 

A “Captain Scarlet & the Mysterons”
story
By Chris Bishop & Sue Stanhope
EPILOGUE
Comfortably propped up in his
bed, Matt Riordan was looking with a murderous stare at the TV set installed at
the other end of his room. The news coverage he was hearing right now was
the latest in a long series of reports that the W.B.C. had been broadcasting
since the events of the preceding week. The present coverage was relating
how the last of the now infamous Donaghue gang had been finally rounded up by
the WGPC special forces, arrested and soon to be prosecuted for their numerous
crimes.
For what it was worth,
Riordan thought with grim
reflection, the Mysteron was right. With Ian Stewart in office, the
gang would be unable to pursue its activities. In effect, the gang was
almost completely dismantled. There were ‘survivors’ of course, who would
join other gangs, or try to pick up the pieces of the Ben Fisher or Gabriel
James gangs – but the ‘Donaghue family’ was finished. There was no-one
left from it.
With Ox in the hospital,
Riordan had heard, still fighting for his life, with the doctors unsure if he
would make it or not, he, Matt Riordan, was the only surviving member.
Some good it’ll do me,
Riordan reflected. He
was heading for prison, as soon as he was fit enough to leave the hospital.
And if Ox survived, he’d soon follow behind.
What a mess it was…
Riordan looked down at the newspaper by his side,
on the bed, open at the page he had been reading lately. With the catchy title
of ‘Death of a notorious crime syndicate boss’, the lengthy article on
it was a retrospective of the ‘life of Patrick Donaghue’ – fictionalised at best
– a young and successful mobster who had climbed up the difficult steps of his
professional trade from conman to head of a powerful syndicate, all of it almost
by the sole strength of his character, charisma and astuteness. To finally
die, still at a young age, when he tried to get rid of his worst enemy – the now
all-powerful Supreme Commander of the WGPC, Ian Stewart. There was a bad
black and white photograph of a half-burned body hanging on electric cables,
where it had fallen – a picture that had been taken at some distance from the
incident by a reporter who had been sent to Stewart’s swearing-in ceremony that
day. Policemen and Spectrum officers had made it impossible for anyone to
get close enough to the body to actually see the features, and that gruesome
photo of the dead man was as close as they were able to get. There was a
small photo insert next to the article – a Photofit picture of ‘Patrick
Donaghue’ at the peak of his career. The photo was a good likeness,
Riordan had to admit, but still, it clearly wasn’t enough to be an accurate
portrait of its subject.
And besides – none of it was true. It wasn’t
Pat who had died this grisly death trying to kill Stewart. And that the
newspapers, the television and all the other media would think that it was Pat
and would drag the name of his friend – who had been a good man – through the
mud was a constant frustration for Riordan.
The fact that Spectrum didn’t seem in any hurry to
present a disclaimer was a total injustice in Riordan’s point of view. Pat
was one of their own – he was probably killed in the line of duty, for this…
murdering duplicate to take his place. And Spectrum would let people
believe he was a homicidal maniac? How could they do that to him?
That was so unfair.
On the TV screen, the news
coverage was dragging on – and yet again, Riordan heard the commentator
mentioning the name of the ‘infamous criminal Pat Donaghue’. Irritated,
Riordan grabbed the newspaper and threw it towards the TV set. Of course,
the paper never reached it, and spread onto the floor at the foot of his bed.
Riordan took the remote control and tried to shut down the television set, but
the batteries in the remote were either weak or dead - he couldn’t do it.
He let out a frustrated sigh.
He was on the verge of throwing the remote control
at the television when the door opened to let two men enter. Their
appearance distracted Riordan’s attention away from the television. He
recognised Captain Ochre, marching up front; the shorter man behind was dressed
in civvies, but there was a multicoloured badge on his jacket, and his face was
displaying an implacable expression of righteousness. Even Ochre’s bearing
seemed official. Riordan straightened up a little and put down the remote.
This is it, he thought, with an impending sense of doom.
Spectrum has come to officially tell me I’m off to prison. Oh
well… I knew it would end up that way. I just hope they’ll remember I
helped save one of their officers.
While his civilian companion stood next to the
bed, Captain Ochre stepped toward the television set to switch it off – for
which Riordan was particularly grateful. He imagined that Ochre was about
as angry as himself to hear false news of his friend’s death, and couldn’t bear
any more of it.
“Mr Riordan…” Ochre came back to stand
beside the other man. His tone was still amenable enough, but his
companion’s stare was still an icy one as he looked down at Riordan. “This
is Special Agent Martin Conners, of Spectrum Intelligence…”
“Mr Conners…” Instinctively, Riordan
presented his hand – which Conners blatantly ignored. Almost
uncomfortably, Riordan looked up at Ochre. “Captain Ochre… I would say I’m
glad to see you, but under the circumstances…” He hesitated and cleared
his throat. He didn’t know quite how to handle the situation. The best
way, he thought, was probably to cut to the chase. “So… when will I be
transferred to police authority?”
