A “Captain
Scarlet and the Mysterons” short story
The
pumpkin rolled silently down the dew soaked knoll behind the Old Cemetery and splashed
with a sudden sharpness into the stillness of the murky pond. The sound that
bespoke of an untold fear and implied a fate far worse than tidy death,
reverberated in the ears of the startled sexton and was amplified by the
stunning quietude of that eerie moonlit night. It was Halloween. Someone or something moved through the chill
dead air of that demonic night; a thing or being not completely of this Earth.
"Hold,
who goes there!" rang out the deep voice of the burly sexton, while
attempting to negotiate the rail fence separating him from the shadowy figure
edging its way up the hill. The sexton moved in the lumbering fashion of one
who is more adept at lifting heavy objects than in lifting one's own feet.
"Blast,"
he growled as he struggled to pull himself off the ground, having done a
complete somersault over the top rail. As he gained his feet to rejoin the
chase, he caught a glimpse of the dark
intruder disappearing over the rise of the hill.
Moments
later, from his vantage point at the top of the low hill, Tom could see awash
in the moonlight the entire length of the pathway weaving itself down the other
side toward the church and, in the distance, the darkened outlines of the few
buildings which made up the small village of Lakenscroft. Beyond, scattered in
all directions, lay the houses of the village; their lights - looking like
fireflies on a summer night - flickered
through the near leafless branches of the trees in the cool, crisp autumnal air.
Suddenly,
from the corner of his eye, the sexton perceived a glint, and on turning toward
the source of the flash, glimpsed a figure vanishing behind one of the larger
tombstones in the adjoining cemetery. There had been minor vandalism of some of
the headstones within the last few nights and Tom was keen on apprehending the
perpetrators. It appeared that there was only one, and Tom had the culprit in
his sights as he closed the distance between him and the lichen covered
monolith.
'Probably
that wretched Wicker lad,' thought Tom as he rounded the headstone and peered
into the darkness of the bushes. "Come on out of there, Bret; you don't
want me to have to come in and drag you out."
"Looking
for someone?" came the metallic voice behind him.
The
sexton spun full circle before the last syllable had faded from the lips of the
cadaverous form now facing him.
"Who in blazes are you?"
"What, would be the better question,
Earthman," rasped the gaunt, unsmiling figure standing only a few yards
before him; as Tom steeled himself against the blazoned threat.
His
defences were completely useless against the unseen force that seemed to spring
from the dark, deep-set eyes of his assailant. His readied fists fell limply to
his side as he felt a wave of cold silence flood over his weakened body; then
there was darkness.
Were
the reader to look over the shoulder of the victor, who is now stooping above
his victim, he would see in the distance, filtered through the closed drapes of
the vicarage lounge, the dull glow of a room lamp. In that room; at a small
table, two men are huddled over a checkered board of sixty-four alternated
light and dark squares.
"Checkmate!"
Cried the man in the red uniform, as he slammed down the white knight with a
bit more force than the move required; disturbing for a moment the sleep of a
large black cat who lay in front of the blazing hearth. The old cat stirred,
stretched out a paw; then through the miracle of dream, returned to the green
pastures of his youth.
"Good
Heavens, and checkmate it is," sighed a bewildered Anglican priest;
enviously inspecting the beauty of his opponent's successful commando raid;
while realising that his own black troops, which he had so intricately massed
around the enemy monarch, would never be given the command to attack. "I should have sacrificed my bishop
last move and taken the initiative."
"That
would never have done, Father," stated the victor flatly.
"Why
ever not?" Inquired the elderly cleric as he once again scrutinised the
crowded board. "What would you have done, Captain?"
"Panicked,
no doubt. You see, it was psychology that was you undoing. I was counting on
the psychological reluctance of a parish priest to sacrifice his bishop."
"Damn
unsound psychology, my boy; and, in future, I advise that you not depend on it.
I've a bishop, in this diocese, whom I should sacrifice at the first
opportunity ... no, it was the irritating presence of your overbearing queen at
f4 that compelled me to defer my sacrificial attack by one move."
"So,
you would have sacrificed the bishop," mused the opponent.
"The
bishop?" Questioned the cleric, looking up from the board and shooting a
knowing glance over his spectacles at his guest. "I should sacrifice the
Archbishop of Canterbury, himself, if it would ensure a winning position."
At
that moment a brilliant light flashed across the drawn curtain behind the
priest, sending the uniformed captain into motion. In a blink he had moved
across the room, thrown back the curtain and opened the window; only the
darkness of the chamber gave testimony to the fact that he had hesitated
momentarily at the light switch as he passed.
"Listen!"
Whispered the priest in great expectation, "it shan't be long."
"Yes,
I hear it," confirmed the captain, after a moment's interlude. "It is
just as you had described it; a humming sound. And it seems to be coming from
over there," indicating a section of the church cemetery which was now
discernible through the opened window.
"Bolt
this window behind me," ordered the Captain as he stepped into the
darkness, "and under no circumstance open it to anyone but me or another
member of Spectrum."
