THANKS FOR THE
SCARLET MEMORIES
A Captain Scarlet
and the Mysterons story
Written by Lady Hawke
Copyright: April
2, 2002
AUTHOR'S NOTE: I wish to thank
Chris Bishop, not only for her fabulous Spectrum Headquarters web site, but also
for her gracious help in translating my English into the French language where
needed. She has always been most kind and caring with her fellow fans of Gerry
and Sylvia Anderson's worlds. A big HURRAH! to her, our Captain. Also, special
note to the creator of a new and upcoming Angel named Eternity. Thank you,
Kelly Ann Winkworth, for the use of your character name. Can't wait to see her
again in your own words! As always, I'd love to hear from my readers. Please
forward your comments to me or through Chris' site. Enjoy! Lady Hawke
A Long Way Down
Scarlet glared toward the late
afternoon sun at his companion. “I thought we were supposed to meet someone
here,” he argued. “I would think we were conspicuous enough in our uniforms for
this informant to find us.” He stood with his back to the railing of the
Minolta Tower Centre’s observation deck. The ice cream coned shaped pillar
stood ninety-nine meters tall, overlooking Ontario’s Table Rock Complex and the
Niagara River below.
“Calm down, Paul,” Captain Blue
advised. “We’ll wait a little longer. Maybe he got stuck in traffic, or in the
elevator up here. This seems to be a busy place.” The Spectrum officer sighed
and glanced out beyond the twelve foot fencing and Plexiglas before him. “Relax
and enjoy the magnificent view. Afterward we could grab an early dinner,"
he suggested. "The smells from the restaurant are making my stomach
growl.” Around them rose the misty updrafts of chilly air from the thundering
flow of Canada’s Horseshoe Falls. Blue held onto the icy steel railing, leaned
forward and gazed down into the humid tumult beyond Queen Victoria Park. “This
is really awe-inspiring. I wish we were closer to the falls,” he commented.
“Can’t hardly feel the mist from way up here.” The American captain considered
his companion who seemed unimpressed by the view. Instead Scarlet’s crystal sky
eyes were scanning the awed crowd of tourists out on a late September vacation.
“Have you ever taken the suspended cable car ride over the whirlpool at Niagara
Gorge, Paul? It’s dizzying. Really a thrill.”
“We’re not here as tourists,
Captain,” Scarlet reminded, still surveying the crowd around them on the
circular roof deck. “We’re here to retrieve some vital information regarding a
possible Mysteron threat against the new energy turbines for the Niagara Power
Project. If we don’t intercept those plans before the Mysterons do, we may see
an end to your 'awe-inspiring' view,” Scarlet finished with a piercing glare.
Blue sighed at his partner’s
dedication and straightened away from the railing. “All right, but you just
said it’d be easier for this informant to find us. I just thought we
could stand by the railing, be conspicuous, and enjoy the view all at
the same time. Honestly. You Brits need to relax and enjoy yourselves more
often.”
Again that icy stare. “Pardon me?”
Blue waved a hand at the expanse of
water in its rawest, roiling form. “This is a miracle of nature. The result of
receding glaciers and ten percent of the earth’s fresh water right here in one
spot, and I haven't seen you even glance at it once,” he defended himself.
“I’ll glance at it later,” Scarlet
replied, his gaze returning to the crowd.
“Party pooper,” Blue mumbled under
his breath and resigned to joining his partner in watching the ever-flowing
river of people who had gathered atop the Minolta Tower to share in his
appreciation of the falls. It was obvious who were the tourists. Young couples,
families, retirees, all sporting binoculars, cameras or other recording
devices, all trying to capture the grandeur of Niagara to memory or film. What
was Scarlet looking for anyway?
The news sent in to Spectrum
Headquarters, London only specified that an employee of Teledyne Turbine
Corporation was willing to hand over information regarding a new prototype
hydroelectric turbines which, when installed, would revolutionize Niagara’s
Power Plant, increasing power generation almost two-fold. The Mysterons had
just sent to Earth a new threat which had stated, THE FLOW OF THE NIAGARA WOULD
HALT ITS INCESSANT ROAR. Not much to go on, but Teledyne’s new generator could
be the means for an elaborate booby trap, or the shut down of one of North
America’s largest power grids.
Though Spectrum teams were combing
the area for other possible leads, it was his and Scarlet’s assignment to
procure the turbine plans and the current location of the new prototype
generators, hidden somewhere in Teledyne’s possession. The informant for which
they waited was to be their guide. The puzzle was: Niagara’s Power Project lay
about six miles north of their present location, on the U.S. side of the river
border. Teledyne Industries was based in St. Cloud, Minnesota. So, why were he
and his British counterpart standing at the railing of the Minolta Tower
overlooking Horseshoe Falls, their feet firmly planted in Ontario, Canada? In
their Spectrum uniforms and caps, the two captains certainly held no
resemblance to a honeymoon couple. They were as out of place as a pair of
Conservative Republicans at a nude beach. With another frustrated breath, Blue
contended, “Maybe we’re at the wrong tower. The Skylon Tower’s further down
river. Maybe we were supposed to meet him there.”
“I don’t think so,” came Scarlet’s
distracted reply.
Then Blue’s eyes settled on a young
woman in black jeans who stood a quarter way round the deck from them. Her dark
eyes seemed to be scanning the scenery, elbows atop the guard rail. Yet she
often glanced over her shoulder at the milling crowd as if expecting someone to
join her. The American captain allowed himself the luxury of focusing on the
woman’s features: light skin, dark brunette, almost black, shoulder length hair
which had been twirled back to her nape and held in place with a butterfly
clip. The woman’s features were European, yet her turquoise and black blouse
had a distinctive Oriental cut, and a pair of chopsticks stabbed out from her
hair bun creating the illusion of an antennaed, swallow-tailed butterfly
perched atop the high collar. Just a slice of her ivory neck was visible as the
woman turned to regard the crowd once more.
She was perhaps in her mid-thirties,
wearing little makeup. Her posture at the railing suggested impatient
alertness, hands clasping and unclasping each other to the rhythm of some inner
time clock. She seemed definitely to be waiting for someone. Just as Blue was
about to alert his partner, his eyes dropped to the woman’s feet. She wore
flat, ballerina-style loafers, and standing before them, wedged against the
railing, was a black, hard-sided briefcase with silver trim. Could this be
their informant?
Captain Blue turned his eyes to the
slightly shorter officer at his side. “Captain Scarlet. I think I found your
man,” he informed. “Except it’s not a man.”
“Where?” Scarlet demanded, straightening
away from the railing against which he had been leaning. In a millisecond the
captain was tensed and ready for action. Scarlet followed Blue’s outstretched
finger to a section of the observation deck where a young couple stood in a
passionate embrace.
“Now wait a minute,” Blue stammered.
“She was just there. A brunette woman with chopsticks in her hair.”
“Chopsticks?” Scarlet retorted.
“You’ve been staring at that vertical drop too long, Captain,” he accused even
as he bobbed his dark head trying to see through the milling crowd.
“No,” Blue defended. “She was
there. Petite, wearing a turquoise blouse and black jeans.” Frantically his own
eyes scoured the mass of bodies. He caught a glimpse of antennae receding
against capped and hooded heads. His arm grabbed at that phantom. “There!”
“You follow,” Scarlet ordered, also
spotting the spectral butterfly. “I’ll contact Lieutenant Green. He’ll have the
saloon brought to the door.”
“SIG,” Blue acknowledged as he
bolted into the crowd blurting apologies as he went. The bobbing butterfly had
vanished, but the elevator’s central hub was also this way. She might have
given up waiting, and was leaving, or perhaps looking to make a phone call. As
he froze before the bank of elevators, Captain Blue paused. Which one had she
taken, and was she going to the bottom? If he followed, but she exited onto
another floor, he’d lose her. There was only one choice. Swiftly Blue tugged
out his pistol and smashed the Plexiglas casing over the maintenance box set
within the bulkhead between two lift doors. Inside he curled his fingers over
the emergency override trigger and tugged it outward. A high-pitched siren
whined into the open air and a security guard quickly stepped to block any
further tampering.
“Hey! What are you doing?” the uniformed security policeman
demanded.
“I’m Captain Blue of Spectrum,” Blue
answered flipping out his I.D. badge then sliding it back into its zippered
vest pocket. “I need to detain a passenger on one of your elevators. Call down
to your security office and have them check everyone coming off the elevators
on all floors. No one is to leave a lift without being checked. We’re looking
for a dark-haired woman wearing an Oriental style blouse, chopsticks in her
hair, and carrying a hard-sided briefcase. Is that clear?”
“Yes, Sir,” the guard stammered,
grabbing the fist-sized walkie-talkie at his belt to relay the orders to his
superiors.
“What happened, Captain?” Scarlet
demanded flanking Blue’s side.
“She entered an elevator. I froze
the system until we can check each car,” Blue informed. The observation deck’s
crowd was milling in ever tighter circles around the lift hub. Uncertain panic
would soon follow if the siren was not terminated. “Security!” Blue shouted
over the ruckus. “Turn off that damned noise, or you’ll have a melee here.”
“Right away, Sir,” stammered the
guard who continued to bark orders into his walkie-talkie.
Blue turned back to his companion.
“She had a briefcase,” he elaborated. “And she kept looking over her shoulder,
nervous as if she were waiting for someone.”
Scarlet’s eyes narrowed. “Why didn’t
she come to find us? If she was in your view, we certainly were in hers,” the
British officer reasoned. “She put herself in undue danger. Did you get a good
look? Was she alone when she left in such a hurry?”
Blue had to shrug. “I’m not sure. I
saw her heading this way. It’s the only way down, so a lot of people would be
using the same route.”
Scarlet’s eyes bored into the steel
of a closed lift door. “If only we knew she was our contact.” He shook his head
and raised a determined glare. “This’ll take too long. There are half a dozen
cars and three levels of suites and dining halls to inspect. Have one car
reactivated, Captain. And have security evacuate the Tower. We’re going to
ground level to meet with Green. We’ll stand by the entrance and wait to see
who comes out.”
“What if we’ve scared her to
silence?” Blue interjected. “She could ditch the briefcase and change her looks
quickly enough.”
“You said she was wearing a very
distinctive blouse, right?”
Blue nodded. “Turquoise and black
with a mandarin collar and black velvet buttons.”
“Then we’ll stop anybody in blue,”
Scarlet assured with a twisted smirk. “Just like Cinderella…”
“If the shirt fits,” Blue chimed in
with a grin and had the security guard free up one lift for Scarlet and him to
travel to ground level. They met Lieutenant Green
outside.
“Did you find her?” the younger man
inquired from beside the waiting Spectrum saloon.
“No,” Blue conceded. “We’re going to
try and catch her from here.” Quickly Blue filled them in on a complete
description of their target, and the three spread out to cover the bank of exit
doors.
Soon the Minolta Tower was
evacuated. By order of security, every occupant had to exit through one of the
three sets of revolving doors after being screened through a metal detector and
an I.D. check. Many were stopped for concealed pocket knives and large watches.
One woman even had some stolen restaurant cutlery hidden in her pocketbook, but
no guns were found. All briefcases were opened and inspected, but no woman who
fit the description was found in possession of such a case.
Meanwhile, outside the ninety-nine
meter tower, the trio of Spectrum officers evaluated every person who exited,
noting dress, hair color, gender, and unanimously dazed expression as they
spilled into the parking lot. Though there were those who expressed indignation
at being forced to leave, the Minolta Tower security had obviously mentioned a
cautionary drill, and most visitors were quietly compliant. As the multitude
poured out one-by-one, it was becoming clear, the Spectrum team had somehow
missed their woman. The last perplexed occupant strolled out and turned
regretful eyes back at the towering structure which also housed an elite hotel.
“Hotel,” Blue voiced snapping his
fingers. “Captain Scarlet. We’ll have to get security to scour the place
room-by-room. This woman I saw may be staying in a suite. She could still be
hiding in the building.”
“Or perhaps she took refuge within
one in the melee,” Scarlet conceded. With a nod the British officer agreed.
“All right. Let’s get the search started. I’ll contact the local police about
bypassing traffic around the tower. You get security onto the room
inspections.” He turned to the youngest officer. “Lieutenant Green. Contact Colonel White and update him on our
situation.”
“And hope we have the right person,”
Green echoed what all three were thinking. An embarrassment to Spectrum was the
last thing they needed. It was difficult enough sometimes to gain the trust and
cooperation of local authorities in heading up an investigation, much less
staging a rather public case of mistaken identity before the Ontario Federal
Police.
Dark uniformed officers were soon on
hand, stepping out from their patrol cars to cordon off the plaza surrounding
the building. Captain Scarlet described the woman they were searching for and
expressed, “She’s to be treated as a protected witness, Officers. Spectrum
simply want her held for questioning. No harm is to come to her nor force used
against her. Is that clear?” The supervising sergeant and his men nodded, then
spread out to search the immediate perimeter.
Lieutenant Green came to stand by
Scarlet's side. “The Colonel’s concerned, Sir,” he admitted in his Caribbean
accent. “We can’t risk letting the plans fall into the wrong hands.”
Scarlet watched the Federal police
disperse and scowled. “If we could only be sure,” he rumbled beside Green. “If
she was our contact, why didn’t she come to us?”
“Perhaps she had second thoughts,”
Green proposed. “Got scared and ran.”
Scarlet shook his head. “She knew
how important this was. Those blueprints were to be transferred to a secure
Spectrum facility so Teledyne Industries could install the turbines under
guarded safety without threat of tampering. We were going to protect them. I
thought Teledyne trusted us.”
Green’s dark brows rose in
resignation. “We may need to accept the possibility that the Mysterons reached
her before we did.”
“But she was there, Griff,” Scarlet
argued with a tightening fist. “Standing there waiting one minute and gone the
next. How could we have been so close and let her get away?”
“Do you think, if the Mysterons
somehow got to her first, she’s now dead?”
Scarlet's scowl deepened. “I hope
not. I believe Captain Blue would regret having lost her.” They waited for Blue
to rejoin them at the curb. “How’s the search going?”
Blue bit his lower lip before
answering, “Slowly. The suites are being searched as well as all the corridors
and maintenance closets. Even the dining halls are being sifted through a
colander.”
With a nod Scarlet mused, “Then it’s
only a matter of time.”
“So we wait here or return to
Cloudbase?” Green inquired shoving a brown thumb at the parked Spectrum saloon.
“No,” Scarlet countered. He paused
pondering a possibility. “I’ve got a hunch our attache' is still in the area.”
‘What?” Blue responded with a chin
jerk.
“If she felt threatened, she might
have retreated to a more private place. Someplace where she could see her
enemies coming.”
“OK, but how are we supposed to find
her?”
“She obviously picked the Minolta
Tower for a reason,” Scarlet continued. “If she knew the building intimately,
she could easily outwit the security sweeps. If she’s in hiding, she may wait
for things to calm down. All we have to do is be patient.”
Blue pursed his lips in
understanding. “You mean…”
“When the cat’s away,” Green chimed
in with a smile.
‘The mice will come out to play,”
Blue finished with an accompanying grin.
“Yes,” Scarlet answered. “In this
case, just one mouse.” Cloudbase was alerted to their plan, and the three
Spectrum officers sat in the dark of the evacuated and sealed off Minolta Tower. Silently they settled into
the cushioned chairs of the tower’s reception lobby just outside the giftshop
and the elevator shafts which ascended to the building’s summit. As evening
approached Blue resigned to leafing through magazines, squinting in the red
glow from the emergency lamps along the wall behind him. Scarlet paced quietly
along the carpet runner from the bank of revolving doors to the reception desk
and back again. Lieutenant Green was slouched in his chair, head tossed back,
snoring in a fitful catnap.
As darkness engulfed them, the
silence of a ticking clock and Scarlet’s muffled footfalls upon the carpet was
split by a startled scream. Poised in mid-stride Scarlet drew his pistol. “This
way,” he urged and launched himself through the lobby and down the maintenance
corridor beyond the elevators.
Blue strutted behind him as Green
jolted awake in time to shout, “I’ll guard the front!”
Up ahead, in the reddish dimness,
Scarlet and Blue followed a trio of retreating figures. One of them was shorter
than the others. A squarish case swung from a dangling arm. “Halt!” Scarlet
shouted. “Captain Scarlet, Spectrum. Release the woman immediately.” The trio
dodged around a narrow corner and disappeared. Sliding to a stop at the
intersection Scarlet held his gun ready. “I’ll go first,” he advised his
partner.
“Be careful,” Blue warned. “I’m sure
I saw guns in the assailant’s hands.”
“SIG.” Scarlet peeked around the
corner with one eye then swung into place, gun leveled for return fire.
Instantly he lowered the barrel and sighed. “Gone.”
“There must be an exit,” Blue
suggested. “This is the way to the maintenance and staff lockers.” Blue stepped
past his friend and headed forward into the darkness. Scarlet followed close
behind, sliding along the wall to keep his gun free from his friend’s back.
“Here, Paul. An access door. Staff must enter here to punch in for the day.” A
time clock hung on the wall by the exit.
“I’ll go,” Scarlet said arming his
way past Blue to the door. “Contact Green. Get him to swing round from the
outside. Lock the door again so there’s no access back in. They could get away
if we’re not swift.”
“SIG,” Blue answered and twitched
the muscle of his left eye to activate his cap mike.
With a nod for luck, Scarlet raised his
pistol and shoved open the door into the night. Outside the roar of the falls
was a deep rumble even from his stance a hundred yards from the cliffside
precipice. Eyes scanning the surrounding buildings, Scarlet searched the staff
parking lot and alley for movement. As he stepped forward cautiously, trying to
hear the scrambling of footsteps over the incessant waterfall, his scarlet boot
snapped against an object. He looked down. Beneath his foot lay a dark shaft of
wood. Kneeling, Scarlet surveyed the lot once more before considering the item.
A lone chopstick, crushed beneath his step. A coincidence?
Scarlet dropped the stick when
another yelp from the darkness alerted him toward the railroad tracks and the
Niagara Parkway beyond. Vaulting to his feet he bolted toward the trees within
Queen Victoria Park.
“Captain Scarlet!” he heard
Lieutenant Green call. The younger man was running from the front on the
opposite side of the tower.
Twisting and slowing his trot,
Scarlet called back, “Keep the police away, Lieutenant.” He saw Blue trotting
up to join him. “We’ll not risk a firefight with the woman hostage.”
“But, Captain,” Green protested,
pistol in hand.
“That’s an order,” Scarlet demanded
even as Captain Blue strutted to his side. “They’re heading for the highway.
They may have a vehicle there.”
“I wish we had Symphony overhead in
a chopper keeping her eagle eyes on us.”
“It’s us, or the woman dies,”
Scarlet assured.
With a nod Blue sprinted beside his
friend across the tracks and through a slender access gate to a two-lane road
and the trees beyond. There they spread out to cover the park. Up ahead two men
continued to jostle and shove a woman forward between them. Scarlet bolted to
the next tree trying to flank the assailants before they reached the parking
lot to the Table Rock Complex. Blue followed suit on the opposing side. When
they caught each others’ eyes Scarlet motioned for Blue to swing around from
the roadway side of the park. He would do the same, effectively cutting off the
kidnappers from their getaway vehicle. Blue nodded and scurried to the corner
of another tree.
One of the assailants spun to check
their escape. He must have sighted Captain Blue rushing to another hiding
place. Raising his gun the man fired a shot in the Spectrum officer’s
direction.
“No!” the woman yelped. “Don’t hurt
anyone. I’ll go with you.” She was still struggling, slowing their retreat.
Scarlet could see from his vantage point the briefcase dangled not from her
hand, but from her wrist. Somehow the woman had handcuffed herself to the data
she had been sent to deliver. Her captor fired in Blue’s direction again. As he
did so, Scarlet bolted to the far side of the parking lot ducking behind a
minivan. Across the four lane parkway, Scarlet could see in the bus depot
parking lot of the emptying Table Rock Complex, a lone car. It sat waiting at
the edge of the observation plaza directly beside the western perimeter of
Horseshoe Falls. If that was their destination, he had to intercept them before
they reached it. It would be tricky. Traffic meandered leisurely along this
section before the traffic light near the main entrance to the tourist complex.
It was, after all, the most scenic of sections along the Niagara Parkway.
Dodging the cars would be possible, but treacherous. If Scarlet could just get
across unnoticed, he would have a clear shot at the woman’s captors, in the
open, with less likelihood of injuring her or the passing drivers.
Perhaps anticipating his partner's
intent, Blue chose that moment to step out from the protection of the trees and
draw the assailants' attentions. “Captain Blue, Spectrum,” he announced. “Let
the woman go, and I won’t need to use force.”
One of the retreating men paused and
turned eyes and weapon upon the captain who stood beside a large trunk at the
edge of the wood. Scarlet made his move across the highway as the second man,
too, turned away from their destination to confront the blue uniformed officer.
As bullets were exchanged the British captain wove across the traffic to the
far side of the four lane highway. Sprinting for the bus depot Scarlet took
advantage of the inclement weather kiosks bordering the lot’s drop-off zone. As
he dove behind the assailants’ waiting car he activated his cap mike.
“Lieutenant Green.”
“Yes, Captain,” came the younger
man’s eager reply.
“Move out. We’re across the parkway
at the Table Rock Complex. Get the police to surround us. Block traffic. Don’t
let them get away.”
“SIG.”
“And bring the saloon around. We
could use some cover and a distraction about now.”
“I’m on it, Sir,” Green
acknowledged.
Scarlet scrambled to his feet in
time to see his targets reach the road. It was only a matter of time, but where
was Blue?
“Release the woman and we’ll
retreat,” Blue called from the safety of the parking lot at the far edge of the
roadway. Scarlet saw his partner’s blue cap peek from behind a large sport
utility vehicle. “You won’t get away. We’ll not allow you to take a hostage.”
“You already have, Spectrum man!”
the dark-haired aggressor spouted swinging his pistol around for another shot.
Paint chips flew from the vehicle as Blue ducked to safety. “Back off or we’ll
kill her. We need only what’s in the case.”
“Not a chance,” Blue assured his
voice nearly muffled by the rush of water behind Scarlet. Stepping fully from
his cover, Blue fired his gun once. The threatening assailant collapsed in a
heap. One down. But there was still an arm upon the woman and a gun to her
head. Blue bolted into traffic after them.
Squatting at the ready, Scarlet awaited
a clear shot. Trying it now as the pair and his partner dodged the oncoming
cars would be too risky. Blue was in his line of fire as were several passing
vehicles. Besides, Blue had always been the better marksman. Scarlet watched
through the upwelling mist as the American captain stalled in the center of the
highway raising his weapon for a perfect shot. “Halt!” he ordered over the roar
of the falls and the squealing of brakes. The blond-haired kidnapper twisted
within his grip of the woman even as a car
honked and threw off Blue’s
shot. The bullet went wide. The assailant’s own bullet pinged against metal.
Another car screeched to a halt within centimeters of Captain Blue. With a
curse the captain lowered his weapon. Too risky, Scarlet assessed from his
vantage point. Blue had almost struck the woman. He would not risk another such
lucky shot.
From behind the getaway car, Scarlet
braced his knees for a spring. Perhaps he could overtake the man. If he could
circumvent the vehicle, separate the hostage from her aggressor, an arrest
could be made. They were almost to the car. Then a red vehicle roared through
the trees across the adjacent parking lot and straight for the highway. All
froze to watch as the Spectrum saloon veered into oncoming traffic and swerved
to avoid an accident. Green’s distraction. Springing to his feet, Scarlet
hollered, “That's far enough! Let the woman go!” His pistol swung into place
over the parked car’s roof. His target was not less than seven meters away. Too
far for a clean shot.
In response, the assailant spun in
his grasp, the woman before him. If only Blue had a clear shot from behind.
“Back off!” the blond man ordered even as he fired his weapon at Scarlet’s
head. The captain ducked beneath the roof of the vehicle but was accosted by a
second bullet blasting through the car's side window. Scarlet felt the burning
sting high in his right shoulder and gasped.
“Captain Scarlet!” he heard Blue
shout. Another gunshot barked into the night. Scarlet sucked in a strength
gaining breath and rose for another aim.
“I’m all right, Captain,” he called
back over the hood of the car. Suddenly a misty cloud from the falls rose and nearly obscured his view. From the
opposite side of the vehicle a haze of blue and brown struggled. The woman
stood aside, dazed. Her eyes were wide with horror. One shot, Scarlet thought.
If only Blue would release his assailant. “Adam!” he called, alerting his
partner to his quavering aim. “Get down!”
Scarlet held his numbing, injured arm
for a more steady shot. It all happened so quickly. The woman yelped. Green
chattered into his ear mike. “Captain Scarlet. The police have the area
surrounded.” Blue threw a skull-wrenching punch, but was yanked along by the
kidnapper’s grip of his jacket. Scarlet readjusted his aim. His injured
shoulder muscle twitched painfully as the bullet there dug flesh. The two
grapplers sank below view from his side of the car. Scarlet side-stepped for a
better shot.