“You are under Spectrum authority, Mr
Riordan,” Special Agent Conners replied. If it were possible, his tone was
even more glacial than his stare. His words rang threateningly in
Riordan’s mind. He knew that he had been under Spectrum’s protection for
the last few days, and that they needed him for information and testimony.
But now that all that dreadful affair was finished, surely, they didn’t need him
anymore. He always assumed that when
that happened, he would be handed over to the police and then would face
trial for his criminal actions. That he was apparently staying under
Spectrum’s guard was worrying. He could be charged with far more serious
accusations – such as terrorism, although he couldn’t see how they might pin
that on him. Probably, because of his involvement with the ‘Mysteron’
Donaghue? If they were able to do that, it could mean he would spend the
rest of his life in the de Witt penitentiary. He wasn’t sure he was ready for
that.
“I’m sorry, Mr. Conners,” Riordan said, as
politely and calmly as he could, “I always thought that, when Spectrum was done
with me, I would be handed over to…”
“You thought wrong, Mr. Riordan,” Conners cut in
abruptly. “Spectrum has not yet finished with you. In fact, it’s
only the beginning.”
Riordan’s face paled visibly, as he watched the
man open a folder he was holding under his arm. Conners addressed a sideways
look at Captain Ochre, who was still standing by his side, almost rigid, waiting
silently. “Mr. Riordan, you have to understand that the situation you have
been involved in must stay strictly secret. That’s why we kept you away
from prying eyes, under our constant surveillance and… protection. No-one
was able to come into contact with you and we made sure that you would not
contact anyone from your end.”
“Yes… Yes, I know all that already, Mr.
Conners.” Riordan would have given anything to at least have had access to
a telephone during his ‘incarceration’. He would not have called for his
lawyer – he hadn’t even asked for one. He would not have tried to contact
a friend – he wasn’t sure he had any left now. But he would have certainly
tried to contact Sarah Donaghue. Pat’s sister had surely heard the news
and must be devastated by it. He would have wanted to talk to her, tell
her the truth, comfort her… But it had not been possible. Spectrum made
sure he would not get close to any communication device of any kind.
A glance in Ochre’s direction
made Riordan wonder if the captain had not contacted Sarah on his own.
After all, Ochre was a close friend of Pat, maybe he had talked to her…
The voice of Conners brought Riordan back to his
present situation. “Mr. Riordan – I’m sure you realise that it’s
imperative that this affair continues to stay a secret. The Mysterons’
true nature can’t be revealed in its entirety to the public. Already, too
many rumours have spread around the globe – we’re just lucky enough that the
majority of people consider them lies or exaggerations. It must continue
to remain that way.”
“Mr. Conners, I’m not even sure I
understand completely what the nature of those… Mysterons…
is,” Riordan replied. “It’s like I’ve just fallen into a
nightmarish movie… I’m not sure I believe it, and I’m certain
nobody will if I ever tell them about it! Which would not be my first
choice,” he added quickly, seeing the warning glance in Conners’ eyes.
“I’m sure of it,” Conners
answered in a falsely syrupy tone. “That’s why we must take special
measures in your case, Mr. Riordan.”
He looked down into his folder and took a paper
from it, reading it silently as he did so. Riordan saw a frown appear on
his face.
That’s not good for me, he thought.
“I have to be honest with you, Mr. Riordan, this…
special procedure is being carried out against my best advice,” Conners
continued, producing the paper. “This is a certificate of full immunity.
It’s not unconditional, of course. It’ll be effective only if you agree to
work for Spectrum from now on, and for as long as you continue to work for the
organisation. Of course, considering your… shady past, you’ll be on
probation at first – and subjected to close surveillance, until such time as you
prove that you’re worthy of our trust. Which I doubt very much will ever
happen.”
From the moment Conners had started talking about
immunity, Matt Riordan’s eyes had grown wide – and had not stopped widening
until the end of the Spectrum Intelligence man’s speech. With a trembling
hand, he took the paper from Conners’ hand and was now reading it very quickly,
unsure if it was real.
Immunity… But with conditions.
“What… what’s the alternative?” he asked, raising
his head to Conners.
The latter raised a brow. “There is no
alternative, Mr. Riordan,” he said in a very icy tone. “Or rather – you
wouldn’t like it. It wouldn’t be very pleasant for you.” He left the
explanation hanging, and closed the folder in a very brusque gesture. “I
suggest you take that opportunity and hold on to it for dear life. It’s
the only chance you’ll ever get to become an honest man. Not that I think
you deserve it.” He turned his back on the open-mouthed, silent Riordan
and walked toward the door to open it. “An agent will come to pick you up
in two days and take you to your new assignment. I advise you to be here.
Of course, you’ll be watched to ensure that you will be… Good day,
Mr. Riordan.”
He didn’t wait to hear Riordan’s possible reply
and stepped out, closing the door behind him. Still flabbergasted by the
news, Riordan kept staring at the now closed door; he barely noticed the faint
smile on Captain Ochre’s face. Now that Conners had gone, the officer was
starting to relax.
“Wow,” Riordan finally murmured. “I can’t
believe it… I… I fully expected to spend the rest of my life in prison and
now… that Conners offers me this.”
