Thanks
to Hazel Kohler – with some help from Mary J. Rudy – who had graciously offered
to be my beta reader and had proof-read this story. This is this chapter revised version. C.B.)
Epilogue
“He was
dead before the helicopter actually touched down.”
Rhapsody
Angel stared blankly at Destiny, seated across from her in one of the couches
in the officers’ rest lounge. She frowned deeply. “Dead? Are you sure?”
Destiny
nodded quietly. “Yes, quite sure,” she answered. “He wasn’t breathing anymore,
his heart had stopped beating… He was dead.” She sighed heavily, looking down
uneasily at her hands. “It turned out he had been hit by a sharp piece of
wreckage when the capsule exploded,” she explained. “It severed an artery close
to his heart… Can you imagine that? Every beat of his heart was actually
pumping his blood out of him. There wasn’t much left of it when the medics from
the helicopter took him.” She looked at Rhapsody. “He saved my life yet again. If he had not been shielding me with
his body, I would have been hit by that piece of wreckage… And I would have
died in his stead.”
“Except
you would not have revived afterward, the way he did,” Rhapsody added quietly.
“Yes. That
is something I am not about to forget. It was quite amazing… Grey told Ochre
and me that Paul would be all right, that we had no need to worry about him. He
tried to remind us that he was indestructible.” Destiny shook her head. “I
didn’t know exactly what it meant, before. But after what had happened in those
mountains, I THOUGHT I had it all figured out: he walked out unscathed from
that jet crash. The wound he received to his head took only a few minutes to
completely disappear. And his hand… Mon
Dieu, his hand was completely crushed… And yet, less than an hour later, it
was perfectly all right. So I thought he could heal from any wound, no matter
how severe … and maybe, he could not be killed… just maybe.”
“You
weren’t sure of that,” Rhapsody noted.
“It seemed
so incredible,” Destiny sighed again. “And yet… I saw him DIE. Oh yes, he could
be killed… but to actually think he would REVIVE…” She shrugged. “Even after
Captain Grey’s insistence that it would actually happen, we kept staring at the
instruments they hooked Paul to in that helicopter. We were sceptical about it.
And it was obvious even Grey had some doubts… even if he had already witnessed
it before. We all felt pretty relieved when we saw that monitor showing some
signs of life. When we finally arrived on Cloudbase, Paul was well on his way
to complete recovery.”
Rhapsody
smiled widely. “That’s the third time you called him ‘Paul’,” she reminded her
friend.
Destiny
gave it some thought before answering serenely. “It comes so naturally. It does not feel awkward to call him ‘Paul’.
No, it feels right.” She looked down again. “He IS Paul. The things he did in
those mountains… A Mysteron would not have done it. I’ve seen what those
reconstructs were actually all about. Commander Torey was dedicated only to his
masters’ orders. He was cold, unfeeling, calculating, and cruel… Paul could
never be that way. He’s the same caring, warm, courageous man I have known all
along. I recognized his spirit down there… I recognize his soul. I should never
have doubted him. And thinking what those doubts caused… We could all have been
killed, because of that.”
“You
weren’t the only one at fault, Juliette.”
“But I had
a great deal of responsibility in all of this. Paul didn’t want the Colonel to
learn about what really happened with Captain Ochre and me… He actually asked
us not to put this on our official report.”
“Once
again, showing you he’s the real thing,” Rhapsody noted, smiling broadly. “Who else but Paul Metcalfe would risk doing
a thing like that?”
“He’s
trying to protect us. Again. Well, I must say, I wasn’t too sure to follow his
lead in this direction. I did it for Ochre, more than for myself, actually. But
I felt so guilty over what I personally did in those mountains… Fortunately, it was taken out of my hands.”
“Meaning
what?” Rhapsody asked, frowning. “I know you saw the Colonel this morning…You…
didn’t talk to him about this, did you? ”
Destiny
shrugged. I had to, she thought, but
she did not say that to her British friend. It wasn’t a difficult decision to
make, however. Colonel White HAD come to see her that very morning. Why he
suspected something was wrong with these reports was beyond her knowledge,
though. The talk she had with him did a lot of good; she had felt quite
relieved afterward. She was just a little worried that Paul would eventually
have some problem over that whole falsified report affair. But the Spectrum
commander didn’t seem to have taken it the wrong way. Not TOO wrong, anyway. He
had something else on his mind…
“Don’t
concern yourself too much about this,” Destiny said to Rhapsody. “The question
has been taken care of.” Thinking of the Colonel provided her with a reason to
change the subject. “By the way… did you know somebody almost destroyed the
Colonel’s rose tree in the Promenade Deck?”
It had the
result she had hoped for; she saw her friend frown. “It’s been the talk of the
base since yesterday,” the British pilot said carefully. “It was discovered
shortly after you and the others left… How did you find out?”
“You need
to ask? The Colonel grilled me this morning. It seems he’s on the lookout for
the culprit.” Destiny glanced curiously at Rhapsody. “Do you know anything
about this?”
