Prologue
Birnam Wood, near
Dunsinane castle, Scotland 1057A.D.
By the time the victorious army had
withdrawn in some kind of order, it was raining and the blood-soaked ground was
rapidly turning into a quagmire. The air was filled with the groaning of the
wounded and the occasional shriek of terrified and dying men. Some bodies were
still twitching and some poor souls were trying to drag themselves across the
slippery filth of the ground in a desperate attempt to avoid the fate they knew
was coming. The scavengers had moved in, looting the dead and with a terrible
mercy, cutting the throats of those too weak to avoid them, before they stripped
the bodies.
In an island of dark silence, quite
separate from the droves of death-dealing scavengers, moved three women,
standing so closely together that they seemed to share one vast body. They were
dressed in heavy cloaks, made of a material that was black only in the same way
as a starling’s wing is black, and which seemed to shine even in the dull skies
overhead. Their faces were partially hidden by their long, matted jet-black hair
and folds of material that covered their noses and mouths, yet their dull-grey
eyes missed nothing on the heaving battlefield around them. The scavengers made
haste to avoid them ignoring the dead that lay in their path, as they moved with
deliberate purpose across the hellish killing ground.
As it was with the Goddesses in the old
religion that still clung to the wilder parts of the country, she was three –
The Morrígan – the Raven Goddess of
Battle, who chose the heroes from the slain. On this field she had come for one
body – and one body only. It was a
man – the King - her champion -
dressed in a fine woven plaid and the most expensive of body armours. Not that
that had availed him anything for his head had been hacked off and the corpse
lay in a sticky pool of blood.
“You have it?” one asked, her voice
muffled by her cloak.
“Aye, it’s here.”
“Take it from him.”
The woman, a surprisingly slender
creature of indeterminate age, tugged at a dull golden band that encircled the
arm and when it would not come, she drew a long bladed dagger and hacked the
limb near the wrist, so the circlet fell into the bloody earth with a squelch.
She lifted it and all three placed a
hand on it and began circling the corpse widdershins as they intoned,
“Thrice to thine, and thrice to mine,
And thrice again, to make up nine.”
The tallest raised the circlet above her
head and it seemed to the few scavengers that dared to watch, that a grey mist
rose from the desecrated corpse and flowed into the band, making the gold grow
dimmer.
“Now the charm’s wound up and through all eternity, as we dwindle and die in men’s memories, this band shall seek out new champions, until it finds a man who has the power to undue the ruin of this defeat and restore to us our power over men’s fate. A champion who need fear no man of woman born but will triumph over the treacherous Macduff and all his kind! The evil done to us on this day shall be revenged on all traitors and false friends by those that possess the band and but speak the name of Macbeth!”
A “Captain Scarlet and the Mysteron” short
story
by Marion Woods
June
Captain Blue wandered into the sick-bay on Cloudbase carrying a newspaper under
one arm. Unbeknown to the medical staff, the newspaper was wrapped around a
bottle of pale ale. He skirted past Doctor Fawn’s office and sidled past the
nurses on duty at the desk, returning their smiling ‘hellos’ with a weak grin.
Once in the ward he hurried over to the bed where Captain Scarlet was lying,
eyes closed and head nodding rhythmically in time with the loud music over his
headphones.
Blue dumped the bottle on the bed and in so doing very nearly gave his friend a
heart attack.
“The things I do for you,” he complained at Scarlet who was examining the bottle
with delight. “I’ll be the one who gets hauled over the coals if I’m caught.”
“Adam, you are a life saver. I am dying of boredom and blandness here.” Scarlet
stretched out his hand.
“One, you said one bottle,” Blue reminded him.
“Bottle opener?”
“Damn! I knew I had forgotten something…”
“What?” Scarlet’s face fell. “You are having me on, aren’t you? Oh, Aadaamm…” he whined.
Blue dropped the paper on the bed beside his friend. “Hey, just show a little
gratitude here, buddy. I go out of my way to smuggle your illegal hooch in here
for you and all I get is complaints.”
“A bottle is no use without a bottle opener.”
Blue was rummaging through his pockets, emptying a handkerchief, some loose
change, a biro pen and a leather wallet onto the coverlet. Finally he found a
bunch of keys and assorted gadgets.
“Here you go.” He selected a small penknife and flicked a blade open to reveal a
bottle opener.
“How do you manage to keep all that
stuff in your uniform and still look presentable?” Scarlet asked rhetorically – Adam could make rags look chic. He happily took the cap off the bottle
and handed the bunch back to Blue, who was carefully stowing his possessions
back into the various pockets of his uniform. “Hand me that tooth mug, please.” He poured out the beer and proffered the glass to his friend, “Want some?” Blue grimaced and shook his head. Laughing Paul downed the first glassful and sighed with content. “What news?” he asked.
“Nothing much on the Mysteron scene, at least, but Seymour has called a meeting
of the CADS committee for Friday, to discuss a new project. He’s putting it all
together now. You should be out by then, yeah?”
“Soon, Fawn promised me this morning that it won’t be long now.”
“You’ve only had three days off work - with a shattered pelvis,” Blue smiled. “I
don’t know if I should envy rather than pity you.”
“Oh pity me, please! I’d be at work right now, but Fawn is flexing his muscles
and keeping me here ‘for observation’.” He sipped his beer and grimaced, “Just
my luck to be on the Glenn Field shuttle when they let a novice pilot it! They
were lucky more people weren’t hurt.”
“No, you were the only passenger who got injured, luckily enough – and that was only because that freight container with the
machine parts in broke free and crashed through the passenger doors. If you’d
been a little friendlier and sat up front with the others you wouldn’t have got
crushed at all.”
Scarlet pulled a face and asked, “Who was flying that day?”
“A young English woman promoted to Cloudbase Lieutenant from the admin side at
Spectrum London. She’d been working in research for a few months before her name
went on the flight duty rota – and
guess what? – now she’s back in research! ”
“So I should hope! What’s her name
– just so I know to avoid her in the future?”
“Lieutenant Flaxen.”
“Flaxen?
Right - keep her away from me, Adam.”
Captains Ochre and Magenta walked in to the conference room for the meeting of
the Cloudbase Amateur Dramatic Society and apologised for being late. CADS was
the brainchild of Lieutenant Green who had
– and no-one quite knew how he’d managed it
– got permission from the Colonel to start the group about 18 months ago. It had
quickly become a very popular pastime
– especially amongst the senior staff, who found it an acceptable way to avoid
the Colonel’s wrath whilst still having an opportunity to ‘act the giddy goat’.
Lieutenant
Green scowled at them and pointedly carried on his argument with Destiny Angel.
“There aren’t enough French speakers to do a Molière play.”
“But it isn’t fair – always I do your English dramas.”
“And very good you are in them too. Now Destiny, please be reasonable.” Green
produced a red folder and waved it theatrically, “Everyone
– your attention please! Now we are
all
here, I have a suggestion to make. So far we’ve put on one performance – our Christmas pantomime of Robin Hood,
which we devised ourselves -so now I suggest we do a full production of a
recognized play. We could be ready to do a few performances around Halloween
– if we concentrate.”
“And if the Mysterons give us a breathing space,” Blue reminded him.
“And if Scarlet can avoid landing himself in sick-bay every other week,” Ochre
laughed.
“Stop waving it about, Seymour – we
can’t see the title!” Scarlet demanded, glaring across at Captain Ochre, but
managing to bite back his retort.
Green opened the folder and began to distribute the typed scripts inside.
“What is it?” the impatient Ochre asked as the individual scripts were passed
around.
“Macbeth? Oh, I have a sinking feeling
about this one…” Blue muttered as he flicked through the pages.
“You’re not supposed to say the name of the play!” Rhapsody warned with a grin.
“You call it ‘The Scottish Play’.”
“Why?” Symphony asked.
“Tradition has it that Shakespeare wrote real witchcraft into the play to
impress the new King – James I -
who was an acknowledged expert on witchcraft.
He’d even written a book about it.” She noted the surprise on the faces of her
friends, “And you all thought I was just a pretty face, didn’t you?”
“No, never that,” Blue said and added hastily, “I mean you’re not just a pretty face… but you are, of course… very pretty….”
Rhapsody laughed at him and bowed her head in mocking acknowledgement of the
compliment. She smiled at Symphony who was watching his confusion with a
jaundiced eye.
“Shakespeare?” Scarlet queried, “Do you think we’re ready for that? It’s a bit
highbrow, Seymour and well, most of the company are Americans and everyone knows
they can’t read the lines properly.”
“Who can’t read?” Ochre bristled.
“Read the lines – it’s what actors
call speaking the blank verse,” Scarlet retorted.
“That’s a form of racism,” Ochre protested.
“Yup, cruelty to dumb Yankees…” Scarlet teased. Usually it was Ochre who annoyed
everyone else, so he was delighted to find an opportunity to needle the
dark-haired American.
“You must have been working on these for some time to have them all ready and
edited, Seymour,” Blue said glancing up from his script. “Were you so confident
we’d agree?”
Green shuffled a little, “Well, to be honest, Captain
Blue…”
“Always the best policy, Seymour,” Blue smiled at the younger man.
“On my last trip home I met up with an old teacher of mine, Miss Adrian. She’s a
marvellous woman and she was the one who introduced me to the theatre and the
delights of Shakespeare. We did this particular play in my last year at school
there. Well, when she mentioned that the school had received money to buy new
script sets for the drama department and I mentioned that I had set up a little Am-Dram at work, she offered me these scripts, and as
they had played such a major part in my last year at home I said yes…”
“Ah, so you are an old hand at this play, then?” Symphony said looking at the
typescript over Blue’s shoulder. “It says there are witches
– is that why you wanna do it at Halloween? I have this real neat Witch’s
outfit I could use…”
“I don’t think these witches are the same kind as the ones that would wear that
green chiffony thing…” Blue warned her and they began to whisper together.
“I would say that this is the ‘edited highlights’ of the play Shakespeare
wrote,” Scarlet commented as he started to read his script copy.
“Well, it has been pruned – there
are too many parts for us to play them all
– even doubling or tripling up,” Green explained. “But the story isn’t altered
any.”
“Well, I think it’s a good idea; plenty of meaty parts for us girls, for a
change. We won’t have to fight over who gets the only speaking part like we did
with Maid Marian,” Rhapsody said. “Will you direct again, Seymour?”
Green nodded, “Do we need to hold auditions?” he asked tentatively.
“Non,” Destiny said sharply. “Last time it was too much fighting and Ochre and
Scarlet did not talk for weeks afterwards.”
“Huh, I still say it was fixed,” Ochre muttered.
“Hey, Richard the Lionheart was English,”
Scarlet responded. “And it was only a bit part, so it made sense to get the
Lieutenant to do it. I don’t know what you were making such a fuss about - you
got to play The Sheriff of Nottingham, didn’t you?”
“Yeah, but he only agreed to that because he thought he was gonna get to be a
cowboy,” Magenta said with a snigger.
“Coeur-de-Lion
was French,” Destiny chipped in poking Scarlet in the arm.
Needled by their carping, Scarlet went onto the attack, “OK, ok, so it wasn’t
our best effort, but it went down well enough. And everyone had agreed to do a pantomime of Robin Hood,” he reasoned. “If I had
known we would still be arguing over it all these months later, I would never
have agreed to play Robin.”
Blue gave him a disbelieving glance and rolled his eyes. The acting bug had
bitten Scarlet deeply and it was mostly his pestering that had jollied everyone
into joining in.
“I thought the guys looked splendid in those cute costumes,” Symphony laughed,
coming to Scarlet’s assistance by changing the subject slightly. “Well most of
them anyway… those that had the legs for it.”
“Funny, I was just thinking the same about you and Destiny, when you played Will
Scarlet and Alan-a-Dale,” Magenta winked at her.
Destiny snorted her feelings about that, “It was
stupide
that we two had to be men!”
Rhapsody laughed and glanced at Scarlet, “Hmmm, I agree with you, Karen,
although it’s not a million miles away from the situation with their everyday
uniforms, of course…”
Symphony nodded, “And I guess it was an example of the famous British sense of
humour to get someone as tall as Adam to play a guy called Little John!” She ruffled his hair with her fingers.
“No, as I explained at the time, he wasn’t called Little John because he was
little…” Scarlet began to explain again.
Green cleared his throat and said loudly, “This is why we need to do a
recognised play, so that the Colonel can see we are really serious about it and
so he’ll continue to authorise exemptions for radar duties and admin work during
the rehearsals and the performances.” He paused significantly and looked around
the room, well aware that some officers remained in the company solely for the
exemption passes. “We can prune some more of it if necessary,” he added.
“So, who’s playing which part, Seymour?” asked Blue, guessing the young man had
worked it out to his own satisfaction already.
“Well, I have a few suggestions,” Green cleared his throat. “For Macbeth, an
ambitious Scottish general, I thought of Captain Scarlet…”
“No fair – he’s not Scottish – and if I couldn’t be Richard the
Lionheart because I wasn’t English…” Ochre protested.
“You’re not Scottish either!” Scarlet retorted.
“I’m descended from…”
“Oh, shut up you two!” Blue commanded with a rare display of irritation. “Carry
on, Seymour.”
“Banquo, Macbeth’s right-hand man, that’s you Captain Blue. He’s murdered by
Macbeth but his ghost comes back to haunt the King.”
“Hey, Adam, at last a role commensurate
with your acting skills,” Ochre said sardonically. From Captain Blue’s
expression it was obvious that he was waiting for the put down and sure enough,
Ochre continued, “You should have no trouble playing a stiff!”
“And as Macduff – a Scottish
nobleman who’s the enemy of Macbeth
– I suggest Captain Ochre,” Green said hurriedly as Scarlet looked ready to leap
to his friend’s defence.
“Is that another example of your type-casting, Seymour?” Magenta grinned.
“Macduff is the man who finally kills Macbeth.”
“Seymour,” Destiny wheedled, “Who will be
Lady Macbeth?” “It’s a very important part,” Scarlet said, glancing at both Destiny and Rhapsody Angels with some hesitancy.
“I thought that Rhapsody should do it,” Green said avoiding Destiny’s eye.
“Hey, she’s a real bitch, this Lady Macbeth,” Symphony said, looking up from the
script she had pinched from Blue. “And I use the word ‘Lady’ in its broadest
sense. What makes you think any of us could pull it off, Seymour? What with our
nice manners and all?” she teased.
“
I assure you, Seymour, I can do a real
bitch just as well as Rhapsody…” the French woman protested, her eyes
flashing with indignation.
Symphony laughed gaily.
“Yes, I am sure you can,” Green agreed. “But well, Rhapsody’s English and …er…
surely you’ve seen the definitive picture of Ellen Terry playing Lady Macbeth
with long, red plaits?” he hedged looking intimidated.
“I plait my hair for no man,” Rhapsody warned playfully. “Plaits make me look
like Anne of Green Gables.”
“She is
very sexy,” Blue muttered, thinking aloud. He became aware of the sudden silence
and glanced around the room. Ochre and Magenta were grinning and Scarlet was
looking amused, whilst even Destiny was smirking and Rhapsody was blushing a
little.
“Anne of Green Gables is very sexy, is she?” Ochre sniggered. “Tell me, did this
proclivity show up in your character profile, Adam?”
“I meant
Rhapsody… I mean, Lady Macbeth is a very sexy woman!” he
protested. “Well, all powerful women
are sexy,” he muttered, wishing that the ground would swallow him up.
“You’re lucky - I’m gonna take that as a compliment,” Symphony purred in his ear
and Blue sank lower in his seat, his face a picture of stoic resignation at the
surety that he hadn’t heard of the last of his gaffe.
“Let’s
get a move on,” Green shouted over the laughter that broke out. “There are also
the three witches, and these will be played by Symphony, Destiny and Lieutenant
Flaxen.”
“Oh no,” Scarlet groaned dramatically his head in his hands, to a general
sniggering.
“Magenta, I’d like you to play the Thane of Ross, a Scottish nobleman, if you
will. Some of the minor parts can be played by Lieutenants, and I’m sure we can
double up with some minor parts towards the end of the play, especially those
whose main characters are already dead. Good, well that’s settled then,” Green
said cheerfully. “Rehearsals start tomorrow afternoon with a read through. I’ll
speak to the Colonel about the exemption passes…”
The meeting began to break up, with everyone taking their scripts with them to
study. Blue was waiting for Scarlet and as they turned to go Green said,
“Oh Captain, I nearly forgot, there is also this…” he held out a thick torque
made of a yellow metal. “My grandfather gave it to me when I was a kid. He said
his grandfather’s grandfather had found it on a beach – washed up from some wreck, maybe. I’d guess it must be much
older than that, but I never cared enough about it to find out. In fact, I never
liked it much at all. When we did our performance of Macbeth at school, I loaned
it to my best friend, Sam Myers, who was playing the lead role. Sam and I knew
each other since we were knee-high… his parents were good friends of my parents
and they helped me a lot with the kids, when my folks were killed. It looked the
right sort of thing for Macbeth to wear and Sam became quite attached to it
– he used to wear it all the time –
I think he wanted me to give it to him permanently, but it was almost all I had
left of my family and I wanted it back when the play was finished. I thought if
things got really desperate I could sell it
– but it never came to that, thankfully. We argued about it – just about the only argument we ever had.” He looked with
intense dislike at the object lying in his dark hand and sighed.
