Halloween on Cloudbase is a
peculiar time. We’re all on duty, as always and nowhere does it say it’s a
holiday, but somehow a strange festival atmosphere seeps into the old place and
everyone gets into the spirit of the thing.
Well, I say everyone, but that’s not strictly
true. There are a few people who look
askance at the rest of us, exuding an air of superiority that makes me itch to
bring them down a peg or two.
One of them is the colonel, but
however much I want to target him, I’m not stupid enough to try. Actually, I suppose he isn’t that bad; as
long as no one actually gets hurt or manages to do something that reduces our
level of operational capacity – or some such - he turns a blind eye.
There are some guidelines, of course;
but, generally speaking, these have grown up from past experiences.
Dr. Fawn told me once that ‘the
old man’ appreciated the need for us all to let of off steam now and again, or
we’d all go stir-crazy sitting around waiting for the Mysterons to take another
of their deadly pot shots at us.
I guess that’s why we’ve been
allowed to form our little Am-Dram group.
It’s called CADS, presumably because of the military’s fondness for
wacky acronyms. We had a nasty
experience doing a Shakespeare play a few years ago, when a mysterious gold
torque, that was part of his costume, turned Captain Scarlet into a raving
psycho – so now we stick to light-hearted stuff and don’t do a production for
Halloween any more.
Ouija boards and séances are
disapproved of too. Apparently, just
because Captain Blue believes they’re not something we should indulge in, since
they tend to upset Captain Scarlet. But
then, Blue is usually so busy humping Symphony Angel every spare minute they
get, that he probably wouldn’t notice if we held one again.
I’m not the only one with a
penchant for practical jokes. Just the one everyone blames, and I’ve been
ticked off occasionally at Halloween.
Once or twice it wasn’t even my fault.
Genuinely. I remember the ‘joke’
Captain Scarlet played the first Halloween after he’d had his own ‘run in’ with
the Mysterons.
The incident of Scarlet’s
attempted abduction of the World President, and how Blue had had to kill his
friend to save the politician, was something that shocked us all. Scarlet fell
something like 800 feet from the top of the London Car-Vu and due to his
Mysteron-given ability to retrometabolise, he still managed to wake up
again.
Now that is what I call scary.
Of course, we’re profoundly lucky
that he’s on our side and he’s put his life on the line more times than we can
count since it happened – one time was when he walked into the Halloween Party
and tried to make out the Mysterons had regained control of him.
I thought Captain Blue really was
going to kill him – again.
It’s true to say that weird things
do tend to happen on Cloudbase at Halloween.
We all pretend we haven’t noticed, because they generally seem to happen
to Scarlet and he’s developed a complex about it now, but we all get involved
from time to time.
That’s why I always try to do
something light-hearted and ‘normal’ at Halloween. I don’t play tricks on April Fools’ Day - often - but I like to
think that injecting a little light-hearted humour into the, sometimes, all too
sombre atmosphere of Halloween, helps people relax a bit. I keep it simple though.
I think one of the best things I did was the other year when I went
round as many desks as I could and loosened the bottoms of all the hole-punches
I could find.
You know, it’s amazing how long
people have been predicting the advent of the paper-less office. And how determined human beings are to
retain piles of print-outs and memos.
Colonel White is always telling us to ‘think before we print’ – so, of
course, we do… and then most of us print out a spare copy, in case we lose the
original.
So, on the afternoon of October 31st – before the
celebrations proper had started - I hacked into the admin lieutenant’s
base-wide-comms account and sent a wide-ranging memo on new security routines
and how to formulate new pass-codes: a perfect pretext to print out and keep
for reference.
All over the base howls of anguish
went up as paper-fixated officers reached for their hole-punches and showered
their desks, and the floors around them, with fiddly little circles of
paper.
Colonel White made me apologise to
the housekeepers for that one – but it was worth it.
The only problem with thinking up
an endless stream of essentially uncontroversial pranks is that as time goes
by, you start to run out of steam.
Living up to past triumphs gets more difficult as people get more wary
and, as happened this year, you can be just too busy to give it much
thought.
My partner-in-crime
(appropriately) has often been Captain Magenta, although over the years he’s
probably been the butt of my jokes to an equal extent. He doesn’t seem to mind, and, although it
pains me to admit it, he’s a pretty good sport. I’ve never known him to grass me out when the colonel’s asked if
he knows who’s responsible.
A few days before this Halloween,
we were sitting in the Officers’ Lounge waiting to go on duty and I noticed him
looking sideways at me. I checked my flies and wondered if I was wearing my
uniform vest back to front – but all was safe and secure on the sartorial
front; so I asked him what was eating him.
He told me he was wondering why I
hadn’t explained what my Halloween prank would be as he was expecting to be
asked to help.
“I don’t have one,” I confessed,
and it was obvious that he didn’t believe me because he said:
“Yeah, right: just don’t include
me as one of the patsies, Rick.”