“Run!” he ordered the woman, but her
attention was locked on the two doing battle upon the grass. Around them sirens
blared. Traffic was being detained, some diverted into the far parking lot to
clear the highway. Police were scattering to flank the two Spectrum officers,
guns drawn. And Blue’s assailant yanked his fallen gun back into play. “No!”
Scarlet demanded. As the stranger raised the barrel and pulled the trigger,
Scarlet took a final step and aimed for the man. Two guns blared into the
night. Blue collapsed on top of his
aggressor. “Adam!” Dropping his pistol Scarlet slid to the wet grass. “Adam!”
he called again shoving his friend from his assailant’s still body. Blue
flumped over, a reddening stain darkening his jacket just above the man's
heart.
So occupied was he with his
partner’s fate, Scarlet didn’t see the man beside him raise his gun. The woman
screamed again, jolting the British officer from his grief. “Now get up,
Spectrum Man, and back away,” the stranger growled.
“Captain!” Green called from where
he stood beside the cockeyed saloon not ten meters away. Slowly Scarlet
withdrew, raising a calming hand to his colleague.
“Stay back, Lieutenant,” he advised.
“Get a medical helicopter here. Captain Blue’s still alive, but he’s losing a
lot of blood.”
“But what about you, Sir?” Green
insisted.
“I’m cooperating, as you should be,”
Scarlet countered watching the pistol rise as he did. The man regained his feet
before the British captain. “I thought I shot you,” Scarlet said gazing down
the gun barrel leveled at his face.
“Bullet-proof vest,” the man
assured. “You should have aimed for my head. Now back away or your partner here
gets another bullet.”
Scarlet raised his hands and took
three steps back. “What are you after? What’s in that case?” he asked, stalling
his retreat.
“Private,” the man snapped with a
waggle of his gun. “None of your concern.”
Scarlet glanced toward the grass.
His own pistol was behind him lying just beyond the car’s bumper. Could he move
swiftly enough, with his current handicap, to regain control?
“Captain Scarlet!” Green called
again.
Scarlet saw his younger compatriot
gesture from behind the armed assailant. The communication’s specialist set his
arms as if he were holding a rifle then pointed to the police cars parked along
the opposite side of the parkway. A sharp shooter was prepared to take the man
out. He needed only a clear shot.
“Don’t move toward your gun,
Captain,” the aggressor warned, “or your friend here is dead.”
“And the woman?” Scarlet inquired
backing up another step.
“My partner lied before,” the man
admitted. “I need her to decipher the plans.”
Scarlet opted then for a distraction
of his own. “We know of your intentions,” he admitted. “The Mysterons need the
plans to booby trap the hydroelectric dam.”
The stranger’s strained, reddened
face twisted into a grimace. “Mysterons? Who are they?”
Scarlet froze, his body tensed. This
man wasn’t a Mysteron agent? That meant the briefcase could hold the plans for
a new, high-tech Christmas toy, for all he knew. In his confusion Scarlet
lowered his hands. “You’re not-?“
The man fired. Scarlet felt the
concussion pound his upper chest, ripping through bone and flesh, and lodging
against his spine. With a spasm of muscles and a grunt of escaping air from his
lungs, Scarlet crumpled to the grass.
“Get in the car. Now!” the man
demanded of the woman even as her shriek of horror echoed in Scarlet’s ears.
“You killed him! He wasn’t going for
his gun. I won’t cooperate with murderers!”
“You’ll cooperate, or you’ll die,”
the man assured.
Another shot blasted into the night.
Had the police sniper found his mark? Scarlet felt the drenching coolness of
the grass press against his cheek. One lung filling with blood, he found it
increasingly difficult to breathe. The drifting river mist chilled his fiery
body. He was somehow still conscious as two car doors slammed shut and a car
engine revved to life. They were getting away. Scarlet shoved his hands into
the wet grass and pressed his numbing body to regain his feet. His gun was
beside him, next to his fallen cap. Struggling to stand, pistol dangling from
his reluctant right hand, Scarlet braced his legs wide for one final aim.
Through the mist-coated windshield he could see the frightened face of the
woman in the passenger’s seat. From behind the wheel, his target grimaced and
backed the car away from the Spectrum officer and the pedestrian walkway
bordering Horseshoe Falls. Scarlet grasped his gun with both hands even as his
vision threatened to blacken beyond focus. “You mustn’t get… away,” he mumbled over
rising blood, forcing his right forefinger to slide into the pistol’s guard to
grasp the trigger. With a jerk he released a bullet even as the vehicle
screamed into drive. The car's tires sputtered mist soaked turf and squealed
against pavement. As the vehicle gained speed to bypass the nearby police
blocking the roadway, it jumped the curb and headed straight for the Spectrum
officer. Wobbling before the oncoming car, Scarlet wasn’t able to step aside.
The car’s bumper slammed against his legs propelling him backward toward the
steel and stone railing. He felt his bones snap. Then, just short of the chest
high wall, the vehicle swerved to the left dislodging its baggage and roaring
along the walkway and freedom. Scarlet felt his body wheel around in the air.
Whipped from his perch he dove toward the guard rail. His arms were like jelly
as he vaulted over the railing and toward the river. The roar of the falls
surrounded him. In that rushing moment, bone-chilling water was Scarlet's only
reality.
* *
*
Lieutenant Green sprang to his feet
from beside Captain Blue just as the retreating vehicle plowed into Captain
Scarlet. The communication’s expert could only watch helplessly as his comrade
was propelled toward the stone railing. The escaping car sent the Spectrum
officer tumbling through the air like a dog-tossed toy. Scarlet’s flailing legs
disappeared into the rocky, chilling water below. Green bolted forward bouncing
off the railing in time to see a small red speck drift over the summit of the
falls and down the escarpment. Immediately his cap mike was before his lips.
“Cloudbase,” he said. “This is Lieutenant Green. I’ll need an aquatic rescue
unit here on the double. Captain Scarlet has gone over the falls. He’s severely
injured and may be unable to swim. A medical helicopter and Doctor Fawn’s
presence is requested.”
“SIR, Lieutenant,” came Captain
Magenta’s prompt reply. The man was obviously manning the communication’s console
in Green’s absence. “We’ve got a chopper en route to you now for Captain Blue.
Doctor Fawn will take over at the scene. Colonel White will arrange for a
rescue team with Captain Grey as supervisor. Aquatic rescue equipment should be
arriving within two hours.”
Green watched the non-stop torrent
of water dive over the cliff and frowned. Two hours? “SIG,” he answered
downheartedly and turned back to his other injured comrade. Scarlet would have
to wait. Dark eyes drifting beyond the immediate scene, the lieutenant could
just make out the swaying, squealing vehicle of the retreating assailant as it
swerved back onto the parkway beyond the complex, dodging stalled traffic and
sparking against the guard rail bordering the river. Quickly the Niagara Falls
officers took chase. Green only shook his head. His people were his priority.
The police would take care of the runaway car and forward news of its
apprehension to Spectrum Headquarters. Kneeling again beside Blue, Lieutenant Green gingerly pressed a clean dressing against the
man’s weeping wound.
*
* *
From behind the backlit cascade, the
last Table Rock tour group was being escorted along the dripping gantry back to
their waiting elevator when a woman pointed out beyond the coursing flow of
water. A dark shape fell with the deluge, a figure the shape of a man. A flash
of red was all the shocked onlookers saw as the body plummeted the remaining
thirty feet to the river below.
*
* *
When the helicopter arrived atop the
Table Rock Complex’s roof helipad, Symphony Angel leaped down with the medical
personnel to follow them into the elevator. Once at ground level, she vaulted
to the grass to help lift Blue gently onto a gurney. Green filled Doctor Fawn
in on the man’s injuries as Symphony gently stroked Blue’s blond hair from his
face and mumbled reassurances under her breath. “Adam?” she called. “Can you
hear me?”
“Blood pressure at 95 over 56 and
falling. We’re losing him, Doctor,” a nurse stated elbowing the concerned Angel
out of the way. Fawn barked his instructions to his staff as Symphony was
relegated to returning to the helicopter and strapping herself back in as
pilot. Within minutes, Green was waving them away. The chopper soon rose into
the night.
An hour later, on Cloudbase, Colonel
White and Captain Ochre watched from the observation booth as Fawn finished
surgery on Captain Blue. Symphony, allowed to be present, sat at the head of
the operating table, her stricken visage hidden by a surgical mask. As Fawn stepped
back and tugged his gloves off, White hit the address button. “How is he,
Doctor?” the colonel inquired as one of Fawn’s surgical robots completed the
fine work of suturing the wound.
Fawn plucked the mask from his own
face, watching the machine’s tiny metal fingers weave their medical dance.
Silently Symphony raised hopeful eyes for the doctor’s response as she stroked
the unconscious captain’s blond hair with concerned, gloved hands. “He’s
stable, but critical, Colonel. We were able to get enough hemoglobin into him
on site to stabilize his blood pressure, but he’s very weak. Won’t be conscious
for some hours.” With a sigh Fawn approached the window. “He’s in a light coma.
I’ll keep him hooked up to the monitors and move him into recovery once his heart
rhythm and blood pressure steadies.”
“What damage to his heart, Doctor?”
Ochre asked from beside his commander-in-chief.
Fawn tilted his head in resignation.
“He was lucky. The bullet only clipped his left ventricle. I was able to repair
the damage. He’ll be on medical leave for at least three weeks, able for light
duty aboard Cloudbase within one.”
“But he’ll make a full recovery,
right?”
White settled a hand atop Ochre’s
shoulder. “I’m sure Blue will be eager to return to duty, Captain. That alone
will urge him to get well.”
Fawn nodded in agreement. “Svenson’s
young enough. He keeps himself in good shape. His heart is strong, healthy.
He’ll make a full recovery.”
“Thank you, Doctor,” White said then
turned away toward the booth’s exit. “Now to our next challenge- the recovery
of Captain Scarlet.”
*
* *
There was grim concern in Doctor
Fawn’s brown eyes as he sat in Colonel White's conference room with his fellow
officers and superior. Captain Magenta, seated at the auxiliary comm. station,
was relaying Lieutenant Green’s report. The young communication’s specialist
was still on site at the Minolta Tower Centre and Table Rock Complex. As the
remaining witness to the day’s events, Green described his associates’ actions
and concerns. Green also described the incident at Table Rock’s bus depot and
the circumstances behind Captain Scarlet’s disappearance.
“We need to find him as soon as
possible, Gentlemen,” Fawn urged from his seat.
Everyone turned to consider the
physician’s urgency. “We will recover him, rest assured, Doctor,” the colonel
promised. “He’s severely injured, that’s no doubt, but his recuperative
abilities have proved miraculous.”
“Maybe not this time,” Fawn
countered with a grave scowl. Again looks of unease and uncertainty were
exchanged.
“Clarify,” White ordered with a
furrowed brow.
“Captain Scarlet has suffered two
bullet wounds. According to Green, the second, taken in the chest, was almost
certainly fatal, despite Scarlet’s resiliency.” Fawn considered his next words
with care. “Considering the speed with which the car impacted his body, he was
most probably dead when he was thrown into the river.”
“That never stopped him before,”
Magenta reminded from his post. “He was back on his feet in days. As if nothing
had ever happened.”
“Because,” Fawn interjected, “his
body was returned to Cloudbase and allowed to recuperate. Scarlet’s body may be
trapped, beneath the falls or along the river. He’s in chilling water, unable
to breathe. Even if he were somehow able to regenerate his injuries, he will
stay effectively dead until he is retrieved. We don’t know how long his body
can remain inert before permanent damage occurs.”
“What you’re saying, Doctor,” White asked,
“is that if we don’t find Scarlet soon, his retrometabolic abilities may not be
able to revive him? Scarlet will truly be dead?”
Fawn nodded once. “It is a distinct
possibility I do not wish to risk.”
“Nor do I,” White agreed. The
colonel stood from his chair. “Very well, Gentlemen. Captain Grey is already on
the scene. We’ll send additional personnel to comb the riverbanks on both the
Canadian and U.S. borders. And I’ll employ the assistance of local units to
dredge the Niagara for any signs of Captain Scarlet. I want him found before
the day’s end.” White considered his staff. “Captain Ochre, I’m sending you and
Harmony Angel to relieve Grey and Destiny’s duties at the power plant. Their
full attentions must be on this rescue mission. Magenta. I need Green back here
and at his post. Relieve him at Table Rock. You’ll coordinate the rescue
mission with Captain Grey who’ll be in charge of the aquatic team.”
“Yes, Sir,” came a small chorus of
replies. An extended search was underway within the hour. Volunteers in
flat-keeled dredges were recruited to carefully scour the more shallow edges of
the river as Captain Grey and his aquanaut team searched the area around and
within the falls with scuba gear and underwater flood lights. Hours later, no
trace of Scarlet had been revealed. His only sign of existence was the scarlet
kepi sitting reverently, as if in memorial, on the waiting gurney beside the
Table Rock elevator to the roof helipad. The cap perched there, awaiting its
owner as a dog glumly anticipated the return of its master.
Fears and Risks
Dawn promised to be bright and the
morning pleasant for late September. Julienne DePaureau stretched beside her
bed then stumbled into her simple kitchen to make herself some hot green tea.
Pulling back her hair, she twisted its greying auburn length into a bun. She
plucked a large, ivory hair pin from her lips and slid it down in place,
allowing stray locks to curl about her sun-baked complexion. At her age,
Julienne didn’t mind a bit of wayward hair or even the friendly wrinkles about
her eyes and wide mouth. Her hands, worn and well used from the vegetable
garden, matched the weathering of her visage. She was healthy, toned, and
self-sufficient. That’s all she needed out of life. That, and a pot of green tea.
As she considered her desert dry kettle and the deepness of her water storage
tank she groaned. “Oh, non, Pierre!” she grumbled in her native French
to the empty space which was her cabin. “We have forgotten to refill the tank
again, mon ami.” From outside her kitchen window a large face smeared
the glass with an oat encrusted muzzle. There was enough water reserve for
either her tea or a quick shower, but Julienne had no patience now for either.
She had meant to tramp down to the river and pump two reserve tanks just last
night after dinner. It was her own fault, having become preoccupied with the
news on her solar powered radio: some disturbance and gun battle at the Table
Rock Complex up river. Curiously there had been no specifics, only that the crime
had been an attempted kidnapping. The remaining assailant was yet to be
apprehended. One was dead, but at least one other had gotten away with his
hostage, seemingly disappearing into the night, despite being chased by a
squadron of Ontario police.
Now that she absolutely needed the
water for her daily chores, Julienne would finish her breakfast, get dressed,
then hitch up Pierre to the wagon and go see about replenishing her supply. As
her kettle warmed on the woodstove, she flipped on again her radio and listened
for an update of the case. The newscast began, static-laden but strong. Yes,
the escaping assailant had yet to be apprehended. He may be injured. The
abandoned, bullet-ridden car had been found some eleven miles north, along the
River Road. No hostage was evident; they must have escaped together into the
woods.
“Mon Dieu,” Julienne
gasped. “They could well be
around here.” Setting down her toast and tea, she rose from her chair
and hastily dressed. Warm clothes, a sweater, riding breeches, lug-soled boots.
Then, rummaging through a dusty wooden trunk set against a dark back corner
wall, Julienne DePaureau pulled out a cloth-wrapped bundle. As she unrolled it,
cartridges tumbled into her open palm followed by an old, but well-kept
revolver. With grim determination, the fifty-year old poked a bullet into each
cylinder, then slid the wheel closed. Now she was armed. Her dead husband had
years ago taught her how to use the revolver, but it had been many seasons
since she had touched the weapon.
Breakfast forgotten, but still
needing water, Julienne cursed her delinquency. The news had told her last
night of an escaped kidnapper, yet she had still, in her quiet solitude, not
thought of such news directly affecting her. The only notable incident at her tiny
wilderness homestead had been a suicide drowning four years ago. The pregnant
girl, devoid of a father for her child, had thrown herself into the falls up
river. Her swollen, frozen body had washed up along DePaureau’s little stretch
of bank, lodged in an old collapsed tree. The sight had been horrible, and
Julienne had run over a mile downstream to her neighbor's domicile to report
it, as she herself had no electricity and no phone.
Now there was a threat to her home
and person, an armed kidnapper who had shot at police and some special
government agents. He had left one dead and one gravely injured. Now it seemed
the assailant’s car had been left not far from her home. Julienne tucked the
silver revolver into the small of her back, securely braced against the belt of
her riding breeches, then headed out into her garden to collect her roan and
blonde-maned draft horse, Pierre. Swiftly she hitched him to her buckboard,
loaded the two empty water barrels onto its flat bed and heaved herself up onto
the wooden bench seat. With a clucking tongue and a flip of the reins, she
ordered Pierre to strut down the dirt lane which led to the river’s edge.
Up from the bank an angular
contraption stood in wood and steel bolts. Julienne was proud of her water
pump, which in actuality didn’t pump anything. Instead, the levered machine was
modeled after water carriers used along the Nile River in Egypt for millennia.
Counterweighted, it lowered a swinging, empty jug out into the river. The arm
then lifted the jug again to tilt into a sluice which angled into a collecting
bin. This bin, much like an aqueduct, channeled the river water into a funnel
overhanging a trough. From there, Julienne could fill her water barrels, each
weighing 50 pounds once full, then haul them to her cabin, emptying them
through a hose which led into her home’s stainless steel storage tank. This
allowed her to store twelve and a half gallons at a time, freeing her from more
frequent trips to the river. When full, the steel tank, conveniently placed by
the woodstove, was also heated for her showers, and acted as a radiating source
of warmth at night. Her only additive was a water tablet to purify and retard
the growth of bacteria and algae.
Now, she hurriedly tied Pierre up to
his river-side hitch, tossed him some hay from the buckboard, and tugged down
the empty barrels for filling. She stood them side-by-side at the bottom of the
suspended trough and opened two shoots for the water to flow into each
simultaneously. Striding to the
control arm, Julienne unlatched the restraining chain and allowed the jug,
overhanging the river, to fall into the rushing current. The jug bubbled full
within seconds. A tug of the control arm set the contraption in motion. Water
was soon flowing along the well worn sluice and channels and into the water
barrels.
As Julienne continued the swinging,
pumping rhythm, a shiny object tumbled along the sluice, glinting in the
morning sunlight. She stopped and tugged the chain back onto the arm,
suspending the bucket out over the river, to inspect the finger-sized item.
Curiously, she retrieved it from the draining channel and turned it in her
fingers. Translucent in the center, the cylinder was capped by two pieces of
metal, unlike any material she had seen before. The two inch capsule was nearly
waterlogged, but being hollow, had floated into the jug to end up plucked from
the river. “Qu'est-ce que c'est que ça?” she wondered. It was definitely some kind of electronic
device, but its purpose was unknown to her. Turning to toss the curiosity onto
the buckboard, she nearly dropped it when it fizzled alive, glowing red in the
center for only a brief moment. Somehow, its inner electronics were still
operating, even after being dumped into the chilling Niagara. “Étrange,” she murmured. Perhaps there were more like
it floating by; a curiosity she could not ignore. Tucking the object into her
sweater pocket, Julienne tromped down the bank to the river’s edge. There, the
deep green of the Niagara River flowed swiftly with the last rains of
September. This was her river, her source of water, game, fish, and freedom,
far from the noise and bustle of the tourist town upstream. Here, the falls
were but a dim hum which at times, even at her distance, could sound like
thunder if the breeze were blowing right.
Climbing over the rocks to the muddy
edge, Julienne gazed out into the flow where the jug overhung the water. There
was no sign of any other debris floating by. But as she spun to return to her
pump, a flash of red caught her eye. Within the shadows of the old fallen tree,
a red cloth wavered in the chop. Julienne paused to focus on that dangling
scrap then gasped. A pale hand draped in a black sleeve hung over a branch and
waggled its fingers in the flow. The red cloth was a jacket attached to a body
wrapped in shadowy black. Facing downstream, the man’s boots were half buried
in the mud, anchoring him to the river bed. Red boots. Some kind of uniform. “Oh non, Pas encore,” she moaned, cringing at the
memory of the unfortunate teenager four years before. “Good Lord, spare us from
such tragedies,” she prayed in her native French. Her feet wanted to retreat to
the buckboard, run away as she had before.
But this was no hapless and distraught youngster swollen from a week in
the river. This was a man in some military style uniform. Could he be the dead
special government agent of which the news had spoken? Dead surely, as the man
lay face down in the green water, his body in undulating motion only because
of the flowing river. “Lord, give me
strength,” she murmured. Julienne side-stepped the rocks to the mangled stump
of the fallen tree. From there she gazed down at the fallen victim. His red
vest jacket was well-soaked; his matching boots muddied by the riverbed. Upon
his draped sleeve she could just make out some sort of circular emblem or
patch; a stylized ‘S’ surrounded by colorful striping, reminiscent of a
rainbow. Who was he? Were there people looking for him? Could there be a reward
for his recovery? More importantly, if the man was connected with the
kidnappers, could she garner police protection for having discovered the body
and alerting the authorities?
As she pondered her alternatives,
the body shifted in the swift current and nearly nudged free of its tree hold.
Half rolling the man’s face was partly revealed. Pale skin, eyes closed, black
hair almost obscuring his face. The features were of a handsome fellow, in his
mid thirties perhaps. Far too young to die in the line of duty, if indeed he
were one of the special government agents from Table Rock. The body shifted again, threatening to
break free from the whitened tree's tentative branch hold. It would soon
dislodge all together and drift further downstream. She would lose her chance
to claim its discovery.
Then Julienne noticed the small
cylinder attached to the man’s shoulder. It was the same as in her pocket. So,
the device was a symbol of rank, an epaulette of some kind. She must find the
strength to retrieve the body, drag it onto shore at least, before it was lost
to the mighty Niagara once more. Julienne shoved herself back up the bank,
sprinting to the buckboard. She fumbled inside the open tool bin attached to
the bench, and tugged free a length of rope. Swiftly she looped a knot into a
lasso and rushed back to the fallen tree. If she could just secure him, Pierre
could provide the muscle work of dragging the body from the river. Bracing
herself at the stump Julienne swung the lasso out at the bobbing figure half
submerged in the flow. Her first several attempts failed. Then Julienne was
able to hook the man’s boot as it broke free from the bottom and bobbed to the
surface. Smiling in triumph Julienne yanked the rope taut and wrapped its
length around the still rooted stump.
She returned to Pierre. “Come on, mon ami,” she said unhitching the draft horse
from the buckboard and leading him by the halter to the riverbank. Untying the
rope from the stump, Julienne freed the body from its branchy embrace as best
she could with a few tugs, then twisted the rope securely to Pierre’s halter. “Très bien, mon ami,
listen well,” she ordered.
Julienne scrambled down the bank to the water’s muddy edge. She would need to
carefully guide the body out from the clinging tree and the water’s grasp even
as Pierre followed her instructions. She paused, reluctant to step down into
the muck beside the man, afraid to touch cold flesh. She had never had such
courage before. But this man had been murdered. “Brave soul,” she murmured in
French. “You did not deserve such a fate.” Strength bolstered by her
conviction, Julienne sloshed into the chilly water and took hold of the damp
rope. “Allez hue, Pierre,” she instructed. The draft horse tossed
his great head and nickered, stepping amongst the brush to retreat from the
river.
The soaking body jolted in the
water. Julienne had to act swiftly to dislodge him several times from branches
and debris. Then he was half up the bank, his tethered foot securely jammed
into a tree root, his flowing hair waving in the current, pale face beneath the
flow. Julienne felt the doubt grip her like a viper. She couldn’t gaze at the
man’s whitened face, no matter how handsome the features. The body was secure;
she could just leave him there and ride Pierre to her neighbor's home to use
the phone to call the authorities.
Making the decision for her, Pierre
whinnied and yanked again. The body burst from the water. With a smack of wet
rope, he was on the bank. “Reste!”
Julienne ordered. Pierre stomped a furry hoof but remained stationary.
Straightening the man’s other leg, Julienne unhooked the rope and lashed it
securely around both ankles. Then, removing any further barriers with a few
tosses of her arm, she was ready to give the horse the next command. “Hue,” she said and watched as the body was
unceremoniously dragged up onto the crest of the riverbank, arms flailing at
passing brush and rocks. “Reste, Pierre. Brave
bête.” She followed the body up onto dry
land and stomped the muddy water from her boots as best she could. They
squished and sloshed as she moved to release the man’s ankles from the rope
before returning to her horse. “Brave bête,” she reassured, patting the animal’s neck and
affectionately rubbing his muzzle. “Proud Pierre. Mon meilleur ami.” The horse tossed his head and turned a large eye to the woman in
response to her kind words.
