This is exactly what I wanted to read now, post-Doomsday. Because the Doctor, as we knew him, wouldn't want a domestic life with Rose, but I really do believe that his love for her, and losing her, has changed him (despite everyone's complaints that Rose shouldn't be special), and could have lead him to be more willing to get stuck in one time and place with her... And trust the Doctor to see a (slightly) domestic (okay, maybe landed then, if not domestic) life as an adventure. You just know he'll make it one too.
And only you could make the Doctor proposing to Rose seem even slightly in character. :)
Their pain, the not-quite-relief of it, and the changes it's wrought on them both is very much in evidence here. You have such an incredible way with words. I so wish I could write like you, even a little bit.
So, what does this mean? That he's stuck on earth with Rose for 60 years? Or can he go back through the void whenever he weants?
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This is exactly what I wanted to read now, post-Doomsday. Because the Doctor, as we knew him, wouldn't want a domestic life with Rose, but I really do believe that his love for her, and losing her, has changed him (despite everyone's complaints that Rose shouldn't be special), and could have lead him to be more willing to get stuck in one time and place with her... And trust the Doctor to see a (slightly) domestic (okay, maybe landed then, if not domestic) life as an adventure. You just know he'll make it one too.
And only you could make the Doctor proposing to Rose seem even slightly in character. :)
Their pain, the not-quite-relief of it, and the changes it's wrought on them both is very much in evidence here. You have such an incredible way with words. I so wish I could write like you, even a little bit.
So, what does this mean? That he's stuck on earth with Rose for 60 years? Or can he go back through the void whenever he weants?