“Mr Conners has got nothing to do with this,
Matt,” Ochre then said. His smile had broadened, and he was now removing
his cap. Now he seemed completely at ease. His eyes were brightening with
enthusiasm. “He was merely the messenger of an administrative decision.
Since you already found out a lot about the Mysterons and what they are able to
do, and since you have had contact with Spectrum senior staff and know the
secret identity of two of its members – that’s me and Captain Magenta – it
seemed a good idea to… ‘hire’ you, so to speak.”
Blackmail me into accepting the offer is a
more accurate description, Riordan pondered. But of course, he knew
Conners was right. It was his only chance to start anew, to have a honest
life after all those years of living on the fringe of the law, to escape
the enemies he had made for himself, especially these last few days. He
knew it would mean a very
different life, probably he wouldn’t have benefit of all the luxury he
had been accustomed to. But what else could he do? Besides, he was
willing to do it.
Pat had done the same. That would be a
fitting tribute.
“Captain Ochre… I… thank you for this opportunity.
I won’t disappoint you.”
“You don’t have to thank
me, Matt. It wasn’t my idea. As I said, it was an
administrative decision. You should thank Colonel White. But I doubt
you’ll ever have the chance to meet him and do that. Once you receive the proper
training, you will be assigned to one of our ground bases.”
“Where will I be sent?”
“I don’t know. But you
won’t stay in New York, that’s a certainty. You must leave the city.
Disappear totally, so people will forget about you. As far as everyone is
concerned, Matt Riordan, member of the Donaghue gang, is better off considered
dead.”
“If that’s what it takes… I can live with that.”
He looked over the dark screen of the television set and gave a deep sigh.
He had certainly picked up that Ochre had talked earlier about Pat, almost as if
Pat was still alive. Now was perhaps the chance to tell the captain what
had been bothering him lately. He started, with a slight hesitation
in his voice. “Captain, I… I must say I’m… grateful for Spectrum’s intervention…
but…”
“But?” Ochre said with a furrowed brow.
“I sense there’s something bothering you, Matt.”
“It’s not… me, actually. But don’t you think
Spectrum ought to also do something for Pat?” Riordan gestured
angrily toward the television. “They’re dragging his good name through the
mud – the media, that is. They’re passing him off as a murderer – they’re
saying how he died a criminal’s death… But that’s not true. It
wasn’t Pat who did all those horrible things. Pat was a good man.
Why doesn’t Spectrum set the record straight? They owe it to Pat!”
“Indeed,” Ochre answered with a slow acknowledging
nod. “But I’m afraid it’s not possible, Matt.”
“Another ‘administrative decision’?” Riordan
scoffed.
“We can’t tell the truth to the world. That
would be telling about the Mysterons. Or, at least, giving further substance to the rumours that are already
out there… Besides,” Ochre added quickly, seeing that Riordan, obviously
disgusted by the statement, was getting ready to protest further, “it would seem
that this… incident… might also have its usefulness after all.”
“What usefulness is there in letting people
believe that an evil man died under the identity of a good one?” Riordan
grumbled.
Ochre shook his head. He inhaled deeply, before
letting his breath go very slowly. “It could be useful when the good man
wants the world at large to believe he’s dead,” he said very carefully.
At first, Riordan didn’t seem
to register what Ochre had just told him; he stared at the captain without any
expression on his face other than utter confusion, apparently struggling to
understand what he meant. A frown appeared on his brow. “Wha-what
are you saying now, Captain? What do you mean?”
There was a large smile on Ochre’s face when next
he spoke. “I think you understood perfectly what I meant, Matt.”
Riordan’s eyes widened with disbelief.
“P-pat…?”
“… Is alive and well.”
“B-b-but… the Mysteron agent… the
double…”
“We call them ‘duplicates’, Matt.”
Riordan nodded vaguely, acknowledging the
information, but not really listening to it. “He said Pat was dead and that he
had taken his place,” he said insistently.
“He also told you Captain
Scarlet was dead, didn’t he?” Ochre cut in pointedly. “And you know
that wasn’t the case.” Ochre paused a second, before continuing,
more quietly, “The Mysteron agent only thought
Pat was dead. Obviously, he was wrong.”
“Pat’s alive,” Riordan
murmured, still obviously shaken by the news. “I… can hardly believe it…
How…?”
“It’s rather a long story,
Matt,” Ochre sighed. “And a complicated one. I’ll leave the
explanation to Pat himself, when next you see him. But the bottom line is
that Pat – Captain Magenta – has been
very lucky.”
“The luck of the Irish,”
Riordan remarked with a smile, thinking that he himself had had some of that rub
off onto him today. He chuckled, shaking his head. “You Spectrum
officers are really a tough bunch, Captain! I can hardly believe you want
me to be a part of your organisation.
Me, a Spectrum agent?”
“We don’t expect you to be an
‘agent’, Matt,” Ochre said with a short laugh. “But you’ve got abilities
that may be useful for Spectrum. For example, you’re very adept with
computers.”