“Eventually, Sam did give it back - his parents made him give it back – just before I was going to University
in Jamaica. He was obviously not
happy to have to do it, and we had another argument
– he said if I was his real friend I would let him have it as a gift of
friendship. I might as well have let him keep it – a few days after he returned it he went out on a bender and
was killed in a bar-room brawl and we never did get the chance to patch up our
quarrel. Now all I see when I look
at it is Sam’s face – it comes
between me and my memories of my own folks…”
Green’s genial face set in a hard and angry expression. Scarlet looked askance
at him, Seymour Griffiths was so laid-back as a rule that his reaction was
surprising. Still, it was a dear friend who had died.
Green caught the concerned expression on Scarlet’s face and snapped out of his
musing with a rueful grin, “Sorry… lost track there! Anyway, as I said, Sam wore
this as part of his costume when he played Macbeth
– and to be honest I can’t see any other use for it, I’ve been using it as a
paper-weight myself – but it looks
right for this, at least! Would you like to wear it in the play?”
Scarlet
took it with a smile, “Why of course I will, Seymour.
You’re right; it looks as if it would be the right kind of jewellery.” He
examined the heavy metal band with some interest, noticing a fine tracery of
carving on what he had assumed was a plain gold band. At the end the torque had
intricately woven strands of metal interlaced into a solid ball. It was about
the right size to fit a man’s arm.
“Was he good as Macbeth?” he asked conversationally, as he slid his uniform
sleeve up to his elbow and experienced a slight static shock, which made the
hairs on his arm stand up, as he clamped the torque onto his left wrist. It
fitted perfectly, almost seeming to mould itself to his arm and the metal felt
surprisingly warm. He admired it for a moment before pulling the sleeve down
again.
“Best I ever saw. You’d think he was the man himself…” Seymour smiled.
“What part did you play, Seymour?”
“Me? Oh I was Banquo…”
Scarlet raised an eyebrow; “Is that why you gave the part to Adam?” he nodded at
the silent American still waiting patiently by the door. “Continuing the
tradition from Macbeth and Banquo, through you and Sam - best of mates and all?”
“I guess it had something to do with it…” the young man smiled in response.
“Well I hope I can do your friend –
and your torque – justice,” Scarlet
said, twisting the ornament around on his arm until it felt comfortable “And
maybe that will exorcise the sad memories you have about it now and remind you
of the good ones.”
That evening as they came off duty Captain Blue suggested they wander over to
the Amber Room – as they usually
did - but Scarlet knowing Rhapsody was in Angel One, called off with the excuse
of looking over his script. Waving goodbye he went back to his quarters. There
he sat in his armchair with a glass of whisky and opened his script to read it
through. He knew the play fairly well, had seen a couple of excellent
productions at Stratford and he wanted to do his best to bring the man to life.
He read his lines, muttering them under his breath to get the rhythm of the
scansion. Gradually he became aware of a burning sensation on his left arm and
rolling back the sleeve to investigate he saw that the flesh around the torque
was red and inflamed and as he tried to move it away to inspect the problem, a
sharp pain jarred his nerves and he grimaced. He twisted the thing round and the
sensation eased. Frowning he examined it closer under the reading light and his
frown deepened. Not only was it causing him pain, but the fine line carvings had
disappeared and across the red skin were faint white lines – almost like crease marks - that seemed
to correspond to what he remembered of the carvings. The pain had all but disappeared now, but he was reluctant to risk reanimating it by trying to remove the torque now. He felt sure his retrometabolism would deal with any other problems overnight and it would slip off easily in the morning. He undressed and rolled into bed, finishing the script before he turned out the light. He was looking forward to this production – very much indeed.
He slept with an unusually deep and dreamless sleep and so in the quietest hour
of the night there were no witnesses to the faint grey mist that rose from the
torque, which still encircled the strong arm. It hovered above the sprawled body
and someone with sharp hearing might have heard faint echoes:
"Of all the men that have come to our call, this one is a most worthy champion.
Come sisters, let us make sure he will do out bidding and revenge us at last."
A
slow murmuring filled the room and slowly the words became intelligible,
“Thrice to thine, and thrice to mine,
And thrice again, to make up nine.”
July-August
“When shall we three meet again
In Thunder, lightning, or in rain?”
“When the hurlyburly’s done,
When the battle’s lost and won.”
“That will be ere the set of sun.”
“Where the place?”
“Upon the heath.”
“There to meet with Macbeth.”
Lieutenant Green interrupted from the prompt box,
“Destiny, you are supposed to be a witch
– a ‘secret, black and midnight hag’ – you are not about to invite Macbeth to
dinner. So, can we have a little more ‘menace’ in the speech, please?”
“How do you put menace into two lines?” Destiny pouted, brushing her blonde hair
back with an angry gesture. “Besides, I do not know what is this hurlyburly…”
“And if
you call us hags just once more, Seymour Griffiths, I swear, I will hit you with
my broomstick,” Symphony threatened as she stretched to her full height.
She added, “I don’t even want to play the witch this way. This image is
outdated and erroneous.”
“Adam tells you that?” Destiny grinned.
Symphony stuck her chin out stubbornly. “I wanna be a modern, sexy witch.”
“Shakespeare did not write about sexy witches! Forget the TV re-runs and get wicked!” Green thundered. “Now once more
if you please, and Symphony, please remember, again is supposed to rhyme with
rain. You were not bad, Flaxen, a little more screeching and you’ve got it
nailed.”
With deep sighs the witches began again.
“A drum! A drum!
Macbeth doth come,” Flaxen chanted.
Scarlet and Blue, out of uniform and casually dressed in jeans and T-shirts,
entered on their cue and walked down to centre stage ignoring the fact that the
one of the witches was standing with her hands on her hips. She nodded a curt
welcome.
“What are these,
So wither’d and so wild in their attire,
That look not like th’ inhabitants o’
the earth.
And yet are on’t?” Blue began,
“Speaking of wild attire, Adam, did you check that…
sack-bag of a witch’s costume Green’s devised, as I asked you to? I’ll probably
come out in a rash if I wear it. I really don’t see why we three witches can’t
wear nice clothes,” Symphony complained. “So I want you to tell him what you
told me about outdated and erroneous
images.”
“Vraiment,”
said the second witch, also getting to her feet and stretching her back, “I too
cannot have the harsh clothes.”
“Aw, come on girls, now is not the time for this,” Green pleaded climbing from
the prompt box. “The costumes are what witches would’ve worn.”
“Quite right,” Scarlet said with surprising vehemence, “You are devotees of
Hecate, She-devils and harbingers of evil
– it is only fitting you should be dressed as such! You are not taking this
seriously!”
Both Angel Pilots flared in anger at his outburst and Blue could see them both
about to launch into an argument, “Whoa, hold on here, it’s just a play and
we’re just doing this for fun, right? So back off, Paul,” he said, glaring at
his partner.
Scarlet looked a little sheepish as he fiddled with the torque around his wrist.
He shook his head slightly and said, by way of appeasement,
“Well, you could always keep your silk undies on underneath,” he winked.
“And after all, he’s expecting us to wear kilts!”
“Plaids, kilts weren’t invented until the early 19th Century,” Flaxen
said automatically and blushed violently as she realised she had just corrected
Captain Scarlet. She stood
and stretched, gabbling in her confusion, “Can’t we have a break, Seymour, it
seems like we’ve been crawling around for hours?”
“Oh, well, I guess twenty minutes won’t make much difference, Audrey,” Green
smiled and ran his fingers through his curly black hair. “There’s some coffee
over in the wings there.”
“Will you be going for authenticity too, or will you be wearing something under your kilt, Paul?” Symphony asked pointedly, still niggled by his
remarks.
“I shall strive for authenticity in as much as possible, but I doubt if what is
under the costume will make much
difference to my acting ability either way, so I’ll be wearing much the same as
usual, I expect,” he replied loftily.
“And that is?” she asked archly.
“Shouldn’t you be asking Adam what he’ll be wearing?” He began to realise she
was teasing and responded in kind.
“Oh, I know what he wears…”
Blue, innocently wandering towards the coffee, heard Scarlet’s splutter of
laughter and turned to see what the joke was, satisfied that the two people who
mattered most to him had patched up their differences.
“Flaxen told us that Scotsmen don’t wear anything under their kilts. If the guys
get to wear their boxer shorts, why do we have to be authentic and wear stinking
clothes of sacking?” Symphony demanded when Green and Flaxen came back with
their coffees, with Captain Blue strolling along behind them.
“We’ve been all thorough this already. And besides, unless the guys are very
unlucky, no-one will see what’s under their costumes,” Green argued. “But
everyone will see what you three are wearing and I can’t think of any production
that had the three witches dressed in the latest Verdain outfits.”
“Well you keep saying that you want ‘wicked’, Seymour, and believe me, that
dress makes me feel very wicked,”
Symphony laughed as she slipped her arm through Blue’s and pinched his cup of
coffee. “Doesn’t it, Adam?” she winked up at him.
“Oh don’t ask me. I can never second guess your moods…” Blue said mildly enough,
but he gave her a sharp glance, by way of asking her to tone it down a little.
Scarlet’s frown reappeared “It is obvious that Banquo is too besotted with Lady
Macbeth, to fall for your blandishments, Weird Sister!”
“Oh lay off it, will ya?” Blue snapped. “I must’ve explained what I meant dozens
of times…”
“Where is the sexy Rhapsody?” Symphony asked, tugging her arm free of her
boyfriend’s and looking rather put out.
“She’ll be next when we go to relieve her,” Destiny said and glanced at her
watch, “Which we must do now… Tiens,
we are late.”
With a withering glance at the unfortunate Blue, Symphony flounced out of the
theatre after Destiny.
Green sighed, “We’ll never get the witches right if those two don’t concentrate.
Right, whilst we’re waiting for Lady Macbeth, let’s do Macbeth and Banquo… Act 1
Scene 3 – Macbeth’s speech ‘Stay you imperfect speakers…”
Scarlet moved upstage and Blue, left holding the now empty coffee cup followed
him. Halfway through the scene Flaxen skipped over and took the cup with a
sympathetic smile.
“Were such things here as we do speak
about?
Or have we eaten on the insane root
That takes reason prisoner?”
Blue declaimed.
“Your
children
shall be kings.”
“You
shall be king.”
“And Thane of Cawdor too; went it not
so?”
“To the self-same tune and words...”
“Choon – not toon!” Green howled as ‘Macbeth’
creased with laughter.
“Hey, I never said I could do the accent!” ‘Banquo’ protested in self defence.
|
||||
September
As the weeks went by Cloudbase personnel became used to the senior officers and
the Angels spending their off duty time in the theatre and even walking around
the place muttering their lines, or ‘speaking forsoothly’ as one wag called it. The project even seemed blessed with
good fortune in that, apart from a threat to a new giant transport plane - when
Spectrum just managed to avert a complete catastrophe and Scarlet spent another
few days in sick-bay recovering from his latest death - the Mysterons remained
inactive, with all of the bases around the World reporting nothing suspicious.
Colonel White was grateful that his senior officers were all so wrapped up in
the doings of an Eleventh-Century Scot that they weren’t tempted into wild
projects of their own. Long periods of inactivity simply waiting to react to the
next Mysteron threat tended to set everyone’s nerves on edge and lead to all
kinds of problems.
However,
ever since he had had cause to discipline Lieutenant Green for spending time,
when he should have been working on Spectrum files, re-editing his stage
directions and ‘improving the text’, he kept a watchful eye on things, to ensure
that the enthusiasm remained within sensible bounds. He had to admit that
everyone seemed very dedicated to CADS’s new project, even to the extent that
Captain Ochre had stopped polluting the air of the Officers’ Lounge with
modelling glue, and was deeply involved with creating the scenery and props for
the play. Captain Magenta, as well as playing his own role, was experimenting
with a computer projection to depict the climactic approach of Birnam Wood to
Dunsinane Castle and all of the Angels
– even the two who had chosen not to become involved with the performance side
of the project – were helping create costumes.
But the project was not confined just to the theatre and its adjacent
facilities, nor was everything all sweetness and light amongst the company. One
particular evening he had gone into the canteen for his dinner and had chosen a
table adjacent to one where Scarlet, Blue and Rhapsody Angel were already eating
and apparently so deep in conversation, that he had not liked to intrude. He’d
had difficulty eating his meal without choking, as he listen to Captain Scarlet
trying to coach Captain Blue to speak with a
proper
English accent. By the time dessert appeared he suspected, by the way the
American’s native Bostonian drawl was getting more pronounced rather than less,
that even the long-suffering Blue was losing patience with his best friend,
whose coaching technique was amounting to little more than hectoring. He got the distinct impression that it
was taking all of Rhapsody’s diplomatic skills to stop the men coming to blows,
and even if Captain Scarlet could
be an impulsive hothead at times
Captain Blue was not known for his quick temper.
The Colonel decided to keep a closer watch on the situation. If his elite team
of agents were going to end up at each other’s throats over this play – it might still have to be called off.
Lieutenant Green saw things differently. Everything was gradually falling into
place, the scenery was almost ready and the props were all prepared.
Performances were beginning to gel. There were still areas that caused concern – some of the minor parts were less well
rehearsed and Captain Scarlet was still picking on the Americans in the cast for
their pronunciation and delivery. However, Captain Blue did sound less
‘American’ than he had done and was managing to imbue Banquo with the aura of a
man swept to his doom by his closest friend’s insecurity. Ochre was improving with every
performance as the upright, moralistic Macduff, intent on revenging his family’s
murder on an increasingly amoral Macbeth.
Symphony and Destiny had finally stopped arguing about how the witches should be
portrayed and, if they were not as overtly evil as the director would have liked
them to be, they were better than he had expected they ever would be. Flaxen had
started to relax amongst the exalted company she was keeping and he was
beginning to get a decent performance out of her too. She hadn’t broken a prop
or tripped over her costume for days and she was proving invaluable as an
assistant stage manager.
Symphony, having been shown a copy of John Singer Sargent’s inspiring portrait
of Ellen Terry as Lady Macbeth, which Flaxen pulled off the internet, had even
persuaded Rhapsody to allow her to make hair extensions plaited in the manner of
the portrait, which could be attached to her own copper-coloured hair in time
for the performance. In her costume of a heavy, dark-green gown, with a broad
golden circlet over her now impossibly long and heavy plaits, she now looked
every inch the imperious Queen.
Having watched Scarlet and Rhapsody rehearse on many occasions he had to admit
that there was definitely ‘a chemistry’ between his leading actors
– one that transcended mere acting. Scarlet was utterly believable as the
ambitious nobleman, prepared to wade through blood to achieve the ultimate prize
and there was something tragic
in Rhapsody’s portrayal of Lady Macbeth’s descent into madness from the
ambitious woman who had urged her compliant husband to murder. It made the hairs on the back of your
neck stand up…
Indeed, overall Lieutenant Green felt quietly confident that the performance
would do them all credit.
Like the Colonel, Captain Blue wasn’t so sure. He had learnt his lines without
difficulty – it was one of the
advantages of a photographic memory - and thereafter he had maintained his
interest in the project by researching both the historical background and past
productions of the play. He had
even made a few suggestions about the staging to Green, which the Lieutenant had
adopted, although he suspected that was merely to humour his superior officer.
He already knew the play itself was dubious history and he began to delve deeper
into some of the known facts of the period. He became intrigued by the discovery
that Macbeth had reigned for a decade- was widely approved of and had been – if not a devotee of – then the protector of the old Celtic
religion, that still continued in the wilder and more remote parts of his realm.
From there it was an easy stride to the myths and legends of the Celtic people.
His interest in such matters had been kindled as a child, listening to his
Grandfather reading wonderful tales of heroes and monsters. He became engrossed
in studying the fragmentary knowledge of the complex society that had existed
over a millennium ago, so much so that Symphony – who had no interest in long gone
history - was forced to present him with an ultimatum - either he put the books
away or he got himself a new girlfriend.
One
afternoon, as they sat on the edge of the stage swigging mineral water, during a
break from yet another rehearsal, Blue leant across to Scarlet and pointed at the
torque – which his partner never
removed these days.
“You know I’ve been looking at the background to this play?
Well, I wondered if that torque you’re wearing isn’t Celtic. I heard
Seymour telling the story of how he came by it
– but if it is really as old as I suspect - it ought to be kept somewhere
safe or even be in a museum. It could be very valuable.”
Scarlet turned on him with a face like thunder, “He gave it to me. Are you
suggesting I might lose it?”
“No, just that it might be worth far more than he realises. Can I have a look?”
He stretched out a hand expecting to be given the ornament.
“No,” Scarlet almost snarled, moving
his arm away from Blue’s advancing hand with a jerk. “You don’t need to see it.”
“I don’t need to, I’d just like to, that’s all,” Blue frowned.
“No!”
Blue grabbed the arm and pulled it towards him, despite Scarlet’s fierce
attempts to break free from his grasp. Suddenly he let the arm drop and gazed in
concern at his friend, “Paul, are you allergic to that metal? That is a terrible
rash on your arm. Maybe even your retrometabolism can’t cope with it if you
don’t take the thing off for long enough.”
“I am fine – it is nothing to do with you! Keep
your interfering meddling to yourself!” Scarlet leapt to his feet and strode
across the stage away from his speechless friend.
