Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons:
In the year 2038, the United Kingdom launched a
military-based organisation designed to protect/assist its national defence
forces against foreign interests. Although the 'Spectrum' project was supported
by the United Nations, most of the funding came from the UK and several Western
European countries (all of which fell under Spectrum's jurisdiction).
Thanks to the success of the project, the
organisation soon began efforts to colonise the moon that would later result in
the Lunarville projects. By 2060, ore mining and mineral processing had become
the Moon's largest export to Earth, supplying mass quantities of fuel and
construction materials to Spectrum and several other military organisations.
It was a further five years before any attempt was made to send a manned expedition to Mars. At the time, it was publicised that the greatest danger of travelling through space was lethal radiation from solar flares. However, Spectrum officials had secretly become aware of several disturbing 'anomalies' concerning the planet Mars, particularly concentrated around the Cydonia Mensae region. Unmanned probes sent to the planet in the past had been inexplicably lost, while observations from the planet continued to suggest a technological presence of some kind.
It was decided that NASA should have nothing to
do with the first manned mission to Mars, and a heavily fortified Spectrum
spacecraft was designed to carry a crew of four. After a fierce and very
thorough screening process, Captain Black was accepted to lead the mission to
investigate the anomalies. Construction of the spacecraft was completed by the
spring of 2065. The journey to Mars was estimated to take six to eight months.
The Spectrum team arrived on the outskirts of
Cydonia Mensae just after midday on 12th December 2065 GMT.
Dust often blew thick across the Martian
plains. It was natural to the planet's behaviour. Global dust storms could
cloak the entire planet for months on end, as Russian scientists had discovered
to their dismay in the autumn of 1971 when the probes Mars 2 and Mars 3 arrived
in orbit above the red planet. Following a pre-programmed set of instructions
that were irreversible, the probes deployed one lander each into the midst of
140-kilometre-per-second winds that smashed them to pieces against the barren
landscape. In the meantime, their respective orbiting probes took picture upon
picture of a planet enveloped in dust. Dust that shielded the entire planetary
surface from any prying eyes in a colossal storm that would continue to last
long beyond the lifespan of the probes' cameras.
"It's damn peculiar," Captain Mauve
stated from the navigation chair of Spectrum's Mars Exploration Vehicle.
"Too many coincidences, too many failed missions. And not all the fault of
one organisation either. Both America and Russia sent probes of their own
design to Mars using different methods. And they still both suffered from failure."
Sitting in front of Captain Mauve, in the pilot
and co-pilot's chairs, sat Captain Yellow and Captain Black. They had left
Captain Mint at the landing module over two hours ago and had been travelling
towards the site of the anomalous readings. Black was busy monitoring the
buggy's progress across the Martian surface at 20 kilometres per hour. It was
Yellow who replied to Mauve's statement.
"Those were early days. Both scientists
and engineers were still in a sharp learning curve regarding space travel. Most
of the probes that failed were lost because of technical inaccuracies, not
external interference."
Mauve, seated in the back, was undeterred.
"Allegedly, maybe. But look at the facts... The Russian probe Mars 1 -
lost within 195,000 kilometres of the planet in 1963. Or NASA's Mariner 3, also
lost en-route to Mars in 1964."
"Ah, but the Mariner 3 was only a
technical fault," Yellow interrupted. "Its protective fibre glass
shroud was supposed to
detach after leaving
Earth's orbit."
"That's only the official
explanation."
Yellow sighed exasperatedly. "Urgh! We're
here to investigate the strange readings discovered by past probes, Captain,
not theorise on why the probes were lost."
"I'm just saying that it's damn
peculiar."
"Thank you for that profound
statement."
"Remember the Russian Zond 2 probe?"
Mauve went on. "Also lost in 1965 travelling from Earth to Mars."
"Thank you Captain Mauve."
"And the Phobos probes... Phobos 1
disappeared en-route."
"THANK you, Captain Mauve."
Mauve ceased talking, and Yellow consulted his
computer display.
"Phobos 2 made it to Martian orbit before
losing all contact..." Mauve quietly said.
Yellow buried his head in his hands and sighed
again. "Don't you ever give up?"
"These are all facts, Captain."
Yellow turned in his co-pilot's seat to look
back at him. "You want success stories? How about NASA's Mariner 4? It
closed to within 10,000 kilometres of Mars and took 21 photographs in 1964.
Mariner 9 took over 7000 pictures of the Martian surface by the end of 1972.
Mars Global Surveyor began mapping the planet from orbit in 1998. Mars
Pathfinder landed a rover probe on the surface to analyse ground samples by the
turn of the millennium..." He paused to take note of the defeated look on
Mauve's face. "Shall I go on?"
Mauve hissed through his teeth. "NASA
worshipper..." he mumbled.
"What was that?"
"That's enough," said Captain Black,
who until recently had allowed the two of them to talk it out. "We're
approaching the site. Turn on the cameras and warm up the sensor mappers."
Yellow cast a discreet look at Mauve before
responding. "Aye aye, Sir." He activated the relevant machinery. "Cameras on."