“Colonel
White asked me the same question,” Rhapsody retorted. “Of course I don’t know
anything about it.”
She was
lying and Destiny knew it. Captain Scarlet himself had told her about the tree,
and Rhapsody’s presence when the accident happened. But since the British girl
had chosen to be discreet about it by not saying anything, even to the one she
considered her closest friend, Destiny decided not to press. Instead, thinking
again of Scarlet and of all that had happened with him the day before, she
lowered her eyes, and her voice was filled with embarrassment when she spoke up
again:
“About Paul,
Dianne…”
“Yes?”
“You were
right, you know? You were right all along about him, and I was wrong. So
terribly wrong. Now I only hope he finds it in himself to forgive me for how I
treated him until now.”
“You
actually doubt that?”
Destiny
looked up at Rhapsody, who was still watching her, with a smile on her face.
The British pilot shook her head. “Come on, you should know him better than
that: that same ‘warm, caring man’ you described earlier isn’t able to carry a
grudge. Especially if it’s against somebody who’ll actually admit to having
been wrong.”
“Yes, that
I know,” Destiny murmured. “But under the circumstances, I would not hold it
against him if he would not talk to me anymore.”
At that
precise moment, the door slid open and Captain Scarlet strode in; he nodded to
the two women seated there and, whistling a happy tune, went directly to the
coffee distributor. The girls followed him with their eyes and watched as he
poured himself a big cup. He added some milk and turned around, stirring the
warm beverage, when he suddenly realized he had become the centre of their
attention. He instantly stopped whistling and stared back at the girls with a
perplexed frown.
“What?” he
asked. “Is there something wrong?”
“We were
planning a ski trip to Aspen,” Rhapsody told him, causing Destiny to smile in
amusement. “Would you care to join us?”
“Oh, very
funny!” Scarlet threw the spoon he was using onto the counter behind him. “I
don’t want to see any more snow for a LONG time!”
“Provided
your job doesn’t send you to Antarctica,” Rhapsody remarked, standing up. “If
you’ll excuse me, Captain, I’ve got some business to attend to.”
“What kind
of business?” Scarlet asked, frowning again.
“Er… ah…
things. They can’t wait. See you later.”
Rhapsody
shot an understanding look at Destiny and then hurriedly left the room,
followed by Captain Scarlet’s puzzled glance.
“Was that
because of me, or am I imagining things?” he asked.
“Don’t
worry,” Destiny replied with a warm smile. “Rhapsody isn’t about to act toward
you as foolishly as I did. I’d dare say she thinks you’re the best thing to
happen to this Earth since sliced bread.”
“Seeing
the way she flew out of here, it doesn’t really look like that!” Scarlet was
still asking himself if he should take it as a compliment, being compared to
sliced bread.
“She just
thought you and I should be left alone together for a talk,” Destiny explained.
“Really?”
Scarlet came to sit next to her and put his cup on the low table in front of
them. “So, what do you want to talk about?” he asked with a grin. “Sport?
Politics? Don’t tell me it’s about a ski trip to Aspen, you will really
disappoint me…”
Destiny
smiled slightly. His humorous tone and the twinkle in his clear blue eyes were
good to see.
“You look
good,” she noted.
“I feel
good,” he replied. “I think I could take on the world right now… No, wait. Some
people may take that the wrong way, considering recent events. Let me rephrase
that: would you settle for me taking on the Mysterons?”
His
bad-taste humour wasn’t really out of character, Destiny thought. In any case,
it was more proof that he was really back.
“You’re
looking pretty grim, love,” Scarlet noted, frowning. “Why the long face?”
“I acted
pretty badly toward you these last weeks,” Destiny said, looking down. “I was
even cruel to you…”
“Forget
about it, Juliette. I told you I could understand your reasons.”
“Perhaps,
but I would like to explain myself… even if it doesn’t excuse my behaviour
toward you.”
“If it
makes you feel better…”
Destiny
nodded; she was keeping her eyes down, not daring to face Scarlet. Her throat
was tight and her heart heavy. She could feel the tears coming to her eyes.
“Paul, I…” She finally looked up to him. She could see the puzzlement in his
handsome face. He was obviously wondering what could put her in such a state.
To his amazement, she burst into tears, right into his shoulder. “I saw you
dead,” he heard her say in a muffled voice, filled with tears and pain.
“Hey! Come
on, now!” he protested with a soothing tone, taking her into a warm hug. “Don’t
cry over me… Twice in two days, this is starting to be embarrassing, you know!
Especially since I know you’re not the crying type.”
“I can’t
help it…” the girl replied, sobbing.
“Stop it,
please! You’re making my brand new uniform wet!”
Scarlet
heard her giggle through her tears. That
did the trick, he thought, smiling. He put his hand under her chin and
forced her to look at him. “Calm down, Juliette. I’m not dead… Far from it,
actually. What happened in the mountains is over now.”