Julienne considered the uniformed
figure sprawled face down on the ground. She could leave him here, flumped upon
the dirt, arms over his head, or she could arrange the body in a more dignified
stance. With a huff of half courage Julienne agreed to the latter. Appalled by
the contact with dead flesh, she nonetheless clutched the man’s sleeve and
rolled him over onto his back. His chin waggled loosely in negation even as she
spied the two tiny holes in his jacket vest. Bullet holes. The officer had
indeed been murdered, then unceremoniously dumped into the river. “God forgive
the wicked soul who did this to you, young sir,” Julienne murmured. “May your
spirit find peace.” She arranged his arms at the man’s side, taking the
opportunity to inspect the sleeve insignia. The ‘S’ was significant, she was
sure. Certainly not a local or even federal government agency, despite his
wearing the colors of Canada’s Mounted Police. Curiously she rolled the thick
sleeve between her fingers. The cloth seemed insulating yet porous, all weather
fabric, tough yet breathable. The red jacket, too, was sturdy. Its zippered
pocket drew her attention. Could he have retained some piece of identifying
memorabilia? Did she really want to know his name? Perhaps it was better that
the dead man remain anonymous. Nonetheless, her hand found itself upon the
zipper pull. The latch was stuck, perhaps the wet and swollen fabric had jammed
the device.
As she tugged at the resisting
zipper, a sound issued from the wobbling body. It was a moist sucking of air,
the return of breath. Julienne bolted to her feet and scrambled away, eyes wide
in horror. A sharp scream issued from her own lungs as Julienne watched the
man’s chest shudder then rise and fall in a deep gasp of life. Yes, he was
alive. Instinctively Julienne crossed her hand upon her chest. “Mon Dieu,” her
throaty gasp exhaled. The man had been shot in the chest, dumped in the icy
river more than twelve hours ago. There was no way this man could live unless…
“Démon,” Julienne voiced, even as her boots kicked dirt in
retreat. Stumbling backward she twisted to sprint for her horse. With a hop
atop a fallen log, Julienne vaulted onto Pierre’s harnessed back. She leaned
forward and yanked the reins free of a bush. Then, with a quick kick to the
draft horse’s flank and a clutch of his thick mane, Julienne sent him trotting
away. Pierre galloped from the river and toward Julienne’s cabin in the
Canadian wilderness.
*
* *
“Colonel!” Lieutenant
Green yelped from Cloudbase’s data station. “I’ve got a faint signal.”
“From Scarlet?” White surmised.
“It only lasted a millisecond, but it
definitely came from Captain Scarlet, Sir,” Green assured.
“Good news, Lieutenant. Keep alert
in case the signal is repeated. Be ready to triangulate his exact location.”
“SIG,” Green snapped back and busied
himself with preparations to pinpoint the missing Spectrum officer’s
coordinates should the man try to call again.
In sickbay, Symphony smiled diamonds
when Blue’s eyes slid open and focused on her concerned face. “Adam. I was so
worried,” she expressed climbing to her feet to allow her friend a better view
of her relief. “How are you feeling?”
“Tired,” the man groaned trying to
move beneath the blanket. “What hit me? Feels like I collided with a rogue
elephant.”
“You were shot,” Karen Wainwright
explained. “Do you remember being at Niagara Falls?”
Groggily Blue scrunched up his face
and searched his fuzzy memory. “We had a hostage situation. Captain Scarlet was
injured. I’d tackled the assailant. Must have dropped my gun.”
Karen nodded. “That’s right. But
your attacker was able to get to his gun. He shot you. But you’re going
to be all right.” Her brown eyes softened to stress-releasing tears. “You
almost died, Adam, but you’re going to be just fine.” Swiping tears away,
Symphony Angel smiled again.
“That’s encouraging,” Blue grunted
flinching in discomfort. “Anything’s better than how I feel right now. How’s
Paul?”
Karen blinked in dismissal, her grin
collapsing in a heap. Then she swallowed her emotions before admitting, “He
tried to save you, Adam, but your attacker wasn’t killed. He got away with the
woman, his hostage. Adam,” she breathed, “Captain Scarlet’s missing. He was
thrown over the falls. He’s dead. He may be dead for good this time. Captain
Grey hasn’t found any trace of him.”
“Grey?” Blue rasped. “He was on
assignment with Destiny at the power plant.”
Karen nodded. “He was recalled to
help find Paul. He’s using his new remote underwater cameras to search the
waters at the base of the falls. But no trace of Scarlet. It’s like he was
washed away to Lake Ontario or something. He may never be found,” she surmised
with a dour frown. Tears glistened anew upon her cheeks.
Captain Blue groaned to sit against
his pillow. Symphony forced him gently flat with her shaky hands. “Paul’s
indestructible, Karen,” he insisted resisting her caution. “He’ll find us once
he’s recovered.”
“If he recovers,” Symphony
Angel murmured beneath her breath.
Blue tensed at her words then winced
at the sharp pain in his chest. “What do you mean, ‘If'?’" he growled.
Karen Wainwright resigned to filling
her friend in on what had taken place at Table Rock after Adam had been shot.
Blue listened stoically, his only outward reaction a narrowing of blue eyes.
“So you see,” she concluded, “we need to find him before he’s dead for good. If
that’s really possible.”
Blue released a tense breath. “I
agree with Doctor Fawn,” he admitted grimly. “We’ve killed Mysterons before
with only gunfire. It’s just a matter of luck and a good shot. It’s quite
possible, with just the right circumstances, that Paul might not have survived
this time.”
“How can you be so calm about this?”
Symphony asked her brown eyes round with disbelief.
Blue’s thin lips drew a straight
line. After a moment he grimaced in discomfort and explained with a trembling
voice, “I’m not calm, Karen. I’m… I’m grieving.” There
was silence in sickbay for a long moment after that. The shock of the
possibility weighed the air like a thick spring fog. Finally Captain Blue
closed his eyes to drift back into a healing sleep. “He’s still alive,” he
murmured as Blue lost consciousness. He didn’t see Symphony’s encouraging smile
as she bent to kiss his cheek. Reluctantly she left for her duty shift onboard
Angel One.
*
* *
Captain Grey shoved himself out of
the river and collapsed against a granite boulder just up the rocky bank below
the falls. Tugging his scuba mask from his face he huffed in futility. “He’s
not down there, Jeb,” Grey hollered to his assistant supervisor stationed
further up the wall. “We would have found a scrap of fabric, his gun. Something!”
Jeb Daniels frowned and checked the
readout of his underwater monitor. For the thousandth time he swiped the spray
away with a brown hand and studied the picture sent back by the underwater
probe coursing through the violent cascade. Nothing. No sign. “Then he must
have washed down river,” Daniels called down over the roar of the falls.
Grey nodded his resignation. “We’ll
boost the search then. I’m taking a boat downstream,” he assured unlatching the
oxygen tank from his back. “We’ll use the underwater cameras to monitor the
riverbed. Put together a grid pattern for me, Jeb. I want to be on the river in
half an hour.”
Jeb Daniels’ dark frown deepened.
“You’ve been working straight on this for over thirteen hours, Bradley,”
Daniels asserted. “Let the other team members have a go at it. They know how to
work your equipment.”
Grey shook his head adamantly. “No.
I’ll not sleep while my friend’s lost somewhere in this river.”
“It’s a recovery mission, Captain,”
Jeb reminded. “The body’ll be found eventually. There’s no sense in killing
yourself too.”
“Paul didn’t commit suicide, Jeb,”
Grey barked, pitching the scuba tank up to his assistant. The metal cylinder
clanked heavily against the rocks and wedged between the guard wall and a
boulder. “He was murdered. I won’t rest until I find him. Is that clear?”
Jeb only nodded once, then bent to
retrieve the discarded tank from the rocks.
Grey shoved himself to his shaky feet and followed his assistant back up onto
the Table Rock plaza. There he traded his drysuit for heavy rain gear and boots
to help combat the incessant rising mist so close to the Horseshoe Falls. Soon,
Captain Grey was guiding a refitted fishing trawler along the river’s course,
monitoring the rocky bottom for any sign of a red jacket and his fallen
comrade.
*
* *
Julienne DePaureau paced within her
little cabin. Why had she run? Her superstitions had gone amok at the sight of
life returning to a dead body. She was no doctor. Who was she to diagnose a
man’s injuries? The bullet holes could have been only fabric deep, the bullets
deflected from flesh by a bullet-proof vest beneath his jacket. He might have
swum downstream, been face down in the water for only a few moments before her
discovery. There was every reason he could be alive, and yet she had run. The
man needed her help and Julienne had bolted as if she were a child. The memory
of another time was too fresh, she admitted. This was much like that night her
beloved Victor had died. Unsure whether to go for help or stay with her
stricken husband, Julienne had hurried to the neighbor's to call for an
ambulance. Victor had been experiencing chest pains, gasping for air. Unwilling
to take the risk of CPR alone, Julienne had escaped the situation; instead
relying on another for help.
Help had arrived too late, however.
By the time she had led the Emergency Medical Technicians back to her cabin in
the woods, Victor was dead. With shame and fear of the big city up river, Julienne
DePaureau had remained in the home Victor had built for them. All had been
quietly uneventful for so long until four years ago… and now. Now someone was in need of her help
again. And Julienne had escaped her responsibility like an undisciplined school
girl from a final exam. Kneading her hands she gazed out the kitchen window
into her fenced garden. Pierre stood patiently at the perimeter still laden
with the harness, reins flipped over the top railing. A glance at the afternoon
sky told her a late September storm was brewing. The weather would change from
pleasantly cool to bone-chillingly frigid if rain and wind were in the mix.
She could go back, take a blanket,
fresh water. She had to go back. She had left the buckboard and her half-filled
water barrels by the river. With a hesitant sigh Julienne tugged down a heavy
blanket from an overhead shelf in her bedroom. She snatched a canteen from a
peg and swung in onto her shoulder. Marching back into the changing afternoon,
Julienne had to smile at her stupidity and bravery. Beneath her sweater, the
body-warmed hardness of the silver revolver reminded her that she was, after
all, not totally defenseless. Atop
Pierre’s broad back Julienne raced back to the fallen officer who had somehow
miraculously survived the torture of the falls and one man’s savage attack. “Monsieur Miracle,” she
attested to herself. Until he could tell her his name, she would call him ‘Miracle’.
Julienne slowed to a bumping prance
as she and Pierre neared the fallen tree. The man's body was gone. Surely she
had not imagined the entire incident. Yet, the government officer, or soldier,
as he had been in the midst of a firefight, was in no shape to regain his feet
and walk away. In the least, he would be suffering from hypothermia. If by some
act of God he had reached his feet, surely Julienne would have spotted his
brilliant jacket somewhere along the drab autumn trail. “Bonjour,” Julienne called. “Monsieur?
Êtes-vous là?” Perhaps the man did not speak nor
understand her native French.
“Ohé!”
she addressed the wilderness scrub. “Are you there, Monsieur?” Uncertain, Julienne slid from her horse’s back,
blanket in arm and canteen draped over her shoulder. “Monsieur?” Her green
eyes searched the scrub for any sign of scarlet. As she neared the bank a boot
heel caught her attention. Somehow he had awakened and tried to drag himself
back to the river, perhaps for a drink. Julienne rushed forward. There, draped
downhill, face against the dirt and leaf-strewn path lay the mysterious
stranger. She knelt beside him. He was unconscious, but Julienne was glad to
see the man was breathing regularly and that his ashen face was regaining some
color. “Monsieur,” she said, touching his shoulder. Not wishing to
startle him, Julienne set down the blanket and canteen before gently rolling
the officer again onto his back.
Crystal sky eyes fluttered open, but
couldn’t seem to focus on her fearful yet concerned countenance. “Where’s
Captain Blue?” he croaked.
“Captain Blue?” Julienne repeated.
The man had spoken in English with a distinctively British accent. He wasn't an
American. Nor was he Canadian, it seemed. “I do not know,” she told him in
English. “I am Madame DePaureau. You are on my land. I pulled you from the
river. Can you stand?”
“Cold,” the stranger groaned then
pulled his left arm tight in against his side shivering. Julienne reached to
touch his hand. The digits were deathly chilled, as dead flesh. He was indeed
suffering from hypothermia.
“I have a blanket,” she told him and
twisted to unfold the cloth. “Sit up, Monsieur.
I shall wrap it about you.”
“Juliette?
Is that you?” The man seemed delirious. His eyes rolled in his head then
closed. Was he unconscious again?
“Monsieur.” Gingerly she draped the blanket over his lounging
form. She had to get him into dry clothes, away from the chill of the river,
onto the buckboard and back to her cabin. “I will not abandon you, mon ami," she promised him. "You
startled me before. Forgive me. I will not run again.”
The man's blue eyes reopened,
blinked, then turned to focus upon her face. “You’re not Juliette,” he mumbled through quavering lips.
His teeth chattered within his mouth.
With a soothing smile DePaureau
answered, “No. I am Julienne. Julienne DePaureau, young sir. Do you also have a
name?”
The man swallowed then cleared his
throat. “Scarlet,” he said hoarsely trying to sit beneath the cover. “Captain.
Spectrum.”
With an assisting grasp Julienne
helped the officer to sit, wrapping the heavy blanket about his shoulders. “I
am honored to meet you, Captain Spectrum Scarlet,” she said slowly, finding the
words awkward in English. “My house is warm, and there is food. Stand, Monsieur.
Pierre will return us to my home.”
“I…I can’t,” he groaned his face
twisting in obvious discomfort. “Legs… broken I think. My arm… useless.”
“Mon
Dieu,” Julienne attested nearly
releasing her grasp of his shoulder for fear of harming him further. “It is a
miracle you are even alive, Monsieur. I should go. Get an ambulance.”
“No,” Scarlet answered with a grunt.
“Just get me to your saloon. I…will try to walk.”
“But, Monsieur,” Julienne protested. “Your legs. I have no ‘saloon’, only a wagon. Pierre
is my horse.” She rose to her feet. “Wait. I will bring them to you.” Quickly
Julienne busied herself hitching Pierre again to the buckboard. Then, water
barrels forgotten for the moment, Julienne climbed up onto the seat and
maneuvered the draft horse to back the wagon to the riverbank. “Reste, Pierre,” she
instructed the animal before securing the reins and sliding back to the path. “Monsieur,” she
told the shivering man hunched upon the dirt. “I will help you. I will... get a
branch for a... a crutch.” She searched the debris pile beside the fallen tree,
choosing a sturdy, straight sapling she had just last month pruned from her
trail. When the French Canadian woman returned to the injured man, Scarlet had
retrieved the canteen and was guzzling water from the opened spout. He choked
and coughed, then set the container down to screw back on the lid with his left
hand. “Shall we... give it a go, as they say in your country?” she asked him.
His blue eyes rose to regard her as
if from out of a fog. “Where am I, Madam?”
“I told you, Monsieur Scarlet.
You are on my land. I pulled you from the river.”
“The Niagara River,” he corrected.
“Oui, the Niagara. You have survived a fall not many
have, Monsieur,”
she attested. “My... neighbor has a phone. I will take you to my home,
then I shall go there and call for an ambulance.”
Again the dark-haired man shook his
drooping head. “No. I… I can’t go to a civilian hospital.”
Julienne blinked, uncertain why. “Monsieur?”
The man sighed. "I must contact
my superiors, Madam. Get me to your neighbor’s
home. I shall use the phone there.”
Hesitating in her reply Julienne
offered the injured officer her tree crutch. “As you wish, Monsieur Scarlet.”
Left arm rising to grasp the
sapling, Scarlet rolled onto his left hip and groaned as muscle took over where
bone had given way. Julienne maneuvered her support to his right side, where
the bullet hole had somehow left his limb unresponsive.
“Forgive me. I do not... wish to
hurt you further,” she murmured raising his injured arm and ducking beneath it
to lend her support. The discarded blanket flumped to the dirt as Scarlet
released a pained growl. Slowly they limped the few steps to the back of the
buckboard. “I am unsure how to get you up, Monsieur,” Julienne admitted watching the man’s jaw clench
in obvious agony.
Swallowing, Scarlet grunted, “Give
me the reins.” Leaving him leaning heavily against the tree crutch and wagon,
Julienne rushed forward to untie Pierre’s reins and pull them back along the
wagon’s bed. “Hand them to me,” Scarlet instructed.
“But, Monsieur,
your arm…”
“Is feeling better,” he insisted
raising both hands to grasp the leather straps. With a heave of straining
lungs, the man forced his right hand to pull his weight forward onto the
buckboard. Handhold by handhold, he slid his lower half onto the flat bed
before releasing the reins and collapsing in a heap.
“Monsieur?” Julienne inquired. “Captain?” No response. The man was unconscious
again. Her first concern was to recover him in the blanket, for his clothes
were still drenched. They sucked the warmth from him as the river had almost
taken his life. Then, mounting the buckboard seat, Julienne snapped the reins
and urged Pierre forward. The neighbors would be able to help her remove him
from the wagon. But why no ambulance, no hospital? She glanced back at his
bumping form beneath the blanket. The jostling could not be good for his
injuries. The man could still die from shock and exposure.
No. The sooner Julienne got him
inside under blankets and fed warm tea and soup, the better. Her first priority
was to stabilize him. Her husband, Victor, would not have wanted her to abandon
this officer, to release him to yet another’s custody. No, she would not hand
him over to her neighbors. She would nurse the scarlet man before going to the
phone. The captain was her responsibility now. After all, she had been the one
to save him from the river. But as Julienne reined Pierre in at the fence to
her little cabin garden, she felt a flood of uncertainty sink to the well of
her stomach. How was she going to get the captain inside without his help
again? She would have to wake him; further drain his already taxed energy
reserves.
With determination Julienne turned
the buckboard around and backed it to her door. After tying Pierre off to the
fence, she then strode to the back of the wagon. “Captain Spectrum Scarlet,”
she called. “Wake. We must get you inside and out of the weather.” As she
spoke, a chilling wind was rising, bringing dark clouds from the north. Having lived
in the north corner of Quebec all her young life, Julienne was accustomed to
late September snow showers. They could be the most devastating to the
unprepared skin and health. And the stranger was soaking wet. Getting him
conscious proved a daunting task, however. Shock and the bone-chilling breeze were taking their toll on his strength. Wrapped in
the blanket he crawled to the edge of the buckboard and dove headfirst to the
dirt. There was no waking him after that. With a determined gulp of air, Julienne
clutched the blanket in her well-seasoned hands and hauled the stranger through
the door and up to her smoldering woodstove. There she settled him as best she
could upon the hardwood floor, propping his head with a couch pillow and
tucking another blanket about his legs.
After stoking the waning flames
within the stove with more wood, Julienne drained her remaining water reserve
to again fill the kettle for tea. As the pot hissed upon the stove, she
considered the man’s slack face atop the pillow. He seemed to be gaining color
even as he lay there. Perhaps his wounds were not as severe as he had thought.
The holes in his jacket shed no blood upon his chest. Yet, he had said his legs
were broken; surely a severe enough injury to induce shock, septicemia, and
fever. He needed a hospital, yet he had refused one. Perhaps the man really was
suffering some delirium. He certainly wasn’t thinking rationally.
Julienne shook her head free of the
inner chatter. The truth to the matter was: this man was injured. He needed
assistance as soon as possible. By leaving the canteen by his side, covering
him with blankets and laying him beside the warming stove, she had provided the
officer with far more comfort than he would have had alone by the river. She
could unhitch Pierre and ride to the neighbor’s to be back within the hour to
await the police and ambulance. The man had survived so far; he would be all
right for a while longer. Yet that same fear dug at her like a backhoe.
Julienne had not been able to help the pregnant teen; had not known what to do
for her husband, Victor. They were both dead. What if she left, and the
stranger died while she was going for help again? “Non!”
Julienne yelped, slamming a fist atop the table beside her.
The man shuddered awake, gasped,
eyes opening. “Colonel White,” he said, “He wasn’t a Mysteron.”
“Qu'est-ce que je
fais?” Julienne asked the wide-eyed stranger. “What do
I do?" she repeated to him in English. "Do not die, Monsieur. You must not die like my dear Victor.
You must promise me,” she entreated sinking to her knees before the man. “Captain. Promise me.”
The man swallowed, his tired eyes following her
down. “I…I can’t die,” he answered her. “I must contact-"
“Your superiors," she finished
for him. "I know, but how? I have no phone. I will not leave you, Monsieur. I
left my husband and he died. I... abandoned you once. Not again. What do I do?”
“My cap,” he said raising his hand
from beneath the covers to grasp at his head. “Where is my cap?”
“Your hat? I found only you…and…"
She dug into her sweater pocket. “And this.” Before his pain-creased eyes she
showed him the epaulette. “It blinked. Somehow it still works.”
“What color?” the stranger asked
struggling to sit up.
“Color?” Julienne spouted. Did it
matter?
“What color did it blink?” the man
insisted.
Julienne paused. “Uh…uh… It blinked red.”
“The emergency signal.” Scarlet
swallowed and tried to adjust himself upon the hard floor. Beneath the blanket his
legs shifted. “Can you get it to blink again?” he asked with a grunt. “I must
report to my superior, the colonel. It’s vital he knows what I know about our
target.”
“Target, Monsieur?
Do you mean the kidnapper? He got away.”
“Yes,” the man agreed. “I believe we
were after the wrong man. The power plant is still in grave danger. The plans
may even now be in Mysteron hands.”
“The Niagara Power Project? But it
is kilometers south of here. What is going to happen, Captain? And what are
Mysterons?”
Scarlet shook his head and groaned
into a sit. “I must contact the
colonel, Madam. Give me the epaulette. If I
can reactivate it, my colleagues will be able to find me.”
“They will bring help? Medical
assistance?”
The stranger reacted in a most
unusual way to her questions. He sighed wearily and produced a twisted smile.
“Yes, medical assistance.” The man shifted again and rubbed at his chest with a
grimace. Julienne handed him the epaulette.
“I did nothing but look at it, Monsieur. It
blinked in my hand.”
The man held it, tilted it from side
to side, watched the half-filled capsule slosh with water. He frowned. “It’s
been damaged. The water.”
“But it did work,” Julienne
assured. “Allow me.” She took the capsule from him and rolled it in her
fingers. She squeezed it, turned it, pressed it end to end, but there was no
response from the device. “Perhaps you are right.”
With a determined grimace Scarlet
twisted to regard his right shoulder and the epaulette still perched there.
With a determined effort, he snatched the flooded device from his jacket and
shook it. Useless. The water had short-circuited both signaling devices.
“Once you are feeling rested, Monsieur,”
Julienne suggested to brighten his dark mood, “I will take you to a phone. You
may call your colonel then.”
With a deep sigh the man nodded
wearily. “Very well. But I should go now. This can’t wait. Lives may be at
stake.”
Julienne gazed concernedly down at
the man’s shrouded legs. “But your legs are broken, Monsieur. You said so yourself.” She watched the man’s face
crease in confusion, perhaps searching his memory.
“I said that?”
“Oui, Monsieur.” Julienne nodded. “And your arm,” she added pointing
to his right shoulder where the epaulette had been perched.
“Is feeling much better now, Madam. Thank you.” As her tea kettle began to sing
Scarlet cleared his throat. “Perhaps if you could offer me some hot tea, I
would fare even better. Perhaps good enough to get up off your floor and
present myself to you more properly.”
Julienne smiled. The man was
definitely sounding more coherent and reasonable. “Of course, Captain.” She
rose from her kneel to reach over him to the steaming kettle sitting atop the
stove. “You work for the government, then?” she inquired as she lifted the
kettle toward the waiting tea pot.
“Yes,” Scarlet answered with a sigh.
He rubbed at his chest and gingerly stretched out his right arm with a testing
grunt. “I’m a field officer for Spectrum. Our organization works for the World
Government under President Younger.”
“And the kidnapper…?”
“Mistaken identity, I’m afraid,” he
admitted. “My partner. My partner was gravely injured. I must find out if he’s
all right.”
Julienne reached further past the
stove from her standing position to collect the tea canister. The Spectrum
officer was in her way, before the stove and tiny storage counter. Sliding a
foot forward for a better stance, Julienne’s elbow knocked the tea pot over.
Steaming water flooded onto the hot stove and over its rim like a miniature
boiling Niagara Falls.
Hit in the back by the liquid the
man before the stove growled at the attack and rolled onto his knees, away from
the deluge. Scarlet scrambled to his feet.
“Monsieur! Je suis
désolée! I’m
sorry!” Julienne blurted eyes wide at such a painful accident. “Here I make you
tea, to injure you again instead…” She halted her ramblings. In her awkward
panic she had not comprehended the sight before her. The stranger was standing
there brushing the hot liquid from his neck and stomping his feet in obvious
discomfort. “Monsieur. Your legs… They
are not broken.”
Scarlet paused in his self
ministries. His sky blue eyes rose to meet hers. “Right,” he mumbled. “Perhaps
in my previous delirium I was mistaken.”
“Perhaps you also lied to me,”
Julienne countered her hand reaching back for the revolver tucked beneath her
sweater. The gun swung up to cover him. “Now, Monsieur.