“I’m not as adept as Pat is himself,” Riordan
defended himself with modesty. “Far from it.” He paused a
second, as an afterthought came to the front of his mind. “You said that
Pat will explain to me when I next see him. I… haven’t seen him yet.”
His voice sounded sad, and indeed he was sad
inside. Knowing what he had gone through, why hadn’t Pat come yet to visit
him in the hospital? Why hadn’t he shown any sign of life at all and
already come to start explaining all about that Mysteron double of his?
Unless…
“He’s all right, isn’t he?”
Captain Ochre gave a deep sigh. “Captain Magenta
has been through a lot,” he confirmed, “and spent some time in the hospital.
But he has been recuperating these last few days, and should be back on duty
shortly. I know you’re wondering why he hasn’t come, but he couldn’t,
Matt. And he couldn’t call you. What would you have thought if you had
heard his voice over the phone?”
“That the Mysteron double was alive, and after
me,” Riordan answered with a shiver. “But if Pat had come with you,
Captain…”
“Just like you, he has to keep a low profile,
avoid New York, at least for the time being. This whole terrible affair
with the Mysteron duplicate put too much of a spotlight on Pat’s former life and
the Syndicate he ran. Considering how the events have unfolded, it sounded
a judicious idea now to at least use them to Pat’s best advantage. The
world at large will believe New York mobster Patrick Donaghue dead – like they
believe WGPC Commander Richard Fraser to be dead. That part of his life
will now truly be behind Pat.” Ochre shook his head, and put on his cap.
“But now that you know, and I’ve prepared the ground for him, he’ll
contact you shortly. He’s been very worried about you, when he heard how
you ended up in the hospital.”
“Where is he now?” Riordan asked thoughtfully.
“He had some… personal business to attend too.
Very important, family business.”
Ever so slowly, Riordan nodded. Family
business. Of course, that was certainly what Pat needed to do first.
He would want to see Sarah and tell her exactly what had happened. That was the
most sensible thing to do. And maybe he contacted the rest of his family
in Ireland. The news of his ‘death’ must have made the headlines of many papers
around the world, and even though Pat wasn’t on the best of terms with his
father, he would certainly feel that he should at least tell him that his son
didn’t die a criminal.
“Thank you for your visit,
Captain,” Riordan said, watching as Ochre was preparing himself to leave. He
lifted the document that Special Agent Conners had left him, and that he was
still holding in his hand. “And thank you… for a new lease on life.”
“It may be an administrative
decision, Mr. Riordan,” Ochre said with a broad smile, “but you won’t be
surprised to learn that it was Pat’s suggestion to begin with.”
That made Riordan smile in
turn. “I bet he had to plead and submit
a lot of guarantees to your commander to make him accept that
suggestion!”
“You don’t ‘make our commander
accept’ anything he doesn’t want,” Ochre retorted. “But he knows Pat, and
trusts his judgement.” He held out his hand. “I want to be the first
to welcome you to Spectrum, Matt Riordan.”
Riordan shook the hand,
vigorously. “Do tell Pat to take it easy. And that I’m expecting
news from him as soon as he’s able to free himself.”
“I will,” Ochre promised.
As soon as he’s back from Ireland.”
Riordan nodded. Ireland.
So he was right. Pat had gone there to see his parents. Probably, his
sister Sarah was there, too.
He wonder how it was going there, how Pat managed
to confront his father.
Probably, it wasn’t the easiest thing for him to
do.
* * *
The Spectrum Patrol Car stopped a few yards from
the door leading to the residence of the small Innisfree dairy farm. It
had been three years, Captain Magenta reflected, since he had come to this
place. Since his father had thrown him out, to be precise. Despite the
fact that he had wanted so very much to come back since that fateful day,
Magenta had not found the courage to do so. Even now, he still wasn’t that
sure that it was such a good idea. Facing his family, especially his
father, after all that had happened, would be so terribly hard for him.
They thought him dead. Well, his parents
did, anyway. How could he come to them now? How would they react
upon seeing him alive? I’d rather face Mysterons, Magenta thought
grimly.
Well… Almost.
“Not getting cold feet, are you?”
Magenta turned to face Captain Scarlet, sitting
behind the wheel of the car. His British counterpart was looking at him
questioningly. Magenta uncomfortably shifted on his seat, and stroked the
back of his head with his free hand. He was so nervous, his black hair was
damp.
“Why am I here?” he murmured.
“How can I do it? They read the papers… saw the TV news… They know about what
happened in New York… They think I’m dead!”
Scarlet nodded thoughtfully.
“That’s why you must see them,” he said insistently. “Pat, you can’t let them
believe you died a criminal, a murderer, in fact. You must tell them the truth.
Don’t you think they deserve that?”
“And what truth? That I
gave up my syndicate in New York three years ago to enrol in Spectrum? And that
I couldn’t find the courage to even tell them that?” Magenta grunted
loudly. “I don’t even know if my father would believe me. Heck, I don’t
know if I would believe myself! What if he feels I should have told him
earlier? What if he’s angry at me for not telling him?”
“Patrick…” Scarlet reached to take his
friend’s good shoulder, carefully avoiding the one that had been hurt recently,
and squeezed it encouragingly. “It’s now or never. You have to tell them NOW.