She shook
her head. “That is not what I’m talking about,” she retorted.
“What are
you talking about, then?”
She
hesitated a second, and bowed her head again. “After your car crash a month
ago? I… I saw your dead body.”
Scarlet
frowned. “What?” he murmured. He raised her head again, taking it between his
hands to look into her eyes. “You actually saw my body? The original one?”
She
nodded. “I was the one who identified it and signed the death certificate as
witness.”
“Oh, God!”
Scarlet exclaimed. “Don’t tell me…” His tone changed then, to a furious growl,
and his eyes flashed angrily. “I’m going to wring Fawn’s neck!”
“Don’t be
angry at him, Paul. I actually insisted to do it,” Destiny protested quietly.
“Why in
God’s name did you let yourself in for that?” Scarlet asked her. He nodded his
understanding. “Now I see why you had so much trouble accepting me, after
seeing that,” he murmured, looking at her with compassion. He blew out a heavy sigh and let himself
slump against the back of the couch. He looked thoughtfully at the young woman.
“You must have felt awful,” he realized. “I know I did.”
“What do
you mean, ‘you did’?” Destiny asked him, puzzled.
“I saw the
state the body was in.”
“Oh, no…”
Destiny murmured, starting to go pale. “You didn’t… see the body?”
“Yes, I
did,” Scarlet nodded. “They didn’t want
me near the actual body, at first… But
I was rather insistent.” He scratched his head. “Actually, Adam helped me convince the Colonel and Doctor Fawn.
They were reluctant to let me go into the morgue, but… they finally
agreed. Adam came in with me. He didn’t want me to face it alone.” He
shook his head. “It was a sorry sight,
wasn’t it? I nearly broke down myself
when I saw it… If Adam hadn’t been there…” He shrugged uneasily and cleared his
throat. “I won’t bore you with the sorry details. Let’s just say he helped me pull through.”
“And you
asked me why I exposed myself to that?” Destiny frowned. “Why did you? It was
your own, original body…”
He
shrugged again. “I really can’t
say… Morbid curiosity, perhaps. And somehow, I had to see for myself, to
convince myself that what everybody was telling me was really the truth. It all seemed so strange, so improbable, so
confusing… It was so hard to believe.”
His stare became distant, as the memories of his broken, half-burned body
flashed into his mind like a chamber of horrors exhibit… or rather, a scene
from a very frightening nightmare. I can’t burden Juliette with that, not after
what she’s been through herself. She doesn’t deserve it. He sighed. “Well… I suppose I know now, it was all
true… And I have to accept what
happened and make the best of it.”
“That was…
a very courageous thing to do”, Destiny said.
She gave a faint smile. “But then again, you always have been
courageous…”
“No. I’ve always been lucky.”
“Don’t
give me that, Paul,” Destiny replied, looking straight at him. “I know
you. Probably better than anyone else
on Cloudbase. I know what kind of man you are.” She nodded thoughtfully. “You said you had to make sure, well it
was the same for me. I had to make sure
it was really you who were dead. It was
hard enough believing you had kidnapped the World President, even having
witnessed it myself… But the thought that you were dead was very hard to
accept. And then, I learned that the body I had identified was not actually
that of the man I saw falling from the Car-Vu…”
“That must
have been confusing.”
“I’m just
starting to understand more of it now.” Destiny looked at Scarlet. “And now I
realized you can be no other than the man you pretend to be. You are not a ‘cold
soulless Mysteron clone’, like you said yourself. I knew Paul Metcalfe, and I saw you act like him. With all my
heart, I believe YOU ARE Paul Metcalfe.” She smiled slightly. “Can I ask your
forgiveness for ever doubting you?”
He looked
at her, thoughtful for a moment, then smiled back at her, and hugged her close
to his heart. “The day I can’t forgive my closest friends, I would be a ‘cold
soulless Mysteron clone’,” he told her. “I’m glad you’ve come around, love.”
She closed
her eyes and squeezed him tightly, letting herself be washed by his warmth.
“And I’m glad you’re back, Paul,” she murmured gently in his ear.
* * *
“Hello!
How are things going here?”
Captain
Scarlet entered the bedroom in Sickbay that had been assigned to Captain Grey
the day before, when they all came back from their ordeal in the mountains. In
the room were Captain Blue and Colonel White, surrounding the bed where Grey
was lying, his injured leg elevated to reduce the pressure on it. When he saw
Scarlet entering, a large smile crossed his face.
“Hi,
Scarlet! Good to see you on top of things!”
“You look
better too, Grey!” Scarlet nodded.
“Doctor
Fawn says I’ll be on my feet before I know it,” Grey explained.
“He also
said you have to rest for a few weeks,” Blue noted.
“Physicians
don’t know the extent of a strong man’s capacity to recover,” Grey retorted,
winking at Scarlet. “Three years ago, they said I would never be able to walk
normally again.”