"Mappers booting up," Yellow
reported. "We'll be ready to record in a couple of minutes."
The buggy trundled over the crushed rock and
fine sediment that covered the ground before them. Black slowed the vehicle to
ten kilometres an hour as they began a shallow ascent up an incline. Each of
them felt their safety belts press into their chests - the uneven landscape
protesting against the buggy's suspension. A few minutes later they eventually
reached the summit, and Black ordered Captain Mauve to activate the sensor
mappers.
"So what are we expecting to see out
here?" Yellow said quietly, directing the question to Mauve.
"I'm an expert on probes, not fortune
telling."
"All that knowledge and not even a
theory?"
"I thought I told you two to pack it
in," Black said firmly. "This isn't a training simulation, let's pull
it together. You're supposed to be professionals."
"Aye, Sir."
"Sorry, Sir."
The buggy suddenly chugged to a halt as Black
stopped the vehicle without warning. A deathly hush filled the interior cabin
as the three of them looked out at the ghostly space ahead of them.
"What the hell...?" said Mauve.
Yellow shook his head. "Is that...?"
In the crater below them stood an arrangement
of structures resembling skyscrapers. 'Towers', for lack of a better word, were
placed in formation around smaller buildings. The whole complex was shimmering
with an unearthly glow.
"Are the cameras recording?" asked
Captain Black.
Yellow made a quick check. "Yes, Sir. The
lander module should be getting all of this within a few seconds."
"What do the sensor mappers tell us?"
"Just a minute," said Mauve from
behind the two of them.
Black looked back out at the alien 'city'. He
couldn't make out any roads from this far away, nor could he spot any movement.
"What do you make of it, Captain
Yellow?" he asked.
"I... I don't know, Sir. I'm not sure we
should risk taking the buggy in any closer. We might startle whoever's down
there."
"IF anyone is down there." Black
double-checked the stinger missiles placed in the side-carriage compartments of
the buggy. Standard procedure that was outlined in their mission briefing.
"Captain Mauve, how's it coming with the sensor mappers?"
"Data is coming in now, Sir. But..."
He paused, squinting at the readout on his computer display.
"But what?"
"It's scrambled. For some reason the
computer is feeding out the information in it's raw state. We'll need to take
the recorded information back to the lander module to decode any of it."
"Keep recording. Get as much data as you
can."
"Sir!" Yellow exclaimed. "Out
there, by the far right tower."
Both Captain Black and Captain Mauve looked out
to the area he was indicating. Another structure was rising from beneath the
surface, long and metallic in shape. A second similar pole rose from the
opposing side of the 'city'. Each pole carried a rectangular instrument at
their tip, strongly resembling a cannon or a similar class of weapon.
"They've spotted us," said Mauve.
"We don't know that," replied Yellow.
"This could be a normal procedure for them."
"Agreed," said Captain Black.
"Arm the stinger missiles, but don't fire unless I give the order."
Yellow ran through a quick routine of computer
commands. "Stinger missiles armed."
The three Spectrum officers continued to watch
the two poles as they slid out of their recesses, extending far beyond the peak
of the highest building in the strange 'city'.
"Sir," said Yellow. "I don't
like the look of those devices on top of the poles."
"Nor do I, Captain," replied Black.
"What do you make of them?"
"Some kind of weapon?"
"It looks that way," said Mauve.
"We're in trouble if they're hostile."
Black's growing anxiety forced him to look down
at the weapons display to double-check the stinger missiles were armed. He had
hoped he wouldn't encounter a situation like this.
The two poles finally stopped moving, and
remained dormant for a while. Captain Black decided to take the initiative.
"All right, let's show them that we come
in peace. Activate the radio and broadcast on all frequencies."
"Microphone on," Mauve reported.
"This is Captain Black from the Spectrum
vehicle located on the ridge of the crater. We mean you no harm. Please
respond."
He nodded to Mauve to turn off the radio and
the three of them remained silent, looking out at their new discovery. It was a
few moments before anyone spoke.
"Nothing..." said Yellow, shaking his
head.
Mauve's voice was almost a whisper. "Maybe
they don't take kindly to visitors."
"Wait, look!" exclaimed Yellow.
"Out there."
The instruments atop each pole swivelled on their axis towards them, and came to a
stop. Their cross hairs were lined up precisely on the buggy.
"They're hostile!" said Mauve.
"Fire the stingers," Captain Black
ordered.
Twin missile carriages popped out from the side
of the buggy and launched two surface-to-surface warheads towards each of the
pole-like structures. Twin explosions blossomed heavenwards. The poles' bases
collapsed with remarkable ease, as if they hadn't been designed to take very
much punishment.
None of the crew aboard the Spectrum Buggy had
time to consider such constructional errors, however, as they stared in horror
at the overkill they had caused. They had only aimed at the poles that had
turned on them, but the collapsing structures instead toppled onto the rest of
the buildings. Like the poles themselves, the buildings collapsed with
surprising delicacy, spreading debris and dust across the entire crater. It was
devastation on an appalling scale.