You can’t know how they will react… until you speak to them?”
Magenta’s face hardened. He was really tempted to
turn around quickly and run as far as he could from this place. He felt
that he wasn’t ready. But his friend’s words had reached him. Much
to his annoyance.
“Why did I ask you to come with me?” he muttered.
“Because you needed
me to be the voice of your conscience?” Scarlet offered with a brief smile.
“Or perhaps it’s because I had to do exactly the same thing two years ago when I
had to face my own family?”
“Before you say it, Scarlet, I really hate it when
you’re right,” Magenta grumbled.
Scarlet smirked knowingly. “You know I am.”
Magenta gave an involuntary laugh. “You HAD to say
it?”
“Yeah, for two reasons,” Scarlet replied
cryptically.
“Which are?” Magenta asked in a tone that
suggested he already regretted the question.
“Well, firstly –” he grinned, “– it’s true.”
“And secondly?”
Scarlet gave an exaggerated shrug. “It made you
laugh.” He watched the smile widening on his friend’s face. That had worked.
“Now, go and find them, tell them.”
Magenta heaved a heavy sigh. It wasn’t
Scarlet’s cajoling that drew his noisy response, it was the sight of his sister,
Sarah, who had just stepped out of the farmhouse and seen the Spectrum car,
parked at some distance from it. He could see the look of concern etched clearly
on her face as she ran from the farmhouse to the car, obviously wondering what
was going on.
“Okay,” Scarlet
began, “you can start with Sarah.” Turning his head, Scarlet watched,
dumbfounded, as Magenta tried desperately to merge with his seat, his head
bowed. By the time he looked up once more, Sarah was at the side of the
car.
“Miss Donaghue,” Scarlet greeted her as he opened
his door and stepped out.
“Captain Scarlet,” she replied, with a thin,
forced smile. She remembered the officer. She had met him all those months
ago, when Pat had finally told her about his life as a Spectrum officer.
Scarlet looked into her eyes. She had
clearly been crying - of that, there could be no doubt. But behind the
sadness, he could see hurt, anger and disappointment. She was surely wondering
what had happened for her brother to have apparently left Spectrum, to return to
the mob and die the way he did. It was all he could take. Leaning
back inside the car, he vented his frustration.
“Out!”
Startled by the loud cry, Magenta snapped his head
up, his eyes wide and mouth open in astonishment.
Sarah’s eyes followed Scarlet’s gaze, widening as
they reached the object of the English captain’s outburst.
“Pat?” she breathed. “But…” She turned her
head to face Scarlet’s sympathetic smile as she struggled to find the words.
“…How?”
Slowly, uncertainly, Magenta stepped from the car,
his movements akin to a hospital patient taking a first few tentative steps
following a major operation. Rounding the car gingerly, he appeared to be
trying to start a sentence numerous times before finding the right words.
“You remember a few months ago when you found out
that I joined Spectrum?”
Numbly, Sarah nodded as he approached her.
“Well, it’s like that… sort of… not what you
were originally led to believe.”
“How articulate you can be,” Scarlet commented
dryly.
Now standing only two feet from Sarah, Magenta
scowled and continued. “There was a guy… He looked like me, used my name…
That’s all. It wasn’t me.”
“It’s been nearly two weeks,” Sarah replied
pointedly, stunned but angry.
“I’ve been in hospital.”
“Your hands look okay.”
“Er, yeah,” Magenta replied, puzzled by the
remark. He didn’t want to tell her about his injured shoulder and how it
was still itching. That Doctor Fawn had agreed to let him out of sickbay
so soon after his ordeal was little short of a miracle.
“You could have made a phone call!” Sarah snapped,
finally specifying what his apparently thick mind didn’t seem to comprehend.
“You thought I was dead, how could I call? ‘Hi,
sis, how’s it going? By the way, I’m not dead…’ I would have given
you a heart attack!”
“Don’t get clever with me, Patrick!” she retorted
heatedly. “We’ve been to Hell and back here!”
“It’s not like I planned all this,” Magenta
replied in a similar tone.
Scarlet’s eyes widened in utter surprise as the
diminutive Sarah swung a furious right hook at Magenta’s jaw, catching him
completely unawares; he spun backwards, his shoulders pressing against the shiny
red finish of the car before dropping heavily to a sitting position on the
ground. Tentatively putting a hand to his jaw, he looked up, at first
bewildered and uncertain. Without having time to even try to speak,
Magenta was almost smothered by his sister’s arms as they wrapped around him,
Sarah knelt at his side, tears flowing from her eyes as she murmured
almost incomprehensible complaints against her ‘stupid big brother’. He stifled
the groan that almost escaped his lips when in her warm embrace, she squeezed
his wounded shoulder a little too tightly for his comfort.
“Pocket, I’m sorry, really, I never meant for any
of this.”
Sarah pulled back, drying her eyes as she did so.
“I know.” She lowered her eyes. “I’m ashamed to admit, I believed what they said
on TV.”
“I should have called. Well, I tried to, in New
York. But I guess you’d already left.”