As
the young Spectrum officer moved up the hill from the vicarage towards the
apparent source of the low droning, he was halted by a refulgent burst of white
light which momentarily illuminated the tombstones affronting the mausoleum.
Father
McGinnis had warned of strange lights and uncanny noises emanating from that
area of the cemetery and would not rule out the plight of restless souls as its
cause. An unmarked grave, lying just beyond the mausoleum was supposedly the
resting place of the local Grey Lady, or resident ghost. In her corporeal life,
some 300 years earlier, she had attracted the suspicion of the local
witch-hunting ecclesiastics; dramatically escaping their clutches by the
fateful intercession of a more
merciful, but just as untimely death. Her lifeless body had been found at the
foot of Beacon's Bluff; that she was interned in holy ground suggested that her
death had been attributable to misadventure rather than suicide. Her numerous
manifestations over the centuries spoke of a troubled soul; perhaps, one with
an old score to settle before she would be allowed to rest.
"This
is Captain Scarlet," the young officer whispered into the cap-microphone.
"Lieutenant Green, are Captains Blue and Magenta in position?"
"Yes,
Captain, your tracking devices are all functioning perfectly and I can plot all
of your positions and follow any future movements from the monitor here on
Cloudbase."
"Can
you hear the humming, Lieutenant?"
"Yes,
and it is loudest from the tracking device carried by Captain Blue."
"That's
not surprising, Lieutenant, as he's somewhere within the mausoleum,
itself."
Captain
Scarlet had made his way to the side of the building housing the remains of the
Capriccio ancestors and while attempting to look through the barred window was
nearly blinded by another flash of light.
"It's
an oxyacetylene torch, Lieutenant," he whispered into the cap-mike.
"Whoever it is has just gained entry through a steel door that would
appear to lead into the hillside. Can you roust Captain Blue into action?"
"No
go, Captain. He's not answering."
"I'm
going in; get Captain Magenta back to the vicarage, Father McGinnis may be in
danger."
Darting
to the front gate of the mausoleum, Captain Scarlet found the bolt cut and the
two doors standing open. The roar of the blowtorch had been silenced, as had
the accompanying light. He stood hesitantly for a moment while his eyes
accommodated themselves to the darkness of the interior.
"Captain
Blue," he called out not much above a whisper; then again, somewhat
louder.
"Over
here, Captain Scarlet," came a muffled voice through the darkness of the
burial chamber.
"Where?
I can't see you," asked the other as he half stumbled toward the rear of
the chamber.
"You're
standing right in front of me! Open the door."
"Door?"
Murmured the confused rescuer, looking along the back wall. "Don't tell me
you're in one of these vaults?"
"Where
else would I hide in this shoebox?" Look, I can't seem to find the handle
on this side; open the door before I suffocate."
"The
owner of this thing would have had little incentive to design it to be opened
from the inside," quipped Captain Scarlet as he threw open the door and dragged
his fellow officer gasping from the crypt. "I don't know what you were
worried about," he said, surveying the snug interior with the aid of the
moon which had just peeked over a drifting cloud, "even with the lead
lining, there is a good four of five hours of air in one of these vaults."
"Yes,
perhaps, but I don't wish to test that theory. Most definitely not on
Halloween." He reached into the vault and retrieved his cap, then nodding
toward the steel door, from which a dim glow of light was emerging, he added:
"Besides, we've got a ghost to catch."
"Captains,"
came the voice of Lieutenant Green over three headsets simultaneously, before
going silent.
"Captain
Scarlet! Captain Blue! are you reading me," came the anxious accent of
Captain Magenta over the respective headsets of the two captains.
"Yes,
Captain Blue and I are both here; very much alive and about to follow our Grey
Lady through a shaft leading from the back of this mausoleum. We've no more
idea than you what the Lieutenant was on about."
"SIG,
Captain Scarlet. I'm at the cemetery gate and shall make my way ..."
"You're
at the gate! What in blazes are you doing there? Didn't you get a message from
Lieutenant Green to go to the Vicarage?
"Captain
Magenta, this is Captain Blue. Do you read me?"
Captain
Scarlet directed his fellow officer back to the vicarage while he sped off
toward the lambent light. The tunnel snaked its way through the side of the
hill and with each footfall the returned humming and hissing of the blowtorch
increased in pitch, in step with the waxing brightness of the ghostly light.

Captain
Blue could see the glow of the light from Father McGinnis's lounge and was
cursing the fact that the drapes were opened and a priestly figure could be
seen silhouetted in the window. Before he could finish his curse, a dull
coloured human-like form caught the attention of his peripheral vision. The
form disappeared behind a dome-shaped tombstone. The Spectrum officer instinctively
hit the ground and rolled behind a nearby edifice. Within seconds he was on his
cap-mike to Captain Magenta: "Is that you?"
"Yes,
it's me."
"Look,
I've got an intruder trapped just below the vicarage. If you sneak out the side
door and make your way down the fence line you can surprise him. He's behind a
five-foot dome-shaped stone under the oak; there's a statue of an angel just
behind him toward the vicarage. Do you know where I mean?"