“Nevertheless,
I suggest you don’t overexert yourself,” Colonel White said. “You are not
Scarlet, Captain Grey.”
“Believe
me, sir: I know that.”
Colonel
White turned to Scarlet. “And I see you’re back to normal, Captain.”
“Yes,
sir,” Scarlet answered with a grin. “Taking into consideration what ‘normal’
means for me now… Nearly didn’t make it, though. That Mysteron was a tough one to handle.”
“It would
appear all Mysteron agents would have the same rejuvenating powers you have
inherited,” White remarked gloomily.
“Not all,
sir,” Blue retorted. “What about Captain Brown’s reconstruct? He didn’t come
back to life.”
“Brown was
literally blown to pieces, Captain Blue,” White replied, shaking his head. “I
doubt there is any regeneration possible after that.”
“Or maybe
the Mysterons were relying on me at the time, to finish Brown’s mission,”
Scarlet noted, quietly.
“That’s a
rather cold assessment!” Blue remarked.
“What
choice do I have?” Scarlet retorted. “I can’t keep dwelling on it. It would
drive me mad.”
“Well,
anyway, while there is really no explanation why you have retained that regenerative
ability, the fact that you did could even the score,” White said, thoughtful.
“And we must consider the fact that, basically, all Mysteron agents do possess
the same powers.”
“The mere
thought of that sends shivers down my spine,” Grey said grimly.
“There is
another thing going for us,” White added, looking closely at his young
compatriot. “Now we know what those dizzy spells of yours are all about,
Captain Scarlet.”
“Yes,”
Scarlet answered, scratching the back of his head. “As strange as it seems, they’re
part of some sort of ‘sixth sense’ I’ve developed, telling me of a Mysteron’s
presence, or danger coming from them.”
“You
sensed the DT19 was Mysteronised, when it landed at London Airport, last week,”
Blue noted.
“Yes. I
also sensed Torey’s presence when he landed on Cloudbase, yesterday. He was
already a Mysteron.”
“And on
board the jet, his presence near you was so overwhelming that you were actually
feeling sick through almost the entire flight,” Grey added quickly.
“So now,
in addition of being indestructible, you’re a walking Mysteron detector,” White
mused. “Mmm… I had a feeling it was something like that…”
“Really,
sir?” a puzzled Blue asked.
“I
couldn’t believe the Mysterons were actually trying to take Scarlet back under
their control,” White replied. “So there had to be another explanation. That
seems to be it.”
“If Doctor
Fawn’s prognosis is right about the sixth sense, the symptoms should become
less and less pronounced as time goes by,” Scarlet said. “I ought to think of
this as an ‘adaptation period’. In fact, I believe the process is well on its
way. My headache was gone, more or less, by the end of yesterday’s
misadventures.”
White
nodded thoughtfully. “Good thing, then. It wouldn’t do much good if you’re too
ill to do your job every time the Mysterons make their move.”
“He did a
pretty good job yesterday, sir!” Grey protested.
Colonel
White shot him a measuring look. “I was trying to be humorous, Captain,” he
replied dryly. “Obviously, I didn’t succeed very well.”
“How did
you find out the Aero Special One had been Mysteronised?” Scarlet asked.
“Nobody’s told me that, yet…”
“It was
Symphony, who had her doubts at one point,” White explained. “And then, the body of the real James Torey
turned up. Killed in a car accident.”
“Like me,”
Scarlet murmured.
“We
realized then that the Jet was in the hands of the Mysterons,” Blue said. “It
didn’t answer any of our calls, and the Angels succeeded in getting a look in
the cockpit. They saw there was nobody at the helm… Like the DT19 last week. So
they shot it down.”
“As for
what happened to you all,” White continued, looking straight at Scarlet, “We
thought that at least YOU would have survived a crash. So we put out a search
party.”
“All for
me?” Scarlet said, grinning. “Gee… I’m touched!”
“We’re not
about to let our best asset against the Mysterons slip through our fingers,
now!” White retorted with a faint smile. “Captain Blue insisted on leading the
search team.”
“Sick as
you were?” Scarlet asked his friend.
“I’m quite
all right, now, thank you very much,” Blue retorted. “You can imagine how glad we were to actually find out you were
all alive, the four of you!”
“Well, I
have to thank you. I’m certainly glad to be out of those mountains.” Scarlet
glanced at Grey. “You had your share of troubles there, Captain Grey. I think
I’d better be going now… Let you get some rest.”
“That’s a
good idea,” White agreed. “We’d better all go… But I still have some words to
exchange with Captain Grey… alone, if you don’t mind, gentlemen.” He addressed
a reassuring smile to his wounded Captain. “Then I’ll leave you alone.”
Captains
Scarlet and Blue nodded and left the room. Colonel White then pulled a chair up
to the bed and sat down next to Grey. The American was looking uneasily at his
commander.
“Is there
something the matter, sir?”