Have a seat and explain to me how you have come from the falls with not a
single injury, yet wearing the clothes of a dead man.”
“Pardon me?” Scarlet responded backing
into a chair and lowering himself, all the while keeping his hands innocently
before him.
“Your clothes,” Julienne repeated
pointing with the barrel. “There is much mystery here. Perhaps you are the kidnapper.
Aren’t you? You... you stole that uniform from the dead officer you killed. Did
you hide the body underwater just as I came upon you? You played dead. But I
rescued you instead of running away as you expected. Now you pretend to be that
brave officer so that you might make good your escape. Well, I don’t believe
you.”
“Madam,”
Scarlet replied with a decisive breath. “I can’t explain it to you, but I am
Captain Scarlet of Spectrum. This is my uniform.”
“Then explain your broken legs, the
bullet holes. No man could have survived such wounds. You don’t even have a
scratch.”
Scarlet shrugged and lowered his
hands to his lap in resignation. “I was lucky, I guess.”
“But the news said you had gone over
the falls. People die when they go over the falls, Monsieur. Captain,” she restated in sarcasm. “Now, place
your hands atop the table. Do not try anything.”
“You’re confused, Madam. I’m Captain Scarlet. My associates are looking for me. One may be dead or
dying. Everything I said to you is true, but I must leave now to report in. I
have information no one else has.”
“What information?” Julienne
demanded wavering the gun. “Something about Mysterons?”
“Where did you hear that?” Scarlet
asked with suspicion in his narrowed eyes.
“From you. In your delirium.”
“Oh, that's right." He cleared
his throat. "I'm afraid that information’s classified. I can’t explain.
Please, just let me leave. Point me to your neighbor's home, so that I might
use that phone you spoke of.”
Julienne shook her head. “And
endanger my only friend besides Pierre? No, Monsieur.
I will tie you up and call the police. They are looking for you too, as I'm
sure are your many accomplices.”
Scarlet lowered his chin and sighed.
Was he scheming to act or was he frustrated in her cleverness? For this was the
only logical scenario. The man seated at her table had to be the
kidnapper, falsely portraying the poor murdered officer who had tried to stop
his evil deed. “I’m a Spectrum field agent," he explained slowly. "I
was shot at and fell over the falls to end up here. You saved me from the
river, and I am eternally grateful, Madam. I
am telling the truth. I can prove it to you,” he said slowly reaching for his
jacket pocket.
“Don’t move!” Julienne warned. “If
you can prove it, then what happened to the woman who was kidnapped?” she
insisted. “Where is she? Did you kill her too?”
“That's ridiculous,” the man spouted
slapping the table with his open palm. “I didn’t kill anyone. If only I had my
cap, I could call Cloudbase and be away from here.”
“Cloudbase. You used that word
before. Is it your hideout? I must say, Captain, your handsomeness, your
feigned injuries nearly fooled me.” She stepped aside to her closed cabin door
where hung a rope upon a peg. She shifted her gaze from the seated kidnapper to
the peg. “Now, Monsieur. I’ll ask you to tie this around your wrists. Then
I will tie you to the chair. That should keep you.”
“And if I refuse?” he asked with a
raised brow.
Julienne swallowed as she drew near.
Could she be mistaken? What if what he said were true? There had been cases of
people surviving the falls, but they had been in protective capsules. This man
would be the walking dead. “Then I will wound you, Monsieur. At least I can do that.”
“Then wound me,” the man challenged.
His silky voice was calm, resigned. Was this the ploy of a murderer or the plea
of a desperate man who was telling the truth?
“I do not wish to hurt you. But if
you are the kidnapper, then I can’t let you go.” Julienne tossed the length of
rope and stepped back. “Now tie up your wrists.”
The man only sighed and considered
the rope upon the table before him. “How do you expect me to tie myself up, Madam?”
Rolling her eyes at the obvious she
explained, “Make a noose. Loop one wrist through it. Then twist the rope tightly
around both. I will then attach it to the chair more securely. You will not get
away.”
“Very clever, Madam.” The man slowly reached for the rope. It
dangled from one hand for a moment. Then with a crooked smile Scarlet assured,
“But you will have to wound me.” In an instant he flung the rope her way.
Julienne dodged the flying coils and in her nervousness her finger slipped onto
the trigger of her gun. A deafening blast announced a bullet released from its
chamber. Eyes shut by instinct, she could not see where the gun had been aimed.
She thought it went high. Forcing herself to look, Julienne saw the man,
standing and halfway to the door as if running to escape. He was paused in
mid-stride. His head was back, tilted at an odd and painful angle. A dark smear
adorned his forehead.
“Mon Dieu!” she yelped. Her wayward shot had actually made
contact. Twisting at the concussion, the stranger grunted then collapsed as his
knees gave way to the shock. In a heap he landed on his back upon the hard wood
floor. Julienne dropped the silver revolver and scrambled to the man’s side. “Monsieur!” she
called. His blood was spilling onto the ground. The man’s eyes were rolling to
whiteness. “I’m sorry.” The bullet had seemingly entered his skull just above
and forward of his right temple, gouging a track of red across his forehead. “Mon,
Dieu,” Julienne moaned. “What have I done?”
With a nerve tingling shudder the stranger’s
body went slack. Was he dead? Julienne’s trembling hand reached beneath his
chin to feel for a pulse. No, the heart was still beating, but would it for
long? She had inflicted a head wound, perhaps a fatal one. Kneeling upon the
floor, Julienne was frozen in indecision. What to do? Go for help? Leave the
man to die alone? “Oh, what have I done?” she moaned again.
After several shocked moments Julienne was able
to climb shakily to her feet. Adrenaline made her knees knock. Her breathing
was shallow, rapid. Self-defense. Yes. She had shot the man in self-defense. He
was an escaped criminal, after all. He had stolen the uniform of a good man to
escape the police. Yes, that was it. Why then did doubt grip at her heart like
a tightening steel fist? “What if I was wrong, Monsieur?”
she asked the supine figure sprawled on the floor. In answer he released a
single deep gasp, then his chest stilled. Blood slowed to a trickle from the
head gouge. There was blood in his dark hair, pooled into the creases of his
closed lids. It dribbled across his slack left cheek. It drizzled to the floor,
puddling beside him. So much blood. It was the most terrible sight since she
had discovered the young pregnant woman four years earlier. Only now it was
worse. Julienne had done the killing. Yes, it seemed he was dead, for there was
no longer a rising to his chest. “Mon Dieu. I have... murdered… I am now the killer.” In her
shocked realization Julienne DePaureau released a scream. Outside Pierre
whinnied nervously and fought the bridle and harness, pawing at the ground and
throwing up his head.
“Police!” Julienne cried out. “Police!” Her
scrambling feet took her to the door. It slammed behind her as she rushed out
to the buckboard. In a moment she was atop the seat and slapping the reins upon
Pierre’s broad flank. Thundering hooves beat at the dampening ground. Rain
began pelting the dirt, sending up tiny earth eruptions as Julienne drove
blindly away from her horrific act of violence. “Police!” she screamed again.
*
* *
“What was that, Lieutenant?” Colonel White demanded
from his control dais in Cloudbase's command control center.
“Sir,” Green began hesitantly. “I was almost
able to get a lock on the faint signal I intercepted from Captain Scarlet some
hours ago. I’ve been trying to triangulate its position ever since.”
“And?” When Green didn’t continue, the colonel
scowled and stamped his fist upon the console before him. “Come on, Man. What
is it?”
“Well, Sir. I’ve been able to narrow the field
somewhat, but it’s just a hunch.”
White sighed tiredly. “At this point,
Lieutenant, I’m willing to bring in a tarot reader. What have you got?”
“I believe the signal came from several miles
down river, near a more isolated portion of Ontario. Perhaps ten to fifteen
miles, Sir.”
“Well, why didn’t you say so, Man? Get Captain
Grey on the horn and tell him to adjust his search pattern.”
“Yes, Sir,” Green snapped. “I just hope I’m
right, Colonel. It was a very faint and brief signal.”
Colonel White nodded and rose from his chair
and the pile of reports set before him. “Like myself, I’m sure Captain Scarlet
would be willing to bet your skills on that faint signal, Green. You’re the
best man at the job.”
“All the more vital I did my figuring right,
Sir,” Green replied even as he made the final connections to contact the
Niagara field commander.
“You’re worried for your reputation?”
“No, Sir,” the younger man admitted. “The last
thing I want to do is send Captain Grey on a wild goose chase. Time’s running
out for Captain Scarlet.”
“Yes,” White admitted under his breath and sank
again into his work. Clearly sullen and distracted, it took the
commander-in-chief twice as long to update his files as normal. “Blast it,”
White cursed and moved on to other responsibilities.
*
* *
“Are you sure you are all right, mon
ami?” Destiny Angel
asked as she piloted the four-man river trawler swiftly downstream in the
gloomy, rainy hours of late afternoon. Nearly twenty-four hours had passed and
there had still been no sign of their missing comrade. Now they’d been ordered
to comb an unlikely section of the river some ten plus miles north of the
falls. Grey was sullen and quiet. He had been for many hours, at times only
pausing in his concentration on the underwater readout to curse the
ineffectiveness of combing a river with RUVs instead of human eyes.
“I’m fine,” Grey growled back from the
trawler’s rear seat where he was slouched beside his dripping equipment. The
tiny, shark-finned remote controlled underwater camera, ‘Rover” as Grey called
it, sat cradled in a makeshift berth of emergency flotation devices at the
captain’s feet. Some one of his aquanautical rescue team had thought it quaint
to paint the silver pod with dark eyes and gill slits, completing the
streamlined appearance of an ocean predator. All that was missing were a row of
pearly teeth beneath the capsule’s true eye, the optical camera lens situated
at the prow. “Rover’s just not as good as I’d hoped. His visual acuity is less
than three meters in this murk.”
“Do not be hard on yourself,” Destiny called
over her shoulder and the hum of the boat’s twin jet propellers. “Your
equipment was tested and fine-tuned in a large swimming pool. These are not the
tropical clear waters of Aruba, my friend.”
“Nor the sunny weather,” Grey growled tugging
his hood closer about his neck as the icy rain gained in intensity. He tapped
the coursing wind blown precipitation from his boots. “I’m just tired, and my
patience is as thin as rice paper.”
“We’ll find him," the French pilot
attested, checking the kilometer markers on her electronic dashboard. Three to
go before they slowed and returned to a zigzag
pattern of passes over the bottom with the aqua-cam. “We’ve got to,” she added
to herself. Grey would drive himself to collapse if they didn’t. “Where are
you, Scarlet?” Destiny murmured as her brown eyes continued to steal glances at
the shoreline searching for a flash of red in a strip of autumn brown and grey.
*
* *
Scarlet was unsure how long he had lain there unconscious
upon the floor. He had been shot in a far too vital spot when he had gambled
his escape from the unstable woman. “Lucky shot,” he groaned and rolled onto
his side to gather his feet to stand. The blood from his head wound was already
congealing on the hardwood floor beside him. On hands and knees Scarlet risked
raising a finger to the ache in his head. A hard scab was his discovery. Even
that would soon fall off leaving narry a mark for his near death experience.
With a smile Scarlet recalled the panicked
sounds of Julienne DePaureau when he had held his breath to fake his own
demise. Instinct had told him she would run. He had been right. Scarlet just
hadn’t counted on her lucky shot. A bullet wound to the arm wouldn’t have even
slowed him down. Now, he had wasted precious time. He had to get to the
neighbor’s house, the one with the phone, to call Cloudbase. He knew if
Spectrum thought his kidnapper foe a Mysteron, they would be expending
resources to find him and the woman. Meanwhile, the real threat was perhaps
even now modifying the plant’s new turbines to secretly blow once they were
installed. Slowly he rose to his feet, checking his head for stability before
stumbling toward the door and freedom.
Outside a gale wind was brewing. Icy rain pelted
his tender forehead. Wincing Scarlet raised a hand to shelter his eyes before
trotting after the retreating wagon tracks. But before he was even yards from
the cabin a new noise burst through the moan of wind and rain. “A copter,”
Scarlet realized. Carefully he paused to listen. Could it be a Spectrum
vehicle? The craft’s identity was disguised by rain and distance. The wind
brought its presence but not its location. It seemed to be near the river. If
he headed that way instead, perhaps he could intercept the helicopter and
report in much sooner. After all, Scarlet
wasn’t sure where Julienne’s neighbor’s domicile was located exactly.
And the pelting rain was quickly turning the wagon tracks to mush.
Calculating his chances, Scarlet sprinted for
the river. He hoped his jacket vest would make him stand out among the dull
colors of the Canadian autumn. As he coursed along the path, the volume of the
helicopter engine grew. It seemed he had made the right choice when the bulky
vehicle appeared just over the trees. It swayed in the wind, its twin rotors
beating at the rain. It was an aquatic rescue helicopter complete with pontoon
landing gear. Scarlet smiled and waved his arms at the pilot. Ingenious. Only
the bulk stability of such a rescue craft could maneuver safely in this storm,
for indeed the wind and rain were reaching monsoon strength. The temperature,
too, was dropping rapidly. As Scarlet squinted into the driving downpour, a
stinging at his face told him the rain was changing to sleet. The helicopter,
however, seemed to be hovering close to the river, perhaps searching the
shoreline for him. The pilot had yet to notice Scarlet’s waving arms. The
Spectrum captain continued his trot along the path to the riverbank, where,
with a flourish of arms and a wash of soaking downdrafts from the aircraft,
Scarlet finally caught Melody Angel's attention. Now she only needed to find a
safe place to land in from the choppy waters of the Niagara River.
*
* *
“Captain,” Destiny warned over the sloshing of
the now turbulent river as she piloted the trawler at a dead slow. “We should
call off the search. The weather-“
From his hunched stance over the soggy monitor Grey waved her to silence. “I don’t care about a little
rain, Juliette,” he snapped. His other hand was busy maneuvering the
joystick for the remote underwater vehicle below them. Rover was scanning the
bottom and had found the remains of a car, two shopping carts, even an
abandoned baby carriage, but nothing human. “I’ll keep searching until this
equipment stops working.”
Juliet raised an ironic brow. “In this storm,
it is amazing your electronics still are.” She shrugged her collar
closer about her neck, tightening the hood upon her golden head. “At least put
on your gloves, Brad,” she urged. “The weather is becoming arctic.”
Grey seemed to be ignoring her, but finally he
stood and swiped dripping bangs away from his eyes. “The gloves would be a
hindrance. I can’t navigate with them on. This is fine work, Destiny, adjusting
depth and speed.” He gestured toward the joystick and the RUV’s control panel.
“These knobs are extremely sensitive.”
“They are not meant to be out in the open like
this. You will ruin your electronics.”
As Grey returned his puffy, tired eyes to the
monitor, he growled beneath his breath, “I’ll just build a better one.”
Just then a Spectrum helicopter barreled
overhead. Its aquatic landing pontoons lowered, and the craft began its
descent. “Mon Dieu,” Destiny proclaimed as the sleet whipped about in
the rotor’s backwash.
Grey, too, paused at his job to raise squinting
eyes at the intruder. “What the Hell?” His hand slipped off the joystick and
hit the power level control. Suddenly a blue arc of electricity made contact
with sleet and human flesh. Captain Grey trembled
with the short-circuiting energy coursing through him. With a shriek, Destiny
leaped for the cushioned seat at the pilot’s station. There she was somewhat
sheltered from the wild light show.
*
* *
Above them Captain Scarlet glared down from the
open hatch and cursed, “Blast it. We’re creating a closed circuit between the
rotor blades and Grey’s electronics.” He turned narrowed eyes to the helicopter
pilot. “Melody, raise the copter above the trees. Get us to maximum hover
height. Hurry.”
“SIG,” Melody Angel acknowledged. The
helicopter roared into the heavy crosswinds above the river. As the craft
bucked and lurched, Scarlet released the clasp to his safety harness. “What are
you doing?” Melody asked over her shoulder.
“Saving a friend,” was the British captain’s
answer. Grabbing a hold of the door frame, Scarlet gauged the widening distance
to the water. “Wish me luck,” he murmured as he dove out into the raging storm
and violent, dark waters of the Niagara. He hit with such force, Scarlet almost
lost consciousness, but he was able to slow his decent into the depths by
spreading his limbs then paddling toward the surface. He burst to the breakers
with a sputtering gasp and stroked to the stalled but bobbing trawler’s side.
“Destiny!” he cried over the thumping
roar of the helicopter even now moving off to a safer distance over
land. There was no answer, only another fireworks display from the rocking
trawler’s stern. There, Scarlet could just see the hooded head and shoulders of
Grey, slumped against the gunwale, coursing arcs of blue electricity dancing
about him. “Destiny!” he hollered again reaching for the stern cleat, but
pausing as it suddenly sparked to life.
“Captain Scarlet?” he heard the Angel pilot
answer. Her head poked over the open pilot’s cabin. “You’re alive, mon ami.”
“But Brad won’t be,” Scarlet barked back
treading water beside the boat, “unless we can insulate him or shut off this
equipment.”
“But how?” Destiny inquired over the
splattering sleet and zapping electronics.
“Where’s the power source?”
Destiny craned her head out of Scarlet’s sight. When her eyes returned to him, they
told the British captain of the difficulty. “The equipment generator is under
Captain Grey. He fell onto it. I can’t reach it unless I touch metal.”
“Hurry, Destiny. Can you throw me a life
jacket? Can you reach one? It’ll keep Brad afloat.”
“But, Paul. How will you put it on him? You
can’t touch the boat. It’s metal too.”
“Don’t worry about me. Just do it.” When
Destiny leaned down to tug a vest from beneath her pilot’s seat, Scarlet
grabbed at a docking buoy dangling from the side. With it as his anchor he
swung one leg up onto the gunwale and heaved himself on board. The rogue
electrical storm coursed past him but the arc contacted the deck. It was only a
matter of time, however, before the lethal energy connected with his chilled
and wet uniform. One hundred thousand volts would kill him permanently, Scarlet
knew, but Brad Holden had already succumbed to a prolonged dose of lesser
strength. Spectrum's Captain Grey would be dead unless Scarlet disconnected the
generator and prevented another static, open current so the rescue helicopter
could return to pick them up. Even now Melody hovered at a non-threatening
altitude, awaiting his signal to descend.
“Paul,” Destiny called. Scarlet stood upon the
deck, his boots settling upon the wet carpet runner down the center of the
hull. It was little protection from the wild sparks of the ionized energy
zapping about him and his companions. Scarlet turned and caught the life jacket
from the Angel pilot before returning his gaze to the short-circuiting
generator and its frazzled electronics. How was he going to get Grey free of
the dangerous equipment without electrocuting himself in the process? The key
was quick action and, more importantly, momentum.
Beside him, upon the deck, lay a coil of nylon
rope. Swiftly Scarlet set down the jacket and wrapped the rope about his waist
tying the other end to the life jacket’s safety harness. “Captain Scarlet? What
are you doing?” Destiny asked from behind him. She still clung to the padded
chair.
“Improvising ,” was his curt reply. He still
had to get Grey into the life jacket. With the lethal dance of energy all
around, and the injured captain unconscious, perhaps even dead, there would be
little assistance. Melody and her Spectrum chopper would only complicate
matters until he could shut down his end of the electrical disturbance. The
ionizing rhythm of the blades was what had set off the short circuit in the
first place. Time was running out. As soon as the random arc moved to the far
gunwale, Scarlet bolted forward and flung Grey onto his back. A shockwave made
him recoil. Grey was still electrified. Lying atop the generator, no doubt kept
him within the electrical connection. The man was in grave danger. If his heart
had stopped, Captain Grey needed immediate resuscitation. The cause of his
peril had to be shut down. The generator and its red emergency off button were
just beneath the man’s legs, under the RUV’s control panel. If Scarlet could
just hit that, the lethal fireworks would be extinguished and Melody could land
the helicopter and affect a rescue.
Electricity grabbed him, then, in a vibrating,
paralyzing dance. Scarlet felt the shock of his heart gripped in mid-beat.
Would he die? Truly die with his two friends as witnesses? The arc of
paralyzing energy found a new target, and Scarlet was free. He sank to his
knees, the pain of his encounter his only reality. He had to stay conscious.
“Paul!” Destiny screamed. He focused on her
voice, forcing the telescoping blackness before his eyes to widen again to full
alertness. He saw the peril shared in his friend’s brown eyes. Scarlet sucked
air into his reluctant chest. Yes, he still knew how to breathe. He was still alive.
Grey. He had to save Captain Grey. With a determined grimace Scarlet took up
the life jacket in his arms. He tensed his still throbbing legs for his final
bolt. Half-numbed fingers gripped the life jacket’s main clasp. If he could
only get the garment around Grey’s waist, he could snap the clasp shut. The
lethal electricity was his one deterrent, his enemy. With a burst of power
Scarlet rushed forward. Wrapping the jacket about Grey’s middle, Scarlet fought
against the numbing power stinging back at his fumbling fingers. The connection
had to be broken. In the next moment he jumped back and fell flat against the
deck plates, dazed and shaken but free of the surge.
“The generator,” Destiny reminded. The power
arc was still dancing wildly upon the gunwale. Grey was still being zapped each
time his wet coat and skin were tagged in this lethal game. With a grunt
Scarlet shook off the pain and numbness in his body and stumbled again to his
feet.
“One more try,” he growled and launched himself
at Grey again. The life jacket was clasped. Scarlet only needed to give his
unconscious friend a shove over the gunwale and into the chilling water. The
full fury of the power storm turned its attention onto the man who was now
draped over the gunwale, attached by rope to the injured Grey now bobbing in
the freezing waters of the Niagara River. Scarlet felt his teeth crack against
his clenching jaw muscles, the pain and burning vibration was so great his
eyesight went black though his lids were still open. If he succumbed to the
shock he would surely die. Red button. Red button, he told his fading
consciousness. When Destiny screamed his name, Scarlet found his focus. His
friends would die unless…
Forcing his tensed muscles to shove him from
the trawler’s portside, Scarlet collapsed to the deck and the air began to
thicken around him like a tomb. “No!” he shouted and shook the darkness away.
He must fight against oblivion. But now his body was a pile of burning flesh,
unresponsive and numb. The emergency shut-off button was now within his blurred
sight, just under the makeshift shelf holding Grey’s surveillance equipment. No
longer obscured by the captain’s trembling body, could Scarlet reach it?
Someone was by his side amidst the arcing
chaos. “Captain,” Destiny pleaded tugging him into a sitting position. “We must
stop the generator. One of us must hit the button.”
“I… I can’t move,” Scarlet croaked, his throat
scratchy with dried saliva. “I…”
“Then I must do it for Brad’s sake,” Destiny
affirmed. “We need the helicopter here, now.” She rose beside him and tugged
down her sleeve to cover her gloved hand. The clothing would only marginally
protect her from the high voltage. But with a determined frown, Destiny stepped
to the generator.
“Juliette. No!” Scarlet bellowed against his unresponsive
body. “You’ll be killed. I won’t lose two friends. It’s my fault. I must…”
Tucked away, beside his slumped and useless arm, was a flotation pillow. If he
could just get to it… With will and conviction beyond his bodily strength,
Captain Scarlet moved his throbbing hand to grip the stowed device. An
uncoordinated jerk brought if flumping onto his lap. Scarlet lifted the pillow
and aimed through the haze before his eyes to toss the device past Destiny’s
outstretched hand. The red button smacked flush against the generator casing
and the electrical light show fizzled dead without its lifeforce.
Released from its power Scarlet rolled down onto his back and accepted the
darkness with triumph.
Side Effects
It was many hours before Captain Scarlet was to
awaken again. Eyes rolling open he glanced beside him to see the medical
equipment hovering like vultures. “Was I dead?" he murmured. His voice was
but a croak of its former self.
A doctor with auburn hair and green eyes came to
stand beside him. “You seem to be fine now, Captain,” she said adjusting the
blanket about his bare waist. “Though we were wondering what took you so long
to recover. Doctor Fawn’s in a twitter.”
Scarlet looked down to see his bare arms linked
by tubes and electropads to the vulture monitors about him. “What happened to
me?” he asked the woman doctor.
“You suffered a severe electrical shock. Doctor
Fawn was worried. You were unconscious so long. He had me hook you up to these
status machines to monitor your progress.”
“Was anyone else hurt?”
The doctor scrunched up her brow in
bewilderment. “Don’t you remember? You rescued Captain Grey from the trawler.
The generator had short-circuited. He’d been electrocuted. We nearly lost him,
but that dunk into the freezing river slowed his brain functions and protected
him from permanent damage until Melody Angel could get him to shore and offer
CPR. He's stabilized now, but he has some severe burns to his chest and
extremities.”
“Captain Grey?” Scarlet repeated. “Do I know
him? Is he a friend?”
“Yes, Captain,” the attractive red-head
answered. “He’s a colleague.” The woman stalled then switched tactics. “Do you
know who I am?” she asked with tilted head.