Thereafter relations between the two became strained, with Scarlet avoiding
Blue’s company except when they were rehearsing.
Adam became uneasy about the way the play was beginning to take over all of
Scarlet’s time and energies. Paul was never available to go to the gym or the
pool anymore, he missed their regular game of squash in the sports hall and he
rarely seemed to go to the canteen - which was definitely odd - because even to
Blue’s inexpert eye he was losing weight. Scarlet was brusque and unfriendly
towards most of his colleagues now and, even on stage during the rehearsals he
craved, he was domineering and arrogant.
Try as he might, Blue could not shake off his underlying apprehension. He tried
telling himself he was being too
intrusive and taking on a responsibility that no-one had asked, or expected, him
to take and he debated speaking to Doctor Fawn and suggesting that he check out
Scarlet’s rash – but the thought
that Paul would know it was his doing, and get justifiably annoyed with his… interference, was a risk he was not
prepared to take. Why should I worry when
nobody else does? He’s a grown man;
let him deal with his own problems! he reasoned whenever some incident
rekindled his vague feelings of foreboding again. So, in the face of Scarlet’s continuing sharp antagonism and
steadfast denials of any problem, Blue shrugged off his concerns as fanciful and
was grateful when a different problem arose to grab his attention.
There were occasions when Scarlet, himself, became aware of his pre-occupation
with the play and regretted his sharpness with his fellow actors, but there was
something driving him on, something forcing him to devote his attention to this
and nothing else. His sleep was disturbed by images of dark castles and smoky
halls. Strange people he felt he should know - but did not - wandered through
his dreams and he felt they expected great things of him. But he did not know
how to satisfy their expectations –
or even exactly what they expected of
him. His only relief came whilst he
was rehearsing, or studying his lines and increasingly he spent every spare
moment doing that. Most of the cast were tired of his insistence that they spend
so much time on the project. Even Blue was finding excuses to be elsewhere than
in the theatre. But he would have the last laugh
– he would show them all just how the part should be played.
October
“Thrust - parry - spin.
Thrust and parry, lunge! Spin and lunge…”
Scarlet pranced around the stage practising his moves for the duel in the
climactic battle scene. He was wearing his plaid costume and a breast plate of
armour. The dimmed stage lights glinted off the golden circle he wore around his
brows and the torque, which he now wore openly all the time – even when he wasn’t
acting. Scarlet and Blue had
been rehearsing all morning, initially in company with the Angels and Lieutenant
Flaxen and latterly with Captain Magenta, who had just left to swap duties with
Captain Ochre. Scarlet seemed tireless, exuding an raw energy and coiled tension
that was exhausting to watch –
never mind trying to keep up with –
which was lucky because Ochre was scheduled to attend rehearsals for the next
two hours.
Blue, watching without much interest from the wings, called across, “Wouldn’t it
be better to wait for Ochre to get here? You may find that’s too energetic for
the lines you have to speak,”
“Stand in for him and read his lines for me, so I can pace myself.” It was an
imperious demand rather than a request.
“No, you can wait for Rick,” said Blue annoyed at being ordered about in this
way - really it was getting beyond a joke.
“Besides, you’ve already thumped me black and blue and I don’t intend to let you
do it again today. Why I let Green talk me into playing Young Siward as well as
Banquo, I don’t know. It is such a rush to get the ghostly make up off before I
have to come back on to get slain again,” he sighed.
“Let fall thy sword on vulnerable
crests;
I bear a charmed life, which must not
yield
To one of woman born.”
Scarlet extended the sword and lunged across the stage; Blue sat motionless and
watched his approach with unblinking eyes. He stopped with the blade mere inches
from his friend’s face and grinned insolently at his partner along the length of
his arm and the blade.
“Oh, cut it out!” Blue snapped reaching to push the blade away. “You’re just
like a big kid showing off.”
“A
charmed life – it could have been written for me,” Scarlet mused as his
hand twisted the torque around on his arm. “I wonder how a man who lived almost
500 years ago could have known so much about how it would feel to know there
isn’t a man alive that can kill you.”
“Aren’t you being a little over-dramatic, Paul?” Blue asked with a frown. “There
are plenty of men who can kill you
– just not for long,” he admitted in the face of Scarlet’s haughty expression -
Paul was associating himself far too deeply with this role. It filled his every
waking moment and he talked about nothing else. Blue was still concerned about
the torque, for the rash associated with it, now covered the left arm and was
clearly visible.
“Despair thy charm;
And let the angel whom thou still hast
serv’d
Tell thee, Macduff was from his mother’s
womb
Untimely ripp’d.”
Ochre’s voice cut through the air and Scarlet turned with a delighted gasp. He
advanced on the newcomer and they circled each other, snarling like lions along
the lengths of their swords.
“Accursed be that tongue that tells me
so,
Yet I will try the last. Before my body
I throw my warlike shield; lay on
Macduff,
And damn’d be him that first cries,
‘Hold, enough!’”
With a shake of his head, Blue watched them as the duel took them across the
stage, Scarlet on the attack all the time. Ochre, who was nowhere near as good a
swordsman as his colleague, was forced to defend himself.
“Hey, don’t forget I am supposed to win this...” he panted, running around to
change direction and backing off from Scarlet’s advance.
“Why?” Scarlet asked, “You must be of woman born and I fear none such as you.”
“Never mind that gibberish, the stage directions clearly state I have to win – I come on at the end with your head,” Ochre gasped, dodging Scarlet’s
blows.
“Yeah,”
Blue reasoned, “But you’d expect Macbeth to fight like a madman
– he’s just realised that his promised invulnerability is a big con. Suddenly
he’s just Mister Normal-Guy again all because MacDuff was born by caesarean –
untimely ripped - and therefore not of
woman born – at least not in the
normal way,”
“Huh,” Ochre said, holding up his
hands. He stopped defending himself, and turned to Blue, “Well, the play says I
have to win…”
“But your victory happens off stage, don’t forget, so you don’t get your moment
of glory,” Blue grinned. “I kinda suspect Shakespeare couldn’t bring himself to
top his hero in full view of the groundlings.”
Suddenly Ochre gasped with pain and staggered to his knees as Scarlet, still
fighting, landed a heavy blow on his shoulder and would have come in for the
kill, if Blue hadn’t stepped forward and pushed the sword away from the stunned
Ochre.
“Hey, Paul –
pay attention here! Rick had stopped the fight…”
Scarlet came to a halt, and looked in surprise at his fallen comrade, “He never
called hold, enough!” he muttered darkly. He
backed off looking shaken and placed his right hand over his left arm once more.
He looked almost dazed for a moment and then said, in a voice that was more like
himself, “I am sorry, Rick. Here, let me help you,” he reached out a hand, but
Ochre shrugged him off.
“Thanks, but your kind of help I can do without. Give us a hand here, Adam.”
“Sure, come on let’s get Fawn to check you over. Accidents will happen.”
“Accidents? That was no accident, he did it deliberately,” Ochre complained as
they walked away, leaving Scarlet alone on the stage.
“I doubt it was deliberate, but he is getting more carried away than ever as the
performance approaches. The Colonel might pull the plug on us after this…”
Blue’s voice faded as they disappeared through the doors.
Scarlet watched them go, his hand once more over the torque on
his left arm. “So, that’s the way of it now, is it?” he muttered to himself, “My so-called best friend sides with my enemy
and conspires against me even whilst he pretends to be my friend. You think
yourself so secret, but I have seen you, Banquo, consorting with one of the
weird sisters – late at night in
secret places. I tried not to believe that my doubts were valid, that you – my most trusted captain – could be turned from me! But
she-devils have more wiles than we have armour to withstand, and now she has you
in leading-strings you are little more than her puppet! I trusted you, Banquo,
and you should know me well enough to know how I deal with treachery like yours. It may be that I shall have to
deal with you sooner than I expected, I cannot risk you interfering with my
plans now – so soon before the
performance that will see the triumph of the Goddess once more – when Banquo, Macduff and their
traitorous allies all die at my hands!.”
He returned the prop sword in the rack and left the theatre, moving stealthily
across the base. When he reached a door in the armoury he glanced about to see
that no-one was around, and then slipped through. When he emerged a matter of
minutes later he was careful to keep his back to the security cameras and walked
away to turn off the corridor at the first opportunity. Then, using skills honed to perfection over years of
training he crossed to the accommodation levels, avoiding the CC cameras and, in
effect, vanished from sight.
“Hhmm,” Symphony Angel gave a satisfied sigh as she finished the last mouthful
of her doughnut and settled down beside Captain Blue. “I really must work a
charm on Lieutenant Green to see if we can’t have these duty patterns more
often. This beats the canteen and a stint in the Room of Sleep hands down.”
They had just eaten a picnic lunch in the privacy of Blue’s quarters and were
now together on the futon, his arm around her shoulders, listening to soft music
on the audio system.
When he didn’t answer she moved out of his embrace and frowned into his face -
he was miles away. “A penny for them,” she prompted, nudging his ribs.
He winced and shifted uncomfortably. Playfully, she tugged his Boston Bruins
T-shirt out from the waistband of his designer jeans and saw the darkening
bruises on his ribs, “Ooh, that’s nasty; what d’you do? Walk into a door?”
“No, I got that courtesy of Mr Scottish Play himself. There’s another on my left
shoulder and one just above my right elbow.” He grimaced and stretched the arm;
the joint gave a sharp crack as he did so.
“Paul beat you up?”
“No, Macbeth defeated Young Siward - several times. And I wasn’t the only one.
He damn near broke Rick’s collar bone with a sword whilst they were rehearsing
their duel.”
“Oh, rehearsals,” Symphony wrinkled her nose
dismissively. “Dianne says Paul is
demanding she spends every spare minute rehearsing. I know we only have a matter
of days left before the performance, but it’s going a bit far, if you ask me.
We’ll all be heartily sick of it before opening night. Still, if effort equates
to a good performance it will be Oscar-winning work.” She brushed her hair back
from her face and sighed.
“Do you think he is getting…obsessive,
about this?” he asked her uncertainly.
She wrapped her arms around her knees and gave it some thought. Finally she
turned to look at him over her shoulder and said, “Well, it could just be that
Paul and Dianne don’t often get an opportunity to spend so much time alone…
they’re not as ruthless as we are in taking advantage of the schedules.” She
smiled brightly.
“Or maybe just better at hiding it when they do,” Blue reasoned. There was a
subtle game of double-bluff going on amongst the senior staff, with everyone
assuming he didn’t realise they knew about his relationship with Symphony. But
as long as they were all happily humouring his presumed ‘innocence’ of their
knowledge, they were keeping their noses out of his affairs – which was all that he asked. He’d realised very early on in
the relationship that Karen’s open and impulsive nature meant she was almost
incapable of hiding her true feelings for him, and he loved her all the more for
it.
She grinned, “You complaining again, Svenson?”
“Who me? Good, old Adam? I never complain, you know that,” he sighed and gave a
wry grimace. “It’s just that Paul is getting so wrapped up in this play. Apart
for his pursuit of Mysterons I’ve never seen him so
– focused.”
Suddenly she shifted onto her knees and turned to face him with a rueful smile,
“You’re doing it again…”
“What?”
“Talking about Paul! You worry too much about him, d’you know that?”
“Maybe, but I can’t help it
– I feel kinda responsible for him…”
“You… big brother, you!” she teased. “You can’t
be responsible for everyone!”
“I know that and believe me I have no desire to be responsible for the rest of
the crew on this base! – but it’s
different with Paul…I mean after London and all.”
She gave him a sympathetic half-smile. Adam rarely spoke voluntarily about the
events surrounding Captain Scarlet’s Mysteronisation and their battle to the
death at the top of the London car-vu. That Scarlet had survived to become
indestructible was nothing less than a miracle, in her opinion, but somehow in
the excitement of Scarlet’s metamorphosis, she felt that people under-estimated
the effect it had had on his best-friend.
“And
who’s going to worry about you? Apart from me, that is?”
“I don’t need to be worried over; I can take care of myself.”
“And so can Paul,” she said forcefully. She shook her head affectionately at the
obstinate expression that settled over his features, “I don’t know why I bother
telling you off, it won’t stop you worrying. If it wasn’t him it would be
someone else.” She looked at him sideways from half closed eyes and pouted, “One
day it might be me, if I’m lucky…”
He laughed at her outrageous flirting and soothed, “Aah,
Älskling, do you need proof that whatever else I may be thinking about; I
always have you on my mind?”
“It might be nice to be reassured that there are occasions when I have your full and undivided attention…” she tapped an emphatic finger on his knee.
“Oh, there are – most certainly there are! Come back here and I’ll give you a for instance…” he pleaded, patting the
empty space beside him.
“What girl could refuse an offer like that, you sweet-talking guy?” she asked
ironically. “Still, if you promise to be a good boy, I’ll kiss your bruises
better on my way back…”
“I’m damned sure that won’t be covered by my medical insurance,” he said dryly,
smiling as her laughter wrinkled her nose in the way that always set his heart
thumping.
He reached out hungrily to take her in his arms and for some time afterwards
they were so pleasantly occupied that he didn’t give his concerns about Captain
Scarlet another thought.
Finally he breathed languidly into her ear, “Well, Miss Wainwright, was I a good boy?”
Her smile started his pulse racing all over again and she said, “Fishing for
compliments, Mister Svenson?”
“No, just a little… market research - you know I have a reputation for
thoroughness. “
“Market research, eh? Well, you won’t get any valid results from a single
example…”
“How true... I suppose there’s nothing for it but to increase the data available
for analysis…”
Symphony laughed. “Purely in the interest of research, of course?” she teased.
“Of course,” he confirmed, tilting her chin up to kiss her lips.
On duty that evening as relief commander of Cloudbase, Blue had a meeting with Destiny, who was currently Angel
Leader. They spent several hours
trying to match up the duty rotas for the next month or so. It was complicated
by the numerous requests for leave over the forthcoming Thanksgiving and
Christmas holidays and the only good point was the fact that the play would be
over and everyone would be back on full duty sessions.
Destiny finally pushed back her chair and said, “Eh
bien, it isn’t our fault if the liste
does not work. C’était très difficile,
but we manage it, Adam.”
Blue leant back and grinned up at her as she collected her papers. “You have a
knack for it, Juliette. Mind you, there will be some complaints, even so.”
“There always are,” Destiny agreed with an expressive shrug. She looked down at
his smiling face, noticing how tired he looked and impulsively laid her own
cheek against his to say in a stage whisper, “Mais
au moins tu as finalement le week-end pour toi et Symphony, seuls tous les
deux.”
Blue blushed slightly and gave a low chuckle. He had rather hoped she hadn’t
noticed that. Laughing, she ruffled his fair hair and blew him a kiss as she
left. Lieutenant Flaxen, covering the comm
desk, sniggered and had to move her chair to the far end of the bank of
computers, so that he couldn’t see her grin.
Later, Captain Blue looked up from the files he was amending and gave a tired
smile. Captain Grey smiled back and came to stand by the Colonel’s impressive
circular desk.
“All quiet, Captain?”
“As the grave, we damn near fell asleep, didn’t we Flaxen?”
Flaxen stretched and gave a bright nod, “Almost…” she agreed, although in fact
it had been Captain Blue who had seemed ready to doze off, she had been quite
busy enough.
“Well, I guess we ought to be grateful.
After all, if it was busy it would mean the Mysterons were up to no good
somewhere, and some poor soul would be suffering,” Grey reasoned.
“Guess that’s right, Captain.” Blue signed off the computer system and collected
his files together. “Who’s on with you?
“Claret, I saw him going into the gents as I came up the escalator. He’ll be
here any minute, so you can go, Flaxen.”
“SIG and thanks, sir.”
“Come on Flaxen, I’ll buy you a cup of tea before you turn in,” Blue offered
impulsively as he waited for her to join him.
“Thanks,
Captain, that would be… smashing,” She couldn’t hide her surprise at the
suggestion, but she fell in beside him and as they left the control room she
waved at Claret, hurrying towards the automatic doors.
Busy logging on for their duty shifts no-one noticed the shadowy figure that
slipped out from the computer banks and followed behind the departing officers.
The
canteen was almost empty, except for the few night duty crews who had also just
swapped shifts and were quenching their thirsts. Blue bought two teas and an
individual packet of chocolate-chip cookies, before joining Flaxen at a table by
the window.
“How are you getting on with your lines?” she asked, a little nervous of sitting
alone with a senior Captain. She opened the cookies he handed her and the packet
ripped showering the table in fragments of broken biscuit and crumbs.
Blue pretended not to notice and continued the conversation, “Aah, I know them
all right; I just don’t seem to be able to say them in a manner that satisfies
either Lieutenant Green or Captain Scarlet. Why they just can’t accept that I
don’t speak King’s English and grit
their teeth about it, I don’t know!”
He gave her a charming smile and it wasn’t hard to understand why many of the
impressionable young women on the base were starry-eyed about him. Of all the
Senior Captains he was probably the least intimidating, at least, when he was
off duty. Captain Grey had a reputation for being somewhat dour, whilst Ochre
and Magenta were practical jokers and Captain Scarlet... well, many people, even
on Cloudbase, hardly knew how to react to a man who was indestructible – herself included. Besides, Captain
Scarlet tended to keep rather more to himself when he was off duty these days – although she had heard from personnel
who had served on the base since before his ‘accident’ - that he had been far
more outgoing and care-free in those
early days.