“You tell
me, Captain,” White said quietly. He
nodded toward Grey’s injured leg. “How are you, really?”
“Doctor
Fawn said I was lucky,” Grey answered, shaking his head. “My fever’s been under
control since the rescue team found us. It’s pretty well gone, now. My leg will
heal quickly. And I’ve got a couple of cracked ribs that shouldn’t cause any
problem now.”
“I heard
you had a concussion.”
“Just have
to keep quiet for a couple of days and it will only be a bad memory. I should
be back on duty soon enough, sir.”
“Right
now, that doesn’t worry me. The important thing is for you to rest, and get
well soon. And that’s an order,
Captain.”
“Yes,
sir.”
“I won’t
tire you much longer… Now, on an entirely different subject…” White got himself comfortable and cleared
his throat. “What REALLY happened down there, Grey?”
“Sir?”
Grey looked in puzzlement at Colonel White. The latter could see his officer
was on his guard. He nodded thoughtfully.
“Something
happened, didn’t it?” the Spectrum commander said, more as a statement than a
question.
“You read
our reports, sir,” Grey answered cautiously.
“Yes, and
that’s why I’m here to question you. I’d like to know why one of my agents’
account of events is different from the other three…”
“Say that again?”
White
sighed, a little annoyed. “Of all the members of Spectrum, I would have thought
that at least I could count on YOU, Grey, to be truthful to me.” He gave the
faintest of smiles. “Remember… you carry my real name? And you were a Navy man,
just like me… Now, as one Navy man to another… Would you mind telling me what
happened down in those mountains?”
Captain
Grey was more than embarrassed. When Captain Scarlet had revived, some hours
earlier, he had pleaded with Grey, Destiny and Captain Ochre to keep silent
about certain details of their misadventure. He didn’t want the Colonel to
learn how he, as field commander, had been so badly treated and mistrusted by
two of his team-mates… No doubt, he wanted to protect Destiny and especially
Ochre, who had knocked him out and restrained him with handcuffs… This could
have had serious consequences for all of them. Knowing how the Spectrum
commander-in-chief would react to Ochre’s blatant indiscipline, Grey had
reluctantly agreed to follow Scarlet’s lead and left out the incriminating
incidents from his report. He particularly wanted to save some trouble for
Destiny, who could have been considered an accomplice after the facts.
But now,
someone obviously didn’t produce the same report as the others and Colonel
White was now on to them…
“You know,
falsifying official reports could be considered a serious offence,” White
continued softly. “Who put you all on to this?
Scarlet, yes? That would be like him.”
“Ow, sir…”
Grey sighed heavily and turned a pleading look on his commander. “Don’t blame
Scarlet for that. He had it pretty tough down there…”
“I knew
it!” White observed dryly.
“I bet
it’s Ochre who reported everything,” Grey noted.
“Captain
Ochre did what he thought was right,” White replied. “And I had a talk with
Destiny, earlier this morning. She confirmed most of what Ochre’s report had
already told me. Now I want to hear your side of the story.”
“You won’t
like it, sir.”
“From what
I’ve learned of it, I already dislike it pretty badly. Grey, do I have to take disciplinary action
to make you talk? I don’t want to. And I’m sure YOU don’t, either.”
“It won’t
be necessary, sir,” Grey sighed. “I’ll tell you what you want to know. Guess I
should have known you’d learn about it sooner or later. But, please, don’t be too harsh on Scarlet…”
“Let me be
the judge of what I should do with Captain Scarlet,” White interrupted. “For
now, I’m still waiting. And my patience is wearing thin, Captain.”
“All
right, sir. Here it is, then…”
* * *
Captain
Ochre snapped to attention in front of Colonel White, seated at his circular,
computerized desk. The Spectrum commander took a look at the report spread in
front of him and looked up at his officer. “At ease, Captain,” he told him.
“Have you been waiting long?”
“No, Sir,”
Ochre replied, clasping his hands behind him. He was still rigid enough,
obviously fully expecting the worst from this encounter.
“All
right,” Colonel White said. “Following your report, I spoke to Destiny Angel
and Captain Grey, asking them not to talk about this to anybody else. I would
have liked to talk to Captain Scarlet concerning this matter, but it seems that
will have to wait. His position on this is fairly clear, anyway, and nothing he
would have to say would change the outcome of this meeting.”
“Excuse
me, sir,” Ochre said tentatively, “Could Captain Scarlet be in trouble
concerning that false report thing?”
“What are
your feelings about that, Captain Ochre?”
Ochre
shook his head. “Considering what happened, sir, and since it’s all due to my
own actions, I don’t think you should take any action against him.”
“He DID
ask you and the others to falsify your reports. I know it was HIS idea. That
could be considered a conspiracy.”
“I know,
sir, but Scarlet did it to protect his team-mates.”
“Destiny
and yourself, anyway. Captain Grey wasn’t in any position to interfere or stop
you.”