Sarah nodded. “Almost straight away after I
saw the news. I had to come here. Had to be with Mammy and Pappy
when… I’m sorry, Pat, I…”
“Don’t be. I saw the news too! I
almost believed it, and I KNEW it wasn’t me!”
Sarah emitted a short awkward laugh. “Better
late than never, eh?”
“Did you… tell Pappy and Mammy
about me being in Spectrum?”
“No.” Sarah shook her head. “After the
news, I didn’t know what to think anymore… so I kept silent.”
“Right,” Magenta replied thoughtfully. “I have to
speak to Pappy. Tell him everything.”
Sarah’s expression darkened
once more. “Oh, Pat, I’m so glad. Pappy’s barely said a word since
we heard.”
“That bad?” Magenta frowned. “I knew he
hated me, but…”
“Hated you?!” Sarah cried, astonished by the
statement. “Pat, he loves you. The news… it broke his heart.”
There was a dumbfounded expression on Magenta’s face at this revelation.
She smiled as she took his hands, “but you can mend that easily enough.”
“I let him down,” Magenta admitted sadly.
“So make up,” came the simple reply. “You’re
both ready now.”
Magenta took a deep breath. “Where is he?”
Sarah let out a deep sigh and turned her eyes
downward. “Where he’s been almost every minute since we heard.”
“Where?” her puzzled brother asked.
“In the stables.”
“Stables? Why?”
“With Pellinore, of course.”
“The horse I bought him?” Magenta, choked with
emotion, stumbled on the words.
Sarah smiled again. “He loves him. And when he
heard the news about your… death, it was as if that horse was the last thing
that still ties in to you.”
Magenta looked towards Scarlet, silently pleading.
His English colleague took the hint almost immediately and stepped forward.
“Miss Donaghue? Perhaps I could follow you
indoors and explain everything to you and your mother… while Pat goes to talk
with your father?”
Sarah smiled at Scarlet. He was tactful,
she’d give him that. Getting to her feet, she waited as Magenta did the
same and dusted himself down, methodically. Squeezing his arm, she smiled
and nodded.
“It’ll be fine,” she added encouragingly.
Magenta found himself nodding in response.
Taking a deep breath, he turned his eyes in the direction of the stables.
“Good luck, Pat,” Scarlet offered.
Magenta turned to face Scarlet and Sarah; he
suddenly seemed calmer, as if the decision, having been made, was now much less
of an ordeal.
“Thanks, Paul. Oh, and
Sarah?”
“Yes?”
“Good right hook,” he replied, moving his lower
jaw with his hand from right to left.
Sarah reddened at the words, her eyes widening at
the memory. “I’m so sorry, Pat!”
Scarlet snorted. “Don’t be, he deserved it!”
“Thanks, man, very supportive,” Magenta replied,
with a grin as wide as Sarah’s.
“You go to the stables, Captain Magenta.
Now!”
“S.I.G…” Magenta exhaled deeply and nodded.
It was time.
***
It was only a short walk to the stables but each
of Magenta’s steps was slow and filled with trepidation. He wasn’t
prepared. No, that wasn’t true, he’d gone over this moment in his head a
dozen times or more since the end of the mission. In not one of the
scenarios he had imagined had he allowed himself the possibility that his father
would forgive him his past. The most he had hoped for was that he was, at
best, pleased to see him still alive, but there was always that nagging doubt,
that terrible uncertainty deep inside of him. What if he wasn’t pleased
to see him at all?
Finally, he reached the stables; he felt sick, his
breathing quick and shallow. It had been here, all those years ago, that
his father had rejected him totally and thrown him off the farm, insisting that
he had no son. Numb at the words, Magenta had left the farm never to
return until now. Had he turned around only seconds after that fateful
moment, he would have seen his father overcome with grief. Perhaps if
either of them had tried a little harder to put aside their hurt pride, the
heart attack that almost killed Sean Donaghue only two days later would not have
happened. In her attempt to protect her husband, Lily had refused to let
their son visit him in hospital, so fearful was she that another fit of anger
might kill him. To Pat, it had been a final condemnation by his father;
their link, he believed, was irreparably severed.
Magenta pulled himself back to
the present, taking a deep breath to steady his nerves. The door was open.
This was it. He stepped inside. As his eyes adjusted to the sudden
comparative darkness inside the stables, a flood of noises and smells assaulted
his senses only serving to bring the whole episode of his last encounter with
his father back to the forefront of his mind. He put his hands to his face
as he tried once more to compose himself and force himself not to turn and run.
From the far side of the
stable, he heard a light whinny followed by a man’s voice. The man was
comforting the horse, talking to him in a reassuring, calming tone. As
Magenta stepped silently closer, he saw his father, standing, slowly grooming
the horse that he recognised instantly as Pellinore. It had only been a few
years, but Sean looked so much older. His broad shoulders seemed to have
sagged considerably. Magenta was a little taken aback; from what Sarah had
told him, Sean Donaghue had made a slow, but complete recovery of his heart
attack. At the moment he looked weaker, low-spirited, almost stooping – he
wasn’t standing as tall and proud as the man Magenta remembered. It was
hurting him; there was no doubt in his mind that he was responsible for this
dejected appearance in his father.