She
collected her fragments of cookie and gave a rueful grimace before confessing,
“Captain Scarlet makes me so nervous that I end up doing something daft
– something that invariably seems to cause him grief. We were doing the scene
with the witches and Macbeth yesterday and I managed to knock the cauldron over
and it landed on his foot. What’s the chance of that happening normally? I’m
jinxed.”
“Or he is,” Blue suggested. “But why should he make you nervous?”
“Well, he’s a senior Captain…”
“So am I,
but I don’t make you nervous, do I?”
“Not as
much,” she admitted with a blush.
“Oh good, because I’ve never thought of myself as scary.”
“Oh you’re not scary - exactly – but you are Captain Blue … the Captain Blue and he’s the Captain Scarlet - Spectrum’s premier
agents – so it is infinitely worse
that whenever I screw up it always seems to be Scarlet who witnesses it!.” She
shrugged as she tried to explain, “I’m just plain Audrey Geffen, from West
Bromwich – the insignificant
Lieutenant Flaxen - the idiot banished to the research library until the last
tick of recorded time, whilst she works through demerits awarded for crashing an
SPJ.” Her face was a picture of misery.
“But that wasn’t your fault,” Captain Blue said conversationally, as he nibbled
at some of the scattered cookie fragments he’d been collecting.
“What do you mean? I was flying the Glenn Field shuttle and it crashed. And, of
course, just to add to my woes, Captain Scarlet was one of the passengers too,”
she sighed. “I fail to see how that wasn’t my fault, Captain.”
“It was a dodgy plane. The retractable landing gear had
malfunctioned and it failed to descend in time for the grappling lines to catch
the jet properly.” He smiled at her astonishment. “Hasn’t anyone told you yet?
That figures.”
“When?” she gasped, “I mean when was that discovered?”
“Well, I became involved a little over a month or so ago when Lieutenant Green
asked me to check it out before the repair crews set to work, because he was
concerned about the crash investigation report
– with reason as it turned out, it was a very sloppy piece of work! I managed to
get down to Glenn Field for a couple of days on some pretext and gave it the
once over. It wasn’t hard to spot what the problem was – I was very surprised the crash
investigators didn’t pick up on it.” He looked at her astonished expression. “I
gave the Colonel a report to the effect that the crash was due to a malfunction
and not pilot error – and that the
crash investigators could do with some basic re-training! As I understand it, the report was
accepted in its entirety and the demerits have now been rescinded. The Colonel
issued an official duty record amendment
– it was in one of the morning briefings.
The official notification should’ve reached you
– but then it’s probably creeping through the internal snail-mail.” And I hope I haven’t just spoiled someone’s
surprise… he added to himself as a thought struck him.
She was still staring into the middle distance with a stunned expression. “Oh,
that was nice of him,” she murmured.
Unsure of whether she meant Green or the Colonel, Blue drained his cup and
continued, “Anyway, we’re the lucky ones! Because of that mistake you went back
to Research and I happen to think you’re one of the best researchers we have.
That was a neat piece of work tracking down the transport plane as the
Mysterons’ last target.” He winked at her as he got to his feet.
She suddenly realised he was leaving and cried, “Oh, I ought to thank you,
Captain! I thought I’d moulder in Research for ever after the accident,” her
dark eyes glowed with excitement, “It’s so wonderful, I could kiss you!” She
gasped at her own audacity and began to stammer an apology.
Blue laughed and stooped to present his cheek, “Be my guest!” Blushing
furiously, Flaxen planted a tentative kiss on the rough cheek and was even bold
enough to join in with his laughter as they took the cups back to the serving
hatch.
“Goodnight, Flaxen. Sweet dreams.”
“Goodnight, Captain Blue, and thank you
– thank you
so very much!”
From across the other side of the canteen a dark figure watched the little drama
at the table and frowned. Moments later he stood and pushed past the group of
technicians just entering through the main door.
Feeling pleased with life for once, Blue strode towards his quarters, humming
tunelessly. Symphony had been telling him for some time now what a nice girl
Flaxen was, and when Green had asked if he would check the plane over before the
maintenance team started work, he had agreed. It had made a nice change from
rehearsing. Melody had joined him and they had gone through the plane with a
fine-tooth comb, although it had become quite obvious fairly early on that there
had been a malfunction. The report hadn’t taken him long and Green had been
delighted when he had handed it over for inclusion in the Colonel’s in-tray.
Quite frankly, the Colonel had been more concerned at the failure of his crash
investigation squad than the lifting of the blame from one of his Lieutenants,
but he had, with his usual thoroughness, removed the demerits from the young
woman’s record. No doubt, in his own way, he would seek to make amends for her
temporary banishment back to research.
Blue rubbed his chin thoughtfully and hoped once more that he hadn’t queered
Lieutenant Green’s pitch with Flaxen. I’m
not usually so slow on the uptake,” he castigated himself, I must be getting as preoccupied with this damn play as
Scarlet!
On impulse he took the scenic route through the Promenade deck, stopping to gaze
down on Angel One, where he knew Symphony was on duty. She couldn’t see him, of
course, but he blew her a kiss anyway and went on his way feeling more
light-hearted than he had for some days past.
Turning past the corridor that led to
the theatre he stopped, catching a muted cry coming from the auditorium. He went
down to the door meaning to reprimand anyone stupid enough to be rehearsing at
this hour – even if it was Paul. As
he pushed open the door he heard Rhapsody’s voice, choked with tears,
“Thank God, I thought no-one would ever come this way.”
“Dianne, what’s wrong?”
She was dressed in her full costume and sitting on the floor near the steps to
the stage, holding her ankle. “I tripped over this
flaming dress and slipped down the last couple of steps. I’ve hurt my
ankle.”
“What are you doing here?”
“I’m supposed to be rehearsing with Paul, but I have no idea where he’s got too.
I’d given up waiting for him and decided to leave and that’s when I tripped.”
“Rehearsing? Do you have any idea what time it is? You are both mental cases.
Come on, put your arm around my neck and I’ll carry you down to sick bay so Fawn
can give you the once over.”
“Oh, just to my room, Adam, I’ll be fine.”
“No, it is sick bay or nothing.”
“But it’s too far to sick bay – I’m
too heavy,” she began a protest that quickly became redundant as he swept her up
as if she were no more than a child.
“I’m not that decrepit and you weight less than Karen, even in that frock – although for the sake of all concerned
don’t ever tell her I said that!”
She gave a shaky laugh and acquiesced gracefully, “All right – the secret is safe with me! Off we go to sick bay then – Sir Galahad.”
“Surely I should be Sir Lancelot, if I’m the Queen’s champion?” he said genially
as he pushed through the theatre doors.
“Yes, I guess you should, at that. All right, Lancelot
– carry me away…” She rested her throbbing head against his shoulder and
closed her eyes with an exhausted sigh as he strode along the corridors.
Both of them were oblivious to the
dark figure watching from the shadows.
A slow hiss rose from the figure –
so he wanted to be Lancelot to His Queen
- and never had there been a more treacherous friend to his monarch than the
adulterous Lancelot. He turned away from their chosen route and raced back
towards the place his surveillance had started. Sooner or later, Banquo would
have to return…
Doctor Fawn was on duty and directing Blue to an emergency bed he examined
Rhapsody himself. He quickly
confirmed a twisted and badly swollen ankle,
applied an ice pack, dosed her with an analgesic and left the duty nurse to help
her undress so she could spend the rest of the night in sick bay.
As Blue strolled back towards the exit Fawn stopped him to ask, “What’s going
on, Adam? I’ve been seeing a spate of minor accidents from people involved with
the play recently. Just in the last 24 hours or so, Flaxen stubbed her toe badly
tripping over the witches’ cauldron; Ochre is going to have severe bruising and
you’ve got quite an impressive collection of bruises yourself from your fights
with Scarlet. Now Rhapsody’s twisted her ankle
– rehearsing – at a time of night when she ought to
be in bed! They’re the worst, but I’ve had cuts and splinters and bumps and
bruises from half a dozen other ‘actors’.
I thought this was a play – not a
real war…”
Blue grimaced and hesitantly said, “I know what you mean…but I think it’s just
that people are getting a little wound up as the performance approaches.”
“By people you mean Scarlet, hmmm?”
Blue considered the question seriously, “No,” he reasoned slowly, “I think
everyone’s on edge at the moment –
although Paul is perhaps more on edge than most. Tempers are fraying…” he gave
an almost apologetic shrug, “too many artistic temperaments, maybe?”
“Too many bloody prima-donna-type egos, more like,” Fawn grumbled. “I for one
will be glad when you’ve given up on this project and gone back to making fools
of yourselves in pantomimes.”
Blue grinned, “You should join us, Edward. It’d do you good to get out of
sickbay for once…”
“Not bloody likely… now do me a favour and see if you can’t keep everyone in one
piece until the final curtain falls. Artistic temperaments…just an excuse to
behave like spoilt kids….” Fawn muttered derisively as he turned away and walked
back to check on Rhapsody.
Satisfied that the Angel was in good
– if somewhat peeved - hands, Blue
continued his journey back to his quarters. By now he was really tired and just
wanted to fall onto his bed and sleep away the remaining hours until his next
shift. If he left it much longer he’d have to use the room of sleep…
He was
already starting to relax mentally when he opened the door to his quarters and
stepped in, reaching for the light switch as he did so. He was totally
unprepared for the attack. Two hands grabbed him round his neck from behind and
a leg tripped him so he fell, winded, to the floor. His face was pressed into
the carpet, which scratched and burnt at his flesh as his assailant pushed him
down, kneeling across his back.
Blue had long experience of unarmed combat and self defence, but every move he
made against his unknown assailant was countered by an effective and painful
countermove. He was having trouble breathing and he tried to keep calm as the
grip never lessened on his throat. He stopped struggling, forcing himself to
relax.
“Oh you’re good, but I am and always have been
much
better,” a voice hissed in his
ear.
Blue’s mind almost refused to take in the information… “Paul?” he managed to
gasp.
The grip tightened. “Shut up and listen. I have been watching you – first you consort with those bawdy
She-Devils – plotting and
conspiring – and then not even
content with that - you would usurp my place in my lady’s affections – well, I am no Arthur to forgive such
treason – Lancelot!”
“Paul,
what are you talking about? Watching me? If you saw Dianne was hurt
– why didn’t you help her?” The words were cut off as the fingers tightened
around his throat once more.
“You intrigue against me with my enemies…”
“What enemies?” Blue gasped, almost choking.
“Macduff…”
“Rick? Oh my God, Paul – stop this, it isn’t funny…” Desperation lent Blue strength and he pushed his elbows into the carpet,
forcing himself up from the floor. It unseated Scarlet, whose grip lessened
enough to allow him a deep breath of air. With a huge effort Blue rose to his
knees and threw Scarlet to the ground as he made another attempt to grab his
neck. He moved over the prone figure of Captain Scarlet, intent on calming him
down and to his horror felt a blade slice into his shoulder. The pain shot
through him and he staggered, falling to the ground. Just before he passed out
he saw Scarlet’s face, staring down at him with a look of unreserved hatred. His
last conscious thought was,
“Oh God, he’s really gonna kill me….”
Doctor Fawn was less than sympathetic towards the distraught women hovering
around the emergency room. He angrily ordered Rhapsody back to bed and told
Symphony to go and sit with her friend. Then he stripped the blood soaked tunic
from Captain Blue and cut the polo-neck sweater away. The wound was jagged, but
not too deep, having been deflected by the collar bone. He had lost a lot of
blood though.
“Match the blood, nurse, and we’ll top him up.”
“Yes, Doctor.”
He cleaned the wound and bandaged it carefully, and then he treated the carpet
burns on Blue’s face and saw the bruises beginning to form across his larynx. He
examined the throat and thought compassionately,
this is one Adam’s apple that is going to be very sore! Leaving the nurse to
set up the transfusion, he washed his hands and went from the room to speak to
the Angels. Rhapsody lay on her
bed, whilst Symphony sat on the edge clasping her friend’s hand in a fierce
grip. They were both pale and it looked as if Symphony had been crying.
“How is he?” they asked simultaneously.
“He’ll live. Now, what happened, Karen? I’m going to have to report this to the
Colonel and I want the truth.”
Symphony blinked, “You think I did
it?”
“Heaven knows what happened. You have all been acting like drama queens for
weeks now. What I want is the truth…” Fawn repeated sternly.
Symphony bristled with anger and drew herself up, loosening her grip on
Rhapsody’s hand in the process. “I had just finished in Angel One and I knew
Adam had been on a late duty too, so I thought I’d go and visit and maybe we’d
have a night of unbridled passion - you never know your luck!
– although I would have settled for just a hot drink instead! I found him
lying by the door, bleeding all over his carpet. I rang for the medics and they
whizzed him down here. And that’s the whole truth!”
Fawn suppressed a smile and kept his uncompromising tone, “I believe you, so
don’t get mad at me. Did you see anyone?”
“No,” she snapped.
“Okay. Well, apart from the bit about the
unbridled passion, I’m going to tell the Colonel immediately. If there’s an
armed assailant on the base, he’ll need to know. I suspect he’ll order a
security clamp down.”
Symphony’s anger evaporated as quickly as it had blown up and she asked meekly,
“Please, can I see him?”
Fawn knew without asking which ‘him’ it was and he relented. “Well, you can, but
he’s dead to the World. I’d come back tomorrow and see him then, if I were you.
Mind you – even if he’s on sick
leave for a while – I’m afraid
he’ll be in no state for any kind of passion
– bridled or otherwise – for some
time.”
Symphony blushed, “I’m sorry, Edward.” It was a rare apology. He smiled.
Colonel White was used to being woken for emergencies and he responded
immediately the intercom buzzer sounded. He listened with a frown to Fawn’s
report and snapped into his usual efficient mode. As he was getting into his
uniform he asked, “Is Captain Blue out of danger?”
“Yes, he’ll be okay, with plenty of rest. The blade missed the vital arteries,
but he’s lost a good deal of blood. He must have been lying there for some time
before… he was discovered. There are the marks of hands around his neck too – evidence that probably before he was stabbed, someone had tried to strangle
him.” Fawn discreetly suppressed the information that one mark was a lovebite.
“There is a chance he saw his assailant then. It may be that the attacker does
not know Blue has survived; so it might be as well to maintain the pretence that
he is even more seriously hurt than he is
– we don’t want the attacker to return to complete his job. Inform me the moment
he regains consciousness, Doctor.”
“SIG, Colonel – oh and by the way,
Rhapsody Angel will be out of action for a few days with a badly sprained
ankle.”
Colonel White made an irritated noise, “There seems to be an epidemic of
carelessness around. People with too much free time…”
“Well… maybe. There definitely seems to be something going on. I have seen
incidents of …heightened emotions recently in some of the most unlikely people.”
“Your meaning, Doctor?”
“I’m not sure I have one yet, Colonel. It’s more a vague feeling that there’s …
something in the air.”
“Literally?”
Fawn mused for a moment, “I can’t be more explicit I’m afraid. But it wouldn’t
hurt to have someone – not
Lieutenant Green or any of his actors – run a check on the environmental
controls on the base. “
“You suspect it has something to do with this play?”
“I don’t know that I suspect anything… but the people closest to the production
are the ones suffering the most from these… incidents.”
“An intruder might be targeting them, you mean? We might have a Mysteron aboard
Cloudbase?”
“There hasn’t been a threat lately, has there?”
“No, they have been remarkably quiet,” White confirmed.
Fawn sighed, “I might be imagining it, Charles, but there is something I can’t
put my finger on.”
“That’s enough for me, Edward. I’ll have Lieutenant Claret run the environmental
tests.”
“Thank you, Colonel. Fawn out.”
The Colonel cut the comm link and punched into the direct link to the Control
Room. “Captain Grey, sound yellow alert! We have an armed assailant on the base – Captain Blue has been attacked. Get
the security teams to search the base and put an exclusion zone around Cloudbase
with immediate effect. We don’t know who
– or what – this assailant may be.
Step up the routine Mysteron detector sweeps. I am on my way.”
“SIG.” Grey took the time to ask, “How is Blue, Colonel?”
“He’s lost a lot of blood, Doctor Fawn is doing all he can right now,” White
replied brusquely, giving an impression to his officer that Blue was actually
fighting for his life as they spoke.
Grey sighed, “We’ll hope for the best then.”
“Yes, Captain, you do that.”
Moments later the klaxon sounded and the lights on the base flashed a bright
yellow.
Turn the light out and don’t make such a
noise….
Blue’s fuzzy mind thought he had spoken but when nothing happened to improve the
situation, he made a monumental effort to try and open his eyes.
“He’s waking up…”
I know I am – and there’s no need to
shout!
“Adam…?”
He managed to get his eyelids half open and squinted at the blurred face
hovering above him. “Whazzup? Sshuush,” he murmured.
“Doctor Fawn! He’s awake!”
When he wasn’t so tired he was going to
thump that woman for making so much noise!
The vaguely familiar blonde head was replaced by a dark one.
“Hello, nice of you to join us,” said a voice far less anxious than the female
one. “You are in sick bay –
Symphony found you in your quarters with a stab wound in your shoulder. You’ve
lost blood, but you’ll be fine.”