"SIG,
I ..."
"Are
you all right? You sound rather ...
Hello!"
The
signal was gone; but the figure behind the tombstone was edging its way along
the fence toward the house. Captain Blue leapt to his feet and made a mad
silent dash toward the cover of the next nearest headstone standing between him
and the departing figure. From his new vantage point he calculated that he
might just be able to jump the phantom before being seen. He took a deep breath
and in a sudden burst of adrenaline, using the toe of the angel as a launch
pad, sprang flying through the air and square on to the back of the grey figure
bring it to the ground.
"Well,
you're not a ghost after all," said the captain, rubbing a sore shoulder
before rolling the near unconscious man on to his back. Even in the half-moon
light he could make out the pink uniform and as the wispy cloud, blocking the
moon, was nudged along by a gentle breeze, the face of Captain Magenta was
clearly discernible.
"Blast!"
He cried out, glancing at his slowly recovering friend. Then jumping to his
feet, he ran-off in the direction of the beckoning light of the vicarage
lounge.
Captain
Blue was astonished to have found the window unlashed and quickly pulled
himself over the sill and into the lounge. The door to the library was ajar and
he could hear muffled voices, but was unable to make out a complete sentence.
Gingerly he edged the door open a few more inches to allow a view of the
semi-darken room. The voices were coming from behind a door on the far side of
the library; he slowly crept across the carpeted floor towards the door, trying
to keep the creaking floorboards quiet. He was halfway across the room when a
voice rang out from behind him "Carpe
diem!" and then he felt a blinding blow to his head.

Captain
Scarlet watched as the man continued cutting his way through the second steel
door of the night when the words of Lieutenant Green reverberated in his
headset: "SIG."
"SIG,
Lieutenant, it's good to have you back," he whispered into the mouthpiece.
"Captain,
the interference is impossible tonight so I must be quick. The monitor tells me
that Captains Blue and Magenta have met up just below the vicarage; Captain
Magenta is stationary there, while Captain Blue is quickly nearing the house.
He's practically above you. I'm
directing this message to you alone becaus... can't trust ... others may be ... possess ..."
"Say
again, Lieutenant. Did you say someone was possessed?"
The
cap-mike was dead again and the man in front of the door had finished his task
and was moving through into the new opening, which to the captain's surprise
was lighted by means of numerous candles suspended along the side of the walls.
The
figure moved as a zombie towards the end of the tortuous passage until he stopped
before a small wooden door. He twisted the knob, but the door refused to open.
Having left the oxy-torch behind, he utilised the sole of his right foot as a
battering ram and with one quick kick, the door yielded.
He
moved through the door into the small chamber which housed a spiral iron
staircase and began his ascent. Captain Scarlet watched from the bottom of the
stair until the man had disappeared through the opening at the top, then he
scrambled to the top of the structure. On exiting through the trap door, he
found himself in an anteroom off the chapel of the church; the figure he had
been tailing was kneeling before the altar. A huge jack-o'-lantern on the
sanctuary table was smiling down on the macabre scene, the flickering light
darting from the carved eyes, mouth and nose cast an eerie glow across the
room.
"What
is the meaning of this sacrilege?" Boomed the captain's voice across the
room, the reverberations breaking the solemn stillness of that sacred chamber
as he strode determinedly toward the kneeling figure.
The
zombie seemed totally transfixed; however, a backhand across the face brought
the bent figure quickly to its feet.
"Where
am I?" It wailed. Then on seeing the jack-o'-lantern and recognising the chapel,
the man, for it was a man, returned his gaze to the uniformed officer before
him; seeing him for the first time: "Who are you?"
'That's
what I was about to ask you."
"Me?
I'm Tom Jefferies, the sexton. Everyone around here knows me. I chased the Old
Grey Lady into the mausoleum a few moments ago and can't remember anything
until awaking here. What'd you bring me here for? And who the blazes are you?
"Quick,
Tom; we've got to get to the vicarage, Father McGinnis may be in mortal danger.
What's the quickest way from here?"

The
two men burst through the open door of the vicarage just behind a still dazed
Captain Magenta and made their way to the groans coming from the library.
Captain Blue had been propped against the couch by his diminutive attacker who
was now administering a cold pack to the back of his head.
"What's
happened here?" Barked the only captain still fully conscious, as a
bewildered sexton took in the room full of brightly coloured Spectrum uniforms.
"I'm
afraid it's all my fault," said the priest, still fussing over the patient
of his own making, "but, you see, I took your advice, Captain. I didn't
dare lose the game by not seizing the moment. Unfortunately, it was Captain
Blue whom I pounced by mistake."
"Where
the devil were you all this time?" Demanded an irate captain from the man
in the pink uniform, who was now half lying on the recliner. "You were
supposed to have been guarding the vicar."