“Destiny
neither, sir. I was pretty convincing in dragging her along in that whole mess.
She was reluctant to do anything. I took full responsibility.”
“I’ll be
the judge of your responsibility, Captain.
Right now, you should be concerned about your own actions, and let ME
decide if I should take measures against your team-mates.”
“But,
sir…”
“That part
of the subject is closed, Captain.”
Ochre kept
his mouth shut and watched silently as Colonel White turned the pages of the
report for one last look through it. “I know you want this over with, Captain
Ochre,” White continued, “so I’ll make it quick.”
“I
appreciate that, sir.”
“Wait
before actually thanking me.” White paused a few seconds before looking up to
the American. “Captain, I must say that your report and my subsequent
investigation of the incidents that occurred during your last mission has given
me cause for concern. I assigned Captain Scarlet as your field commander. You
contested his authority – and mine by doing so – knocked him out and put him in
handcuffs. All that because you choose to believe the story of your friend,
Commander James Torey – who happened to be a Mysteron agent – over that of
Scarlet himself. Now I realize you already entertained some mistrust toward
Captain Scarlet…”
“Yes, sir.
I regret to say I did.”
“You used
the past tense.”
“Yes. The
mistrust I may have had… that’s been resolved.”
“Explain
yourself, Captain.”
“Ever
since Captain Scarlet came back on duty, I had a hard time considering him as
the real thing. For me, he was just an impostor, who had taken a friend’s
place. In fact, he took everything from him: his face, his identity, his name…
even his life, for all I knew.”
“The
Mysterons kill their victims before making reconstructs out of them, Captain,”
White remarked. “That much we know. If you are implying that Scarlet has…”
“No, sir.
I don’t imply anything. Not anymore.” Ochre sighed. “I was wrong, I know it
now. That’s not an impostor who came back to us. Except for that retrometabolism thing, he’s the same, loyal guy.
He came through for us, yesterday, more than once. You were right to trust him.
I should have trusted your judgement over that fact.”
“If you
had, it would have saved you and the others a lot of trouble,” White noted
dryly. “Do you realize your own actions during that mission could have had
serious consequences? They could have cost your life, as well as the lives of
the others.”
“I realize
it fully, sir,” Ochre said without expression.
“Your act of insubordination could be considered as mutiny,
Captain. Notwithstanding the fact that
you actually sided with an enemy agent to trap your field commander and put him
in a defenceless position… Do you know what Captain Scarlet actually DID to get
out of those handcuffs, in order to come to Destiny’s rescue?”
“Destiny
and Captain Grey told me, sir. He broke all the bones in his hand.” Ochre shook
his head in disbelief. “I don’t think anybody else would have done the same
thing under the same circumstances.”
“Nobody in
his right mind and not possessing the same powers of recovery, anyway,” White
agreed.
“Still, it
must have been very painful,” Ochre added. “He would not have needed to do
that, if I had acted correctly toward him.”
White
looked sternly at the American officer. He looked pale. Must be in pain, standing on that sprained foot of his, the
Spectrum commander thought. No sense in
dragging this on needlessly. “Do you have anything more to say in your
defence, Captain Ochre?”
“I have no
defence, sir. I’d plead guilty to all charges in front of any court-martial
you’d send me to.”
“Those are
serious offences, which could be brought against you.”
“I’m
prepared to face the consequences of my actions, sir.”
“So I see.
And if it weren’t the case, you would have followed the others’ lead and
falsified your official report too.”
Captain
Ochre didn’t say anything; he waited, while his commander was writing some
quick notes on the report before looking back at him. Here goes, Ochre
thought, getting himself ready for the worst. I’m done for, now…
“Here’s my
decision, Captain Ochre,” White finally said, in an official voice. “Since
Captain Scarlet is obviously reluctant to press charges against you, and taking
into account the fact that you honestly came clean with that story, I’m willing
to drop all the charges but one, on certain conditions.”
Ochre
blinked, obviously surprised by his commander’s magnanimity. “Colonel, I… I don’t know what to say.”
“I am not
finished. The charge I keep against you is your insubordination and obvious
contempt for Captain Scarlet’s authority during this mission. I take this as a
personal offence, since I was the one who assigned Scarlet as your field
commander. I cannot accept this kind of behaviour, especially coming from one
of my senior staff officers. So I assign you to radar duty for a period of two
weeks.”
“Two
weeks, sir?” Ochre asked with dismay.
“Two
weeks, Captain. And if you haven’t already done so, you will have to present
your formal apologies to Captain Scarlet.”
“S.I.G.,
sir.”
“One more
thing: the entire incident will be put on your permanent record. You pull just
one more stunt like it and I’ll personally kick you out of Spectrum.”
“It won’t
happen again, sir. I promise you.”
“For your
sake, I hope so.” White closed the folder. “Dismissed.”
Captain
Ochre saluted his superior officer and turned on his heel, sighing with relief
as he did so. He was about to make good his escape when a call from Colonel
White stopped him short.