The information fired Blue’s memory and the shock of the attack flooded back. He
struggled to sit up. “Paul…” his bruised throat protested by sending a searing
bolt of pain shooting to his already aching head. He fell back with a groan.
“Captain Scarlet is involved in looking for the assailant. I’m sure he’ll drop
by later – you were unconscious
when he was here earlier.” Fawn saw his patient’s eyes widened in panic and he
frowned, that was not the reaction he’d expected. “I have to tell Colonel White
you’re conscious. He wants to question you about the attack. Can you manage to
speak to him?”
Blue shook his head and instantly regretted it, closing his eyes and feeling
tears slip beneath his eyelids, despite his best efforts.
“Well, I won’t let him keep you long, but he will want to speak to you. Rest for
awhile.”
Fawn moved away and he felt a soft hand smooth his aching forehead and struggled
to open his eyes again. The blonde woman was back, smiling affectionately at
him, her own green eyes brimming with unshed tears.
“You had me worried for a time, honey,” she said.
He couldn’t respond, didn’t know what to say, even if he was prepared to
tolerate the pain in his throat. He closed his eyes.
Symphony frowned, however bad he was feeling, Adam could usually manage a smile
for her – he hated to see her
worrying. He must be feeling really bad to ignore her like that. She sat on the
chair and waited for the Colonel to arrive.
Colonel White looked down at his officer’s pale face with the darkening imprint
of the fingers around his throat.
“Captain Blue?” he said as softly as he could.
The eyelids flickered but remained closed.
White
glanced at Fawn who shrugged and spoke to his patient,
“Adam, it’s the Colonel. He wants to speak to you. We need to know all that you
can tell us about the attack or someone else might get hurt – and they might not be so lucky
– the next stabbing could be fatal.”
Laboriously the eyelids rose and Captain Blue looked at the three people around
his bed with a defensive expression.
“Sir,” he croaked and swallowed painfully.
Fawn glanced at the Colonel, “His larynx is very badly bruised, and he’s going
to find it difficult to talk much for some time to come.”
“Save your voice, Captain. I’ll try to frame the questions so that you can
answer in as few words as possible.” White watched carefully, “Captain Scarlet
will drop by later – he’s busy
right now.” Blue’s guarded eyes flared with a flash of emotion and he looked
away. White’s expression hardened, Fawn’s briefing had warned him that mention
of Scarlet was upsetting the American. “Now, first and most importantly, did you
see the man who attacked you?”
Blue’s head gave a minute shake.
“No? Very well, did you hear
anything that might give a clue as to his identity?”
Another minimal shake.
“Do you have any idea as to why you were the chosen victim?”
The blue eyes widened slightly and then he shook his head again.
“Is there anything you can tell us that might assist, Captain?”
A
more definite shake and a grimace of pain.
“I’m afraid he’s not really in a fit condition to answer any more questions,
Colonel. Maybe later when he’s had some sleep, he might be able to remember
more. Of course, there is no guarantee he’ll ever remember anything about it.”
“I’ll ask Captain Scarlet to come and talk to him, perhaps between them they can
piece together what happened.”
This had the desired effect and Blue’s eyes sprang open. There was no mistaking
the fear in them this time.
“Was Captain Scarlet there when the attack happened?” White said quickly.
Blue was confused; he turned his head to the side, away from the Colonel’s too
perceptive gaze. White made the leap to the next logical question – however improbable it seemed – “Was it Scarlet that attacked you, Captain?”
Behind him Symphony gasped and drew breath as if to protest. He turned and gave
her a warning glance that silenced her. Then he turned back to the man on the
bed and pressed, “Captain Blue, I am waiting for you to answer the question.
Have you two had a fight?” He waited,
but it was obvious there was not going to be an answer. He looked with some
compassion at the man on the bed, noticing for the first time the tears pooled
against the bridge of his nose. As Blue gave an involuntary shiver the tears
trickled down the pale face towards the tightly compressed lips. “Very well,
Captain, that is all for now. Get some rest as Doctor Fawn orders. We will speak
of this again, when you are feeling better.”
Outside of the recovery room, White turned to Symphony Angel with a stern
expression, “I am assuming, as you are here, that it was you that discovered him
in his quarters. I will not go into the question of just what you thought you
were doing – going to a Senior Officer’s quarters
at that time of night – at least
not at the moment – but I want to
make sure you are fully aware of the gravity of the situation we are in. Blue
has almost certainly been attacked by someone on the base, someone familiar with
layout and with access to his personal quarters
– his reaction to the mention of Captain Scarlet suggests it may have
been him.” He held up a hand to silence her protest. “I don’t intend to
speculate on what has been going on between these two or why it should have come
to such a pitch tonight. I have no proof that Scarlet is responsible. However, I
do not intend to let it be widely known that Blue is on the road to recovery.
The assailant - whoever he is – may
be tempted to return to finish the job.
You will not speak of any of this to any other officer or member of
staff. Is that completely understood, Symphony Angel?”
“Yes sir.”
He gave a slight nod of his distinguished head, “Very well, go and get some
sleep. You will be needed to cover for Rhapsody
– who I understood has sprained her ankle.” He turned away, muttering to
himself, “I told them five Angels wouldn’t be enough, but did they listen? I
might as well talk to a brick wall when it comes to staffing costs…”
Doctor Fawn restricted all visitors to Captain Blue
– partly because it would have been too obvious just to exclude Scarlet
and partly because the Captain really was in some considerable pain. It did not
stop Symphony coming down to visit though and she took her frustration out on
Rhapsody when she too was denied access
“Quite frankly, Karen, that was a stupid question,” Rhapsody objected angrily,
“Why ever would Paul attack Adam?”
Symphony shrugged, “It doesn’t make
sense, but Adam was hiding something. Something he found upsetting…”
“He’d been attacked – of course he was upset! But that
doesn’t mean it has to be Paul who attacked him!”
The two Angels stared at each other, neither one prepared to back down in their
defence of their loved ones.
“They haven’t found any sign of an intruder and everyone’s been checked with the
Mysteron detectors and cleared. It means that it has to be someone who was
already here and is still here. Paul did attack Rick…”
“That was an accident; you know how intense Paul gets when he’s acting. Rick
just didn’t make his ‘time-out’ call clear enough,” Rhapsody’s face set in a
stubborn expression.
“Maybe, but well before the attack, Adam said he thought Paul was becoming
obsessive and I had to agree with him. And besides, he’s barely made an effort
to get to see him since the attack!”
“He’s been too busy trying to find the assailant!”
“And rehearsing, don’t forget that … he’s found plenty of time to do that it
seems,” Symphony accused.
“Paul is carrying a lot of responsibility for the play
– everyone has worked so hard and if he fails the play will be ruined. I
am sure he feels the need to carry on, despite his private concerns.”
“Oh, well of course the show must go on! He can’t let his public down… I hear
he’s already asked Seymour to play Banquo
– forget Adam and all his hard work… Paul is so selfish! Adam would never
walk away from him if the tables were turned!”
Rhapsody’s head went back and she
glared at her friend. “I think you had better leave, if you can’t remain civil.”
“Don’t worry My Lady; I’m not staying where I’m not
wanted.” As she turned to leave Symphony added, “I said right at the start that
Lady Macbeth was a bitch – and it
seems like they got the right woman to play her!”
Rhapsody bit back her angry reply –
arguing with Karen wouldn’t help solve matters.
She knew that in a while her friend would regret her outburst and be only too
eager to bury the hatchet. In a way, she could empathise with her; she knew that
when Paul was in sick bay – during
one of his longer periods of recovery, when it wasn’t possible for her to spend
all of her time with him – she
always felt like hitting out too. It was ironic, she thought with a wry grimace,
that the person she usually took her frustration out on was lying in the next
ward – and that Paul was suspected of causing
his serious injury.
Sitting alone in her room, Rhapsody mused over the events of the past few days.
She got the impression that there had been some hostility between Paul and Adam
for some time now – but it was unlike Paul to be so
unconcerned about Adam’s welfare.
She had to agree, with Karen that it was never that way when the case was
reversed. It was also worrying that Blue seemed to be getting worse rather than
better, Fawn’s answers when she asked after her friend were non-committal and
brusque. It was odd that they were even keeping Karen out, although she knew
Colonel White had been into see him on several occasions.
Her curiosity was aroused and she squirmed from her bed to grab the crutches
Fawn had given her. He had not forbidden her to move about so, when it was quiet
over the lunch break, she hobbled
out of her room and across to the men’s ward next door. Adam’s bed was curtained
off, even though the rest of the ward was empty. Perhaps Blue really was as bad
as Fawn was suggesting.
Nervously she went up to the curtain and peered in rather uncertainly. Blue was
sitting up against a bank of pillows, his left shoulder bandaged and his arm in
a sling. Propped up against his knees was a security file and on a trolley
beside the bed were a pile of books and reference folders. He was thoughtfully
chewing on the end of a pen as he frowned over the pages. She was so relieved to see him looking as well as
this that she smiled and opened the curtain rather more sharply than she
intended.
He gave a gasp and shifted – genuinely startled.
“Sorry, Adam, it’s only me. May I come in? I could do with some company.” He
nodded. “Does your throat still hurt?” She could see the bruising quite clearly
above the pyjama jacket.
“Not so bad now,” he croaked.
“I am pleased to hear it. I never really got the chance to thank you for
rescuing me – before all this happened. I thought I
was stuck for the night! I could’ve cheerfully killed Paul for standing me up.”
Adam gave a meagre smile and made a show of closing the file and putting it
away. She perched on the end of the bed, resting her crutches against the metal
frame.
“I still haven’t found out where he went to, either. I’ve hardly seen him; he’s
been so busy with the dress rehearsals.
Did you know that Flaxen is going to have to play Lady Macbeth? Fawn says I
won’t be walking well enough – I
think he really just wants to see Paul sweat it out! Oh, she’s a nice enough
girl, but she is so clumsy and Paul is fated to be on the receiving end of all
the spills, it seems. But, she knows the lines
– she acted as prompt for me so often. They’re asking Melody to do the third
witch – should be good! I’m
determined to be in the audience, if nothing else.”
She looked up and smiled at him. His face was carefully neutral and he made no
effort to speak to her. His silence was making her uncomfortable – something she had never felt in his
company before. After a prolonged silence, she began to make a move, “Well, I
guess you don’t want much company right now. I am so glad you are not as bad as
Fawn seemed to be suggesting, but I guess you need your rest, eh? I’m sorry I
bothered you – Fawn will probably
bawl me out too if he finds out.” She reached for her crutches which fell to the
floor with a clatter. She stared in dismay
– it was going to be hard for her to bend to collect them.
Suddenly the bed moved and Adam got out and picked them up one at a time with
his good arm, holding them out to her with a wry smile.
“Thanks,” she smiled back and as she managed to get to her feet she stretched to
kiss his cheek. “Get better soon.”
“You’ll see Paul?” he croaked, as if
every word was painful.
“Yes, I guess so. He came yesterday just passing through, but he hasn’t been
round today. I am sure he would have come into see you, but Fawn was adamant
that you weren’t well enough for visitors. He must reckon you need plenty of
rest.”
“Tell Paul ‘I will not fail his feast’” she
recognised the quote from the play and smiled at him. “I will be there,” Blue
promised, his voice cracking before even this short sentence was finished.
“We’ll go together and sit in the front row to cheer them on!”
Rhapsody smiled, reaching out a hand to touch his injured arm with a gentle
hand.
“Something like that,” he agreed. Even this short conversation had been hard for
him and he climbed back into bed.
It was only a matter of minutes after she had reached her bed again before
Doctor Fawn came in and smiled wryly at her. He said very little but stayed in
the room until Colonel White arrived.
Rhapsody realised that either Blue was being monitored or he must have alerted
them to her visit.
“How are you Rhapsody?” White asked
casually as he smiled down at her, “Moving about a little now, I see?”
“Yes sir, I hope to be up and about very soon.”
“Good, good, you have been to see Captain Blue, I understand?”
“Yes sir,” she was uncertain as to his mood and added, “I didn’t stay very long,
I could see how trying to talk tired him. But I was concerned about him, and
Doctor Fawn was so downbeat in his reports.
“There is a reason for that, Rhapsody. You will have seen that Captain Blue is
on the way to recovery, indeed he has been performing some light duties
already.” White settled back in the armchair and looked severely at the youngest
Angel pilot. “Rhapsody, what I am about to tell you is rated for class one
security and I hope I can trust you to keep it that way?” She blushed and nodded
her agreement.
“Good. Captain Blue did see the man who attacked him
– that man was Captain Scarlet…”
“Paul!” she gasped in disbelief. “I find that hard to believe, Colonel.”
“Frankly, so did I, but Blue was adamant that he had not made a mistake.
Confirmation was obtained by matching Scarlet’s handprint with the bruises on
Blue’s neck – if confirmation was needed.”
She noted that they had matched the prints despite Blue’s assurances. “Why isn’t
Paul in the brig then, sir?”
“For that he can thank Captain Blue. He is refusing to press charges. He has
convinced himself that there is something affecting Scarlet – something making him act out of character.”
“Do you believe him?” she asked bluntly.
“Adam Svenson is not an easy man to say no
to,” White smiled, “particularly when he is so sure of himself.”
“So you haven’t arrested Scarlet,” she persisted.
“No, Captain Blue asked for a few days to prove his theory and then, even if he
fails to press charges, I shall call in SI and have Scarlet interrogated. I
cannot risk an unresolved breach between two of my agents.”
“May I ask what this theory is, Colonel?”
White glanced across at Doctor Fawn, who gave a deep sigh and shrugged.
Realising the Doctor was not going to answer the question White began to
explain, “Doctor Fawn is sceptical about the validity of the whole premise and I
must say, I am a little surprised that Blue has come up with this at all. He
believes that Scarlet is … possessed by that amulet he’s been wearing.”
Rhapsody looked in amazement from one man to the other. Fawn’s scepticism was
clearly shown by his expression and even Colonel White looked uneasy. “Why does he think that?” she asked.
This time Fawn did answer, “He has seen evidence of a rash beneath the torque on
Scarlet’s arm and he believes that is affecting his moods. He may even be right,
but there may be a far more prosaic explanation than possession. If there is an
allergic reaction or infection and Scarlet hasn’t given his retrometabolism time
to clear it up by removing the torque for long enough – well – I have
no idea what effect continued and
prolonged exposure to the process of retrometabolism may do to him. It is possible that it may even lead to
the re-establishment of the Mysteron’s control over him. As usual I am working
in the dark with that aspect of his physiology. However,” Fawn continued, “I
have to say that I have no more proof of my theory than Blue has of his and
besides, Blue isn’t thinking along the lines of a physiological reactions – he’s talking possession – and as such, I think it’s more the
Chaplain’s preserve than mine.”
“Apparently, Lieutenant Green told them about the friend who originally wore the torque as part of a stage costume to play Macbeth and how
the youth’s moods and character changed when he started wearing it .” Colonel
White ran a hand over his chin and looked askance. “It isn’t like Blue to get
carried away with fanciful theories but he seems genuinely to believe in what
he’s saying.” He looked at Rhapsody’s concerned face, and asked, “Have you noticed any difference in Scarlet, Rhapsody,
you two have been very close of late
– rehearsing…”
Rhapsody sighed and bit her lip, “Well,
he has been rather distracted and he’s has been speaking of himself as Macbeth
– even when the topic didn’t seem to be related to the play. He’s been calling
Adam – I mean Captain Blue – Banquo too. I thought it was just an
affectation…”
White nodded, “I have heard about the incident with Captain Ochre and his
inability to restrain his... enthusiasm. Whatever Blue is planning to do – and he hasn’t confided that to me, at
present – all of this must be kept
from Captain Scarlet and from everyone else on board. The situation remains as
it was – officially Captain Blue is
severely injured and may not recover. No-one will be allowed access to him,
except for myself, Doctor Fawn,
and now, if he so wishes it –
yourself. Later he may need other assistants, but for now that is all.”
“Yes Colonel,” she paused and asked,
“Did Adam tell you I had visited him?”
White smiled, “No, there are security cameras on the ward. I don’t want anyone
approaching him without our knowledge.”
“That’s why his curtains are drawn,” she smiled in response. “I really thought
he was at death’s door.”
“And that is exactly what everyone else must continue to believe.”
“Even Symphony? She’s very worried about him, sir.”
“Most especially Symphony! If she starts cheering up we might as well broadcast
his recovery over the tannoy system!” White said with unusual candour.
Colonel White stopped at Doctor Fawn’s office after he had visited Captain Blue
and before he left sickbay.
Fawn looked up with questioning glance, “Well, what does he say now?”
“He says he’ll be pleased to see Rhapsody,” White smiled amused at a private
thought. “I suppose she’s a prettier sight than either of us two.” He sobered up
and said, “You weren’t completely open with her about your own suspicions when
you explained Blue’s theory. Was there a reason for it?”
Fawn shrugged, “Blue is sure that Scarlet’s erratic behaviour is due to the
torque and that may be true, either for the reason I explained or for Blue’s
theory. Against that, all I have is the vague feeling that somehow people are
behaving out of character all around the base. For instance, I suspect that
Captain Blue has been exercising rather less of his usual self-restraint, of
late. And he’s not wearing any unusual, antique jewellery.”
“What makes you say that?” the Colonel asked, putting his cap back on in
preparation for leaving.