"He
was Captain," said the vicar, "but I sent him out." Then looking down at the shattered statuette
on the carpet, he added, "I was quite safe as I had Our Blessed Virgin for
protection. Yes, you see I saw a grey
figure -the Grey Lady, I should think- moving by the lounge window, so I sent
the Captain to investigate."
'That's
right," agreed, Captain Magenta. "I chased the ghostly figure to the
gate of the cemetery where it just vanished. That's when I received your call
and was hit from the back. I was only stunned momentarily, but when I came to,
I discovered my cap missing. I was looking for it when boy blue pounced
me."
"But
I was talking with you on the cap phone just moments before I jumped you,"
protested the blonde captain. "Don't you remember?"
"You
were talking to the Grey Lady; not me. She must still have my cap."
"You
don't honestly believe all this superstition about the Grey Lady," laughed
Captain Blue, while still holding the wet, ice-packed towel to the back of his
head.
"I
do," answered the sexton flatly. "I'm beginning to remember now. She
came to me at the mausoleum and must have hypnotized me. All I could see were
her dark black eyes. It was she who directed me to the doors and lead me into
the church. She ordered me to knell before the jack-o'-lantern and promised
that a truth would be revealed unto me."
"Here
Pal," said Captain Blue, tossing over the wet towel, "you need this
more than I do. And Father, could you turn off that incessant TV in the other
room, that's what distracted me in the first place."
At
that moment, Captain Scarlet's headset exploded into a loud metallic laugh;
followed by the terse announcement: "S-I-R, gentlemen."
"Captain
Black!," cried out three startled voices.
"Excellent
deduction," chided the metallic voice. "While you three have been
chasing your tails and paying homage to jack-o'-lanterns; I just helped myself
to that big black cat of Father McGinnins'. The Mysterons are going to copy his
brain-wave patterns and transfer them to millions of cats worldwide; then no
one on the face of the earth will be able to walk in safety. Civilization shall
be brought to a halt as all hospitals become overfilled with victims of
Taki-induced broken limbs and necks."
Then
as suddenly as it had begun, the headset went silent.
"Is
- is he talking about that big black menace of a cat that I tripped over
earlier, Father?" Captain Scarlet enquired. "His name's 'Taki,' isn't
it?"
"Yes,
that is he," the venerable Father replied, with a sigh. "I'm sorry he
made you fall into the table earlier and knock over all the chessmen, but
luckily I have many chess sets and I do
know of a museum curator who will be able to get the broken set mended so that
very few cracks will show."
"Not
that antique Wedgwood set from the eighteenth century!" Captain Blue
gasped.
"Yes,
I'm afraid so."
Blue
turned to Scarlet. "Paul, how could you?"
"It
wasn't on purpose," Scarlet uttered defensively. "I didn't know that
deadly furball was hovering around my feet. I just didn't see him, until it was
too late."
"Good
God! I'm thinking that it really will be bad luck to have not only black cats,
but any coloured cat cross your path if all the cats are going to be just like
him!" Exclaimed Blue, as he considered the awful ramifications of the
Mysteron threat.
"Aren't
you exaggerating just a bit," Captain Magenta couldn't help adding.
"Um,
no." the cleric stated. "I acquired Taki after his owner was
hospitalised with a broken hip and she had acquired him in a similar
manner."
"Why
would you take on such a dangerous animal?" Questioned Captain Blue.
"He
has the sweetest disposition possible and a fatal sort of charm. Everyone that
sees him loves him and wants him, and he wants to be with you all the time. He
follows me about everywhere and constantly gets underfoot - I often have to
comfort him after tripping over or stepping on him ..."
"Aha!"
Captain Magenta jumped in with glee. "Reinforced bad habits. He knows he
gets attention every time he trips you up, so he does just that for a
reward."
"I
never thought of it that way," said the cleric, with a thoughtful
expression. "You have to apologise to Taki if you hurt him, one can't
ignore a distressed cat."
"And
don't the little velvet-pawed tyrants know it!"
Father
McGinnis smiled and started reciting a poem:
"There
once was a cat old and black,
Who
was practiced at crossing one's track;
He
could trip in a week
More
old ladies of Leith
Than
the number of cogs on a jack.
One
day old Taki surveyed
A
group of War Vets on parade.
He
doggedly marched
Until
he grew parched,
Then
stopped for a rest in the shade.
The
first of the marchers then tripped
At
the spot where the old cat was kipped,
As
the on-flowing throng,
Which
soon followed along,
Found
itself on the first roughly tipped.
In
hospital now, from the slips,
Lie a
crush of old men with cracked hips;
While
a lovely old cat
Lies
asleep on the mat,
With
a hint of a smile on his lips.
'Tis
Taki; the breaker of limbs!
To
trip you is one of his whims.
Though
old folks all fear 'im
His
charm draws them near 'im
And
doctors all sing him fond 'ymns."
"Where
did that come from?" asked Captain Scarlet, in wonderment. "I didn't know you could write
limericks, let alone put them altogether like a ballad; it's incredible."
"I
didn't write it," confessed Father McGinnis. "This was written for me by a poetic friend, who had also
discovered Taki's 'downside', so to speak.
