And the people, the average normal people, their movements jerky as if they were trying not to let themselves be moved along by whatever it was that made their eyes shine.
That was all scary enough. But it was nothing to the dozen or so standing to one side, watching her like the others but through eyes that were pitch black, dead almost.
And Gwen knew that Dark light, knew it from the vision of the future. It had been inside her, made her turn away from Jack, from Torchwood and very nearly from Rhys and her baby.
Baby. My God, would she and Rhys have kids one day?
Yes. Yes they would. Yes, she was going to get married, and Torchwood would survive, and there was no way she’d let Owen and Toshiko fall to this Dark light, whatever it was. Because the future was not cast in stone, it was malleable, fluid.
Somehow, they’d been given a chance to make sure this didn’t happen. That’s why Bilis had put the Light inside her. A forewarning.
She had to find Owen and Toshiko, warn them and…
Oh.
She looked again at the Dark light people. The clown to the left. The golden statue woman in the kimono.
Shit.
The clown was Owen.
The statue was Toshiko.
Was it too late?
She tried to sidestep the crowd, but they seemed to anticipate her every move… But they weren’t attacking her, they were actually making her walk back down the street, towards the place where she and Ianto had met Bilis.
Where he had put the Light inside her.
Oh my God, they weren’t threatening her, they were keeping her apart from the Dark light group. From Owen and Toshiko.
She didn’t need to go forward, she needed to go where they were herding her.
And again, as she turned and ran, not entirely sure where she was going, she yelled out, really, really loudly, ‘Jack!’
In 6 Coburg Street, Jack was sitting in the armchair, and Ianto was crouching down beside him.
Bilis Manger stood by the window, arms behind his back, a gun pressed against his head by Idris Hopper. Well, not so much pressed as jabbing him like an insect, thanks to Idris’s shaking hands. Holding a gun wasn’t something the average Secretary to the Mayor’s Office did on a daily basis.
‘Jack!’
They all heard Gwen’s voice from outside.
Jack looked up at Ianto. ‘Let her in.’ He then nodded to Idris, who gratefully lowered the gun and handed it over to Jack.
A second later, Ianto came back into the room, with Gwen close behind him.
She looked about her. ‘Nice place you have here, Bilis. Decorate it yourself?’
Jack and Idris exchanged confused looks.
‘Ah,’ Bilis said. ‘Perception filters. Useful things, I’m sure you’ll agree.’
He clicked his fingers and they were inside a shop. Bilis’s clock shop. A Stitch in Time. Outside, people were walking down a Cardiff arcade, staring at other shops.
He clicked his fingers a second time, and the room became Coburg Street again, although clearly this was a surprise to Gwen.
‘The place takes on an appearance that seems familiar. It shows you an environment where you might expect to find me. Gwen, here, associates me with clocks, as did Ms Sato. Hence the shop we met in once before. The rest of you expected to see the insides of an old Victorian two-up two-down, and that’s what you got.’ He smiled at Jack. ‘Or did you see something else?’
Jack smiled back. ‘That’d be telling.’
Bilis nodded. ‘We have so much in common, you and I. A shame we find ourselves on opposing sides. Nine times out of ten.’
‘Jack,’ Gwen cut across them. ‘The people outside, they’re inhabited by Rift aliens, the-’
‘Light, yeah we know,’ Ianto finished. ‘Providing hosts until we can get them home.’
‘Then we got it all wrong,’ Gwen said. She turned and pointed at Bilis. ‘He’s not the enemy.’
‘This time.’ Bilis bowed. ‘Well, I’m just saying what you’re all thinking.’
‘We have to get Tosh and Owen back,’ said Jack. ‘I have a plan, but I need them at the Hub.’
‘A plan?’ asked Bilis. ‘Perhaps you would care to share your plan, Captain?’
‘Not yet.’ He looked at Idris. ‘You in?’
Idris was horrified to hear his own voice reply, ‘God, yeah.’
‘Good. Bilis, you now have the book, the diary. That should be able to store the light creatures, if they trust you enough to go back into it.’
‘Correct.’
‘Then why’d you give it away to start with?’ asked Ianto.
And for the first time, Bilis’s demeanour lost its benign, slightly patronising look.
‘The Light had a job to do, helping Abaddon. By keeping the diary away from the agents of the Dark and Pwccm, I ensured that the Light could not be harmed. Once Abaddon was destroyed, the Light were vulnerable, so I needed to get the diary back and return them… to where they belong. To survive. To protect this planet in my Lord’s absence.’
‘Good,’ Jack said, dismissing Bilis’s evangelical tirade as swiftly as possible. ‘Now get out there and do it. Ianto, go with him.’
They left with the diary.
Jack turned to Gwen. ‘You saw the future?’
‘Did you believe it?’
Jack shrugged. ‘Not really. It’s just a possibility.’
‘Jack, I’m so sorry. We did-’
Jack held up a hand. ‘No. No you didn’t, and that’s the point. The light creatures were telling us what could happen if the balance between them isn’t restored. Presumably it’s how they communicate. Nice, if a bit melodramatic. Now, I think we can open the Rift and draw the Dark light creatures into it, but we need a booster. The Rift Manipulator at the Hub isn’t enough. It needs something to fine tune them, as it were.’
Idris moved forward. ‘There’s always-’
But Jack cut him off. ‘Hang on. Gwen, what if we let them swamp someone?’
‘That’d be suicide.’
‘Excuse me,’ Idris tried again. ‘But I know of a point where-’
Gwen waved him quiet and looked back at Jack. ‘I mean it, there is no way we’re letting you take on that responsibility.’
‘It’s my choice, Gwen, don’t forget that.’
The door to the room crashed open. It was a breathless Ianto. ‘Got a little problem.’
TWENTY-THREE
Outside the house, Jack and Gwen stared at Ianto’s ‘little problem’.
The Light had left the people. Bilis triumphantly clutched the diary to his heart. ‘I just need to use the Rift energy to return them home,’ he murmured.
‘Sure you do,’ said Jack. ‘Doesn’t help us with that!’
Everyone on the street now looked as Toshiko did. Eyes full of Dark light stared at the Torchwood group.
‘Did you do this?’ Gwen asked Bilis.
‘No,’ said Ianto. ‘I reckon he was as surprised as I was.’
Jack grabbed Bilis, swung him round. ‘So, you gonna disappear on us or help?’
Bilis just looked serenely up at him. ‘Help, of course. I can’t release the Light if the Dark is still at large. We need to imprison the Dark in the box.’
‘Via Rift energy,’ Jack finished. ‘Got it.’
A clown stepped forward. Jack realised it was a disguised Owen.
The clown pointed at the diary.
Jack nodded. ‘Yeah, we got the point. You want the little Light guys. We don’t want you to have the little Light guys. Eternal war, across the dimensions, yadda yadda yadda. Tough.’
He turned away from Owen.
‘Gwen,’ he hissed. ‘What broke Bilis’s little spell on you?’
‘Remembering the future,’ she replied.
‘But Ms Cooper was infected by the Light,’ Bilis insisted. ‘It is the Dark that controls these people.’
‘Same principle must work though,’ said Ianto. ‘You put the Light in us, those two must have lost it, and that let the Dark in. How?’