“I’m a doctor… just trust me on this one,” Fawn said with a secretive smile.
Captain Scarlet continued to go through the motions of searching for the
assailant who had attacked Captain Blue with a face like thunder. His colleagues
on the search party equated his mood with concern for his friend, not with anger
that Banquo still lived. They were all deeply shocked and spoke in muted voices
about how badly injured the captain was. Several people asked about the nature
of Blue’s injuries and he had to remember to say that he had not been allowed to
see the victim.
When he had left Banquo, unconscious and bleeding profusely on the floor of his
quarters, he had not expected him to survive. Of course, his very survival was
further proof of Banquo’s unholy alliance with the weird sisters, that the witch
who had entrapped him in her web of deceitful lust, should hasten to his side
and find him, still living. It was final confirmation, if any were needed, that
Banquo was not to be trusted.
He had gone back to the sick-bay, hoping he might be able to finish his botched
task, but was denied access by the stern-faced doctor. His questions were
deflected with answers all too vague to reassure him of Banquo’s ultimate
demise.
Frustrated in his mission, he wandered into the room where his Lady was still
recovering from Banquo’s assault on her. She was looking pale and her bright
eyes were full of sadness. He wanted so much to confide in her, to describe how
they were part of the great scheme of things and explain his plans to her -
plans the Goddess was unfolding to him in the darkness of his dreams. He had no
doubt of his ability to defeat the forces ranged against him. He would undo the
wrongs of that ancient battlefield and unravel the chains of written words, in
which that all too perceptive and inquisitive dramatist had confined their story
over 500 years ago.
“My Lady,” he said and kissed her hand,
his concern apparent in his expressive, blue eyes.
Rhapsody removed her hand from his with a gentle tug, avoiding his gaze. She drew a shaky breath and looked
surreptitiously at his left arm seeing, as if for the first time, the red and
flaky skin. Hardening her heart to him she did as she had been asked.
“Oh Paul,” she breathed, “I am so worried about Adam. Doctor Fawn seems to think
he won’t recover. It seems he lost so much blood that there is the high
probability of permanent damage.”
“Do not concern yourself, my dear; I have already made arrangements for another
to take the part in the play.”
“Paul! The play is not important any longer
– Adam is dying!” She was genuinely shocked at his callousness.
Scarlet’s blue eyes narrowed, suspicious of her concern for the man who had
abducted her. Perhaps, like Guinevere, she too was not above reproach. He had
assumed the fault lay entirely with Banquo, but maybe he was wrong. He shrugged,
“That cannot be helped. We have worked so hard on this that we cannot draw back
now.”
Rhapsody’s face became a mask of disapproval, “And will you replace me too?”
“My dearest heart, no-one can replace
you if you only remain as true to me as I do to you! If you cannot take your
place beside me in the performance of our task, there must be another. Do not worry, this is better – because
now the fate they predict for you cannot take effect and we two shall
survive to triumph over our foes. How much sweeter that triumph will be, with
you at my side to share it.”
“Captain Scarlet,” she said sourly, drawing herself as upright as she could, “I
think you are going out of your mind! Stop behaving like this, Paul – or get out!”
His gaze hardened as he looked at her and his suspicions flooded to the surface
again, “As you wish, my Lady.”
“Stop calling me that – and go
away!” She was close to tears as he bowed himself out.
When Doctor Fawn came in to tell her Scarlet had left, he found her sobbing
inconsolably. “I can’t do this – I
can’t lie to him!” she sobbed. “Can’t you help him, Edward? He needs help…”
“He won’t let me near him, Dianne. Our best hope is Blue’s plan, whatever it is – indeed it maybe our only hope.”
|
||||
Halloween
The day of the performance dawned and everyone was on edge . The only person who
seemed oblivious to the tension in the air was Captain Scarlet, whose attention
was fixed on the performance that would see the culmination of his plans and
nothing else. Lieutenant Flaxen was being given final coaching through her
performance as Lady Macbeth and Captains Ochre and Magenta, after a private
conference with the Colonel, had agreed to go on stage that afternoon. Melody
Angel had learnt her lines and was enjoying herself as Symphony applied her
stage make-up.
Symphony had been another reluctant performer, but after the Colonel had had a
quiet word with her and – rather to
Destiny’s surprise - she had agreed to take part. Once Melody's make-up was
completed, the American applied herself to making the beautiful French woman
look like a wizened hag – always a
tough assignment – then, rather to
the director’s consternation; she disappeared along with her make-up kit before
she did her own.
The auditorium was starting to fill with curious spectators and the final
touches were being put to costumes and props when Colonel White sent for
Lieutenant Flaxen. He smiled at the young woman standing nervously before him,
and mentally compared her with the sight he had of Rhapsody in the same costume.
On the Angel it had looked regal and elegant; on Flaxen it looked what it was – heavy furnishing fabric and tawdry
gold ribbon. The Lieutenant just did not have the self-confidence to carry it
off. He hid his smile and tried not to fluster her any more than she was
already.
“Lieutenant I know you have a great deal on your plate at the moment, but I want
you to be aware of something that will happen during the performance, something
you, of all people, must not react to.”
Flaxen listened to the Colonel with eyes growing wider at every sentence and
finally promised to do her best. Colonel White smiled, “That is all I can ask of
any of my staff, Lieutenant. Good luck for the performance; although under the
circumstances you will understand if I do not say ‘break a leg’”
Flaxen blushed and nodded.
Because the Colonel had limited them to one performance the place was full to
capacity. Lieutenant Green, flattered at the interest being shown, had arranged
for a relay to the Amber Room and to the general lounge. Harmony was in Angel
One, with two Lieutenants, Sorrel and Dun, acting as Standby ‘Angels’ for the
evening.
The curtain rose on the first scene. Thunder and lightening rolled across the
stage as Symphony stood to deliver her first lines. She looked spectacular,
having coloured her hair with streaks of black, whilst make-up gave her fresh
complexion an unhealthy grey hue. She spoke her lines clearly, falling almost
naturally into the rhythm of the verse. Destiny answered her, her accent seeming
far less pronounced than it had at the rehearsals and Melody, standing in as
third witch, spoke with confidence. All three witches excelled in their
portrayal of evil, and as the play moved towards Macbeth’s first appearance a
tension built up.
Macbeth and Banquo entered downstage and moved towards the witches. Scarlet wore his plaid costume and
clearly visible around his left arm was the golden torque. Although Green was
much shorter than Captain Blue was he handled his overlarge plaid easily enough
and spoke Banquo’s lines with conviction. The witches set their lure, edging Macbeth towards his first murder
and the story began to unfold.
Lieutenant Flaxen’s entrance as Lady Macbeth was something of an anti-climax as
her accent with its broad, flat-vowels was at odds with her assumed station in
life, but as she got into her stride her confidence grew and the delivery
improved. A genuine shiver ran around the auditorium as she pleaded to the
forces of evil,
“Come, you spirits
That tend on mortal thoughts! unsex me
here,
And fill me from crown to toe top-full
Of direst cruelty…”
With Macbeth’s arrival the mood changed again as the relationship between the
couple was a world away from the sexual chemistry that had been so evident
between Scarlet and Rhapsody. His
address to her was perfunctory and her replies sounded shrewish. She had become
a nagging wife, urging her husband to murder for social advancement and he a
tired, hen-pecked creature.
“If we should fail-“
he moaned.
“We fail?
But screw your courage to the sticking
place,
And we’ll not fail,”
Flaxen chided him, her
voice heavy with derision, as she pushed him towards the chamber where the old
king lay sleeping.
Scarlet almost tripped over his plaid
as she shoved him but regained his balance in time. Once the deed was done and
Macbeth had fled from the carnage, she chided him further and, with the
time-honoured sigh of exasperated wives everywhere, went to replace the daggers
he should not have removed from the scene of the crime. A quiet ripple of
amusement went round the auditorium.
Scarlet was uneasy, things were not turning out as they should. His wife, the
beautiful and noble woman he had schemed for and with and whose strong character
he so admired had turned into an ungainly shrew. Their ambitious and daring plot
to win the ultimate reward risked becoming a farce at the hands of this woman.
His anger grew – these tribulations
could be traced back to that first Banquo
– the false friend who had taken his Lady from him and whose attempted murder
had come between them - the man he most devoutly hoped was now dead. It was
Banquo who had tried to take his torque - the symbol of his greatness - from him
and in so doing sever his links to the Goddess and her power. Banquo whose calm,
rational acceptance of the witches’ prophesies so enraged him. The weird sisters
had promised him he would be king - but they also promised to Banquo that his
descendants would wear the crown - making his kingship nothing but an empty
triumph, barren of all future honour.
His anger carried him through the next few scenes and into the murder of the man
who now represented the absent Banquo. It was with sheer malice that he drove
the theatrical dagger into the man’s flesh
– reliving the satisfaction he had felt when he had stabbed his erstwhile
friend. This time – there would be
no mistake - the play would ensure he died from the wound.
As the curtain came down and Lieutenant Green staggered to his feet complaining
about the force of the blows he’d received, he turned to look at Scarlet, seeing
an expression in the man’s eyes that gave him a shiver of déjà-vu. The years
evaporated and he was back on the stage at Port of Spain, looking at the
self-same expression in the eyes of Sam Myers. Scarlet spun away and stalked off
stage, leaving the Lieutenant stunned and shaken.
As he came off stage himself, he was met by a messenger from Colonel White – Lieutenant Claret, who was manning the
comms desk in the control room, needed his assistance and he was to remain there
until the Colonel relieved him.
Lieutenant Flaxen was on hand and he turned to her, “Audrey, can you make sure
Scarlet knows I’ve had to go? Banquo’s ghost doesn’t say anything so he doesn’t
need to a real person to react to… its annoying but the Colonel wouldn’t insist
if it wasn’t urgent.”
“I’ll see he gets the message, Seymour. Are you all right?”
“Yeah, just a bit bruised – I’m not
surprised Ochre didn’t want to have to fight him again if he caught a wallop
like I did just then!” He paused
and asked her, “Audrey, have you noticed Scarlet’s eyes lately?”
“What, me look Captain Scarlet in the eye? You have to be joking! You’d better
go…”
“Yeah, well, you just watch him
– he’s getting a bit carried away, that’s all…”
She leant forward and to his surprise kissed his cheek, “You worry too much,
Seymour,” she said and turned away with a
triumphant smile.
Green watched her go with a sheepishly happy grin and then turned and rushed off
to the control room – with luck
he’d still be able to catch the rest of the performance on the internal
video-network.
The banqueting hall set had been designed to look impressive and as Macbeth
welcomed his guests Flaxen took a seat on one of a pair of high backed thrones.
In accordance with Colonel White’s instructions she remained impassive when
amidst a general intake of breath, Captain Blue entered downstage, dressed in a
wide-necked, white medical gown, with a huge red stain around the shoulder. The
bruises around his throat were clearly visible even from the auditorium and his
sharp-boned face was an unnatural dough colour, his damp, blond hair was
plastered to his head and there were dark rings beneath his sunken eyes. The
whisper began to circulate that Magenta must have prepared a projection and this
had now come on unexpectedly, until one sceptic asked why the apparition
would’ve been shown as wearing a medical gown and the buzz of controversy
increased.
Scarlet halted mid-speech as he became aware of the ripple of disquiet. He
turned to stare at the man he had wanted dead and a shiver of confusion and fear
ran through him. To imagine Banquo dead and no longer a threat was one thing – but this was Adam, not Banquo –
he had killed Adam! Fighting for
his self-control the words tumbled from him, helter-skelter,
“Thou canst not say I did it:
never shake
Thy gory locks at me.
…If charnel-houses and our graves must
send
Those that we bury back, our monuments
Shall be the maws of kites”
Flaxen caught up with his erratic race through his speeches and gave the next
cue, “What! Quite unmann’d in
folly?”
“As I stand here, I see him!”
Scarlet yelled, pointing a hand at the silent Blue, who was now sitting next to
Flaxen, his level gaze riveted on his increasingly unnerved friend.
“Avaunt! And quit my sight! Let
the cold earth hide thee!
Thy bones are marrowless, thy blood is
cold;
Thou hast no speculation in those eyes
Which thou doest glare with.
… Hence, horrible shadow!
Unreal mockery, hence!”
With stately and unhurried movements, Blue rose and walked from the stage,
halting just before he entered the wings to turn and stare for one last long
moment at the petrified Scarlet. There was a ripple of applause from the
somewhat uneasy audience.
As the apparition left the stage, Scarlet sank to his knees, shock forcing his
common sense to begin to question the facts he thought he knew to be true. That
was not Banquo - it was Adam and
Adam wasn’t his enemy – how could
he have ever imagined such nonsense was true?
What had he done?
He stared with loathing at the torque around his wrist, knowing it was the
source of his misery and confusion. It
was glowing with a strange brilliance beneath the powerful stage lights. He no
longer wanted to wear it; he no longer wanted to be the champion of the Goddess.
He forced his hand towards it, fighting for control. As his right hand grasped
the torque he let out a low moan as the pain shot along his arm and settled with
excruciating insistence behind his eyes.
Voices murmured in his ear that he must believe - that he was required to
perform the tasks they demanded of him. He shook his head
– no, he had had enough of such
foolishness. He began to tug at the torque, which seemed to be embedded in
his flesh. The surprised onlookers saw a faint grey mist, rising from Scarlet
himself and starting to envelop him as he knelt. The temperature in the
auditorium dropped alarmingly as a cold wind sprang up from nowhere, making the
mist swirl in a tight spiral around the lonely figure of the kneeling man.
“Help me!” Scarlet cried, his fingernails digging into his own flesh as he tried
to loosen the torque. In answer to
his plea, Ochre and Magenta hurried out from the wings and knelt on either side of him.
“What can
I do?” Ochre asked simply.
“Take it off… it must come off…” Scarlet gasped as his strength failed him and
his right hand dropped away. It was sheer obstinacy that provided the momentum
for him to extend his left arm towards his friends. They gasped to see that it
was now bleeding profusely where the flesh had been almost peeled back by
Scarlet's frantic efforts to remove the metal band.
Barely able to hide his distaste, Ochre reached out and laid his hand on the
golden band. As he touched it an unearthly wail set
up in the theatre and the mist swirled in a chaotic dance around the three men.
To the fascinated members of the audience it looked like a huge, three headed
bird - a raven with its cruel hooked beak - as it swooped and swirled over them.
The unearthly noise rose in pitch until words became audible, spoken with
desperate fervour by voices that seemed young and ancient together:
“NO! It must not be,”
“Our champion must not fail!”
“He must perform the duties…”
“At last, we are so close to our revenge!”
“Come my sisters, join with me and we shall not
fail now:
Fair is Foul, foul is fair:
Hover through the fog and filthy air.
Thrice to thine, and thrice to mine,
And thrice again, to make up
nine.”
In the centre of the swirling mist, Ochre mustered his strength to pull at the
band and as it slipped easily down the bleeding arm, he fell backwards landing
just outside of the maelstrom. Shaking his head in surprised confusion, he
dropped the torque.
With a
cry of pain and loss Scarlet fell and curled into a ball cradling his arm
against his chest, gasping for breath. An ear-piercing
scream of desolate anger reverberated around the auditorium as the grey mist
broiled and swirled around him, strong enough to force Magenta back on his heels
and keep Ochre pinned to the floor. The screeching made those closest cover
their ears wincing at its intensity. Slowly Scarlet got to his hands and knees
and laboriously began to crawl towards the band, which was glowing with a
luminescence that owed nothing to the stage lights. As his hand reached out for
it, Flaxen stepped forwards and aimed a
vicious kick towards him. She made
contact with the torque, sending it spinning across the stage, far beyond
his reach. With a sob of exhausted relief, Scarlet
collapsed to the floor once more.
As
suddenly as it had appeared the mist vanished, rising to the ceiling before
funnelling back into the discarded torque and like a miniature tornado as the
wailing died away.
Moments later Scarlet felt arms lifting him and he looked up to see Magenta's
concerned face. Beyond his
immediate group stood Flaxen, with Destiny’s arms around her shoulders, their
faces mirroring Magenta’s concern, whilst the ever practical Melody extended her
hand to pull Ochre back to his feet. The torque lay ignored on the stage. The
small crowd parted and Doctor Fawn hurried up to examine Captain Scarlet and
behind him came Adam; Symphony moored to his heels, his left arm back in its
sling and a half smile on his ghoulish face.
Scarlet gasped as the apparition winked and croaked, “I always said you are such
a bloody ham, Paul.”
He gave a weak smile and said, “At least I
don’t look like Boris Karloff on a bad hair day!”
Magenta, having delivered his charge to the Doctor's care, turned towards the
auditorium and announced, “I think everything’s back to normal, Colonel – Scarlet and Blue are insulting each
other!”
Aftermath
Fawn kept Blue and Scarlet incarcerated in sick- bay but after his usual barrage
of tests on Captain Scarlet, he relented enough to permit them the solace of
each other’s company. Blue was
allowed into the side room where Scarlet was resting as his flesh wound repaired
itself.
They exchanged somewhat embarrassed smiles, and Scarlet’s broadened into a grin
as he said, “That was a pretty impressive performance, Blue-boy; you scared me
witless on the stage for a time.”