Closer and closer, barely
daring to breathe, Magenta almost choked with emotion as he heard his father’s
words and realised that he was telling Pellinore about the happier times he had
spent with his son when Pat had been just a boy.
“You know, Pellinore,” he sighed, as he slowly
drew the grooming brush down the horse’s sleek brown neck, “I loved that boy.
I never stopped loving him. He was my son, and I turned him away.
Maybe it’s my fault? Maybe I drove him to it? He always said he
never hurt anyone, what if I hurt him so much that I drove him to it?”
Upon hearing those words,
Magenta prepared himself to protest loudly, to tell his father that it wasn’t
the case, that he wasn’t responsible for anything at all. But as he took a
next, tentative step, and before the words reached his lips, his foot hit a
bucket which was in his path. The bucket fell over with a loud clatter,
spilling water on the ground. Startled, Sean turned to see the tall figure
standing only a few feet away. With the bright sunlight streaming through
the open door, the man was little more than a silhouette, and Sean found himself
squinting to make out the identity of the newcomer.
“Who’s there? Kieran, is that you?”
Unprepared, and unwilling to give his father a
second heart attack due to the sudden shock of seeing him alive, Magenta decided
to try to explain slowly and with care. He swallowed hard.
“I couldn’t let you believe the news reports.
They weren’t true.”
“P-Patrick?” The word stumbled out of Sean’s mouth
as he recognised his son’s voice. “But… I… is it really you?”
“Yes, Pappy, I couldn’t let you believe…”
Magenta was interrupted abruptly as his father
rushed the short distance between them and threw his arms around his son in a
tight embrace. At first stunned by the reaction, Magenta’s arms hovered
uncertainly above his father’s back as his anxious and bewildered mind responded
slowly to the unexpected response. It seemed an age before he allowed his
arms to return the welcome embrace. He bit his lip against the growing pain in
his injured shoulder – Sean’s bear hug was certainly stronger than Sarah’s.
Magenta’s eyes closed tightly and his jaw clenched in bitter-sweet agony as he
felt his father shake in his arms with gut wrenching sobs, and tears flowed from
his eyes.
“Pappy,” he whispered eventually, “I’m so sorry.
I’d give anything to turn back the clock. I never meant for you to be so
unhappy.”
“Unhappy?” Sean returned as he drew back from his
son and composed himself. “I have my son. I don’t understand how, but I
have my son. How could I be unhappy?” His hands still on Magenta’s shoulders, he
looked at him with a frown. “So you didn’t die in New York?” he murmured
uncomfortably.
“No,” Magenta almost whispered. “It wasn’t
me. Pappy, the news… it wasn’t me, not any of it.”
“Not any of it?” Sean repeated, confused by the
statement. “But your gang…”
“Not mine. I…” Magenta struggled for the
words. “I left the mob three years ago.”
Magenta saw the changed expression in his father’s
eyes and returned a puzzled glance of his own. He wasn’t sure if Sean had heard
a single word of what he just told him, as he was scrutinising him from head to
toes, seemingly noticing at last the way he was dressed.
“Where did you get this?” Sean asked abruptly,
tugging on the deep pink tunic.
“That’s what I’ve been trying to tell you…”
“Did you steal it? Are you on the run?”
Sean’s tone had become
suddenly angry. There was also a hint of disappointment in it, as well as
worry. Briefly, Magenta had felt the power of the relief of his father at
the revelation that he was alive. It had brought tears to his eyes and a
lump to his throat; his father loved him, there was no way he was going to allow
that feeling to slip through his fingers once more, especially not because of
this new notion that his father was presently entertaining of his situation.
The absurd accusation made him smile despite himself.
“No, Pappy,” he said, gripping his father’s arms
and staring into his eyes. “It’s mine. That’s what I’m trying
to tell you. Three years ago, I left the mob to join Spectrum, but I
didn’t have the guts to tell you.”
It seemed too much to take in, in only one
sentence. Sean was visibly struggling with mixed feelings. He wanted
to believe his son, but could he? Pat had never lied to him before, of
that he was certain. Could what he was telling him now be true?
“I’m sorry, Pappy, Sarah’s known for a few months,
but I begged her not to tell you. With you all thinking I was dead, I
didn’t know if she’d have said anything, but she told me that after hearing the
news she didn’t know what to think, so she said nothing,” Magenta continued to
speak without really knowing what to say or why he was saying it.
“Sarah knew? And she didn’t tell us?”
“I asked her not to.”
“Why?”
Magenta swallowed hard. “I was afraid.”
“Of what?” Sean asked, his voice edged with
confusion.
“I didn’t think it would be enough to wipe the
slate clean. I didn’t want you to think that… that it was only a way to buy your
approval, your affection. I couldn’t bear to lose you again.”
Sean sighed deeply, a faint smile tugging as his
lips. “Oh, Patrick, you’re such a fool! I always said that Sarah got
all the common sense out of the pair of you. All we ever wanted was you to
lead a law-abiding life. But look at you!” A laugh escaped his lips as he
spoke. “You go from one extreme to the other and you think that’s not good
enough!?”