“Captain,
one last thing…”
What now? Ochre thought, turning back to White.
The Colonel was looking at him in a curiously suspicious way.
“Yesterday,
did you happen to go onto the Promenade Deck?”
“Sir?”
Ochre was puzzled. “I haven’t been up there for weeks, Colonel.”
“You’re
sure?” There was a note of scepticism in the Spectrum commander’s voice.
“Yes, sir.
Ever since the Mysterons announced their first threat, actually.”
White
nodded quietly; he seemed somehow upset. “All right, then. You can go.”
Ochre
didn’t need to be told again; he passed by a quiet Lieutenant Green, as always
seated at his station, and strode out of the Control Room, wondering what the
Promenade Deck thing was all about.
As soon as
the door had closed on Ochre, Lieutenant Green turned to a grim-looking and thoughtful
Colonel White. “It seems your investigation isn’t producing any results, sir,”
the young Black man remarked.
“It’s
maddening,” White murmured, resting his chin on his steepled fingers. “I asked
just about everybody on base. The only ones left were the members of the team
who boarded the Passenger Jet, yesterday. And I have met with all of them
today, and asked them… Now it seems even they don’t know anything about the
incident.” He sighed heavily. “I suppose that’s it, Lieutenant. It looks as if I
won’t find out who’s responsible for what happened to my rose tree.”
“Did you
ask Captain Scarlet, sir?”
White
stared thoughtfully at Green. Scarlet. Maybe he knew something about what had
happened the day before in the Promenade Deck.
Curiously, the commander had left him out. Proceeding by elimination,
and since Scarlet would be the last one he had to question, and also providing
nobody had dared lie to him…
White
quietly stood up. “I’ll be back in a short while, Lieutenant. I going to have a talk with Captain
Scarlet.”
“Do you
want me to call him up, sir?”
“Not
necessary.” A devilish smile crossed the habitually stern face of the Spectrum
commander. “If I’m right, I know where to find him. As they say in the mystery
novels: the culprit always comes back to the site of his crime…”
* * *
Up on the
Promenade Deck, scissors in hand, Rhapsody Angel was looking with obvious
satisfaction at the tree of white roses she had put onto the table in front of
her, when Captain Scarlet entered and saw her. He also saw the tree and frowned
deeply, wondering what was happening with it now.
“Come to
finish my job?” he asked as he approached the young woman.
He
startled her, but she recognized his voice almost right away. She smiled at him
and gestured toward the tree. “Actually, I came to see how my patient was
doing.”
“Patient?”
Scarlet asked, puzzled.
She
nodded. “It was a painful experience, but I think it will survive. Look.”
Scarlet
bent down, looking at the tree. It was clean of all the dirt he had thrown the
day before on its leaves and flowers… A few of them had actually disappeared,
and there were some fresh cuts where they previously had been.
“You had
to do some trimming, I see,” Scarlet noted.
“Couldn’t
be helped. The branches were lost, anyway. I think, in a few days, the damage
will be nothing but a bad memory. Look: there’s already new buds here and
there…”
“Good job,
Angel,” Scarlet grinned, straightening up. “I didn’t know you had such green
fingers.”
“I didn’t
know, either,” Rhapsody smiled back. “But I guess desperation can cause a
person to discover some unsuspected abilities…” She scowled. “Too bad I didn’t
act fast enough so the Colonel wouldn’t discover anything about the… accident.”
“He knows
about it?”
“He’s been
on the prowl since yesterday, looking for the culprit. I kept my mouth shut, of
course… but if I were you, I’d ask for a weekend pass right now.”
“Or
better, a long enough assignment until that tree is completely healed and those
buds have blossomed.”
“That
would be safer.”
“Now, what
about that ski trip to Aspen, then…”
Rhapsody
started laughing. “Hey! Your sense of humour is actually improving! That’s
good. I take it all is well in Captain Scarlet’s life?”
He nodded.
“All is well in Captain Scarlet’s life,” he agreed. “And in Paul Metcalfe’s
too.”
“You had
your talk with Destiny.”
“Yes, I
had. And it did a lot of good.” Scarlet looked at the Angel pilot. “You were
right, she came round.”
“She loves
you too much to stay that angry at you forever.”
“I think I
owe a great deal to you, though. You talked to her.”
“But you
did the rest. When you were trapped down in those mountains, she saw you for
what and who you truly are.”
Scarlet
nodded again, quietly. For a moment, he looked at the young woman, who turned
away to put her scissors down on the table. She was aware of him staring at her
and felt a bit uneasy about it.
“By the
way,” he suddenly said, “I checked out that novel of yours…”
Rhapsody
turned back to him, with a puzzled look, as if she didn’t remember what he was
talking about. He shook his head. “The
Machine to Kill?” he reminded her. There was a twinkle of amusement in his
blue eyes. “Now I know how it ends.” He crossed his arms on his chest, smiling
at her mischievously. “Did you really think I would’ve thrown myself off a
cliff?”