I couldn't help memorising it."
"And
what limb did this poet break?" smirked Blue.
"No
breaks, just a sprained ankle and a bruised face - which was quite enough for
him to be inspired to pen those words."
"I
hate to interrupt this little poetic ensemble," put in an unamused sexton,
"but shouldn't you chaps be making an effort to get Taki back or, at
least, trying to prevent the Mysterions from infecting all ordinary cats with
his trip-wire brainwave pattern!"
"Mysterons,
Tom," corrected the cleric, "and they probably have old Taki halfway
back to their place by now."
"Not
necessarily," spoke Captain Scarlet, 'In fact, I should be most surprised if
they are beyond a five mile radius of Lakenscroft."
"But
there's nothing but rolling hills, woodlands, fens or the sea within a radius
of three or four times that magnitude," offered the Priest.
"Precisely,"
returned the red-uniformed officer, "if you wished to hide a needle where
would you place it?"
"Oh,
that's easy," jumped in Captain Magenta, "I'd place it in a large bag
of needles."
"You
would," chimed in Blue, "and you'd have a devil of a time finding it
again. I'd place it in a haystack where a metal detector or electromagnet would
be able to retrieve it quickly."
"Yes,"
agreed Captain Scarlet, "but how do you propose to find the
haystack?"
"Haystacks?
Needles?" queried a confused sexton, shaking his head. "I wish you would come to the point."
"The
point, Mr. Jefferies," shot back Captain Scarlet, "as you put it, is
found right under your feet."
"The
catacombs!" shrieked the priest, "but I'm afraid that all entrances
have been sealed-off years ago. Besides, Captain, why should you imagine that
they would have taken Taki there?"
"Now,
where else," put in Captain Magenta sarcastically, "would you hide a
cat except in a catacomb? Especially a
black cat."
"Very
droll, Captain," said Scarlet, trying to hide a smile. "But putting
yourself in their place you would find it most difficult to come-and-go in a
small village like Lakenscroft. I should imagine that they have taken up
residence in some abandoned farm in the area."
Captain
Blue was frowning and shaking his head in silent disagreement as his colleague
finished his theory: "Captain Scarlet, we're not dealing with people;
we're talking about Mysterons and Captain Black. No one has ever seen one of
these aliens and even Captain Black has the power of teleportation."
"True,
but they've been in this locality for weeks now and have probably been
expanding the tunneling network which must honeycomb this area; therefore they
must have equipment in place and perhaps even Mysteronised personnel as
well."
"I
think Captain Scarlet is on to something here," agreed Captain Magenta.
"Maybe all that hocus-pocus down at the tomb was a ruse to hide the
location of the 'Brain-wave Generator' or whatever it is they plan using on
Taki."
"I
think I know where to start looking for that haystack, Red."
"Where's
that, Tom?"
"The
old Owen Farm, it's been empty for years and is only three or four furlongs or
so west of the church. You can come in from off the Al and never be noticed by
the locals."
"Let's
have a look!"
It
was obvious, from its rundown appearance, that no one had been living in the
remains of the old farm house west of the village and its secluded position
offered cover from prying eyes. Captain Blue had been left at the vicarage to
look after the safety of Tom and Father McGinnis.
"Look,"
called out Captain Scarlet, pointing to footprints on the dusty front porch.
"Black,"
suggested the other.
"Yes,
Captain Black, or Mysteron agents."
After
entering the lounge room through the unlocked front door they quickly made
their way to a door that led to the basement. Here they found, in the moonlight
that filter its way through the dirt covered windows lining three of the four
walls near the ceiling, evidence that heavy equipment had been recently dragged
across the floor, the marks ending at a large wooden, and recently constructed,
double door.
"Now,
how do we get through there?" asked Captain Magenta.
In
perfect response to the question the latch was seen to move as a loud metallic
clang echoed through the dank cellar. The two Spectrum officers scurried for
cover behind some empty petrol drums standing amongst the scattered items that
littered the basement.
Two
Mysteronised men stepped through the doors, followed by a small electrically
powered car that was pulling a trailer. In the trailer, some sort of parabolic
reflector was lying on its side. The two men had made their way to the opposite
wall where a pair of tall doors were opened onto a lane leading to a hilly
paddock.
"Captain
Magenta," whispered his fellow officer, "while those men are busy
getting that paraphernalia in position atop that mound, let's secure ourselves
in the catacomb."
"Do
you think it's wise going in alone? Maybe we should wait until ..."
Before
he could finish the sentences, his friend had disappeared into the hollows of
the shaft.
"I
wish you wouldn't do that," admonished the pinkly clad officer, after
having caught up with his colleague some twenty feet into the neatly excavated
tunnel. "How far do you thing
we'll have to go?"
"I've
no idea, but you can bet we'll know when we have arrived at our destination.
The Mysterons have used good lighting and, it would appear that they have cut
through with some advanced form of laser technology. No doubt the actual
catacomb will look mediaeval by comparison."
"It
is medieval," stated an unsure Captain Magenta. "Isn't it?"