“You’re a doctor,” Scarlet answered waddling up
onto his elbows in bed. “I recognize the uniform. White coat.”
“What’s my name?”
Scarlet shook his head. “You never mentioned
it.”
“I’m Doctor Topaz. You don’t remember me?
Ever?” Topaz challenged. "You've forgotten all the bandages, gel packs,
splints and bullets?"
"Bullets?" Scarlet retorted.
"You said I had suffered an electrical shock."
"Yes, but before..." Topaz stopped
again and crossed her arms at the man half-sitting in the bed. "What's your
name?"
"I'm..." Scarlet paused, his blue
eyes waggling in their sockets as if he were searching his entire brain matter.
"I'm... a captain. You said that."
"Your name," Topaz demanded.
"My name is..." Scarlet's face
drained of all color. His body prickled with the chill realization. Had he died
and gone to some unearthly hospital in an alternate reality? "I... I can't
remember. Doctor. What's the matter with me?"
Topaz dropped her arms and reached out a hand
to Scarlet's bare shoulder. "I'll go get Doctor Fawn. He's with Captain
Grey right now. Please, Captain Scarlet. Try to relax." Doctor Topaz left
the startled officer where he sat to seek out the counsel of her superior.
Together they rushed back to find an empty bed.
"Quick, Julia! Get security on this,"
Fawn ordered. "He may be a danger to himself."
*
* *
Up on the command deck White listened to the
news and grew concerned. "Fawn, repeat that last," he ordered with a
furrowed brow. "You're saying Captain Scarlet has suffered some kind of
amnesia?"
"Yes, Sir. Doctor Topaz said he seemed
seriously to have forgotten not only his mission, but his identity as
well."
"Are you sure he isn't playing some
sadistic joke on us? Scarlet has tried our patience before."
Fawn's face shook in the monitor inlaid upon
White's command desk. "No, Sir. This is far too serious for a joke.
Captain Scarlet would never risk such a feign, especially during a vital
mission such as this."
"Could he have suffered this memory loss
from his previous trauma, that of falling over the Canadian falls?" White
inquired.
Again Fawn shook his head. "According to
both Melody and Destiny Angels' reports, he was the usual daring Captain
Scarlet we all know and love. He risked his life to save Grey. Literally his
life," Fawn reiterated.
"Yes," White replied. "Melody's
report mentioned that Scarlet held vital information regarding the safety of
the power plant. If this is true, we must find Scarlet immediately and question
him. Is there some way to trigger his memories, Doctor?"
Fawn's broad shoulders shrugged. "I'm not
sure, Colonel. This is a special case. As I said before, the electrical shock
has somehow altered his retrometabolic abilities. He was unconscious for nearly
eight hours. Far too long, even for the extent of his injuries."
White scowled. "And you believe that electricity
may have been the catalyst for this prolonged condition?"
"And the amnesia," Fawn finished.
"Colonel. We're treading on new territory here. We may have to admit that
we've run into Scarlet's first vulnerability."
"But we know electricity of a higher
voltage will permanently kill him," White argued.
"Yes," Fawn agreed. "But a
prolonged exposure to a lower voltage still has reprehensible side-effects it
seems. And Colonel," the doctor insisted with a pause for emphasis.
"At this point we don't know how long these residual effects will last. He
may never regain his healing abilities, nor may he get his memory back."
White's forehead furrowed into the Grand
Canyon. "Doctor Fawn," he ordered. "I want Scarlet found and
isolated. He is to remain under your care until further notice. Is that
clear?"
"Yes, Sir. I'll do my best to help him
regain his memory." The screen promptly went blank.
White nodded. "Meanwhile," he
continued raising grey-blue eyes to his comm. officer, "I need you,
Lieutenant, to review all that happened that night at the Table Rock Complex.
If Scarlet has such vital information,
then it was there in front of you as well."
Green swallowed. The younger man wanted to
disagree with his superior, but couldn't find the words. Instead he asked from
his chair, "What about Captain Blue, Sir? He was present. Might he have
remembered something important? He was closer than I to the kidnapper who took
the turbine plans."
With a nod, White agreed, "I'll question
him myself when he's up to it, Lieutenant. Until then, I'm relying on you to
put this puzzle together."
Green swallowed more deeply this time. A heavy
anchor had just landed atop his shoulders. "S.I.G.," the young man
murmured and returned to his data console where his and everyone's reports, save
Scarlet's and Blue's, were stored. "Great," he mumbled as his brows
rose to the challenge. "A puzzle with missing pieces."
*
* *
The man the woman doctor had called Captain
Scarlet ducked behind a cabinet waiting for the officer in the black and white security uniform to look away before
making his move. How had he gotten here? Who were all these people? Surely this
whole place wasn't a hospital, so where exactly was he? He saw his opening and
pounced upon the security officer, knocking him flat with one karate chop to
the man's neck.
Chilled by the cycling air upon his bare skin,
Scarlet quickly slipped into the unconscious man's uniform and boots, noting
regrettably that they were both too loose and too wide, respectively. Warmed,
however by his success and the security of a side arm at his hip, but still
clueless as to his location, Scarlet continued his trek through the massive
floating base. Was he supposed to be an Airforce
captain? Did he fly a plane? This extraordinary fortress seemed to levitate
above the clouds. Surely the expansive runway he had seen outside one window
was meant for arrivals and departures from this place. Scarlet slithered along
one wall to the junction of crossing corridors. Here he peeked out and just
caught the shoulder of another security officer turning a corner further down.
Scarlet was now armed and disguised. He should be able to stroll freely through
the base. His missing memory, however, denied him the luxury of a mental road
map. Scarlet was lost, with no inkling of how to get to the flight deck, nor
knowing whether, once there, he would be able to pilot a jet away from this
place or not.
Drawing his gun, Scarlet checked the corridors
again before striding out and heading down his random choice. It was only a
matter of time, he knew, before someone recognized him. Only minutes before
someone discovered the unconscious and declothed security guard Scarlet had
left behind. What he needed was a hostage. Someone who could give him
information, protect him from the search party no doubt seeking his location.
Scarlet's hostage appeared only moments later, exiting a lift tube and striding
toward him. The woman was tall, slender, with loose blonde hair and dark eyes.
She was wearing a white flight uniform and paused as she recognized the
misplaced security officer. "Captain Scarlet? What... what are you doing
dressed-"
"Hold it!" he ordered raising the
pistol to cover her retreat. Her voice was not like his. She came from another
country. Her accent was American. Yes, he could remember that distinction while
other, more vital bits of knowledge were somehow locked away. He waggled the
gun barrel her way. "Come here," he instructed. "I need you to
tell me where I am."
"Why, you're on Cloudbase, of
course," the woman offered, raising her hands in innocent defense and
stepping closer. "Have you lost your bearings, Paul? Should I take you to
see Doctor Fawn?"
"No," Paul Scarlet snapped.
"Take me to the flight deck." His blue eyes scanned again her
uniform. "You're a pilot. Right? I want you to take me away from
here."
Now the woman's eyes shrank to slits.
"Away? What are you talking about? Where do you want to go?" She took
another step closer.
Scarlet's eyes grew round with his uncertainty.
"Somewhere... Somewhere where I might remember," he admitted. The
female pilot had slowly approached, but was still out of arm's reach.
"Take me home," Scarlet finally said.
"To your parents' house in Winchester,
England? Is that where you want to go?"
Scarlet hesitated, then lowered the gun a bit.
"Yes," he said. "That might do. I need their help."
"Paul," the pilot reasoned. "If
you're feeling out of sort, it's understandable. But you'll need Colonel
White's permission to leave Cloudbase."
"Who's Colonel White?"
Now the woman blinked. "Man. That
electrical shock really messed you up. Colonel White's our commanding officer.
He's commander-in-chief of Cloudbase." The pilot held out her hand for the
gun. "I'm Symphony. A friend. So's Adam. How about you give me the gun,
and I'll take you to see him? He's been worried sick, you were missing for so
long."
"Missing?" He pulled the gun from her
reach, but kept it pointing toward the floor. "What happened to me? The
doctor, Doctor Topaz, said that I was electrocuted, then that I was shot. This
all seems like some twisted nightmare."
Symphony lowered her hand and sighed. "It
seems you've lost your memory, or part of it, Paul. I'm sure Doctor Fawn could
help. Let's go see him."
"No," Scarlet insisted raising again the
gun barrel. "I must leave this place... An urgency... I feel an urgency to
leave this place. I need to go somewhere, but I... I don't know where."
The gun waggled again in his shaky hands. Why was he feeling such anxiety?
"Captain Scarlet," a deep voice
addressed. "Lower your weapon. Release the Angel pilot immediately."
Scarlet half turned to see a trio of security guards facing him from behind.
Two had their guns trained on him. The one with the deep voice held out an open
hand in placation.
In his confusion Scarlet returned his gaze to
the woman who had talked so calmly to him. "Angel?" he asked.
"You said your name was Symphony. This place is a mad house of lies.
Electrocuted? Shot? I couldn't have died and come back to life. That's
impossible."
In response, Symphony Angel smiled and laid her
hand atop the man's shoulder. "Not for you, it isn't," she told him.
"Now. Do as the sergeant says, Paul. Give me the gun." When Scarlet hesitated, instead raised the
weapon to face the security detail, one of the guards must have taken the
gesture as a sign of retaliation. A single bullet pierced
Scarlet's side. Gun clattering to the floor, Scarlet followed in a heap.
Ears ringing, his side burned as if a glowing hot poker had skewered him.
Symphony knelt down to consider the wound.
"You didn't have to do that!" she defended as she pressed her palm
against Scarlet's side to quell the blood. As
Scarlet grunted in pain and searched the air for a familiar face the angel
beside him smiled. "You're going to be all right, Paul. Relax. Doctor Fawn
will take good care of you."
"I'm... I'm dying," he mumbled in
reply. "He shot me because I wanted to leave... I'm a prisoner here. What
did I do wrong?" Vision fading and head feeling as light as a Dreamwhip, Scarlet only saw the deep
compassionate eyes of the angel looking over him. "I... I didn't mean to
hurt you," he mumbled as his nightmare world in the clouds faded to black.
"Quick!" Symphony pleaded. "Get
a stretcher. I can't stop the bleeding. He really is dying!"
"Not if I can help it," retorted the
familiar voice of Doctor Fawn. The Australian physician shouldered past the
security detail and waved his nurses forward with a gurney. "We've got to
get him to sickbay. If he bleeds to death, we may not be able to revive him."
Symphony stumbled to her feet beside the
nurses, her uniform splattered in scarlet. "But he's indestructible,
Doctor," she reasoned.
As Fawn helped his attendants, he snapped,
"The electrical shock has affected his healing abilities and taken his
memory. Move, People!" Symphony stood alone as the security detail
shadowed Fawn and his medical staff to sickbay. "I want Scarlet prepped
for surgery immediately," she heard Fawn order as the guards disappeared
around the corner.
So. Scarlet did have vulnerabilities. He wasn't
totally indestructible. Electricity, it seemed, put the brave captain in
jeopardy. Would he recover, or had Karen Wainwright just witnessed the true
death of Captain Scarlet? In an instant her feet took her to Captain Blue.
"Adam!" she called, entering the man's recovery room. Captain Blue
jolted awake at Symphony's urgency. "It's Paul. Something's
happened."
Blue's face furrowed as he listened to
Symphony's recollection. "Lost his memory, you say?" the man
stammered as he propped himself higher onto a pillow. The movement still caused
the American captain discomfort. Blue's eyebrows twisted in pain. "That's
hard to swallow."
Symphony nodded in agreement. "And his
healing abilities have been affected. Doctor Fawn was absolutely white heading
into surgery. He's genuinely scared."
Now Blue swung his bare feet over the side of
the bed. "I need to see him," he said hopping to the floor with a
grunt.
Symphony braced his shoulders with cautionary
palms. "Adam. Wait!"
Svenson, however, was adamant. "He's my
friend, Karen. I almost lost him once. I'm not going to again. Doctor Topaz can
sign my medical release. I'm putting on a uniform." He shoved past the
Angel pilot and strode to the storage locker in his cubicle. There, Svenson
gathered his clothes and began stripping his hospital pajamas.
"You shouldn't be up," Karen reminded
from where she'd plopped her rump onto his bed.
Adam glared at her as he stepped into his black
trousers. "I wouldn't be so critical if I were you. I'd get into more
suitable clothes myself and help me to find Doctor Topaz."
Symphony sighed and slid from the bed. She
glanced down at her bloodied uniform again and swallowed. The blood of a good
man was all over her chest. "You're right, Adam," she finally
admitted. "I'll help you, but only if Julia agrees to sign your release
form."
"I'll authorize that right now," came
the rich, stately voice of Colonel White as the commander of Cloudbase strode
into Blue's room.
Captain Blue, only half dressed, snapped to
attention as did the Angel pilot beside him. "I'm sorry, Sir. I didn't
mean to overstep my authority," he stammered.
White raised a calming hand. "At ease,
Captain. Glad to see you back on your feet." White's ice blue eyes,
momentarily softened, chilled to seriousness once more. "I need you to
tell me all that you remember from the events at Niagara Falls. It's vital that you recall everything that might be
useful, every detail." As the colonel settled into a chair, Blue finished
dressing. Symphony, seeing that she was not a part of this conversation,
politely excused herself mumbling about a change of clothes. Once Blue, now
again in his familiar light blue uniform, had sat atop the bed, Colonel White
continued, "Now, Captain, I realize your concern for Captain Scarlet.
However, your report is more important right now."
"Yes, Sir," Blue responded though he
fidgeted with his cap.
"Begin with your first encounter with the
young woman carrying the briefcase," White instructed. With a nod Blue leaned
heavily back against the raised pillows and began to weave his story. He
explained everything from the woman's demeanor and clothes, to her features.
White suggested he have a Spectrum artist work on constructing a sketch of the
missing woman. Blue agreed it was a start. Then Blue proceeded to recount the
kidnapping incident up until the point where the assailant's gun appeared and
Blue felt a sharp pounding to his chest.
"Next thing I recall, Sir, is Captain
Scarlet's voice. He yelled something, then I lost consciousness. I woke up here
with Symphony watching over me."
"Indeed," White mused. There was
silence for a long moment between them. Then Colonel White rose from his chair.
"Very well, Captain Blue. I'll make arrangements for your medical release
to off-duty status. You'll be free to roam the base, but no physical or
strenuous activity. You're on medical leave, Mister. Do I make myself
clear?"
"Yes, Sir," Blue chimed rising too
quickly to his feet and tilting painfully back against the bed. As White gave a
thoughtful nod and turned to go, Blue smiled faintly and added, "Colonel?
With your permission. May I visit Captain Scarlet, Sir?"
Once again, White's icy eyes softened for just
a moment. Though he was in charge of the safety of Earth from Cloudbase and all
his officers and staff, Charles Grey was still very much a human being. He
understood friendships. "Of course, Captain. Send him my regards. Doctor
Fawn will keep me apprised."
"Thank you, Sir," Blue chimed in as
his commander returned to his station. The American captain didn't have to wait
long for the return of his Angel accomplice. Symphony joined him in the
corridor, freshened and ready for duty.
"Adam," the blond woman informed.
"I'm scheduled for duty on Angel One. I can't stay." With an
apologetic frown she kissed him tenderly. "Please don't overexert
yourself. I don't want to even think of you hurting yourself again."
Blue's Scandinavian complexion darkened in his
awkwardness. "I'm fine, Karen. Just a little sore. I'm more concerned with
the mystery behind this kidnapper and the stolen plans. If the Mysterons have
their way, an awful lot of people are going to be left in the dark. No power,
no heat, and winter coming on..." He allowed his thoughts to dangle, not
wanting to voice his many concerns. Symphony hugged him gently then left for
the Amber Room and her duty assignment. Blue proceeded to sickbay's operation anteroom where he
could observe Doctor Fawn administering to his fallen comrade. "Come on,
Old Buddy," Blue cheered quietly. "You've got to make it. Remember
who we are and what happened at Table Rock. People are counting on you."
Blue blinked. Why did it always seem as if Scarlet's life and actions were so
vital to keeping the Mysterons at bay? Was the man's healing abilities that
important a gift? The British captain had saved the lives of so many through
the years. It was because of his courage and daring that Scarlet had placed his
life in jeopardy above all others. Knowing that even if he died he would
recover, Paul Metcalfe had changed from a dedicated, honorable officer to one
who was also completely altruistic. Now, Blue stood before the observation
window, for the first time wishing the situation had been reversed. If he
had been indestructible, then perhaps Scarlet would not now be facing real
death upon the cold steel of an operating table.
"Close the wound," Fawn instructed a
medical robot. How strange for the doctor to have said that in referring to
Captain Scarlet. The former Mysteron agent traditionally needed only a bandage,
so quick was his ability to seal any wound. Periodically Fawn had helped the
British captain along by removing bullets or splinting broken limbs, if only
for the benefit, perhaps, of the doctor, himself. Scarlet had seldom needed full
medical treatment. Now, with the reality of a 'normal' human recovery, Blue's
friend seemed somehow less than normal. He seemed exceedingly fragile somehow.
"High voltage electricity is the
key," Scarlet had once told him. In developing the Mysteron weapon, the
one only sure way to kill a Mysteron agent, Spectrum had discovered Captain
Scarlet's one true vulnerability. That vulnerability had now been tested. Even
at a lower voltage, electricity was a lethal force against the one man who
could otherwise be crashed, smashed, broken and burned, and still report for
dinner. With the unexpected side effect of amnesia, perhaps Blue's friend was
even more fragile than anyone had previously thought. How long would it last?
Would Paul Metcalfe get his memory back all at once or one tiny pixel at a
time? Would he regain his lost life at all? At that thought, Captain Blue
scowled and considered Doctor Fawn as he removed his scrubs and gloves.
"How is he, Doctor?" the captain inquired through the PA speaker.
Fawn seemed to notice the uniformed officer
standing in the anteroom for the first time. "Captain. What are you doing
out of bed and dressed for duty?" he demanded though his brown eyes seemed
too weary for the emotion.
Blue blinked and tucked his cap tighter against
his armpit. "I... I came to see how Paul was doing. Symphony told me what
happened. Will he live?" That last question almost caught in his throat.
In answer, Fawn lowered his eyes to the floor
and sighed. "He'll pull through, but he'll heal at the same rate as one of
us, I'm afraid. There was quite a bit of internal damage to be repaired. He's
in critical condition, and my robots will be busy for at least an hour sewing
him back together." Fawn paused to toss his bloodied gloves into a trash
receptacle. "As for his memory," the doctor continued with a sigh,
"I'm not so sure."
Blue nodded in understanding. "We need
whatever knowledge he had about the kidnapper, I know. But we also need him
back, as a member of this organization... this..."
"Family?" Fawn finished with a smirk.
The doctor's twinge of a smile widened to genuine hope. "If I know my
Scarlets right, this one will relearn in a month everything he's lost."
"And I'll be there to help," Blue
assured.
"He'll need it," Fawn conceded.
"Now, Captain. If you'll excuse me, I'm off to check on Captain Grey. You
should return to your room and rest."
Blue straightened against the two aches in his
heart, one physical, the other emotional. "May I come with you,
Doctor?" he inquired. "I'm sure Brad could use some moral support
too. And I can rest in a chair, if that's to your satisfaction."
Though Doctor Fawn paused in indecision,
chewing at his lower lip, he finally consented. "Very well, Captain. As
long as you stay off your feet. While I'm at it, I'll change your bandages and
check your wound." Blue followed the Australian into another recovery room
where Captain Grey was sleeping upon a bed.
His bare skin was wrapped in bandages and burn gel, where the electrical
current had singed flesh.
"Man. Is he a sight," Blue stammered,
stalling at the doorway. Grey's tired eyes fluttered open and he smiled at his compatriot. Blue
eagerly returned the sentiment. "Hey, Pal. You going as a mummy to the
Halloween Ball? That's not for another month."
With a voice harsh from exposure to frigid
water and trauma Grey answered, "I thought I'd practice getting into
character."
Blue came in and sat atop the bed's foot as
Fawn checked his friend's medical clipboard and recorded Captain Grey's vitals.
"So. How're ya feeling?" Blue asked.
"Grateful to be alive," Grey managed
to admit after clearing his throat. He winced as Fawn tugged at Grey's bandages
to reapply skin regenerator to the seeping wounds. "Paul saved my life and
Destiny's," he added. "I'd like to thank him personally, but he
hasn't come to see me yet. And I can't get out of this bed."
"Nor shall you, Captain," Fawn
interjected sternly. "Not at least for another two days." The doctor
pulled out a needle from his white jacket pocket. He injected Grey's arm with
another dose of antibiotic. "Your biggest health threat now, besides
infection, is another cardiac arrest. And I'll not gamble with your heart like
some fickle high school cheerleader."
"Thanks, Doc," Grey grumbled. "I
love you too."
"Ahh, family," Blue sighed with a pat
to his own tender heart. "Speaking of," he continued remembering
Fawn's own words. "Paul won't be coming to see you any time soon, I'm
afraid. He's in worse shape than you or I. May I tell him, Doctor?"
Without looking up from his nimble ministries,
Fawn nodded. "It seems," Blue explained, "Captain Scarlet's
reaction to electricity is even more severe than yours." The American
captain continued his extrapolation of current events, Scarlet's condition and
Spectrum's dilemma included. "It'll be up
to us," he concluded, "to help him get his memory back."
"I had no idea," Grey sighed.
"Please tell him for me," he requested as his tired eyes fluttered
closed once more. "Tell him. Thank you?"
"I promise, Captain," Blue avowed and
rose from the bed to shuffle to the door.
"Where are you going, Captain?" Fawn
inquired. "I haven't redressed
your wound yet." He was just finishing rebandaging Grey's left hand.
With a weary glance back, Blue informed,
"It seems I'm needed in another recovery room. My own," he clarified,
leaning against the door frame. "A nap sounds good to me too."
"Good idea," Fawn agreed with a
satisfied nod. "I'll have Doctor Topaz check your bandages later."
"Thanks, Doc. Oh, and please wake me when
Paul's conscious. He'll need a friend then, even if he doesn't recognize
me. It'll be my chance to repay him for saving Brad's and my life,
twenty times over."
"Very well, Captain. Rest well." With
a weak wave Adam Svenson trudged back to his room. Tossing his cap onto a
chair, he gingerly settled his tall frame onto the bed and was asleep before he
had time to kick off his boots.
*
* *
Colonel White was scowling from the command
chair behind his crescent-shaped desk. Lieutenant
Green sat sheepishly avoiding that glare from his own station. "Are you
sure, Captain Magenta?"
"Yes, Sir," came the field agent's
reply through the open comm. "There have been no further reports on the
kidnapper and his hostage. The other assailant, shot by Captain Blue, was just
a common thief. No ties to Teledyne Industries at all, that we can find. We may
be looking at a dead end, Colonel."
"That can't be," White growled.
"The Mysterons were definitely referring to Niagara. The river, the falls,
or the power plant. What else could it be?"
"The river and the power plant are still
the most likely targets, Sir. We just have to follow the other leads. We're
wasting too much time here at the Table Rock Complex."
With a mountainous sigh, White agreed.
"Very well, Captain. Have the other two teams report in and wait for my
reply for your reassignment. Notify the local authorities that both the Minolta
Tower Centre and the Table Rock Complex are to remain at full alert status and
closed to the public until further notice."
"S.I.G.," Magenta replied. The
connection then went dead.
White raised icy eyes to Green. "No leads,
just dead ends. What was so vital that Scarlet had to tell us?" The
colonel balled his fist and pounded his desk. "Blast it! We're
handicapped. Blind and deaf."
"Not totally, Sir," Green
interrupted.
"What's that, Man?" Now the older
officer's countenance changed to the intensity of a pneumatic drill.
"Well, I've been gathering information as
you ordered, trying to piece the puzzle together."
"And?" White snapped.
"Captain Scarlet was picked up by Melody Angel
not far from where the abandoned kidnapper's saloon was left."
"Are you suggesting the two incidents may
be more than pure coincidence, Lieutenant?"
Green swallowed. His hypothesis was far-fetched
at best, and the colonel needed facts. "Sir. I'm suggesting that we return
Captain Scarlet to the pick-up site. He may remember whatever it was he
discovered there. There is a chance he found out something which no one
else knows about. He may have even had contact with the kidnapper."
To Green's relief, the colonel only nodded.
"There is that chance. Good thinking, Lieutenant. I'll have Doctor Fawn
accompany Scarlet to the river site. Get Melody Angel to prep a helicopter for
immediate launch."
"S.I.G.," Green acknowledged and
turned his chair to his comm. station.
*
* *
Fawn bristled at the assignment. "Why,
he's barely conscious, Colonel," the doctor argued. "His
extraordinary powers of recovery have been...deactivated. That's the only word that
seems to fit. At this point he won't be ready to return to the field for at
least ten days, minimum."