“Thank Karen; she did the make-up, after she had bawled me out for pretending I
was half-dead. Mind you, by the
time she’d finished telling me what she thought of me, I felt half-dead!” Blue
croaked in reply, his voice lurching from bass to treble like an adolescent’s.
“Look, Adam, I feel really terrible about all this… I honestly don’t know what
came over me the other night. I
just know I felt a murderous rage towards you – well, no, it wasn’t towards you
personally – it was towards Banquo, but I also knew with an utter certainty that
you were Banquo and that you had betrayed me…
you were my enemy.”
“I have never been that, Paul.”
“I know - I wasn’t thinking straight…” Scarlet studied his hands with a bleak
expression on his handsome face.
Blue recognised an unspoken plea for forgiveness and responded with his usual
generosity, “Hey, just don’t do it again, okay?
A guy could get paranoid if his partner takes too many pot-shots at him.”
Scarlet looked up with a grateful smile and admitted, “God knows what was going
on in this head of mine.”
Blue looked at him for a moment and pursed his lips.
“Well, I have a theory…” he began.
Scarlet laughed, “When don’t you have?” Blue flushed slightly and chastened his
friend continued, “Ignore me, Adam, I’d really like to hear your theory.”
“You might not,” the American said, perking up again.
“Fawn thinks I’m going mental.”
“Fawn thinks we are all doolally,” his friend commented dryly.
“It might do him good to have a hobby that doesn’t involve strapping
people to machines and driving them crazy with galloping boredom!”
Blue chortled. Paul hated every
minute he was kept in sick-bay and the very mention of the word ‘test’ was
enough to start him off on a diatribe about Doctors.
He gave a slight nod of his head in agreement with the general tenet of
the complaint and said with some hesitation, “Well, I thought you might have
been possessed by some force within the torque.”
Scarlet gave him a frowning glance, “Why do you say that?”
Blue shrugged, “I guess it was the way you wouldn’t let anyone touch the damned
thing. Besides, I did some research…”
Scarlet sniggered and then sobered in the face of his exasperated friend’s
raised eyebrows, “Sorry – research… yes, of course,
you would have done the research.”
“The books speak of a cult religion with shamans and votive offerings. Possession didn’t seem such an unlikely
option somehow, and you weren’t acting like yourself at all. You stopped eating, for one thing.”
Scarlet nodded emphatically, “And, Oh boy, am I famished now!” As if on cue, Blue fished in the pocket
of his dressing gown before handing his friend a large bar of chocolate. “Where
did you get this from?” Scarlet cried gleefully, opening the packet.
“From Karen, of course. I swear her
approach to the healing process is – eat chocolate and all will be well.”
“Don’t knock it – it works for me! Sometimes that woman is a complete genius! Want some?”
Blue shook his fair head, smiling as his friend wolfed the bar in double time.
“I don’t actually like chocolate that much,” he confessed.
Scarlet stopped mid-chew and gawped for a second. “You are weird, Svenson,” he
volunteered.
“So she is forever telling me,” he admitted with a surprisingly shy smile.
Scarlet choked on his chocolate, “I don’t think I want to know that!” They exchanged amused glances and Blue
actually blushed. “Well, moving swiftly on – you thought I was possessed?”
“Hmmm,” Blue nodded. “It tied in
with what Seymour said about how his friend’s character changed when he wore the
torque.”
“But Seymour has worn it – and his grandfathers – without, presumably, changing
into raving lunatics. You can’t
expect me to believe it was just me and Sam Myers that got taken over? But I can
see you do expect me to believe it – come on,
Adam, explain yourself.”
“If the torque had no effect on the Griffiths family members – there must be a
reason why it affected you and Sam Myers.
So - what it is you and Sam have in common?”
“Seymour?”
“Unlikely or everyone who knew him would go
doolally
too.” Blue sniggered as Scarlet acknowledged his choice of words with an
approving nod.
Scarlet shrugged and screwed the chocolate wrapper up, lobbing it into the waste
paper bin across the room with a deadly accuracy. “Well, however it managed it,
the torque undoubtedly managed to sow mistrust and uncertainty amongst many of
his friends on the base –everyone in CADS was carping at everyone else. The
Angels were forever bitching over their costumes, Ochre was just bitching – as
usual – and face it my friend, even you got stroppy at times! But, if it’s not
Seymour that’s the common factor, what is then?”
Blue looked a little put out by his friend’s comments on the company, but he
kept his tone neutral and answered the question, “It’s obvious when you think
about it - the Scottish play, of course.
Remember Rhapsody said Shakespeare was supposed to have included real witchcraft
in the text?”
Scarlet frowned in concentration.
The memories of the effect of the torque were fading, but the name of Macbeth
stirred them again – like lees in a bottle.
“Yeah – that was what obsessed me and I saw everyone
in terms of the play’s characters.
But in a strange way – I hated the play –I felt like it had me confined in a
straitjacket - stopped my escape routes and made my death inevitable. I was fighting to escape that as much as
anything. That’s why I can remember
knowing people were acting out parts, yet at the same time I knew they
represented a threat to me.
Especially the witches… they should have been on my side but the play made them my enemies – it was only because of the play that
they were dangerous. I was really
uptight about them– they seemed to embody all the evil I was sure was ranged
against me. It was hard not to
attack them sometimes.” He shuddered at the thought that he might – in his
‘madness’ have hurt any of the young women. “When I saw you and Karen on your
‘secret’ assignations – it looked like proof absolute that you were in league
with them - it was that which tipped me against you. That and the proof of your
liaison with Dianne, of course.”
“My what with Dianne? Oh, please tell me that you are not still going on about that stupid comment
I made months ago?”
“Hey, it didn’t seem stupid
to me! You and she were forever making eyes at
each other!”
“We were not! I think I can honestly say I have never made eyes at anybody,” Blue said taking umbrage at the suggestion.
“Ha!
That’s rich. I suppose
you’ll say you do the ‘little-boy-smile’ and the ‘come-hither eyes’ in all
innocence?”
“What?” Blue was outraged.
“That’s what Dianne called it
– “
“I can’t be held responsible
for what other people might say about me!
And anyway – I don’t believe she would
say that.”
“That’s all you know about it
then! I heard her talking to Flaxen when they were rehearsing. She didn’t know I
was there, and she called you ‘the guy with the little-boy-smile and the
come-hither-eyes’ – she wouldn’t say that of a complete stranger!”
“I do not have … either of
those!”
“You do, you know!”
“Well, in that case it is in
all innocence! I have no feelings that way for Dianne. You ought to know that -you know how I
feel about Karen. My God, you’re
the only person I have ever spoken to about it, so you should!”
“Proper little Don Juan
the other day weren’t you? Just
couldn’t leave them alone?” Scarlet continued light-heartedly. “A session with
Karen and a few hours all flirty with Juliette followed by a quick smooch with
Flaxen before you go and muscle in on Dianne. Come to think of it, Adam, it’s
not the kind of behaviour I would have associated with you – Ochre maybe, in his
wilder moments, but you? I’d say I wasn’t the only one acting out
of character. Maybe the effects of
the torque spread like ripples through the company?” He was so intent on
exploring the reasons for what had happened that he did not notice the effect
his words were having on Blue.
The American looked disconsolate as – for the first time – the
realisation of the full implications behind Fawn’s theory that more people than
Scarlet had been affected by the torque’s power hit him squarely. Memories of his passionate encounter with Karen flooded into
his mind, accompanied by the nagging doubt that it may only have happened
because she was ‘bewitched’’.
“A session with Karen,” Blue repeated
miserably and then, as another intolerable thought arose in his mind, he looked
sharply at the hapless man in the bed. “What do you mean? Were you
spying
on me?”
Scarlet opened his mouth to reply but a basic instinct for self-preservation
stopped the words before they reached his lips. He looked across at the man in
the chair and realisation began to dawn that, for some reason, he was beginning
to provoke Adam – and doing a good job of it too.
It was a little known fact that beneath Adam’s equable persona there lurked a
diabolical temper - all the more devastating for being so tightly reined in. Even he seldom witnessed it and had
rarely been the target for it, but it was not something he wanted to have to
face when he was feeling as shaky as he did right now.
“No…well, not for long,” he temporised. He could see that Blue was genuinely
angry and as he rose from his seat to glare down at Scarlet, the Englishman
sought to recover the situation. “I just meant I had seen you and Karen together… I saw you with Destiny and
Flaxen too later on that evening – and they were both all over you as well… that
is, I mean… well, don’t forget I saw you carrying Dianne out of the theatre…”
“If I ever thought you had been spying on Karen and me …”
“Adam, would I?”
Blue hesitated and his sharp blue eyes narrowed, “No, but I’m not sure how much
of the real Paul Metcalfe remained in Paul
Macbeth.”
“Enough to know where to draw the line,” Scarlet sought to reassure his friend,
but he had always found it hard to deceive Adam and it was his blue eyes that
looked away first. There was an
uneasy silence, as Blue paced the room obviously troubled.
“Why would the torque be associated so closely with Macbeth, do you think?”
Scarlet asked seeking to divert Adam from his suspicions.
“He protected the pagans–
although nominally Christian himself,” Blue said flatly.
Scarlet grimaced, it was going to take a while for Adam to lose that tincture of
doubt – the Svenson family were notorious for harbouring grudges, although his
friend had always seemed blessedly free of the practice until now.
He carried on brightly, trying to bury the tension between them, “That’s right;
I remember something about it now – Macbeth had connections with the Vikings in
the Orkneys – and many of them were still pagan of course. The King Macbeth usurped had been
unpopular and it was his son, Malcolm, who defeated Macbeth. Malcolm Canmore was
supported by an army of English mercenaries, paid for by King Edward the
Confessor who saw it as a crusade against a pagan monarch,” Scarlet rambled. “With Macbeth’s defeat the last remaining pagan
strongholds were stamped out and Malcolm and his Saxon Queen – who was later
canonised as Saint Margaret, no less - made damn sure everyone toed the Roman
line – not even the practices of the Celtic Christian Church were tolerated any
longer.”
“How
do you know that?” Blue asked– his interest sparked despite his anger.
“I’m a military historian remember?”
Blue gave a shrug. “Then you probably know more about it than I do, so there is
little point in my talking to you any more.
I’m going to get some sleep…”
“Adam…” Paul called in a conciliatory voice as his friend turned to leave; he
was reluctant to part on such a discordant note.
“Later, Paul. Just give me some time, willya? ”
Blue
sounded so dispirited that Scarlet persisted. “You do understand, don’t you?
I couldn’t stop myself… something just made me act that way. I would
never - never deliberately do such a
thing…” he said, unwittingly making things worse.
“Oh well, I guess that makes it all right then.” Blue’s scorn was merciless.
“Oh, come on Adam... you know me!” Scarlet’s own temper began to flare in the
face of such unexpected antagonism.
“Yes, I do – and you know me! I
make more allowances for you than I would ever do for anyone else I know. I tell myself – he’s under a strain, he has it rough! I tell
myself we are partners and that you would do the same for me. I thought I knew a man who held me in as
much respect as I did him – but maybe I was wrong.”
“No – you are not wrong! I respect you more than any man alive! Jeez – I owe you my life, Adam…”
“So you keep saying and you make it sound like I owe you a favour because of
it!”
“Now you are just talking rubbish!
You can’t believe I would deliberately do something you would hate so much? It wasn’t really me!”
“Yes it was… you have just said so!
You said you knew what you were doing…” Blue’s voice broke under the strain and
he swallowed, massaging his bruised throat with his hand.
“Adam, what’s wrong? This isn’t
like you…and we don’t argue like this.
I wonder if there isn’t some lingering influence from that damned torque making
us fight. It might not be a coincidence that after
Sam gave up the torque he ended up dying in a bar-room brawl…Adam?”
“I’m not
gonna talk about this now… I am going back to bed.”
Chastened, Paul watched the tall American move away across the room “I’m sorry,”
he said quietly. “I am so sorry…”
Partly because Doctor Fawn refused to allow Captain
Scarlet out of sick-bay and partly because the reports he was receiving from the
Doctor indicated that relations between his two Captains could only be described
as strained, the Colonel held the
de-briefing session in the men’s ward a few days later.
Everyone concerned with the performance was there. The four Angels sat on a bed across from
Captain Scarlet. Rhapsody was back
in uniform again having been declared fit that morning. She was still shaken by the events in the theatre and kept
looking with anxious eyes at the downcast man in the bed, as if she expected him
to vanish much as the grey mist had done.
Symphony‘s eyes were fixed with equal diligence on Captain Blue, who was also
back in uniform, even though his arm was still in a sling.
He had spent the morning closeted with the Colonel, and was
looking surprisingly down in the dumps.
She could sense that something
was bothering him and suspected it had something to do with Captain Scarlet and
the incidents surrounding the play.
She had heard from Rhapsody that the pair of them seemed to be at loggerheads
about something – Paul would not talk about it and she had not had a chance to
talk to Adam.
She had been trying to get to see him
for the past few days, but had been told by Fawn that he had asked not to see
anyone until his throat was less sore.
She had vehemently expressed her disbelief at that and insisted he would want to
see her – but to no avail – Fawn remained
unmoved. Now she was wondering why
Blue had not come to join her and was trying to catch his eye, but he was
steadfastly looking in the other direction. His whole demeanour
was far less genial than usual, as he was avoiding talking to anyone, although
he had exchanged a few friendly words with Lieutenant Flaxen, as she stood
nervously between him and an equally subdued Lieutenant Green.
Ochre and Magenta stood opposite them, somewhat closer to the bed. Ochre was chatting with Melody, who was
sitting closest to him, whilst Magenta was smiling at something Destiny was
saying. As Colonel White, with
Doctor Fawn in attendance, came towards the group the chit-chat ceased.
White cleared his throat and nodded grave thanks as Lieutenant Green moved a
chair for him to sit on. Confident he had everyone’s undivided attention the
Colonel began immediately, “I want to bring you all up to date with events
concerning the incidents that have happened over the past few days. Firstly, the golden torque has been subjected to every test
imaginable by Doctor Giardello of Spectrum Intelligence’s R&D department. There
is no sign that it has been tampered with in any way that could equate with
Mysteron activity, as far as we are aware of their capabilities. Everyone knows what they saw and what
they heard on stage the other day and I, for one, have no reasonable solution to
offer. Suffice to say that Captain
Scarlet is on the road to recovery and that the torque can now be returned to
its owner – which is you, I believe, Lieutenant Green?”
Green nodded unhappily, “If you please, Colonel, I don’t want it back. I saw what it did to Captain Scarlet and
I know now what it must have done to Sam Myers. I feel as if I am responsible
for his death by lending him the thing.
I gave it Captain Scarlet to use in the play and he can keep it if he wants to.”
Scarlet immediately shook his dark head, “No, I don’t want it near me. I’m not sure I could resist the
temptation to put it on again.”
“Then perhaps it would just be best to destroy it? Green suggested.
“No, you can’t do that,” Blue interjected surprising them all. “It is an ancient artefact – it should be in a museum.”
“Would any museum want it with such a record of destruction attached to it?”
Green argued.
“Museums are places with little time and no imagination for the supernatural,
Lieutenant. I’m sure many of them
would jump at the chance of acquiring the torque,” reasoned the American, with a
sympathetic glance at his young friend.
“What I don’t understand,” Ochre began, “Is why Scarlet couldn’t take it off
when he wanted to and yet it slipped off as smooth as silk when I tried.”
When no-one had an answer, Blue hazarded a guess, “Well, you were playing
Macduff, the man who defeats Macbeth. So it seems likely that, within the truth
as presented by the play, you would be the victor in any struggle between the
both of you. Captain Scarlet has said - that whilst he was under the influence -
he was struggling to break free of the
straitjacket of the plot. Isn’t
that so, Captain?”
Scarlet looked up and nodded, “Yes, Captain, I did say that.
Whatever was messing with my mind hated the play and yet, had to use it
to achieve its aims…”
“Which were?” Ochre interjected.
Scarlet shifted uneasily, “As far as I can remember – to be revenged on the
treachery of Banquo and Macduff which had led to Macbeth’s defeat at Dunsinane -
the historical Macbeth, I mean.
Something wanted revenge for his death…” he shrugged, “and she was determined to
get it.”
“She?” Rhapsody ventured to ask.
“Yes, a woman – or women… they say Hell
hath no fury like a woman scorned, don’t they?
Well, this fury must have lasted for millennia.”
Doctor Fawn gave a slight cough and said, “I’m not saying I agree with this
possession theory, but I did look up Ochre’s medical records – just out of
interest, you understand? – and it would appear that you were born by emergency
caesarean section, after your mother had had a fall at home.”
Magenta grinned, “So not only were you playing Macduff – but you are also not ‘of woman born’!”
“You’re making me sound like an alien,” Ochre complained.
“Where is that Mysteron detector?” Magenta asked casually and a ripple of
laughter went around the ward.
Colonel White coughed again to remind them of the serious nature of the meeting.
“It is all very well to laugh at it now, but the fact remains Captain Scarlet
attacked and seriously injured Captain Blue. Who knows what might have happened
if the torque had not been removed.”
“Quite so, Colonel. Even now,
Scarlet’s lost a good deal of weight and his vital signs are all over the
place,” Fawn complained. “I am sure
his retrometabolism is trying to combat whatever infected his system – but as
this has been like a low grade infection over many months, he is seriously
weakened and I won’t let him out of my sight for the next fortnight.”