At
that moment the tunnel opened into a sizable chamber and instead of the
expected tombs, there could be seen an array of scientific equipment being
silently operated by some dozen Mysteronised beings. From various places around
the chamber there branched the start of older tunnels, obviously made many centuries
earlier and each winding off to different points of the compass.
"What's
your plan?" asked Captain Magenta.
"Get
ready to fire."
"Just
go in shooting! That's not a plan; that's madness."
"What
would you suggest, wait until they get the drop on us?"
"We
could call in to base and have Lieutenant Green send some backup."
"Maybe
have a spot of tea and a bit of a chin-wag with the Colonel while we're at
it," said the red uniformed officer as he advanced forward with gun at the
ready.
Captain
Scarlet had taken only a couple of steps when a movement flashed at the limit
of his peripheral vision and he dropped to the floor. Two men had entered the
main chamber from an anteroom at the farthest wall, and from his vantage point
he could see part of the room from which they had emerged. Captain Magenta
could also see the room and from his position further back he could just
discern a door leading off from the tunnel where he was hiding, which probably
lead to the anteroom. Moments later he was entering through the door and
quickly moved across the small room where he signaled Captain Scarlet from the
same doorway where the Mysteronised pair had exited only moments before. They
had the Mysterons in a crossfire.
Captain
Scarlet rose to his feet and entered the chamber; having felled the ambulatory
pair with his first two blast, he turned his weapon on those seated at the
various terminals. Those trying to flee or resist were quickly dispatched by
Captain Magenta, standing in the doorway of the anteroom. "Now, that's
what I call a plan," he said to his friend who had joined him at the
doorway, "however, there's nothing but computers in that room," he
added, with a jerk of his thumb, indicating the anteroom behind him.
Captain
Scarlet had a look around the chamber before speaking: "This place is like
a maze. There are five tunnels leading out of here, not counting the one we
just came through."
"I
should think that this one to the right would be the most promising,"
offered Captain Magenta.
"Why's
that?"
"Well,
for a start, it has lights. Also, those two zombies seemed to be heading for it
when you jumped them."
Five
minutes down the tunnel the pair came to a fork: "Great," sighed
Captain Magenta, in exasperation. "Do we spilt up?"
"No,
that branch to the right probably would take us to a power plant; let's keep
going to the left it should lead back to the main catacombs."
"You
mean you can still tell directions in this underground labyrinth?"
"Yes,
I think it must be another aberration of my having been Mysteronised and
survived. Anyway, it shouldn't be much further now. The sexton said that the
farm was only a few furlongs west of the village."
"What
is a furlong anyway -a Celtic mile?"
"Something
like that. Look!"
About
half a chain ahead of them the tunnel widened and the sound of a generator
could be heard.
"So
much for your built in compass, Captain Scarlet. That sounds like a power
station to me."
"More
like a signal generator station, Captain. Let's try to get closer."
The
small enclosure was manned by two Mysteronised beings and a smaller tunnel branched-off just before reaching the
station. By clinging close to the wall and ducking beneath the glass panel, the
two Spectrum officers were able to enter the narrower shaft without being
detected.
After
a few minutes the duo came to a door and Captain Magenta gave it a try. It
opened.
"It
looks like an operating theater," he whispered over his shoulder,
"but whatever it's purpose it appears to be empty."
"Not
for long," the other whispered, nodding toward a side door opening into
the small room.
From
the relative safety of the corridor they could observe through a small glass
plate in the door the activities of three Mysteronised men preparing the room.
One had plugged in some oscilloscopic looking apparatus and was busy at the
control knobs while another appeared to be testing some other electrical
equipment. Their attention was diverted to the third figure who was wheeling
in, what appeared to be the wee 'patient'.
"Do
you suppose that's Taki under those blue sheets, Captain Scarlet".
"There's
only one way we're going to find out, Patrick."
"That's
what I was afraid you were going to say."
At
that moment the thundering of hurried footsteps could be heard coming from the
direction of the tunnel they had just negotiated. The sound echoed and gave the
impression of a vast number of agents.
"With
their telecommutative skills these agents would have learned from their mates
back in the control room, just before their deaths, that we had invaded their
necropolis, so we had best grab the cat and hoof it back to the land of the
living."
Captain
Scarlet was the first to enter the operating theater and leveled his gun on the
man next to the array of electronic apparatus just as he was drawing his own
weapon. The blast to the head killed him instantly and he dropped to the floor
motionless as the man at the oscilloscope turned to see Captain Magenta making
a flying tackle on the agent in charge of the gurney. The two fell to the floor exchanging blows giving the other agent
time to darted for the side door. Captain Scarlet, not wanting to shoot in the
direction of the gurney gave pursuit.
At
that moment, Captain Magenta, struggling to winch the weapon from the hand of
his Mysteronised opponent, grabbed at the body of the gun, causing it to
discharge. The bullet shot into the object on the gurney causing a deep red
stain to spread over the blue sheet; a second bullet tore through the throat of
the agent before logging in the brain and thus releasing the hapless slave from
his Mysteron masters.