Captain Black closed his eyes. Neither of his
colleagues spoke a word - there was no need to. It was some time before Black
opened his eyes and faced what he had done. The crater lay in smoke and ruins,
rubble littering the area where the shimmering structures had stood but moments
ago.
Captain Black finally found his voice, though
it was weighted with the burden of massacre. "Send a message back to
Captain Mint at the lander module. Tell him what has happened here."
Mauve nodded, and jerkily got to work. Black was
saddened by the fact he was still frightened by the alien 'city', rather than
feeling remorse. He looked over at Yellow to see what his reaction was. Yellow,
however, seemed decidedly neutral. Probably for the best, he thought.
"Message sent," Mauve eventually
reported. "Captain Mint will be able to report back to Spectrum
Headquarters on Earth as soon he receives it."
Black nodded heavily. "Very well."
"Wait," Yellow said quietly.
"I... I think something's moving down there..."
"Where?" replied Black, and peered
down into the smoke.
"There," said Yellow. "That
hatch just-"
He broke off as the three officers watched two
more poles slide out from beneath ground. Again, each on opposing sides of the
alien 'city'.
"They're still attacking," said
Mauve.
"Arm two more stinger missiles,"
Black said quickly.
Despite his remorse, his aggressive action had
declared hostility to whoever was living in the 'city'. Fighting back was the
only option he had left. All others had abandoned him when he'd given the first
order to fire.
"Missiles armed," reported Yellow.
"Fire."
Again, two white streaks crossed paths from the
buggy and struck the base of the rising poles, blossoming dust and sediment
upwards in twin mushroom clouds. However, this time the poles withstood the
blast. Black watched helplessly as the metallic objects continued to rise above
the 'city', undeterred by the stinger missiles.
"Did we miss the targets?" he asked.
"No, Sir," replied Yellow. "They
were both direct hits. They just withstood our impact this time."
"We're getting out of here," decided
Black, pushing the buggy's gears into reverse. "Captain Mauve, plot us a
clear course away from this crater."
"Aye, Sir."
The exploration vehicle kicked up a trail of
dust as it began to back away from the destroyed alien edifice. The controls
whined against Captain Black's almost-desperate urging to reverse at full speed
from their imminent destruction. But even as Black and Mauve tried their best
to get the buggy to safety, Yellow shook his head.
"It's too late," he told the others.
"They're going to fire at any second now."
And so they did. The instruments on top of each
pole simultaneously unleashed an eerie ray of light. But it was not directed at
the Spectrum buggy, it was directed at the wrecked alien buildings.
Black released the protesting vehicle controls
and looked on at the bizarre events. Both poles were spreading light across the
crater. "What's that?" he asked.
"I haven't a clue..." said Yellow.
His voice was almost a whisper.
Black's heart sank into his stomach as the
unearthly process began to take shape. As the immense light began to fade away,
the buildings they had destroyed were once again standing in their original
positions. Towers that had collapsed were standing tall and proud as if nothing
had happened, and the entire city was suddenly there once again. As if nothing
had happened.
Untouched...
Black wasn't sure if he should be grateful or
terrified. Different emotions fought for dominance in his mind. Fear,
incomprehension, awe, relief... None of the extensive mission training he'd
undertaken had prepared him for something like this.
The city remained standing in its original,
undamaged state, while the two poles that had reconstructed it slid back down
into their recesses.
"Does..." Yellow began. His voice was
croaky, and he cleared his throat before continuing. "Does that mean the
first two poles we saw... They weren't weapons?"
"We're about to find out..." said
Mauve. "They're rising up again."
No. Black suddenly knew what had happened. It
was so clear to him now, so clear that he wanted to kick himself. Whoever was
down there... They hadn't meant to attack the buggy, they weren't being
hostile...
"Wrong," Black quietly mumbled to
himself, almost catatonically.
Both Yellow and Mauve looked at him.
"Sir?" they quizzed.
"Let me be wrong..." Black replied.
Yellow cast a discreet glance back at Mauve,
but received only a shrug in response. "Sir, what are your orders?"
he asked.
"They were... trying to communicate,"
said Black. "They weren't trying to fire at us, they were... Trying to
communicate." He closed his eyes. "Oh please let me be wrong..."
But even as Black feared he might be right, his
fears were confirmed. The poles they had assumed to be weapons turned on them.
But instead of unleashing a weapon, it unleashed a message. A message so
burning its implication that Black could barely bring himself to listen.
He had fired on a race that had wanted to talk,
not fight. He had made a mistake that would remain with him for the rest of his
life.
"Incoming message," Yellow said in a
baffled voice. "It's in English."
"Play it," he said.
Yellow activated the audio speaker, and the
three officers heard a terrible voice relay a message. A message that would be
relayed to the whole of Earth, and that would strike fear into the hearts of
the innocents. A message that began with seven words.
Seven words that would continue to be feared
long after the events of today.
"This is the voice of the
Mysterons..."
DISCLAIMER: The characters used in this story
are the sole right of Gerry Anderson.
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