When she thought over the last two years and three months, she thought of what led her to this position. After that fateful day on Bad Wolf Bay where the doctor had left her again, this time with his human counter part, things had got interesting.

Making him better had taken a while. Just as the Doctor had said, the human doctor was full of rage and anger and had been born in war. That had not been easy to fix, especially when she knowingly tried. Stubborn as her doctor was as a human, he had resisted changing.

Of course, change was inevitable, and slowly, her doctor had changed. He had warmed up to life, to her. His heart had mended and the memories he had didn't hurt as much. After about a year and a half, her doctor no longer needed her as a doctor, and they got married.

When, a few weeks after their honeymoon, Rose missed her period, she knew exactly why. The pregnancy test only confirmed what she already knew, she was pregnant.


That had been nine months ago. Nine months of raging hormones, weird cravings, morning sickness but most of all love for the unborn child inside her, and for the man that gave her the child.

Now, even in the peak of childbirth, Rose clung to her doctor. He in turn watched over his wife, eyes filled with a fiery compassion for Rose.

Moments later, the call of the OBGYN alerted both Rose and the Doctor to the fact that their baby was finally being born. After nine months of waiting, and not even knowing the gender of the baby, it was time.


Not long later, Rose holds her baby girl, her husband, her doctor, waiting almost impatiently for his turn to hold the baby with the tuft of fine blonde hair and brown eyes.

"Do you have a name for her?" one of the nurses asked, looking both to Rose and her husband. However, it is Rose who answers, unaware of the irony in her name choice. Her doctor never told her about his other self's adventures with his other companions. Doing that would have hurt them both,

"Yeah, I do, if it's all right with you John." she says, looking to her husband. "For a while now, I've been really fond of the name Jenny."