Captain
Magenta ran to the gurney and gingerly pulled back the blood stained sheet,
blocking from his mind the sound of crashing equipment and glass coming from
the other room.
The
sheet being removed, disclosed a broken vessel containing the shattered
remains, of what appeared to be a brain.
"Paul!
I've got some bad news for you," he yelled through the door.
"Well,
I've got some good news," answered his friend, entering the door carrying
a big black cat, who was wearing a very smug expression on his feline face.
"Taki's just disabled his first Mysteron Agent."
"Taki!
You're as sight for sore eyes," exclaimed Patrick, pointing to the mess on
the gurney. "Must be testing other ideas besides cat brain-wave
generation. I thought you were a goner for sure."
"He
will be if we don't get out of here. Quick, let's see where this tunnel
leads."
The
three had only just disappeared around the corner as a group of Mysteron Agents
stormed out of the shaft from the opposite direction and entered the operation
theater. The agent whom Taki had tripped into the equipment and knocked
unconscious was just regaining his feet. Luckily, there were two other exits
and the six agents divided themselves accordingly.
"SIG,"
came the voice of Lieutenant Green over the earphones of Captain Scarlet's
headset. "I have you back on the scanner and you are heading straight
toward the cemetery."
"SIG
Lieutenant. Captain Magenta has Taki in tow, and we are being pursued by
Mysteron Agents; will try to make it topside before engaging the enemy."
"SIG".
Rounding
a slight turn, Captain Scarlet could see that the tunnel branched into at least
four different directions.
"Which
way?" asked his companion, as the sound of Mysteron Agents grew louder.
"Cats
have a built-in sense of direction; perhaps if you set Taki down he could lead
us back to the vicarage."
"This
cat's 15 years if he's a day; he's got a dicky knee and an aversion to walking,
let alone running, and I doubt that he has any homing instincts apart from
sniffing out his food dish from his bed in front of the fireplace."
"Just
do it. He's too heavy to carry."
As
soon as Taki's paws touch the ground he unhesitatingly pranced off down one of
the four branches, coming to an abrupt halt when only ten feet into the shaft.
"What
is it, Taki?" inquired Captain Scarlet.
"Are you lost?”
"He's
probably exhausted, that's the most I've seen that cat move all day. I think
he's telling us that he's done his bit in finding the correct path, now it's up
to us."
"Come
on, Taki, let's just hope your sniffer's in better order than your legs,"
said Captain Scarlet as he scooped up the huge cat on the run, before
disappearing round the corner with Captain Magenta on his heels.
The
two Mysteronised agents now standing at the entrances of the various shafts,
listening for sounds of the fleeing Spectrum Officers, were rejoined by two of
their number who had checked out a shorter tunnel.
"They've
gone down this shaft," said the one who seemed to be in charge, "we
should be able to overtake them."
At
that moment Captain Scarlet arrived at the end of the twisted labyrinth he had
been negotiating. He paused momentarily before the steel door, knowing that the
Capriccio mausoleum lay immediately behind it and wondering if the door had
been secured. He tried the handle. It wouldn't budge.
In
the indefensible starkness of that exposed tunnel, Captain Scarlet gently
placed Taki on the ground and withdrew his weapon; indicating that Captain
Magenta do the same.
"You
and Taki get behind me where I can offer you some protection. Don't argue,
Patrick, there is no time and you know that I am practically
indestructible."
Suddenly
there was heard a loud metallic clank as the steel door behind them flew open.
As the two spectrum officers turned around they came face-to-face with a
smiling Captain Black, who was holding a large crystal-looking weapon and it
was pointing in their direction. It was glowing a light yellow and emitting a
low hum.
"Why
so surprised Captains? You must have known that I shouldn't let you leave
without saying good-bye."
The
two Spectrum Officers fired simultaneously and were flabbergasted to see
Captain Black still standing unharmed, the sickening smirk widening across his
emaciated features.
"Not
only is this Crystal Seisascope capable of turning you to jelly, but at this
setting it acts as a perfect force shield as well."
The
four Mysteron agents had come running around the last twist in the tunnel and
now, with weapons drawn, were approaching at a more leisurely pace.
"Surely
Captain Scarlet, you didn't believe that we went to all this trouble just to
duplicate your friend's brainwaves? The
cat's, Captain Magenta - I don't think yours would be that beneficial to
anyone. When you realise that there are over a billion cats in the civilized
world alone, then even a mere ten percent of them endowed with that black cat's
predilection for disaster would be a major cause of concern; all of them so
afflicted would be quite catastrophic- pardon the pun. However, your
elimination is even more beneficial to us and you walked straight into our
little trap. Now we have both you and the disastrous cat."
The
Mysteron agents, having disarmed the two Spectrum Officers, positioned
themselves on either side of their captives and began leading them back into
the interior of the tunnel.
"Take
them to the Operation Theater," instructed the man in black. "Captain
Scarlet, don't forget your cat."