"Doctor," White countered. "We
need Captain Scarlet's report. His is the one missing puzzle piece. If we are
to find the stolen plans and save the power plant, he must
remember."
Fawn lowered his eyes in assent. "I agree
that placing Scarlet back at the scene may trigger a memory, but you'll be
risking his health. As his doctor, I can't allow that."
"Would you risk the health of thousands of
innocent people, Doctor?" White countered. "If that power plant
blows, despite our best security precautions, are you willing to accept the
fate of an approaching Canadian winter with no heat or electricity for a
populus the size of the entire United Kingdom?"
"No, Sir," Fawn admitted resignedly.
"All right. I'll prep him for transport. He'll be groggy and confined to a
wheel chair. He's under my medical authority, both for his physical and
psychological welfare. You, yourself, are aware of his value to Spectrum."
"I need no reminders, Doctor. Just do
it," White growled. "Spectrum Helicopter A4 is ready on the pad.
Launch is in twenty minutes."
"S.I.G.," Fawn replied and busied
himself with transferring both his remaining patients and duties to his locum
tenens, Doctor Topaz. Then he was off to Scarlet's recovery room to prepare his
patient for transport. The doctor found Captain Blue sitting by Scarlet's bed.
"I thought you were resting, Captain," Fawn accused with a leftover
disapproving scowl.
Blue straightened from his slouch. "I
couldn't sleep long. Nightmare," he admitted wearily. The American
refrained from further explanation.
"Well, you're on medical leave. Return to
your quarters. Doctor Topaz will be with you shortly to redress your
wound." When Blue hesitated from rising to his feet Fawn growled,
"Dismissed, Captain."
"Yes, Sir," Blue snapped and jumped
vertical, snatching up his cap. "Is Captain Scarlet going somewhere?"
he asked when a nurse rolled a wheel chair into the cubicle.
"Spectrum business," Fawn retorted
and nodded to his nurse. "Have him dressed and ready for travel in ten
minutes, Gerald. Uniform and cap, but no pistol. I'll hold onto that for the
time being."
"Yes, Sir," the male nurse replied.
"Wait a minute," Blue protested, no
further than the door. "Where's he going? Cloudbase is the best medical
facility in Spectrum. You can't be transferring him to another hospital."
"This is official business, Captain,"
Fawn reprimanded. "Please follow your orders."
Blue took two more steps outside the door but
stalled again. "Wait a minute. The colonel wants him in the field, doesn't
he? Normally he'd be fully recovered by now. You're going to try and force his
memory back aren't you?"
"Perhaps."
"Then I'm going with you. He needs a
friend, and I can help him remember. I was there, too."
"Not where we're going," Fawn
countered as Gerald stripped the semi-conscious Scarlet of his scrubs and
replaced them with the man's scarlet jacketed uniform. "You're off duty,
Captain. Dismissed," Fawn repeated with lionish force this time.
Blue straightened his spine in defense.
"Actually, the colonel himself can return me to duty. He signed the papers
for my release from sickbay, as did Doctor Topaz, I believe. I'll ask Colonel
White if I can tag along. Paul's my partner, after all."
Fawn shot the captain a frustrated,
laser-piercing glare. "Ten minutes, Blue," he rumbled as the American
spun to leave. Then Fawn turned his attention to his current patient. The
doctor gave Scarlet an injection of antibiotic and pain reliever. How strange
to be attending to the man so, to be using such precautions. Since Scarlet's
rapid and miraculous recovery from his fall from London's Car-Vu almost four
years before, the British captain seldom needed little more than a comfortable
bed and blood sopping bandages. For his own sanity, Fawn occasionally had
ordered Topaz to remove a bullet or two, just to speed healing and prevent the
complications of possible lead poisoning. Many times, Scarlet was needed back
in the field within hours or days of an injury. The man had never a chance to
rest. Now White had insisted the officer back on his feet even before the
anesthetic had fully worn off.
"Doctor Fawn?" a British accent
asked.
Fawn raised his brown eyes to the blue ones
straining from the bed to make contact. "Yes, Captain?" the doctor
acknowledged. "Do you remember me?"
"I... I guessed you were he," Scarlet
answered as he was sat up and his jacket was zipped. "Where are you taking
me?"
Fawn smiled as Gerald helped the groggy captain
gingerly into the wheel chair. "We're taking you somewhere where you might
remember. We need your help, you see, Captain. Do you think you're feeling well
enough?"
"I'm tired... and confused," Scarlet
admitted being wheeled to the door.
"Well, a friend is coming with us. A man
named Adam. He's a captain too. Your partner."
"Angel Symphony spoke of him. He's my
friend?"
"Yes," Fawn answered. "Symphony
Angel's your friend too. She didn't like you pointing a gun at her."
Scarlet's eyes decreased to slits. "I... I
was protecting myself. I thought I was in danger. I remember being in
danger..."
Fawn nodded. "You work for Spectrum. We're
protecting the Earth from the Mysterons, an alien race which wants to destroy
us," Fawn explained as if to a sleepy child. "You're many times put
in danger. That's your job. Adam can explain it more to you." They were
proceeding along the corridor toward the hangar and airstrip. When the elevator
doors opened to take them down to the launch bay a tall man in blue joined them
and smiled down at Scarlet.
"Hey, Buddy. It's good to see you. How're
you feeling?"
Scarlet considered the man. "You must be
Adam Blue," he mused. "We all seem to have color names. Strange
world."
Blue laughed. "No, no. You've got it all
wrong, Paul. Captain Blue is my code name. Captain Scarlet's yours. My real
name is Adam Svenson. Yours is Paul Metcalfe. Do you remember that name at
all?"
"I... I remember darkness. No air. No...
body. A strange world." Scarlet fell silent.
Blue exchanged looks with Fawn. "Do you
think he's remembering his former
self?" the American captain gasped, eyes wide in suspicion.
"Mysterons," Paul mumbled from his
chair. "I... I know that name. I... I'm a Mysteron. Aren't I?"
Doctor Fawn stalled Gerald's advance onto the tarmac where sat Melody and the waiting
helicopter. He held the nurse's arm in a steel grip. "No, Captain,"
the doctor attested. "You are not a Mysteron." The physician
marched around to the front of the wheel chair to glare down at the man seated
there. "You're a Spectrum officer who has faithfully given his loyalties
and life to preserving the Earth, to saving the lives of others like-"
"Captain Grey," Scarlet interjected,
his voice still groggy from the drugs. "You all said I saved Captain
Grey."
Fawn nodded as Captain Blue stepped around to
agree. "You've saved the lives of all of us, Paul. Many times. You're a
good man."
"Then the gun-"
Blue smiled. "Symphony doesn't hold it
against you. She knows now how confused you were."
Fawn waved Blue away. "Captain
Scarlet," he said to focus the man's attention. "We need you to save
us again. We're taking you to a place where you might remember some important
information about the mission. I realize you're in some discomfort, that you're
injured. But there are people in danger and they need you to remember. Do you
understand?"
Scarlet blinked. He swallowed, then nodded
slowly. "I'll do what I can, Doctor," he promised, sounding for once
much like his old self.
"Good. Let's go then, Gerald. Melody
Angel's waiting."
The group of four proceeded forward, and with a
minimum of jostling, Scarlet's wheel chair was hoisted onboard and strapped
down. Blue settled into a seat beside him as Fawn gave the man another shot.
"What's that for?" the American Captain inquired with a suspicious brow
as Scarlet's cheek flinched at the prick.
"Blood coagulant," Fawn murmured
focusing on his work. "Don't want the bleeding to start again."
"Paul's really just like us now. Isn't
he?"
With a nod Fawn answered. "Until his
unique abilities return, he's just as fragile and human as we are." Fawn
retreated to a chair and strapped in as Melody was given clearance for
departure. Outside the hull, the roaring of the Spectrum helicopter grew in
volume.
"Just as human?" Scarlet inquired
eyeing the back of the doctor's head in front of him.
Blue smiled again. "It's a long story.
Don't worry about it now."
"I'm not like you in some way. I'm
different. Why?"
Blue stalled the inquiry with a calming hand.
"You're special, Paul. An... an asset. A hero. My hero. Now relax
and try to remember."
"A hero? Did I win some strategic battle
or something? Where are my medals? Shouldn't I outrank you, then?"
From beside Scarlet, Blue chuckled.
"You're sounding more like yourself every minute, Buddy. You'll be just
fine."
"Then is this itching in my side
expected?"
"Itching?" Blue blinked then raised
his voice over the thunderous thrumming of the helicopter's engines.
"Doctor Fawn. Captain Scarlet's complaining of an itching."
Fawn poked the latch to remove his safety
harness and swivel his chair around to face the two captains. "That's good
news," he avowed.
"It is?" Blue spouted.
"He's healing again," Fawn explained.
The doctor considered the dark-haired officer. "Let's get those bandages
off, shall we?" he said and rose from his seat. As the helicopter roared
toward Ontario, several epiphanies were to occur on board. While Captain Blue
stood aside, Fawn removed Scarlet's jacket and pulled up the man's turtleneck
shirt to discover new skin growing beneath the blood encrusted bandages.
Kneeling beside his patient and poking at the sutured incision where he had
just recently removed a bullet the doctor asked, "How does that
feel?"
"Bruised," Scarlet answered jerking
his own chin down to investigate the loosened stitches. "But I'd been shot.
I remember that. How...how could I -"
"Be indestructible?" Blue finished
from beside Fawn, beaming a broad grin. "Because you're Captain
Scarlet."
"It's a long story, Captain," Fawn
cut in flashing Blue a warning glare over his shoulder. "Once your memory
returns, all will again make sense." The doctor rose to his feet and waved
Blue aside. "Get dressed, Captain," he told the man in the wheel
chair, then turned his attention back to the blonde haired officer. Quietly he
explained, "I want you to dodge his questions regarding his special past.
Is that clear?"
"But he wants to know who he is,"
Blue defended eyeing Scarlet as the man stood to tuck his turtleneck again into
his trousers.
"He's confused right now, Captain,"
Fawn cautioned weaving his head to return the man's eyes to his. "We need
his trust as well as his cooperation. He already pulled a gun on Symphony when
he thought his life threatened. You tell him who he really is now, and
we'll lose him again."
Blue considered the colorful Spectrum emblem on
Fawn's kepi before agreeing. "You're right of course, Doctor. I'll help
him remember only what applies to the mission."
"And your friendship," Fawn
interjected. "If he trusts you, he'll work all the harder. The fact that
his healing abilities seem to be returning is an encouraging sign. His memory
may come flooding back at any moment."
"Let's hope so," Blue wished and
graciously accepted the supportive pat on the shoulder from Fawn. Blue returned
to his partner. Scarlet, having replaced his jacket and cap, was now sitting in
the seat beside the wheel chair gazing out at the passing scenery below.
"So, Paul. How are you feeling now?"
Scarlet looked up at his partner and smiled
politely. "Much better, Adam. Thank you. I believe I understand why we all
seem to have color-coded names. Is it perhaps because we are all from different
places, yet working together against a common enemy?"
Blue sank into another seat and nodded.
"Partly. Plus we all come to work together bringing our special gifts and
talents toward a common goal. We work for the world president. Our job is to
protect the world, its people, governments and resources."
"Against this enemy you call the
Mysterons?"
"Yes," Blue agreed, "but others
have threatened the Earth too. Think of us as world guardians. We work with
governments to keep the peace, but not so far as to step on the toes of the
downtrodden. The world president and his council do their best to keep things
fair and sovereign."
Blue eyes again considering the scenery below,
Scarlet murmured, "King Arthur."
Captain Blue blinked at the name. "No.
President Younger."
Scarlet's eyes rose from their contemplation
and focused on the American officer beside him. "I was thinking of a story
from... from the past. Arthur Pendragon, a sword in a stone, and... a round
table. The king tried to rule wisely, fairly, to keep the peace, but internal
struggles collapsed his utopia."
Blue nodded. "Ahh, Camelot. I know that
story. It comes from your own country. England. Yes," he agreed.
"From what I remember, Camelot fell to Arthur's own struggles against love
and power. He was urged to banish the two people he loved most. In the end, it
was too late. His city was besieged by the
enemy, some of his own making. Arthur was even killed by his own son, Mordred. Ultimately
the king's utopia had fallen to his neglect for strength."
"And our gifts," Scarlet mused.
"These each add to the strength of Spectrum?"
Blue nodded once but scrunched up his brow at
the change of subject. "Are you comparing Spectrum to Camelot? I don't
quite see the connection, Paul."
"We're all knights at a round table,
Adam," Scarlet explained holding his injured side as he adjusted in his
seat. "We work together for a common cause, the peace of the world."
"I see," Blue replied. "And which
knight would I be? Sir Galahad?
Perceval?"
"Bedevere," Scarlet mumbled as if to
himself. Then he negated with a curt wave. "No. We aren't actually those
knights. Spectrum is like the Round Table under King Arthur."
"You're not implying we're destined to
fail too, are you?" Blue wondered with a skeptical glint to his own blue
eyes.
"The enemy is within," Scarlet droned
in answer. Then he smiled. "Might I have a drink of water, Adam? I'm
rather thirsty."
Blue hesitated. What was his friend talking
about? "Water?" he stammered. "Paul-" Captain Blue stopped
himself. Was Scarlet still confused, a side effect of the anesthesia? Or was
there something darker at work? "Water. Sure," Blue acknowledged and
rose from his seat to gather a cup and canteen from the helicopter's provisions
locker. As he did so, Blue twitched the muscle over his left eye, activating
his cap mike. "Colonel White," he said into the tiny microphone as it
swung down to his lips. "I think we have a problem here."
"Explain yourself, Captain," the
commander-in-chief replied through the internal headset in Blue's cap.
"Sir, Captain Scarlet's memory seems to be
a jumble of information, both from his past and something else."
"Elaborate," came the terse reply.
"Well, Sir. He seems to be recalling
things that perhaps only the Mysterons could know. I think he may be tapped in
somehow to their... their collective consciousness."
"Have you discussed this with Doctor
Fawn?" White asked, his voice as grave as an executioner's.
"No, Sir. No time. We'll be arriving in
Ontario within minutes. Right now I'm out of Scarlet's earshot. I thought I'd
seek your advisement."
"My advisement, Captain," White
warned, "would be for you to seek Fawn's counsel. Keep me informed, and
keep Scarlet on a short leash. In this mental state he may be vulnerable to
Mysteron control. In effect, he could be functioning as a double agent."
Blue swallowed this information like sour
medicine. He finished pouring the cup of water and agreed, "Yes, Sir. I'll
report in as soon as we've landed."
"Cloudbase out."
Blue was left to decide which to do first: talk
to Doctor Fawn or give Captain Scarlet his drink. With a sigh Blue considered
the cup of water and proceeded to the back seats and his friend. "Here,
Captain," he said, offering Scarlet the water. With a grateful nod the man
sipped at the refreshment. "What did you mean?" Captain Blue blurted.
"About what?"
"The enemy." Inwardly Blue knew he
should first consult with Fawn. But this was too vital. If Scarlet understood
their friendship, he would be honest and trusting in his answer. If Fawn and he
confronted Scarlet together, a less revealing reply might be the result.
"Oh, nothing," Scarlet answered
returning his attention to the sweeping landscape below the helicopter. His
lips were poised against the cup rim. The British captain took another
distracted sip then elaborated, "Our true enemy is always ourselves, our
fears. If we believe we will fail, then we will."
Blue nodded slowly. "I see. Then that's
all you meant. Nothing else?"
In response, Scarlet simply shrugged, eyes
still attendant upon the view outside the aircraft. "That, and of course
our real obstacle." Again he spoke with such emotionless
matter-of-factness that Blue physically flinched at the statement.
"Would... would you mind explaining
that?" Blue stammered in reply, plopping into a seat beside him. "I
mean, if you have information which may affect our mission, then you need to
tell the colonel."
Scarlet blinked away from the scenery to turn
soft eyes to his companion. "I... I'm not sure I have any
information," he assured. "Where are we going?" He set the empty
cup down atop the chair arm and returned to his sightseeing.
Blue hesitated in his answer, unsure what to
say. His friend was definitely ill, mentally if not physically. The American
Captain was growing increasingly aware that his friend's present state was more
unnerving than if Metcalfe had been incapacitated. "The Niagara River.
Ontario side," he informed as a computer spits out information without question.
"You were lost. We're taking you where we found you to see if you might
remember something."
Scarlet nodded and switched his gaze back to
his partner. "I hope so. I feel like an empty tea kettle, boiling dry with
no way to refill myself."
Within minutes the chopper settled atop an open
shrubby area near the river. Melody Angel set the controls to standby and
unstrapped herself from her safety harness. Doctor Fawn rose from his seat to
check on his patient. "We've landed near a location you may be familiar
with, Captain," he explained. "We're hoping it might trigger your
memory and allow you to remember something vital you wanted to tell us. We
really do need your help."
"Of course, Doctor," Scarlet replied
again sounding like his true, dedicated self once more. Beside him Blue
released a tense sigh. How long would it last? When would his partner's memory
return? Was Spectrum in danger until then? More seriously, would Blue need to
take drastic actions to protect the landing party against his friend?
The nurse guided Scarlet down from the chopper,
though Blue saw that his friend was moving more easily. It seemed his injury
was almost completely healed. As Scarlet stepped out onto the scrub and
wandered about under the nurse's supervision, Blue offered, "Doctor. May I
have a word with you in private?"
As Fawn placed his feet again atop solid ground
he answered, "Of course, Captain."
When they were shielded by the parked
helicopter from Scarlet's ears, Blue informed, "It's Paul. He's acting strangely,
as if he can remember things only a Mysteron would know." Keeping a safe
distance, Blue continued his suspicions and the recounting of his partner's
strange conversation as they followed the British captain toward the river. It
seemed Scarlet was drawn to the rushing water as a moth was attracted to an
open candle.
After listening to Captain Blue's concern, Fawn
replied in a voice only the American could hear. "I understand your
anxiety, but I don't believe we're in any danger. He's not exactly acting like
a Mysteron agent. He's more like a lost child seeking guidance and approval
right now."
"But, Doc. What about Symphony and
the-"
"Adam!" Blue heard his friend call.
Conversation forgotten, the captain sprinted off with Doctor Fawn as his shadow
to see what Scarlet and his nurse had found. "Here!" the British
officer called again. Beneath the shade of a spreading tree, in amongst brush
and weeds a scarlet jacket knelt.
"What is it, Captain?" Doctor Fawn
inquired with a huff, catching up to the group.
Blue shoved himself into the brambles to see.
On the ground lay a man. He was crumpled beneath the tree, his dark outfit
muddied and wet. His face was flush with life, but he was obviously injured and
unconscious. "That's him!" Blue exclaimed. "That's the man who
kidnapped the woman we saw atop the Minolta Tower. The man who shot me. Where's
the briefcase and the plans?" His blue eyes scanned the surrounding brush
for anymore evidence.
Doctor Fawn, ignoring Blue's concern for missed
belongings, shouldered past the taller man and knelt beside Scarlet. The
doctor's nimble fingers reached for the downed man's throat. "He's
alive," he stated after a moment. "Hypothermic. He may have other,
more severe injuries." Fawn snapped professional eyes up to his nurse.
"Bring a gurney from the helicopter, Gerald. We'll take him back to
Cloudbase immediately."
"No!" Scarlet demanded. Everyone
glared at him.
"Captain," Fawn reasoned. "This
man's injured. You've done a good thing here. Quite by accident you've
discovered another missing piece of the puzzle. He can tell us what happened to
the turbine plans and the missing Teledyne employee, but only if he survives.
If he is to have any chance at recovery, we need to get him to a medical
facility."
"But he's supposed to be dead. He
can't be alive," Scarlet insisted.
After a moment of stunned silence, Blue found
his voice. "Why, Paul?" he demanded.
"They killed him. They were supposed to
kill him and deliver the plans to..." Scarlet's voice faded as the officer
bowed his head and closed his eyes.
"Remember, Captain," Blue demanded.
"Try to remember what the Mysterons wanted."
"Mysterons!" Fawn spouted launching
himself to his feet. "You may be right, Captain. In his present mental
state Captain Scarlet could be in some kind of contact. This proves
it." But the British captain said no more. Instead he waggled his head as
if to clear it of a bad dream and stood.
"What happened?" he asked a second
later, even as he tottered atop shaky legs.
"Are you all right?" Blue asked him
offering a steadying arm.
"Dizzy," Scarlet offered then rubbed
at his temple. "Headache." Scarlet raised confused eyes to his
comrade. "Did I say something useful? Did I remember something?"
Scarlet again seemed like a lost child searching for the familiar faces of
family in a crowd.
Blue smiled reassuringly though his own stomach
was as tight as a crocodile's jaws. "You found our kidnapper, Captain. Now
all we need are the missing plans and the woman."
Fawn was not so congratulatory, however. As he
helped Gerald place the injured man upon the gurney he warned, "It may
already be too late. No doubt the Mysterons left this man for dead and took the
plans. They'll soon discover the prototype turbines' whereabouts, infiltrate
the power plant, and sabotage their installation, all at their leisure."
"Not if we can stop them first," Blue
assured. "Get this man's face plastered on all security channels and sent
to Ochre and Harmony at the power plant. Now we know at least one of the agents
we're looking for." He turned to his partner and clasped his shoulder.
"Ready for some action, Old Buddy? We're going to intercept those
plans."
"I'd advise against it, Captain,"
Fawn negated as he guided the gurney through the scrub. "You're in no
shape for active duty. Both of you stay here and look for more clues. I'll have
Melody swing round and pick you up as soon as we get this man to Cloudbase's
infirmary."
"But..."
"No buts, Captain," Fawn objected
over his shoulder. "Keep a close eye on Captain Scarlet, and keep in touch
with Cloudbase."
Blue's argument was lost in the distance
between Fawn and him. Soon the Spectrum helicopter's rotors
were thumping into the air, leaving the two Spectrum officers stranded beside
the foaming Niagara. "Well, I guess we follow orders and keep looking,"
he mused with a shrug of his epaulettes.
"Looking for what?" Scarlet inquired,
childlike innocence in his voice once more.
"For your lost memories, my friend,"
Blue answered squeezing the British officer's upper arm in reassurance.
"Come on. Let's see if your luck holds out." Blue waved Scarlet
forward to lead. "Follow your instincts." With an unconvincing nod
the dark-haired Spectrum officer stepped from the bushes and continued his
wanderings. Blue paid close attention to his partner's body language and stance
as they traveled. It now seemed Paul Metcalfe was fully recovered from his
previous ordeal. Pity Blue himself was less resilient. The American's chest
ached and caused him discomfort when he marched too vigorously through the
scrub. Soon he needed a rest. "Hold on, Old Buddy," Blue called to
Scarlet. "Break time."
Scarlet straightened from his methodical
glancings into the surrounding trees and underbrush to consider his partner.
"We have no time. You need to find this woman you were telling me about.
She needs our assistance, you said. Perhaps we can save her too."
Blue beamed though he grabbed at his chest and
leaned gingerly against a tree. "Now that's the Captain Scarlet I
remember. Always concerned for the innocent." Inwardly, the Spectrum captain
was relieved Scarlet was revealing more of his human self. The strange
occurrence of ten minutes ago could almost be forgotten.
"She's another puzzle piece," Scarlet
continued. "If she's alive she could help us find the turbine plans."
Blue's smile collapsed. From where did that
calculating and stoic concern originate? Short leash indeed. With a grunt he
shoved himself from his resting post and caught up to his partner. "All
right. Let's go find her. If she's alive she may be able to help us catch the
Mysteron agents and prevent them from completing their mission."
"SIG," Scarlet replied and turned
again to some invisible path through the brush.
It took a moment for the man's reply to sink
in, but finally Blue swallowed his discomfort and retorted, "SIG? You
remember that? What does it stand for?"
Scarlet shrugged. "I don't recall. It's a
code acknowledgement. I heard Melody use it when she was given clearance to
launch the helicopter. The 'S' stands for Spectrum, does it not?" He
inquired passing his partner an earnest glance.
Blue was smiling again. He nodded. "Yes.
That's right. You do remember."
Scarlet's lips twisted in awkwardness. "It
was a lucky guess, Captain Blue."
Blue's mouth dropped. "SIG stands for
Spectrum is Green," he explained and waved Scarlet to continue his trek.
As they tramped together through the squatty bushes and shedding , autumn
trees, Blue thought of his friend's recent near death experience just ten miles
south of this isolated section of the Niagara River. How could Captain Scarlet
be so calm after having survived a tumble over the falls? How, in fact, did he
handle the prospect of death on a nearly daily basis? Was it bravery or
suicidal insanity? Perhaps Scarlet's current ignorance was a temporary
reprieve, his own private bliss, a phantom sanctuary. "Thanks for the
missing memories," he murmured beyond Scarlet's earshot. There was silence
between the friends for many minutes until Scarlet's path led them once more
toward the river.
"There!" he yelped with a stabbing
finger. Vaulting off toward the water Scarlet headed for the bleached skeleton
of a collapsed tree.