She smiled
back, but didn’t have time to answer. The door not far from them slid open and
Captain Ochre walked in. His eyes immediately acknowledged Scarlet’s presence.
“Hi,” he said.
“Hi,”
Scarlet nodded back, uncrossing his arms. He had not seen Ochre since early
that morning, shortly after he had revived from his ordeal, and Scarlet had
spoken to him only to ask him not to include in his official report everything
that had happened between them. Not a word from Ochre after that. And right now, the American Captain seemed
pretty embarrassed as he walked toward his British counterpart.
“I… er…
thought I’d find you here,” Ochre said. “I seem to recall you’re fond of this
place.”
“Yes, I’ve
always found it lovely,” Scarlet agreed. “Reminds me a lot of the wood behind
my parents’ house in Winchester… minus the tropical plants, of course.”
Rhapsody
cleared her throat, to remind to the two men she was still there. “I think I’d
better leave you alone, gentlemen…”
She was
already moving to go when Ochre stopped her in her tracks. “No, wait. I may need a witness for this.”
“A
witness?” a perplexed Scarlet asked, frowning. “Are you going to challenge me
to a duel or something like that?”
Ochre
laughed softly. He shook his head. “No, that would be your privilege, I think.”
“His
humour is improving,” Rhapsody told the American officer, as in confidence.
“So I see.
I…” Ochre stopped right away. Seeming to suddenly remember something, he
searched his trouser pocket and withdrew a shiny object which he held out to
Scarlet. “I wanted to give this back to you.”
Scarlet
took the object; he recognized it the second he laid eyes on it. “My Swiss Army knife,” he said, frowning
again. “I thought I had lost it forever… Where did you find it?”
“At the
site of your car crash… when I investigated it a month ago.” Ochre lowered his
gaze, under Scarlet’s perplexed and curious stare. “I… know it was a gift from
your father.”
“Yes. He
gave it to me when I received my Spectrum commission,” Scarlet replied quietly.
He shrugged. “You kept it all this time?”
“I didn’t
feel it truly belonged to you. That is… until now.” Ochre looked up at his
British colleague. “I am truly sorry, Paul. For all I have done.”
Captain
Scarlet said nothing. He looked down thoughtfully at the knife, distractedly
toying with it. He then turned his attention back to Ochre. “You owe me,” he
said quietly.
Ochre had
been expecting this. But then he saw the grin crossing Scarlet’s face. “You owe
me a revenge match in the boxing ring,” the Brit said, in a sprightly tone.
“And THIS time, you’d better play fair!”
Ochre
relaxed. “Knock me out if I don’t,” he
retorted, extending his right hand and grinning broadly.
The two
men clasped hands, before the very happy Rhapsody’s eyes. Scarlet showed the
knife to Ochre. “If you want one so
much, I’ll ask my father where he bought this one and get you one.”
“You’re
too kind. But it wouldn’t be the same. I kept it ’cause it reminded me of a
good friend. Now I don’t need it, because I’ve got my friend back.” He frowned.
“Now, I hope you don’t actually think I intended keeping that knife!”
“Perish
the thought!” Scarlet replied. “Coming from an ex-police commissioner, that
would be pretty ironic!”
Ochre gave
Rhapsody a puzzled look. “You’re sure his humour is improving?”
The young
woman shrugged. “One can always hope,” she remarked. “I guess he’s a hopeless
case.”
“I thought
you were on my side!” Scarlet protested.
“Come on,
now! There are some things so obvious you can’t deny them, you know?”
Scarlet
was about to make some retort when he heard the door behind him sliding open.
He did not even have time to turn around before a strong voice, with a very
recognizable accent, thundered suddenly, startling the three of them:
“Captain
Scarlet!”
Scarlet
spun around swiftly; a very stern, angry-looking Colonel White had stepped into
the Promenade Deck and was staring straight at him, with blazing blue eyes that
caused the young man to snap to attention. Behind him, he heard Captain Ochre
and Rhapsody Angel doing the same.
“Yes,
sir?” Scarlet asked uneasily.
“I was
looking all over for you,” the Colonel said, coming closer, his voice still
sharp. “I want to ask you a question…”
Oh boy! Ochre thought, making himself as
invisible as possible. The falsified
reports… The old man must have reached a decision about them. Scarlet must be
in trouble, now. And I didn’t have the time to tell him… But Ochre soon
realized it was far more serious than that when Colonel White pointed an
accusing finger toward the tree, standing in honour in the middle of the table,
right next to Captain Scarlet.
“By any
chance, do you know what happened to my rose tree, yesterday?”
THE END
A QUESTION OF TRUST (complete story - zip)
Chapter 1
– Chapter
2 – Chapter 3 – Chapter 4
– Chapter
5 – Chapter 6 – Chapter 7
– Chapter
8
Chapter 9 – Chapter 10 – Epilogue
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