quite knowing what it was she was apologising for. She was supposed to be getting help for the Doctor. ‘Look, I’d better be going. . . ’

‘I’m only sorry that I can’t help you,’ he said, as he followed her towards the door. ‘I suggest you telephone for the police or the ambulance service at the earliest opportunity.’

He led the way out of the drawing room and Martha followed him.

86

In the hallway was a low table in front of a mirror with a bowl of flowers and a telephone. ‘You can call from here if you wish.’

‘It’s OK, I’ve got my mobile.’ Martha felt totally deflated. She kept remembering the Doctor’s advice:
if anything goes wrong – go and see
Gaskin.
There must have been a reason for him saying that.

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