Blue trotted after him, unsure what it was his
friend had spotted amongst the drying underbrush. Panting at the effort to keep
up, however, Blue halted his advance at a stabbing pain in his chest. Hand
pressed against the discomfort, he widened his stance to catch his breath and
avoid an awkward fall. As his vision darkened around the edges, Blue could hear
Doctor Fawn's stern warning against such physical exertion. If the physician
had known of the captain's jostling adventures, Fawn would probably have never
left him behind. As the past was past, Blue simply steadied himself as best he
could without blacking out and waited for Scarlet to reappear. "Captain
Scarlet!" he called into the trees and shrubs which angled down to the
river. The British officer had somehow seen what he could not. Then a flash of
red and blue arose from the sloping bank and its deadfall. Captain Scarlet
stood with his arm around a figure dressed in turquoise and black. "The
woman," Blue acknowledged. "Well,
I'll be damned. He found her."
"Adam!" Scarlet called as he
approached limping beside the woman he supported. "She's alive," he
announced. "We need to find her shelter and medical attention."
"Great work! I'll contact Cloudbase,"
Blue assured.
"No!" Scarlet insisted. Together he
and the woman collapsed at Blue's feet. She was dripping wet and pale, her dark
brunette hair plastered against her chilled skin.
"Honestly, Paul. I don't understand
you," Blue countered with a pained sigh. "She needs to get to a
hospital. It's a miracle the Mysterons didn't kill her either."
Scarlet, ignoring his partner's protests,
tilted the woman's head back to start mouth to mouth resuscitation. Pressing
his lips against hers Scarlet forced air into her lungs with two quick breaths.
Captain Blue stood aside in confusion.
"I... I thought you said-"
Scarlet moved to pump the woman's sternum with
five cardiopulmonary thrusts. "She's not
breathing, but she's still alive," he huffed before returning to his CPR.
Two more breaths and he listened for life. Checking her throat for a pulse,
Scarlet returned to administering cardiopulmonary thrusts.
"You're not making sense, Paul. She's been
in that water for hours maybe. It's bone cold, but even for that length of
time, there's no chance."
"No," Scarlet admonished. "She's
not dead." Again he continued his ministries, pressing his lips against
hers and breathing life into the stranger.
Gingerly Blue leaned down to rest a supportive
hand atop his comrade's shoulder. "Let her go, Paul. You can't save
everyone."
With a frustrated huff Metcalfe's epaulette's
slumped. "She wasn't supposed to die. They needed her alive, but she ran
away," he explained swiping away his friend's hand.
"Who needed her? The Mysterons?"
Scarlet's blue eyes shot a fiery glare his
friend's way. "How am I supposed to know?"
In response Svenson only shrugged. "You
tell me, partner. Who's the 'They' you keep speaking of?"
"I..." Scarlet's anger melted to
confusion. "I don't know." His free hand drifted to his temple.
"I...can't remember. She seems familiar somehow. Have I met her
before?"
"I'll say," Blue retorted. "The
last time you saw her she was sitting in a car with a gun to her head. Her driver
ran you down."
"But he only wanted the plans to sell them
for money," Scarlet argued. "She's not supposed to be dead."
With that wish came a sputtering gasp from the
woman supine atop the scrubby ground. Scarlet flinched but recovered quickly
enough to roll her onto her side so that she might more easily clear her lungs
of the chilling liquid.
"You were right," Blue offered and
knelt to help support the retching woman.
"Her injuries aren't severe," Scarlet
informed. "I think she has a dislocated shoulder. Maybe a concussion.
There's a house up this dirt path. We'll take her there."
"You remember a house?"
Scarlet's brow furrowed. "I... I saw the
path from the river. Most likely it leads to a residence, perhaps a ranger
station."
Blue rose to his feet. "I see," he
acknowledged. "Another lucky guess?"
Seemingly ignorant to the challenge the British
officer informed, "I'll stay here and fix her shoulder. You might want to
get what else I found by the river. A briefcase. Could be important."
"Briefcase?" Blue spouted. "Why
didn't you say so? I'll go get it. If it's still intact, she's my new
hero." With that the American captain was striding to the river to collect
perhaps their last piece of evidence. Gladly he wiped the muddied but still
sealed tote clean of river water and lugged it back to his friend in time to
see Scarlet brace the woman's armpit with a boot tip. He gripped her arm in his
hands and firmly pulled. Half-conscious the stranger yelped in pain as Scarlet
gently relieved the pressure, allowing the ball to once again seat itself
within its shoulder socket. "That looks like nasty business. Ever done
that before?"
With a grim nod Scarlet bent down to check his
handiwork, probing fingers feeling through the woman's damp, thin blouse.
"In the WAAF," he said. "A friend of mine was once clipped by a
Jeep. We were miles from the nearest air base. He was able to use his arm once
I replaced the joint."
This time Blue's smirk reached his hairline.
"You are regaining your memory," he assured.
Scarlet paused in his ministries to glance up
at his friend. His expression was bewildered, as if he hadn't considered the
fact. "I... I guess I am," he admitted. "Come on, Adam. Let's
get her inside, out of the cold. Shall we?"
"You got it, partner," Blue quickly
agreed and helped Scarlet support the still pale and lethargic woman. Together
they followed the adjacent path to a small fenced in garden beside a rustic
cabin. The front door remained unanswered, however, when Blue repeatedly
knocked. "Hello!" he called releasing his burden to check around the
small home's side. The window there was covered by a curtain. Not even pressing
his face and shielding his eyes with his free hand against the glass allowed
him a glimpse inside. "Anyone home?" he asked into the window pane.
No reply. Blue returned to the front door in time to see Scarlet give the
barrier an awkward kick. The woman, slumped against his side, nearly slipped
from his grasp. "What are you doing?" Blue demanded as the door ricocheted back on its now twisted hinges.
"Getting her in out of the cold,"
Scarlet replied reinforcing his grip and dragging the stranger inside. Blue
hesitantly followed. The cabin was sparsely furnished with a woodstove and
simple kitchen dinette with four chairs. The well-draped bed against the far
wall was separated from the rest of the floor plan by a tall wooden screen.
"Get that," Scarlet ordered jutting his chin at the divider.
Obediently Captain Blue slid the obstruction
aside as his partner strode forward to lay the woman upon the bed. "I'll
get another blanket," Blue offered noticing a high shelf along the wall
with bedding neatly stacked. As he watched his friend flip the bedspread over
onto his charge Blue inquired, "Now can I contact Cloudbase?"
Scarlet took the extra blanket from him and
nodded. "Doctor Fawn's services would be helpful."
"Good," Blue acknowledged.
"You're finally talking sense." His cap mike swung into position. As
Captain Blue stepped aside to update his superior he wandered toward the tiny
kitchen nook. Eyes scanning his surroundings, he noticed the crumpled blanket
before the abandoned and smoldering woodstove. There was also a dark stain upon
the hardwood floor. Kneeling the Spectrum officer poked a finger at the
congealed stain. Upon closer inspection Blue realized it was blood.
"Cloudbase, Captain Scarlet and I are at a small cabin by the river,
approximately a quarter mile north of our drop off point. We found the Teledyne
employee. She's alive, but is suffering from exposure Also, there might be
another victim here. I found blood on the floor of the cabin. It's a pretty
good-sized puddle. The sooner Melody Angel returns for us the better. Do you
have a positive ID on the first victim?"
"That's affirmative," came Lieutenant
Green's reply into his cap set. "His name is Dwight Hollman. He's a former
employee of Teledyne Turbine Corporation. Hollman was fired from the research
department just three weeks ago for a major security breach."
"Let me guess," Blue interjected with
a sigh. "He tried to smuggle out the plans of a prototype hydroelectric
turbine in order to sell it to the highest bidder."
"How did you know?" Green replied.
Blue only glanced at his unknowing informant as Scarlet attended to the young
woman wrapped in blankets on the bed. "Apparently," Green continued
in his ear, "his partner in crime was an old high school buddy who agreed
to help because of his connections to some foreign energy moguls. It was an all
for profit motive. As we expanded our search we were able to link the two to
the Minolta Tower kidnapping."
"And the woman? Was she our Teledyne
contact, after all?"
"Yes. But she must have known Hollman was
after the plans as well. That's why she was so skittish and ran. This whole
incident could have been avoided if she hadn't run."
Again Blue released a weary sigh. "Water
under the bridge, Griff. Meanwhile, there's a good chance a Mysteron photo copy
of her is one of our saboteurs. Has Teledyne completed the installation of the
prototype turbines at the Niagara Power Project?"
"SIG, Captain," Colonel White cut in.
"The plant is well secured. We've forwarded the identities of both Hollman
and Tiana Boudinot to Captain Ochre and the
plant's security chief. No one without the utmost security clearance will get within
a quarter mile of those new turbines. Grand activation ceremonies are scheduled
for Thursday at noon. Our presence there will be maintained, as planned, until
seventeen hundred hours, Friday."
Blue smirked at the news. "Please send the
power commissioner my regrets, but I don't think I'll stick around for
that." With a relieved breath he added, "I guess our mission here is
complete then. We've found our spies in time and the turbines are secure."
"So it seems, Captain,"
White replied though his voice was grave with unfinished business.
"How is Scarlet? Has his memory improved at all? Doctor Fawn forwards his
concern."
"He's starting to recall past events,
things that happened when he was a colonel with the World Army Air Force."
"I see," was White's deep
acknowledgement. "And what of his... contact with the Mysterons?"
"Well, Sir," Blue admitted
considering with a critical eye his partner's gentle ministries over their
still unconscious charge. "His recollections are fuzzy. They don't seem to
be significant or lasting."
"Any signs of violence or
disloyalty?"
Blue very well understood the colonel's
concern. He also trusted his friend. "He's confused, Colonel. A little
bewildered. Lost even, but I agree with Doctor Fawn's initial diagnosis. Captain
Scarlet's no threat to Spectrum or to Earth."
"I would side with caution, Captain,"
White warned. "A Spectrum helicopter should arrive to escort you to
Cloudbase within the half hour. I suggest you stay where you are."
"SIG." Then Blue's tired mind
recalled one more bit of vital information. "Oh, Colonel. We have a
briefcase here. It matches the one we saw with the woman, Ms. Boudinot, that
night at the Minolta Tower Centre."
"Boudinot," Scarlet echoed from the
bed. Blue ignored him.
"Keep it safe, Captain," White
replied. "We'll open it together once you've returned to Cloudbase. Good
work."
"SIG and thank you, Sir." Silently
the microphone swung back to his visor. Blue turned back to his partner.
"Did you say something, Paul?"
For a moment Scarlet only dabbed the blood from
the woman's weeping head wound. Finally, though, he answered, "Boudinot.
I... I remember that name somehow. From college. Ragnell."
Blue reassured, "Sorry, Buddy. You've got
the wrong woman. This one's Tiana Boudinot." Then, gently settling himself
into a kitchen chair to rest he continued, "You just keep working on
remembering things. We'll both be back home soon. Then we can each take a few
days rest leave to reconstruct our shattered lives." With that Blue
lowered his aching head to cradle it atop his arms upon the table. "The
mission's finished."
"Not yet," Scarlet assured rising
from his seat. He stepped to the table as Blue raised only mildly interested
eyes to watch him. "I've been here before." Scarlet pointed to the
blood stain on the floor between the table and front door. "That's my
blood. I remember now."
"How much do you remember?" Captain
Blue pressed, raising his head from his arms to consider his friend's
determined scowl. Blue's weariness and discomfort were forgotten for the
moment. "Who and where's the owner of this place?"
In response Scarlet backed away, eyes searching
the floor for something, head negating his knowledge. "I... I don't know,
Adam. But-" Boots scuffing the wooden floor Scarlet dove for a half concealed
item beneath a bench seated below the front windowsill. "This is her
gun," he acknowledged as he straightened and presented the silver weapon
to his partner. "She dropped it in a panic and ran out."
"She?" Blue blurted sitting straight
up now in his chair. He stood to get a better look at the old-style revolver.
"Why did she need the gun, Paul?" the American captain demanded.
"Were the Mysterons here? Did they try to kill her, take her over? Take you over? This
woman too?" Blue swung an arm back at the brunette upon the bed. "If
something happened here, we need to know. What was so important to the mission
that you've forgotten? You've got to remember!"
"I... I can't, Adam," Scarlet
defended raising his arms in frustration. The gun barrel pointed dangerously
toward his partner. "I just don't know."
Captain Blue held out his hand for the weapon.
"Easy, Paul. Why don't you let me keep that safe? It's all right. I won't
push you to remember. All in due time."
"But something happened here, Adam,"
Scarlet continued taking a step back and gesturing with the revolver. He poked
it at the stained floor. "That's my blood. I was shot. But I have no scar,
no memory. Why can't I remember?"
"He's a Mysteron!" a female voice
barked from the door. Both men froze in their tracks. The older woman wore a
sweater, riding breeches and hiking boots. She stood, disheveled
and dirtied within the open doorway to the cabin. The reins of a huge gelding
dangled from one hand. In her other perched a muddied pistol. "I shot
him," she explained in a French accent and pointing her gun toward
Scarlet. "He was dead. If he is your partner, he's now your enemy. The
Mysterons. They take over dead bodies, do they not?" she demanded.
"Maybe you're both here to kill me." The gun barrel wavered between
the two men. "They were here, out in my woods. I saw them. Pierre and I.
We hid in the trees. The man was drowned. His exact double dragged him into the
bushes and searched him. Left this gun, so I took it."
Mentally Blue gathered the pieces of her choppy
story into a possible scenario before raising his hands to her. "We're
sorry to intrude. I'm Captain Blue of Spectrum. This is my partner-"
"He is not Captain Scarlet. Not
anymore!" the woman insisted. "He's a Mysteron, I tell you."
"Easy, Ma'am," Blue warned.
"But he was dead! I pulled him from
the river. And he revived, with bullet holes in his chest, I say," the
woman charged. "Then I shot him trying to escape. He can't be
alive."
"Madam,"
Captain Scarlet asked with one hand raised and the gun drooped toward the floor
in the other. "Do you know me?"
The woman blinked at the question. The
recovered pistol in her hand swung dangerously toward Scarlet's chest. "I
pulled you from the river. Your uniform was-" Her eyes narrowed in her
scrutiny. "But your uniform was dirty, drenched. It had two holes. Bullet
holes!"
Blue swallowed against his disposition toward
honesty and cut in," -My partner was injured. He wasn't killed. We've been
trying to retrace the steps of... of his 'double', to find the criminals and
this woman." Blue's free arm swung back to indicate the figure wrapped in
blankets behind him. "She'd been abducted and presumed dead. We were lucky
to find her alive and near this cabin. Again, my apologies, Ma'am, for the
intrusion. We're waiting for a Spectrum helicopter to take us and that
briefcase back to our-"
"Cloudbase," the woman finished
shifting her attentions back to Scarlet. "Yes. Your 'double', Captain,
spoke of it. Said he couldn't go to a civilian hospital. Must speak to his
superiors. I... I believed him at first, but it was all so strange." The
woman's borrowed pistol began to droop away from its target. She dropped the
reins to her horse and stepped inside. "Captain Blue, would you please be
so courteous as to remove your hat while in my home and company and explain
what is going on here?"
Blue bowed slightly and slipped his cap from
his blond head. "Of course, Ma'am. If you would
kindly relinquish your weapon, I'd be glad to explain." Captain
Blue stepped past his partner and extended a hand for the gun.
"Wait, Adam," Scarlet interrupted
grabbing his friend's arm to halt his advance. The silver pistol in is other
hand was raised and ready. "The Mysterons were here," he warned.
"How do we know she-"
"You don't," the woman interjected pivoting
her gun to clip a bullet into Scarlet's clenched and raised hand. The old
revolver twirled free of his grip and clattered against a sideboard table.
Another shot battered Blue's arm as he dropped his cap and moved to draw his
own Spectrum pistol. Both men stood, shocked and bleeding, as the gun-toting
woman stepped forward to slip Blue's color-coded weapon from his holster. She
explained, "You have foiled our plans, Earthmen. You and this woman. We
needed those plans."
"Julienne," Scarlet growled his
injured hand clutched protectively against his soaking chest. "Your name
was Julienne. I remember now. You helped me from the river."
"Yes," the woman admitted checking
Scarlet's holster for a second pistol. It was empty. "I have her memories,
and those of the Mysterons now. You lied, Captain Blue. Captain Scarlet has no
double, for he's singularly indestructible. Your Julienne was weak and
skittish, Captain Scarlet. She came upon us as we found Hollman and Ms.
Boudinot here arguing. We needed those plans, but Boudinot-"
"She got away," Blue surmised holding
the blood and pain back from is injured arm. "Tiana was able to hide from
you. That gave us the time advantage to boost our security and finish
installation of the turbines at the power plant without your
interference."
"We then needed Julienne's help to find
Boudinot and the plans. We had hoped she would find this place, seeking
sanctuary. I would be waiting for her. Now the Mysterons have captured you
three, and we have new plans."
"You're going to kill us, then reconstruct
us," Blue offered, his aching heart thumping out a war drum rhythm within is chest.
Julienne DePaureau's chin rose in challenge.
"No," she said. "We still need Boudinot, and you, Captain, as a
hostage for Captain Scarlet's services." The
woman considered the British officer's damaged hand as she sidestepped to the
covered table. "You will be completely healed shortly, Captain Scarlet.
All evidence of your injury will disappear." She tossed Blue's gun onto
the kitchen table and smiled. "You will then accompany Ms. Boudinot back
to your Cloudbase, but with a short stopover at Niagara's Power Project where
you will detonate this." From beneath the tablecloth-draped dinette
Julienne withdrew a briefcase. It was a close duplicate to the case Blue had
retrieved from the river not a half hour before. She set the case gently down
upon the tabletop.
"A bomb? How's your plan going to work,
Ma'am?" Blue challenged wincing at the twinge of the bullet lodged within
his arm muscle. "I'm his partner. There's no reason for Captain Scarlet to
leave here without me by his side. Spectrum are already suspicious of his loyalties. Unless I authorize it, he won't be
allowed to command our arriving pilot one centimeter beyond the landing
site."
"Rightly so, Captain," Julienne
agreed with a nod. "And your organization is already on alert to our Mr.
Hollman. But we have a trump card."
"A double agent," Scarlet asserted
with a scowl. "Who?"
Julienne smiled again. "Why you, of
course," she answered. "You'll do just what we want. You'll explain
that your partner here went in search of the injured owner of this cabin.
Meanwhile, he left you in charge of the briefcase and Ms. Boudinot. Your little
side trip to the power plant is a safety precaution."
"I won't do your bidding, Madam," Scarlet asserted. "I... I'm a
Spectrum officer."
"We've been testing you, Captain,"
Julienne countered, ignoring Scarlet's affirmation. "Ever since your
little accident, we could sense your thoughts mingling with ours."
"He was somehow in touch with the
Mysteron collective," Blue confirmed. "And at the same time you
were able to infiltrate his mind?"
"Exactly. Except that our mental
connection is tentative. And it is even now slipping. Captain Scarlet's
regaining his memory. He needs another dose in order to become pliant once
again."
"Another dose of what?" Scarlet
demanded taking a half boot shuffle backward. From her pocket Julienne withdrew
a cylindrical object. At its far end were two metal prongs. Beneath her finger
a red button glowed, fully charged.
"Electricity," Blue confirmed grimly.
With a flick of her finger the taser's talons shot forward and clung to
Scarlet's vest just below his throat. Buzzing energy traveled along the
extended wire from its cylinder base to the man's flesh beneath the cloth.
"Paul!" Blue yelped as Scarlet slammed to the floor in a spastic
electrical seizure. "Stop it!" he demanded stepping forward to
intercept the woman. Julienne returned her gun to Blue's face.
"He is indestructible, Captain. You are
not. Please be cautious for Ms. Boudinot's sake."
"But you could kill him," Blue argued
eyeing the weapon suspiciously. How many volts was the device's maximum
discharge? Blue could very well be gambling with all three of their lives now
in arguing his case. "Let him go. I'll take the bomb. I'll take it to the
power station for you."
Julienne DePaureau smiled in sympathy, but
negated, "And have you drop it into the river instead? No, Captain. Our
way is better." She considered the quavering body upon the floor.
"That should be sufficient," she said and flicked off the taser's
energy blast. She dropped the instrument to the floor beside the still
quivering Scarlet. "When he awakens, he will remember nothing of this. He
will follow our instructions as if they were his own. The waters of the Niagara
shall cease to flow, just as we had planned." Then, using her gun to point
the way, Julienne instructed, "Back there, Captain Blue. You need
concealing while we wait for your pilot to return for you." Compliantly
Blue backed away into the darkened corned behind the smoldering woodstove.
"Have a seat. You'll be kept safe as long as Scarlet completes his
mission."
"He'll be blamed for this, you know,"
Blue reminded sliding painfully along the wall to the floor. "His career
in Spectrum will be ruined."
"If he survives," Julienne
replied. Again that self-satisfied, ironic grin slithered across her lips.
"This is no ordinary explosive. There will be nothing left of Captain
Scarlet. Everything will be obliterated within a ten mile radius of ground
zero."
"Ten?" Blue barked. "We're
within that radius here! Safe, my American white ass!"
"Indeed," was the woman's desert dry
reply.
"Bedevere?" a new voice inquired.
"Ah, Ms. Boudinot," Julienne
addressed over her shoulder to the woman awakening upon the bed. The Mysteron's
eyes were still intent on her seated captive. "This is no Arthurian dream,
my dear. There is no Bedevere. But you are safe. Look, a handsome Spectrum
officer has come to your rescue."
"That's not amusing, Julienne," Blue
rumbled, his one sleeve now nearly soaked in scarlet. As Julienne backed away
to check on her other hostage Blue made a desperate move. "Watch
out!" he yelped and kicked his feet into the air, back braced against the
corner. One boot tip clipped the Mysteron's gun barrel and it spun free from
her hand. Even as she scrambled to retrieve it, Blue gathered his feet for
another lunge. Headfirst he bulldozed the woman onto her back. "Get the
gun, Tiana!" he commanded of the dazed young woman who gasped and sat up
amongst the blankets. "Hurry!" With his one good arm Captain Blue
fought off the swinging fists and kicking legs of the Mysteron agent. A punch
to his wounded arm, however, left him gasping and vulnerable. Julienne slammed
her next punch into his temple. Dazed, Blue rolled off his quarry shaking his
head clear of the pain.
"Perhaps we shall not wait for the
destruction of the power plant, Earthman," Julienne avowed leaping again
to her feet and gathering her weapon. Its barrel swung down toward Blue's still
dazed head.
"Bede, watch out!" Boudinot yelped
now on her feet beside the bed. Julienne hesitated to throw the clearly
delirious woman a critical glance. So intent was she on these two, the Mysteron
missed the scarlet boot kicking upward against her armed wrist from behind. As
the pistol flipped away, Julienne was again disarmed. When she spun around to
confront her attacker Blue was pleased to see her astonished face as Captain
Scarlet jabbed a fist into the woman's jaw.
"That's for Julienne," he indicted.
Scarlet followed with a swift rib kick. The Mysteron crumpled.
"Good shot, partner," Blue moaned
from the floor. "How 'bout helping your best friend up? I think I've
reinjured a not so old wound."
"What wound?" Scarlet inquired as Boudinot
limped to stand beside him. "Rag. Are you all right?"
"Besides being scared silly and thrilled
you're alive, I feel like a basketball just after March Madness. It's good to
see you again, Bed."
"You know each other?" Blue asked
gingerly rolling onto his knees and grasping at his chest to rise.
"Adam!" Scarlet snapped. "You're
hurt. Let me help you." The British officer bent down to support his
friend's shoulder.
"Gee, thanks, Buddy. I was afraid you'd
forgotten me."
"How could I?" Scarlet scoffed supporting
Blue's wobbly frame. "After all we've been through together over the
years?" To answer his question, Scarlet continued, "Ragnell and I
attended Winchester University together, back in the early days of my
illustrious career. Took a few classes together."
"Good for you," Blue mumbled. He
coughed and almost doubled over with the pain. "But we've still got a
problem, 'Bedevere'."
"The briefcase bomb," Scarlet
realized.
"Bede," Boudinot urged, grabbing
Scarlet's arm. "A bomb? Is it in my briefcase?"
"No, not yours," Scarlet corrected.
"A duplicate briefcase. One meant to fool Spectrum and the Power Project's
security."
"Paul," Blue cut in leaning against
the woodstove for support. "Melody's on her way. We've either got to
disarm the bomb or fly it away from here. It's lethal to a ten mile
radius."
"Lord!" Boudinot gasped. "I
thought my briefcase held important contents. I kept it safe, Bede. I
didn't let them have it. I even hid in the river. I was so scared to come out.
It got so cold. I... I couldn't hardly hold on to that dead tree anymore."