Magenta lowered his eyes and offered a weak smile.
“I never thought of it like that.”
“I can’t believe you’re alive. I just can’t
believe it! I prayed and prayed for your soul and look…it’s me who gets
forgiven.”
“You? What have you done wrong?”
“I was proud, Pat. Too blasted proud. The
number of times I reached for the phone and stopped myself from calling you...
I’m sorry, son, can you forgive me?”
The words came to him with a dream-like quality.
Never had he imagined a reconciliation with his father so complete and
unconditional. With a sob, he pulled his father close in an embrace as
tight and emotionally charged as their first.
“So,” Sean began again, clearing his throat.
“You’re a colour-coded Spectrum officer then…”
“Yes.” Magenta rubbed his palms over his eyes, but
his flushed cheeks and dampened eyelashes gave him away.
“That’s a rather privileged position within that
organisation, I hear. How high in the rank?”
“Pretty high,” Magenta said non-committally, an
amused smile starting to draw itself on his lips.
“What do I call you? Officially.”
“Captain Magenta.”
“Magenta? Well, it could have been worse,”
Sean laughed. “Couldn’t you have gone for green?”
Magenta shrugged. “It
had already gone. Besides, don’t you think I’m a little tall to be dressed like
a leprechaun?”
Sean laughed, taking his son’s arms in his hands
to look him over again. Glancing up, he caught sight of three figures
standing in the doorway.
“Lily?”
Magenta turned, his eyes wide with joy.
“Mammy?”
The frail figure of Lily Donaghue left the doorway
where she was standing with her daughter Sarah and Captain Scarlet, to run
straight at her son, who caught her in his arms and held her, tears now freely
flowing onto his cheeks. There were few words exchanged, as the two only
seemed to want to bask in each other’s warmth. Finally, Lily stepped back
and looked up with a beaming smile into the face of her son – whom she felt she
had not seen for an eternity but whose memory had never left her.
“When they had told me all about it,” she said to
Magenta, gesturing toward Sarah and Scarlet, “I didn’t know what to believe…
And yet, I couldn’t bring myself to think you were dead and that you died like a
criminal. I knew deep inside of me that it couldn’t be true.”
“Your feeling was right, Mammy,” Magenta said with
a broad smile.
“I’m so glad that you are home, son,” Lily said in
a shaking voice, hugging him once more. “You’ll have to tell us all about
yourself since last you came. About Spectrum and your new life…”
“I will, Mammy.” He looked down at her, his
eyes bright with happiness. “Over one of those wonderful dinners that only
you can make. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve dreamed of eating those
again!”
Lily started laughing, and turned towards the
doorway, still holding on to her son. Magenta felt the heavy hand of his
father landing on his shoulder and looked back; Sean Donaghue was beaming
proudly, his shoulders no longer sagged, the very image of the man his son
remembered him to be. But it was only when they reached the door and
Sarah, almost timidly, with a smile on her face, tiptoed up to plant an
affectionate kiss on his cheek that Pat Donaghue truly felt like he was back
home again. He fought hard not to show too many of the emotions inside of
him, not in front of Scarlet, who, up until now, had been keeping away, but
whose presence couldn’t be ignored for long.
Clearing the lump from his throat, Magenta faced
the English officer. “Pappy, this is my colleague in Spectrum – and my
friend – Captain Scarlet.”
“A good afternoon to you, sir,” Sean Donaghue
said, exchanging a handshake with Scarlet
“And the rest of the day to yourself, Mr
Donaghue,” Scarlet answered.
“I see my son instructed you well, Captain,” Sean
remarked, his smile widening even more – if it were possible.
“He is a man anyone would be proud to call his
friend, Mr Donaghue.”
“Can I invite you to a genuine
Irish family home-cooked dinner?”
Scarlet hesitated. “I wouldn’t want to
intrude…”
“You won’t. Any friend of Patrick is part of
this family. Please. I’ll consider it an honour. You’ll be able to
tell us tales of our son in Spectrum.”
Scarlet raised a brow in amusement. “I don’t
know if that’d be wise, Mr Donaghue…” Seeing Sean’s puzzled expression, he
continued in a confidential tone and with a nod towards Sarah and Lily,
“Some of those tales are too wild to describe in front of ladies…”
Sean Donaghue guffawed loudly, while his son
started turning the same shade of colour as Scarlet’s uniform. He felt the
hand of his father patting his shoulder affectionately; looking at him, Pat had
to admit that he had not seen his father like this, so relaxed, so happy and
proud for such a long time. He looked like a changed man now, as if the
weight of the world had been lifted from his shoulders.
And frankly, Pat Donaghue could relate to that.
He felt quite the same.
“Shall we go now?” Sean pointed toward the
little farmhouse standing a few yards away.
As they headed in that direction, Captain Scarlet
discreetly walked a few steps behind, allowing the family its private and joyful
reunion, smiling as he witnessed how Pat now seemed so very close to his parents
and sister.
The wayward son had finally come back to his home.
THE END
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