“A fortnight?” Scarlet wailed.
“Yes, a fortnight. And one without any illicit food and drink parcels - Captain Blue, please note. I want a chance to watch how your
regenerative processes deal with this problem – it could tell us a great deal
about your retrometabolism,” Fawn said implacably.
“But a fortnight? …Have a heart, Edward, I could get up now, I feel fine!”
Fawn pressed his lips together in an effort not to smile. “Maybe – just maybe - if you co-operate I will let you out in
a week... or so.” And Scarlet
had to be contented with that.
“What about the torque?” Green asked after the laughter had died down.
“Well,” Rhapsody said, “My father knows the director of the British Museum quite
well, I am sure I could ask him for an introduction to the relevant expert there
and get an opinion on it, at least.”
“That’s a good idea, Rhapsody. If everyone concerned with the article agrees?”
Colonel White looked around at his gathered staff. Everyone nodded, just in case
their approval was being sought. “It might be as well to determine who does own
the torque before we dispose of it.
Lieutenant, you are sure you want to give it to Captain Scarlet?” Green
nodded. “And you, Captain, do not want it?”
“No sir, I do not.”
“Then…?”
“I’ll take it,” Blue said quietly.
“I don’t want it, but I’ll undertake to get rid of it.
I have no desire to try the thing on, you can be sure of that,” he added as
Scarlet looked across with some concern and Symphony let out a muted groan of
alarm.
“You are quite sure, Captain Blue?” Colonel White asked, weighing the man before
him in his perceptive gaze.
“Yes,
sir, I’ll get rid of it for you and, if it is worth anything, I can at least
make sure the money gets to the right people.”
“Maybe we should start calling him ‘Frodo’?” Ochre whispered to Melody, who
couldn’t quite contain her snort of laughter.
Blue glanced across at his compatriots with an exasperated grin, “My arm may be
in a sling and my voice still sound
like something from The Chipmunks, but
there’s nothing wrong with my hearing, Rick.” Nevertheless, he didn’t seem too
annoyed and a ripple of amusement went round the room, dissipating the tension
that had been growing.
Colonel White deemed it an appropriate
time to change the subject and he said,
“It may also interest you all to know that I have had a long and serious
discussion with the World President, concerning the paucity of support staff for
the Angel flight. And he has,
finally, agreed that we may begin training a team of standby Angels. They will become an air display team – much as our own Angels
were at the start of their training.
I have already put forward the names of six candidates and the agents at SI will
start vetting them. Their full
Spectrum training will start after Christmas, at Koala Base.”
There was a murmur of approval from everyone present.
Colonel White continued, “I have designated Captain Blue as the staff
officer to oversee the technical side of their course.” He gave Scarlet and Blue a quick glance
and added, “You will necessarily need time to prepare for this assignment,
Captain, and so, you will be exempt from front line service for the duration.”
“Yes,
sir.”
Everyone immediately put Blue’s sombre mood down to the fact that he must
had been informed of this before the meeting started and was obviously less than
ecstatic at his new posting.
“But sir…” Scarlet protested, glancing across at his partner and willing him to
look at him.
But Blue’s gaze, like the Colonel’s, was directed solely at Symphony Angel, who
was looking with horrified outrage at her commanding officer. He saw Destiny’s
hand move to her friend’s arm, advising caution as the Colonel continued,
“Lately, there have been some quite inexcusable breaches of the regulations
masquerading as rehearsals and these must stop! I will not tolerate such
flagrant disregard for discipline.
If there are any further incidents such as the fight between Captains Scarlet
and Ochre … or the other infringements that have come to my attention, the Drama
Society will be wound up. Do I make myself clear, Ladies and Gentlemen? Besides,
it was never my intention that staff officers should work in rigid partnerships,
so it might be as well if, following recent events, you all work on separate
missions for the time being.” He glanced at the dejected Blue and the indignant
Scarlet.
Before Scarlet could voice his indignation, Blue said soberly, “Sir, there is no
need for that, I have no quarrel with Captain Scarlet.
I hold no grudge against him for what happened – it wasn’t his fault.”
However unhappy Blue was about recent events he could accept them on an
intellectual level - that much was evident.
“And I have apologised and I do apologise unreservedly…” Scarlet said
emphatically.
“I am sure you have,” White said as he saw Scarlet send an unspoken plea towards
his friend. Blue gave a slight smile in response. They were clearly still ill at
ease with each other, but it didn’t look as if it was a major breach in their
friendship – maybe time was all that was needed to repair the damage. He continued, “However, I would feel
better if all this had died down completely before you two worked as full
partners again. Quite apart from
the necessity caused by Scarlet’s incarceration in sick-bay for the next week or
so and Blue’s secondment, I think it would be as well to swap all the duty
shifts around – temporarily. It
will mean re-doing the duty rotas, of course.”
“Ah, non,” Destiny sighed.
Once the meeting was over, Symphony hastened to Blue’s side as he stood,
listening to Ochre and Magenta.
She squeezed in between the two officers and took hold of his good arm saying,
“I am sure you two gentlemen will excuse us – we have things to talk about…”
Ochre gave a knowing smile and nudged Magenta’s ribs, “Oh, sure… come on Pat…I
want a word with Scarlet before we go.
Catch you later, Blue…”
Blue tried to remove his arm from her grasp, but she held on and steered him to
the quietest corner of the sickbay.
“Now,” she said, “what’s wrong and why are you avoiding me?”
“I’m not…” he lied.
“I won’t dignify that with a response.
Adam, what’s wrong, what have I done?”
“Nothing.”
“So why are you mad at me?”
“I’m not.”
She gave an exasperated sigh, “Look, let me put it this way… talk to me now and
we can deal with whatever it is –
leave it until you’ve been to Koala and we
will have problems…potentially
terminal
problems. “ He still gave no answer
and eventually she drew a deep breath. “Okay, have it your way. You know where I am if you want to talk
to me, Captain Blue, and I guess I should congratulate you on adding another
notch to your bedpost!” She turned
to leave but suddenly spun round to face him, her eyes flooded with unshed
tears. “You know, I thought you were different
from most of the men I’ve known. I believed the things you said and like an
idiot I thought … I really thought you
cared for me.”
He stared
despondently at her, “I do… I do care…”
She raised a cynical eyebrow. “Then
why are you being so callous? I
thought better of you – especially after what happened…”
He swallowed and sought to control the quaver in his voice.
“But that’s just it... I had the awful idea that what happened was
because of the effect of the torque… and that …” he petered into silence.
“Yes?”
“That you would blame me for what happened. That, maybe you wouldn’t have wanted
it to happen – not then, not like it did… that
it might not mean as much to you as it did to me…” he blurted.
She stared at him in disbelief. “Adam Svenson, for a
supposedly
intelligent man you are an absolute
idiot at times! I’ve never heard such crap! I really don’t know what to say…”
He gave a rueful smile. “Don’t worry; It won’t matter what you say because you
can’t be harder on me than I was on myself.
I’ve made myself completely miserable.”
“It serves you right! You should have talked to
me
if you wanted to know what I was
feeling… You’ve said often enough, that you can’t second guess me, haven’t you?”
“Yes, Karen. You are quite right, Karen.”
“And for your information, if it takes some ancient, demon-riddled piece of
jewellery to finally get you to make a move… well, I can live with that.”
“Yes, Karen.”
“But you really had me thinking that, having got what you wanted, you’d dropped
me to go chasing after someone else! And I don’t like to think badly of you,
even when you richly deserve it...” She placed a hand on his injured arm and
smiled up into his blue eyes.
“Yes, Karen.”
“Pre-emptive
meekness won’t get you off the hook, either,” she warned him playfully.
“Yes, Karen… I mean, no, Karen.” His lips twitched as he fought a smile.
She sniggered at him and then suddenly frowned, “Did you
volunteer
to go to Koala base on the strength of this nonsense?”
He shook his head, “The Colonel said he was sending me because I was ‘the obvious choice’.”
“And that’s the only reason?” he grimaced and she pressed, “Are you lying to me,
Adam?”
“He was less than pleased to think we might be blatantly breaching regulations. He asked me why you were coming to my
quarters, on the night you found me.”
“Oh that,” she grimaced. “I got ticked off for that too – but it was my fault
not yours – why doesn’t he bawl me out?”
“I am the senior officer,” Blue reminded her.
“Technically you are, I suppose.
But it’s unfair to hold you responsible for the stupidity of others.” She sighed
ruefully. “What did you tell him?”
“I said I didn’t know why you were coming, but that I was very pleased you had
decided to ‘drop by’- which was true.
If you hadn’t come to find me, I would have bled to death before anyone missed
me in the morning.” He reached for her hand and raised her fingers to his lips. “Why were you coming?”
“I thought we might’ve… shared a hot drink after our duty shifts…” she coloured
slightly. “That’s all.”
“Now who’s lying?” he smiled and grinned as she blushed.
“Well, we
still have a few weeks before you go,” she said, linking her arm with his good
one. “And at least we won’t have to spend any more time
rehearsing! Actually, I rather think we’ve got it
down to a fine art already….”
Postscript.
December
The taxi pulled up before the courtyard of the British Museum in London and
disgorged its two passengers. The young woman was of medium height and slender,
with a remarkable head of long, copper-red hair.
She was dressed in a smart, tailored, two-piece suit, in pale grey and holding a
leather briefcase as she waited for her escort to pay for the taxi.
As the man stood back from the cab driver’s window it became obvious that
he was tall, broad shouldered and fair haired. He was also wearing a suit, but over that he wore an open,
calf-length, belted overcoat of black leather.
They crossed the courtyard through the smattering of people waiting for the
museum to open. At a side-entrance
they rang a bell and the woman announced through an intercom, “Lady Dianne Simms
and Mr Adam Svenson to see Professor Hayward.”
The door was opened and the couple were ushered through to the warren of
corridors that opened out onto workrooms and offices.
Professor Hayward was different than they had expected, with a thick mop of wavy
blondish hair over a square, strangely boyish face.
He blinked at them behind large pale-framed spectacles and extended a
hand, “Welcome, Lady Dianne, Mr Svenson, it is a pleasure to meet you both. Can I get you a cup of tea? There’s always one on the go around
here?”
“Thank you, that would be most welcome,” Lady Dianne said, carefully placing the
briefcase on the floor beside the chair the Professor was ushering her into to.
He skipped over to the door and called, “A pot of tea and three cups, please,
Deirdre – there’s a love.”
Mr Svenson had fetched himself a chair from by a computer desk and was now
removing his overcoat as the small office was rather close. He perched on the chair, his long legs stretched out
before him so that he looked too big for it.
Lady Dianne gave him a conspiratorial smile as the slight, energetic professor
continued to flit about the room.
Deirdre brought in the tea and the Professor poured them a drink from an
elaborate, but badly chipped tea pot into the mismatched china cups. Lady Dianne picked one up and examined it carefully, “Minton
bone china, isn’t it? From around the 1860’s I would say.”
“Is it really?” Hayward said delighted, “Well, quite out of my period you know,
but I don’t like to think of these things just gathering dust.”
“You should take care of it Professor; it's worth quite a lot of money, if you
have the set.”
“Oh no, just what you see, I’m afraid.
Things get left here by all sorts of people.”
“Perhaps, we should let you see the torque, Professor,” Svenson hinted.
“Well, yes of course… how exciting.
From your description of it, Lady Dianne, I am expecting quite a treasure.”
She lifted the briefcase and flicked the combination lock to open it. Inside the case there lay just one item
– wrapped in a large, bright yellow duster, was the golden torque.
With gentle hands the professor lifted it out and spread it on the desk, making
little squeaks of delight as he examined it.
“Look at the carving and the metal work… I have rarely seen such a fine
example…. Where did you say you got it from?”
“A friend of ours says it was discovered by one of his forebears on a beach in
the Caribbean,” Svenson explained.
“The Caribbean? Oh not, it’s not
American… not even pre-Columbian…most certainly not. This is definitely Celtic.”
He produced a magnifying glass and examined it carefully, "A very fine example
and in marvellous condition. It has
been kept somewhere safely, I expect.”
“No, until a few months ago no-one had any idea of its possible importance and
it was being used as a paperweight before it was worn by another friend as a
part of a theatrical costume.”
“My goodness, Mr Svenson! That is highly inappropriate for such an important
artefact. Can you credit it?” Professor Hayward went back to his examination and
Lady Dianne poured herself another cup of tea and settled down to wait. Finally he put the torque down and gazed
almost sternly at them across the battered desktop.
“My dear young people,” he began, “I have to say that this is the most singular
example of Celtic craftsmanship I have ever seen.
There are the very finest carvings on the main band, which show a King or
a Priestly figure being sacrificed for his people amidst a wonderful depiction
of a forest. Quite an unusual
subject for Celtic art – in fact I have never heard of it's like.” Hayward
peered over his glasses at his visitors.
“I don’t know what you intend to do with this artefact, but I have to say
that the museum would be most interested in acquiring it – most interested.”
“How would it be kept?” Lady Dianne asked, unexpectedly.
“Well, I would want a protective case and a controlled atmosphere to protect the
carvings. We have quite a splendid
display of Celtic metalwork and this would be the centrepiece – oh, most
certainly - without a doubt.”
“No-one would wear it?” she asked.
“Wear it? My dear young Lady, you don’t wear works of antiquity! Certainly, no-one would wear it. I should think so…”
“How much is it worth?” Adam asked suppressing his smile.
“It is priceless, Mr Svenson.”
“So it’s expensive… how much?” he repeated.
“I suppose I mustn’t expect an American to understand the importance of an
object like this…” Professor Hayward began with a disapproving sigh.
“Forget it, Professor. I want
you to value it so that I can make sure that an appropriate sum gets to the
people it belonged to before I acquired it.”
“Well, I am sure if we had to bid for it… I could put a case to the Trustees for
an amount up to…” he named a sum which made Blue smile.
“Well, that sounds quite acceptable to me, Professor.
But I wouldn’t want to put you to the trouble of asking the Trustees for
money – you can keep it,” Blue said reaching into his inside jacket pocket.
“I beg your pardon, Mr Svenson?”
“You do want it? Then it’s yours –
free, gratis and for nothing!”
“My dear sir, I mean… you can’t be serious about this… its market value…”
“Is an irrelevance to me. Put it in
a case, Professor, and don’t ever let it encircle another man’s arm,” Blue said
sternly.
“As a bequest, do you mean? Well,
certainly the museum would be delighted to accept such a magnificent donation –
once we have proof that the item is yours to give… you understand my caution, Mr
Svenson, I am sure.”
“Absolutely, Professor.” Blue produced a wad of papers, which he opened to
display an impressive collection of signatures and seals.
“I took the liberty of having the relevant documentation prepared before
our meeting. These papers should
take care of everything you need to know – all duly notarised by lawyers in
Trinidad, Boston and here in London.”
“Well, I am sure…. The Museum’s lawyers will be only too happy to peruse your
documents and in a week or so…”
“No time for that I’m afraid. I
leave for Australia in a few days and expect to be gone for several months. If you want the torque you must sign for
it now. I need a receipt that I
have left it in your possession. If
subsequent to your lawyers’ perusal of the documents, you have concerns or wish
to return the torque – well Lady Dianne’s father has kindly agreed to make sure
a message reaches me. I would like
it to remain in Britain, but I am sure I could interest many of the museums in
The States. ”
That threat was enough - without a moment’s hesitation the Professor reached for
his pen and signed the necessary papers. “Oh, my goodness – such a bequest!” His
eyes glowed with excitement behind his glasses, “The Adam Svenson bequest.”
“Hey, no not that… call it…” he glanced at Rhapsody.
“Call it the Scarlet Charm bracelet…” she suggested with a smile.
“A quite unsuitable name for it, if I may say so, Lady Dianne.
No, such a generous bequest must be honoured with the donor’s name!”
"You want a
name? Then call it … the Stefan Svenson
Bequest - after my Grandfather."
"Excellent!
Your generosity is very much appreciated - the torque will be most carefully
studied by academics for years to come!"
"Just make sure they don't try it on," Svenson warned and with a
conspiratorial laugh the couple left, leaving the professor to examine his new
acquisition.
“What about the money, Adam?
It was a lot more than I expected. I guess if it belongs to anyone it belongs to
Seymour.”
“I spoke to him before we left Cloudbase and we agreed that
if it was worth anything we’d split the amount between Sam’s family, Seymour’s
old school and him and his brothers and sisters.
I should say that the school’s share will buy a whole library of play scripts
for Miss Adrian and the kids.”
“A whole new school, I should imagine!” she laughed. “But
where will all this money come from?” she persisted.
He placed a long finger against his nose and said, “I am
sure my Father will be delighted to learn that his generosity to the British
Museum has been recognised with a plaque in his father’s name.”
“Oh Adam, you can’t expect
him
to pay for it…”
“Why ever not? “
“He might not agree to it…it is a lot of
money.”
“You leave my Father to me….He can offset it against tax and
everybody wins that way! Now, where did you say was the best place for Christmas
shopping? Karen’s given me a list as long as my
arm and I still need to get Paul a birthday present – how anyone could be so
inconsiderate as to get born this close to Christmas is beyond me.”
He laughed and stretched an arm out to hail a taxi.
The End
Other stories from Marion Woods
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