As
Captain Scarlet bent down to pick-up Taki, Captain Magenta took advantage of
the moment's distraction to elbow one of his guards in the solar plexus while
kicking the other in the crotch. He was a good ten yards down the shaft and
about to disappear around the bend when Captain Black turned-up the Crystal
Seisascope to 'kill'. The hum increased in frequency and the yellow glow
changed to a dangerous red. The increased pitch of the output caused a
terrified Taki to spring from Captain Scarlet's hands and dart across the
ground just as Captain Black took a step forward in preparation to firing.
Tripping over the cat, he flew across the cave banging his head against the
wall and crashing down on the ground with his weapon firing indiscriminately.
Taki disappeared through the doorway into the vault as the other Mysteron
agents, who were momentarily distracted by the commotion, were now firing their
weapons just as Captain Magenta safely rounded the bend at the end of the
tunnel. Before they could join the chase they were cut down by another volley
from the Seisascope and fell in a lifeless heap.
Captain
Scarlet, who had dived through the doorway of the vault in an effort to escape
the blast, had been hit by one of the invisible waves and lay motionless. In
the ensuing quiet a meowing Taki had approached his fallen friend, leaned
forward and tentatively mewed in the captain's ear. When that didn't awaken him, Taki started tugging at the man's
hair with what few teeth still remained in his ancient head. Finding no
reaction to his tugging, the old cat tried pawing the captain's cheek - but he
still had no response, so he renewed his efforts with increased vigour, this
time applying his tongue across the same cheek in an attempt to revive the
unconscious officer.
Captain
Magenta had returned to the scene and having retrieved and holstered his gun,
bent down and removed the Crystal Seisascope from an awakening Captain Black.
Holding the weapon, still in the 'kill' position, on the prone agent he backed
toward his friend.
A
light touch on the neck could discern no pulse from his friend and as Captain
Black began to regain his feet, Patrick could hear the sound of a familiar
voice calling from without the mausoleum.
"In
here Captain Blue, we need to get Captain Scarlet back to Cloudbase
immediately."
Captain
Blue ran to his prone friend and instinctively felt for a pulse.
"You
won't find one." came the taunting voice of Captain Black. "That
Seisascope doesn't just kill, it churns organs into jelly and makes
retrometabolism impossible."
"I'll
try it on you and test that theory," said a stern looking Captain Magenta.
"Sorry
to disappoint you, Captain," returned the grim-faced agent as he began
fading from sight.
"Blast
him Patrick!" screamed Blue. But it was too late. Captain Black had been
teleported out of reach.
"I'm
getting a pulse! It's only just there but it's getting stronger- I'm sure it
is."
"Captain
Blue! What's that?"
Both
officers shot back from their fallen comrade as Taki darted back to the safety
of a dark corner of the vault.
Hovering
over the prone Captain Scarlet was a vaporous form that seemed to be coming from
the body of the near-dead officer. Slowly it formed into the likeness of a
young woman dressed in the garb of a bygone era.
"Who
be this man?" came its weak voice with an accent hardly recognizable as
English. "He is not of our realm. Ye must take him back."
And with that the form faded from sight.

One
hour later, back aboard Cloudbase, Captains Blue and Magenta were being
congratulated by a delighted Colonel White while a somber Lieutenant Green was
looking on from his normal station at the control panel.
"I've
been informed by Dr. Fawn that Captain Scarlet is almost perfectly recovered
and they are running some routine test before releasing him. Each of you played
an integral part in the ultimate success of this mission against the monstrous
plan of the Mysterons. However, none of the dangerous work on the ground could
have been performed without the coordination of our communications officer,
Lieutenant Green."
"Here,
Here!" added the other two Spectrum Officers, raising their glasses in
salute.
"One
burning question, though," put in Captain Scarlet as he made a surprised
entrance into the control room, "what was that message you sent me about
someone being possessed?"
"Not
possessed, Captain," answered
the Lieutenant, "as you recall the
interference was playing havoc with transmission at that time and my message
was continually breaking up. What I was saying was that I couldn't be certain
who was in possession of Captain
Magenta's headset."
"Perhaps,
Lieutenant," mused a thoughtful Colonel White, "'possessed' may have
been the more appropriate terminology."
"I
wasn't there, Sir, and for all we know, what Captains Blue and Magenta saw may
have been some aberration of Captain Scarlet's retrometabolic process brought
on by the effects of the Seisascoptic Rays."
"I
should think that to be the case," agreed Captain Scarlet. "Had the
rays been directed at me, instead of being bounced off the wall, then I doubt
that my retrometabolic abilities would have brought me back to the
living."
"But
you are safely back, Captain," smiled the Colonel, "so, gentlemen,
let us all charge our glasses and toast the hero of the hour."
With glasses
charged and raised, Captain Magenta quickly beat the colonel to the toast:
"To Taki."
"To Taki," echoed a cheerful chorus of admirers.

by Dan
September, 2002
Any comments? Send an E-MAIL
to the SPECTRUM HEADQUARTERS site