Scarlet nodded and braced her visibly trembling
shoulders in his able hands. "It's all right, Rag. I'm sorry for what
you've been through. If I had recognized you that night at the Minolta Tower, I
might have been able to prevent this. You won't come to anymore harm. I
promise. Now, I have to go." He released her arms and turned to retrieve
the briefcase from the table. A growing hum was beating at the charged air
molecules around them.
"The helicopter," Blue announced.
"I hear it too."
Scarlet considered the woman standing by her
friend. "You'll be safer here with Adam. Stay with him. I'll send another
copter for you."
"You're going alone, aren't you?"
Captain Blue confirmed. "You'll even kick Melody out."
Scarlet smiled. "There's something
special, you said, about all of us at Spectrum. Each with our own gifts. Well,
I remember mine, partner. I'll take the bomb out to sea and drop it."
"What about her?" Boudinot inquired
as the Mysteron agent groaned toward consciousness upon the floor.
Scarlet backed toward the door, the briefcase
clutched in his now healed right hand. "Can I trust you two to detain her?
The original Julienne was a good woman. Though she showed fear, she still
helped a stranger who needed it. I...I will always regret her death."
Scarlet swooped up his fallen cap and slipped it back onto his head. As he
commanded the cap mike to his lips he announced, "Melody Angel. Leave the
motor running. I'm coming to replace you as pilot. I have a delivery to make."
When Scarlet paused to listen to the Angel's
reply Blue sighed and announced into the air loud enough for the tiny mike to
transmit, "Melody. Follow his orders. It's all right. Captain Scarlet's
taking a Mysteron bomb where it won't devastate
an entire cityscape of innocent people. Clearance code Green-Alpha-Yahoo."
After a moment Scarlet nodded his satisfaction and smirked again, stepping
toward the door. "Take care, partner," Blue offered placing a boot
heel atop the downed Julienne's throat. "Glad to have you back up to
speed."
"Me too," Scarlet agreed and strode
outside.
"He's going to die, isn't he?" young
Boudinot stammered watching her old friend step out into the whipping wind of
the approaching chopper.
"No," Blue attested gingerly reaching
down to retrieve the discarded pistol. "He's going to save us, Miss
Boudinot. Here. If she moves, shoot her. Don't worry she's not human anymore.
She's-"
"A Mysteron. I heard," Boudinot
finished adjusting the pistol in her visibly shaky hand. "Actually,"
she admitted, "I've been listening for a while. You know, faking it. I
almost lost my cool when that woman zapped Bede."
Blue scrunched up his brows in perplexity.
"Why do you keep calling him that?"
Boudinot smiled, for the moment their past
peril forgotten. "We only took one course together back at Winchester.
Semantics. We were friends for a while after that, but Bede went into the
school of technology and I branched out into engineering. Never was very
interested in military history or warfare. I guess we just grew apart. Anyway,
while taking that Semantics course, we collaborated on a class project. Started
calling each other by code names as part of an experiment on people's
preconceived notions or connotations of names. My real name's Tiana, as you
seem to know. It was more of a joke after the project was done, but he's always
called me Ragnell or Rag. And I never stopped calling him Bede." Boudinot
shrugged. "I hadn't seen him or heard from him in years. Forgot he even
existed, I guess, until two nights ago when I saw his face so clearly through
that car windshield lit by the headlamps. Just before..." She paused as if
the memory was too close, too horrible. Blue gave her the chance to gather her
thoughts, saving his energy for their eventual return to Cloudbase's sickbay and the condemning glare of
Doctor Fawn. "Bede... Paul had already been shot. Somehow he was able to
get up again. Hollman slammed the car into drive and he... Paul flew into the
air and over the railing. I was sure he'd broken every bone... My Lord. How can
it all be true and not some terrible nightmare?"
"Paul Metcalfe's pretty tough," Blue
admitted. "He never ceases to amaze me either."
From the floor a deep laugh announced
Julienne's return to consciousness. "He will yet again," she assured
and tried to rise.
Boudinot flinched and with a yelp the gun
barked in her hand. "Oh, my. I...I never shot anyone before. I
didn't..."
"Damn," Blue cursed, ignoring her
alarm He strode to the door just as Melody Angel came in. "He's left,
hasn't he?"
"You cleared it, Captain," Melody
informed removing her flight helmet. "I even disregarded the blood on his
jacket. He gave a course heading due east, toward the Atlantic coastline."
"But that's not where he's headed. Damn
it," Blue spat again. "Somehow they've got control."
"Of the chopper?" Melody asked as
Blue shoved past her and out into the open sunshine. Even now the beating of
the aircraft's blades were fading in the distance.
"He's heading for the power plant with the
bomb. The Mysterons have control." In an instant his cap mike was before
his lips. "Colonel. Send the Angels to intercept Melody's chopper. Captain
Scarlet's gone rogue. He's carrying a lethal bomb to the Niagara Power Project.
Force him down gently or into a high altitude hover and detonate. Get Ochre and
Harmony out of there. Evacuate to a ten mile radius around the power station.
We may only have minutes, Colonel. They're influencing him. The electrical
shock did it."
"The Angel fighters are on their way,
Captain," assured White without questioning his officer. "Lieutenant
Green's forwarding the evacuation order to Ochre. What exactly happened down
there?"
"If we live, I'll explain it all, Colonel.
Melody, Ms. Boudinot and I are stranded at the cabin near the river. We're
within the blast zone, Sir. I may not be able to transmit for much longer.
Don't risk a rescue. Repeat. No cowboy heroics, Sir."
"Understood. We'll do what we can from
this end. Good luck, Captain Blue." His mike retracted to his cap visor.
"Now what do we do?" Melody asked
from beside him following her comrade's eyes into the late afternoon sun.
"We pray," Boudinot answered from the
doorway. "We pray Bede realizes what he's about to do and snaps out of
their control."
Thanks for the Memories
Paul 'Bedevere' Metcalfe ignored the
transmission coming through his cap set as he piloted the Spectrum helicopter
along the river. The land below continued to pale in shades of yellow and
brown. In only a matter of weeks winter would grab hold of this region as a
grizzly bear clutched salmon.
"Captain Scarlet," Colonel White
demanded. "Land peacefully or you will be shot down. You're a Spectrum
officer, Man. You've sworn to protect human lives. You can't do this. You're not
a Mysteron. Remember your promise to Captain Blue."
"Remember," Scarlet murmured, then
watched as a trio of Angel fighters roared by his starboard side. "Never
again."
"Paul," a sultry French voice
announced through his headset. "Please set the helicopter down peacefully
or we will be forced to shoot."
"You can't, Juliette.
The bomb's set to explode in under four minutes. There's only one way."
"Captain," Destiny Angel tried again.
"We will force you into a high altitude detonation."
"No," Scarlet argued. "The
electromagnetic pulse would knock out half the Eastern seaboard. Veer off, I
tell you." Shoving the vibrating joystick forward Scarlet increased his
speed to maximum in a sweeping starboard turn.
"Colonel," Rhapsody Angel cut in over
the open channel. "Captain Scarlet is now heading due north, Sir. Away
from Niagara Falls."
"Scarlet!" White bellowed.
"Where are you going? That bomb's powerful enough to kill three thousand
people. Get it out to sea, Man. Now!"
The British captain frowned into his cap
microphone. These distractions from his mission were getting tiresome. "No
time, Colonel," he countered. "Order the Angels off my back. I'll not
risk their lives too."
"Then where, Scarlet?"
"Laurentian Highlands. Few people,"
was all the captain could say as he pushed the rescue chopper beyond its safety
limitations. As the aircraft began to buck Scarlet tightened his grip on the
now jerking joystick and ascended to a safer altitude. He headed into the
remote wilderness of northern Quebec
.
*
* *
"Is he crazy?" Blue stammered when he
heard the news. "We'll never find him in that wasteland. There must be
miles and miles of nothing but conifers, granite and glacial lakes up
there."
"Precisely, Captain," White agreed
into Blue's headset. "It seems you were wrong after all. He's our
Captain Scarlet."
"Yeah, always thinking of others and
playing superhero with his own life," Blue attested. "Sir, I want to
be assigned to his rescue team."
"Negative, Captain," the colonel
rumbled. "You're injured and still on medical leave. Doctor Fawn has a bed
warmed for you in sickbay. Captain Ochre's already volunteered to head the
rescue mission."
"Here we go again," Melody sighed,
though the tension between them had lightened. It seemed they, and many other
local residents, would live to see more marvelous Canadian sunsets. The clouded
sky was already transforming into a kaleidoscope of late afternoon colors.
Colonel White continued, "A Helicopter is en route to you now. E.T.A.: twenty minutes."
"SIG, Sir," confirmed Blue.
"Lieutenant Green. tell Symphony, I'll be glad to see her again. It was
touch and go for a while there."
"SIG, Captain," came the younger
man's reply. Blue's mike swung back up to his visor.
As Captain Blue settled into a kitchen chair to
await Karen and their air taxi, he released a weary sigh. "Good luck,
partner," he murmured. Relaxing as best he could, he allowed Melody the
job of supervising their Mysteron prisoner. Perhaps Julienne DePaureau would
yet prove useful to Spectrum.
*
* *
Scarlet cursed under his breath. His altitude
was too high to risk ejecting prematurely without a reliable autopilot. Yet he
had to cover more ground, reach as remote a location as possible before doing
so. Meanwhile, the aircraft was now issuing warning lights and sirens. He had
pushed the engines beyond safety specs, and now he was unsure if he would need
to remain strapped in as pilot to guide the shuddering helicopter down
manually. Though he had survived fiery crashes before, Scarlet doubted his
extraordinary abilities would simultaneously endure the devastation of the
crash and a powerful explosion. There was no time to slip into an escape
parachute, and the timer set into the briefcase's lock was ticking down its
last sixty seconds.
According to his malfunctioning holographic
topography map Captain Scarlet was now north of forty-six degrees latitude. If
he could only reach another fifty miles further north, he would be far enough
away from any habitable town. "Never again," he vowed against the
squealing of the warning sirens. He had promised his friend, Adam, he would
never again allow the Mysterons to manipulate him into a corner. Never would he
gamble with the lives of his comrades or innocent bystanders like Ragnell
Boudinot.
The helicopter's fuel gauge, just then, added
its alarm bell to the tumult in the cockpit. Only another few minutes of fuel
left at normal operations. But Scarlet was nearly shattering the sound barrier
in a vehicle not designed for such speed. After all, this was a rescue chopper,
not the more sleek and powerful magnacopter Symphony more often piloted. His
gas consumption quickly dwindled as did his options. The joystick was bucking
so roughly, the captain's white-knuckled fists were going numb. "Hold
on!" Scarlet cursed at the gauges. "Hold it together," he demanded
of the cockpit around him.
Slowly now, he descended. His target: a
bald-topped mountain crag. It would obliterate the helicopter and its dangerous
load high above the valley floor. The landscape below would be littered with
mountain fragments, boulders and chopper debris, but would otherwise change
little. The free airspace above him would transfer most of the potential energy
and the resultant electromagnetic disturbance into a blasting wind, toppling
trees but doing little further harm to humanity. As per the Colonel's orders,
the Angel fighters were recalled to a safer distance. Destiny, Rhapsody, and
Spectrum's rookie pilot, Eternity, would also be spared the drastic damage from
the EMP and devastating wind currents. Scarlet was alone, above a wilderness of
conifers, moose, bear, and lynx. As he set the
questionable autopilot and slid from his seat to grab the emergency parachute,
Captain Scarlet wished for the lives of Earth's lesser creatures.
The helicopter hatch slid open. Scarlet tucked
his arms into the chute's harness and dove out over the blue topaz waters of an
X shaped mountain lake. "X marks the spot," he mumbled into the
draught of his descent. As he plucked the lanyard and deployed his parachute a
booming thunderclap announced the impact of the helicopter against the summit
behind him. A millisecond following, a fireball expanded, obliterating the
mountaintop and expelling a cascade of heated and split granite. The resultant
blast traveled outward at a speed close to that of sound. First the displaced
air, followed by the mountain itself. "X marks the spot," Scarlet
shouted into his cap mike just as it swung into place before his grimacing
lips.
"Captain Scarlet," White's deep but
fizzled voice hissed into his tortured ears. "Say again. What is
your-" The signal went dead as the electrically charged blast tossed
Scarlet like a marionette beneath his chute lines. As he tried to regain
control and steer the parachute away from the carnage, granite projectiles
whistled past him. A huge chunk of mountain, the size of an oven, sailed by
just below his dangling foot. It seemed Scarlet's most perilous moments would
not be in the landing, but in his journey from the sky. Another fragment of
mountain, perhaps breadbox sized, slammed into Scarlet's right shoulder. He was
instantly in pain and handicapped. His entire right side went dead, as his very
consciousness nearly failed him. From above a sharp spear of rock sliced
through his parachute. In his shock and injury Scarlet was only vaguely aware that
his slow descent had now become a rapid plummet. Unable to maneuver the
shredded chute with only one functioning hand, the British captain saw through
a haze the mouth of the lake reach out to swallow him. For a second time in as
many days, Captain Scarlet's reality was enveloped in water.
*
* *
"Satellites confirm, Sir," Lieutenant
Green reported from his station aboard Cloudbase. "The explosion occurred
in a remote region of western Quebec, some thirty miles northeast of the city of
North Bay."
Colonel White grunted his acknowledgement.
"Get the rescue chopper on it right away," he ordered. "Have the
pilot pick up Captain Ochre at the Niagara Power Project. And have the Angel's
do a flyby once the electromagnetic static has dissipated. See if they can't
find this 'X' Scarlet spoke of."
"SIG," Green responded and allowed
his fingers to play across his data console.
* * *
It was only an hour past sunset when Captain
Ochre's helicopter landed upon the southeastern shore of Lac Kipawa in western
Quebec, not twelve miles northeast of a little river town named Temiscaming. A
staticy signal, somehow insulated from the EMP, had given away Captain
Scarlet's landing site. Ochre and his paramedic team found him conscious, but cold and drenched from the lake. He was
half tangled in his twisted chute cords upon the pebbly beach, just above the
water line.
"Good to see a familiar face,
Captain," Scarlet groaned struggling to dislodge yet another line from his
unresponsive right side.
"You remember me, then," the
mischievous brown-eyed American quipped
helping Scarlet out of his parachute harness.
"I even remember the last joke you played
on me, Rick," the Brit replied with a grunt of discomfort as the last of
the cords were slid away. "A bit of tea with your honey, you said."
Scarlet scrunched up his face. "'A little bit sweet?' was your punch line, I recall. Never again will I allow you
to serve me in the officer's lounge."
With a sadistic chuckle Richard Fraser threw
the man's arm over his shoulder and heaved Scarlet onto his feet. "You
really should cut back, Paul," he suggested.
"On honey
or heroics?"
"Both." Ochre beamed and waved the
paramedics off as Scarlet stood aside and tested the stability of his own two
legs. It seemed the British officer had mostly recovered from his perilous fall
into the icy lake and the subsequent swim to shore. "Come on. Let's get
you home, fall boy."
"Funny, Rick," was Scarlet's grim
response as he limply accepted his comrade's support the short walk to the
chopper. One quick glance skyward, however, made him pause at the hatch. Above
their heads, perched against the growing twilight and bounteous stars, was
silhouetted the damage of his passing. "I don't even know the name of this
mountain, but I suggest a new one," he told Ochre.
"What? Paul's Peak?"
"No," Metcalfe groaned. "Look at
it, Rick. I sheared the top clean off. Reminds me of Devil's Tower in
Wyoming."
"Mysteron Mountain it is, then," was
Fraser's acknowledgement as he maneuvered the injured Scarlet up into their
waiting air taxi. Once inside himself, Ochre slid the hatch shut and secured
the door and his friend for takeoff. The aircraft was soon roaring back to
Cloudbase.
* * *
With a quick stop in at Medical to check on Captains
Grey and Blue, a shower and a change of uniform, Captain Scarlet was back on
duty. Colonel White requested his presence soon after. "You wanted to see
me, Sir?" he inquired poking his capped head in through the open Command
Center doors.
"Come in, Captain. Sit down." As
Scarlet settled himself onto a rising stool, Colonel White continued, "I
just completed a conversation with Quebec's prime minister. It seems he's in
agreement with me against the suggested renaming for your mountain."
Scarlet swallowed. "My-? Sir, did Captain
Ochre speak with you?" he stammered suddenly feeling flushed and adjusting
his collar about his tightening throat.
"'It would be a security risk, you
see," White continued ignoring his officer's apparent discomfort. Then the
white-haired commander-in-chief's countenance softened into a smirk. "He did
accept the name I suggested, however."
"Sir?" Now the Spectrum captain was
perspiring beneath his scarlet jacket. He resisted the temptation to remove his
cap, though his black crown grew damp beneath it.
"The French word for memory is 'mémoire'." Scarlet
listened as his strained throat completely constricted preventing any protest.
"From now on," White explained, "your headless peak in the wilds
of Quebec, Canada shall be known as Mont Mémoire in honor of all who have given their lives in
service to the Earth."
Scarlet released his held breath. "I
see." So his name and memory were not at issue here.
Colonel White was not through, however. "Exactly
when did your full memory return, Captain? And how long did the Mysterons have
control over you?"
"My lost memory, Sir? Of that I'm not
sure. There are still blanks to my past. My keys, for instance."
White placed his hands atop his desk and leaned
forward. "Keys?"
"I can't recall where I put the keys to my
private saloon."
Scowling the colonel blurted, "You don't
have a private saloon, Man. You're on an airbase carrier, forty-thousand feet
above France at the moment. Where in blazes would you drive it?" Visions
of a sports coupe spinning out atop the flight deck were no doubt in the older
man's head.
Scarlet raised a hand in dismissal. "I
meant my parents' saloon, of course, Sir. It's a three year old SAAB, rusty
brown in color, stored in the garage of my parents' home in Winchester. Next I
get home I would like to take a tour of the university there with an old
friend, Ms. Boudinot. Reminisce, you understand. However, I can't seem to
recall where I store the keys to the blasted thing."
In response to Scarlet's hardship, the colonel
was chuckling. From behind the seated captain issued the distinct choking sound
of a suppressed outburst from Green. "Suffice it to say, we all have
lapses in our memory, Scarlet," White acknowledged. His features hardened
again to stone a moment later. "Now, to the more pertinent question: For
how long were the Mysterons in control of your actions?"
Scarlet cleared his throat and answered
honestly, "Only for the initial six hours, Colonel."
White flinched back against his chair.
"Six hours? Good God, Man! What secrets did you pass on? What booby traps
could you have set?" The colonel bolted to his feet.
Scarlet rose from his stool as well. "No,
Sir," he defended. "I was referring to my initial take over, nearly
four years ago. The Mysterons have never since regained their control of
me."
"Never?" White echoed, his skepticism
clear in the stiff back the colonel lowered again into his chair. "But
Blue and Fawn reported lapses in your memory. You were in touch with the...
Mysteron collective, as your partner called it."
"That may be true, Colonel," Scarlet
contended. "But I remember none of it," he assured leaning forward,
hands atop the desk.
"And after the taser blast?"
In response Scarlet closed his eyes and shook
them clear of the painful memory. "I was knocked unconscious. I remember
that. The shock must have righted everything. And yet..." Mentally the
captain dove deep into his most recent memories.
"Scarlet?" White warned.
"Sir, I remember a voice. Deep.
Emotionless." He paused to recollect. "It was Captain Black's
voice!" Scarlet gasped. "It said, 'take the briefcase and fly to the
power plant'. But I didn't, Sir." he defended with a fist slam upon the
desktop. "I was in control."
"Yet you took the case, and you did
take that heading," White argued.
Scarlet shook his head and
straightened his spine in conviction.
"Never again, Colonel. My own will is greater than that."
With a weighted sigh, White acknowledged,
"We'll see, Captain. From now on, any dealings with electricity are to be
dealt with suspicion. Doctor Fawn has advised me, this was a unique collection
of circumstances, perhaps never to be repeated. The voltage, your exposure to
it, the rainy conditions assisting with conductivity, even the chilling
temperature may have all been factors in your temporary memory loss. But your
brain chemistry, Captain, however altered by this Mysteron reconstruction of
yours, is susceptible to Mysteron
control. You've proved that now, whether or not you are willing to admit
it."
"But, Colonel White," Scarlet argued.
"I don't remember any of it now. Just that last. And I headed west then
north instead of toward the coast when I saw that the bomb's timer was set for
five minutes. I realized I couldn't reach a point safely far enough out at sea
in that time. And I would be flying over the most densely
populated area of North America if the bomb were booby trapped to detonate
early, or if I were to be prematurely shot down. I had to head north.
Into the wilderness. It was my only option, Sir."
"Based on the result of your actions, you
present a valid argument," Colonel White rumbled. "Very well,
Scarlet. That information will be taken into account at your next psychological
evaluation."
The captain swallowed again. Though his body
temperature had returned to normal, his heartbeat was still elevated.
"Sir? If I might ask? When will that be scheduled?"
"Your appointment with Doctor Taggert is
in two days. Oh-eight hundred. Mark that on your event calendar, Captain, so you won't forget it."
"Yes, Colonel," Scarlet acknowledged
with a sigh.
With a grunt of finality White leaned back in
his chair and added, "Until then, young man, I've authorized a short leave
of absence. On her supervisor's permission, a certain Ms. Boudinot has
requested a private audience with you in Ontario. The Minolta Tower Centre, I
believe."
"Sir?" Scarlet barked snapping to
attention.
"You heard me, Man. Go reminisce on old
times," White ordered with a curt wave. "Make some new memories.
Consider it therapy. You've earned it."
"Yes... Yes, Colonel." Saluting,
Scarlet pivoted and marched from Cloudbase's center of operation. Shortly
following he was behind the controls of a private jet to Ontario's Niagara
Airport for a special rendezvous.
Epilogue: The Round Table
When he exited the elevator onto the Minolta
Tower's observation deck, Paul Metcalfe paused to smooth his light blue sports
jacket and run fingers through his jet black locks. Was this to be a reunion of
old friends or something more? It had been so many years since Tiana 'Ragnell'
Boudinot and Paul 'Bedevere' Metcalfe had gone their separate ways, to
experience their own, very different lives. It had been a fluke that they had
met again so many miles from the common ground of England's Winchester University.
Yet they had been reunited under a common goal- the safety of mankind. Just as
in King Arthur's time it seemed, knights again roamed the land to protect the
innocent.
With that mental boost, Metcalfe stepped out
onto the circular deck and into the crowd of tourists and honeymooners. He
headed for the nearest railing which overlooked Horseshoe Falls.
"Ragnell?" he called as he approached a woman adorned in a knee
length red dress and flat black boots. Over one shoulder hung a temporary
sling. Ragnell's dislocation injury. Her back was to him, eyes scanning the
roiling scene below, but her shoulder length hair was twisted up at her neck
and secured with a pair of scarlet chopsticks, the same shade as her dress.
"Rag?" he asked again.
Boudinot turned to welcome him with a vibrant
smile and gleaming hazel eyes. "I'm glad you're all right, Bed. I'm glad
you came." She spread her free arm out to allow him access to the railing.
"I was saving you a spot. Take a look."
Paul drew up beside her and, shoulder to shoulder,
they stared down at the tumultuous flow of the thunderous Niagara River.
"It's been a long time, Rag," Metcalfe said, his attention more
focused on the vision in scarlet beside him. "You wanted to see me. Any
old memories you wish to share?"
With a dreamy smile Boudinot slipped her arm
about his jacketed waist and answered, "We'll have plenty of time for
that. Old and new. Like how about you start calling me Tiana? We're not college
kids with a Semantics project between us anymore."
"All right. Then it's Paul," Metcalfe
replied and settled his own arm about her. "So, Tiana. What are your
plans?"
With a shrug within his gentle grasp she
answered, "For now, let's just look out and appreciate your
handiwork."
Metcalfe blinked. "Mine?"
With a feathery chuckle Boudinot explained,
"Adam told me. This is your gift. You keep things going. Sort of like King
Arthur's knight, Bedevere. Your devotion and courage are like these falls. Ever
flowing and always there. Never ending."
Paul's blue eyes creased in skepticism.
"He said that?"
"He is your best friend, isn't
he?"
"Yes," Paul asserted. "He is.
But I never thought him a poet."
"Then believe what he tells you." A
silence fell between them for a long moment. Then Tiana Boudinot sighed. It was
a release brimming with peace and contentment. "Magnificent, isn't
it?" she murmured within Paul's embrace. "A true miracle of
nature."
Paul Metcalfe swept his sky eyes across the
horizon. The roaring of Niagara's Falls was an ever constant thrumming in the
air. The river's mist rose from below tickling his chilled face. Within the
afternoon sunlight, rainbows danced in a spectrum of colors and promised a
beautiful day, a more hopeful future. "Yes," he answered her. "A
miracle."
Watch for my next story: Mistaken Identity, coming this summer.
email me at: LadyHawkeUSA@msn.com
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