I ignored him; the stupid Paddy is always on my back when he feels
I’m not including him in something.
Mind you, I get ticked off when he goes his own sweet way, as well;
except when he’s mooning over the foxy Symphony Angel. Karen’s a babe, all right, but she’s Adam’s
babe, and I respect Blue’s right-hook too much to hit on his squeeze. Pat doesn’t have the choice; he’s fancied
her since the early days and can’t break the habit. Poor sap.
Now, as he sat looking at me with
disbelief in his puppy-dog eyes, I had an idea: it came to me in a flash, as my
best ideas often do, and I acted on it immediately.
Framing my face to an expression
of hurt innocence, I said, “Would I do that?”, and, just as I had expected, Pat
replied,
“Yes.”
I shrugged and, with as much
indifference as I could muster, replied:
“If you think that, there’s
nothing I can do to change your mind, is there?” Pat shook his head. I smirked.
“Just watch your back then, for all the good it will do.”
I glanced back at him as I left
the Lounge, and I saw – with glee – that he was frowning after me, with some
concern. Going out of the door without
looking where I was heading, I bumped straight into Captain Grey.
Bradley Holden has a nasty habit
of appearing unexpectedly and unheard.
“What’re you up to, Ochre?” he
asked me suspiciously. Like Magenta,
Grey has been the target of some of my best jokes over the years.
“Ask Pat,” I replied, grinning
broadly.
And that was all I did on Day One.
Day Two was a busy one; everyone
had been working their butts off for the past couple of months and so I didn’t
see anyone until the late afternoon when I finally had the chance to stroll
into the Officers’ Lounge, off duty.
Captain Scarlet was still out of
action after getting infected by some killer mushrooms – no, to be serious for
once, it’s no joke. It was nasty stuff,
dissolving his internal organs and finally exploding from his body to disperse
spores into the air.
Not surprisingly, the mood on the
base was sombre; Blue – Scarlet’s partner – was particularly edgy and had been
snapping at anyone who got in his way for weeks. As I entered the Lounge, I saw Symphony smothering a polite yawn behind
her hand. I guessed she’d had another
hard day’s night taking her lover’s mind off the problem and soothing his
anxieties – amongst other things.
Rhapsody Angel was also there,
looking drawn and apprehensive, and even the solicitous attention of her two
closest friends – Symphony and Blue – didn’t appear to be helping. I nodded a general greeting and headed for
the coffee pot. If there were other
people in the Lounge, the chances were they wouldn’t have let Blue make the
brew – he makes terrible coffee.
I took a refreshing gulp and
almost choked: obviously Blue hadn’t been at his most approachable today, and
nobody had tried to talk him out of making the coffee after all.
We all sat about in a strained and
oppressive silence, until Symphony announced she had to go and prepare for her
next duty stint. Blue went with her,
presumably to help her prepare, so I went and sat beside Rhapsody.
I’ve always had a soft spot for
Dianne Simms; a bit like Pat lugging his flaming torch around for Karen, I have
a smouldering ember for Good Old Di.
Way back in the early days, before we’d really settled down in Spectrum,
we’d had a bit of a thing going, and I’d been a bastard towards her. Yet, like the true lady she is, she forgave
me and we’re buddies now.
Besides, I knew she and Scarlet
were as much an item as Symph and Blue-boy, only they were about a million
times more discreet.
She smiled at me; a wan little
smile that made me feel all protective.
I put an arm round her slender shoulders and hugged her. She smiled and rested against me for a
moment.
“You getting ready for Halloween,
Rick?” she asked, pulling away, but still sitting close.
“No,” I said, truthfully
enough. “It doesn’t seem right to do
something so frivolous with Paul… urmm…
ill.”
“Oh, but he’s the last person to
expect you to stop having fun,” she protested.
“He might well be, but Blue’d have
my guts and, honestly, do you really think I’m so insensitive, Di? Don’t forget, I saw something of what was
going on at Casterbridge Hospital,” I said, and she blushed slightly, so I
hugged her again.
Just then Pat came in and saw us
in what must have looked like a conspiratorial huddle. I spoke up a little louder, so he couldn’t
fail to hear.
“Whatever I might have up my
sleeve, you don’t need to worry about it.”
I flicked my eyes towards Magenta and Rhapsody laughed.
“Watch it, Pat,” she said gaily,
“he’s got you in his sights this
year.”
Pat glowered at me and I smiled
back, sweetly.
I was off duty for most of Day
Three, so I devoted much of my time to humming. Humming is the second most annoying thing in the universe, after
people who insist on talking to you during the big game on TV. It suggests something is going on, but
doesn’t give any clue of what. I know,
from past experience, that it annoys Pat immensely.
Around lunchtime, I wandered into
the technical stores down under the runways, while I knew Blue was in there and
made a big show of scrounging some wood and a few screws from the
technicians. Then I went to the
Spectramart and when I saw Harmony Angel go in, I followed her and made a big
deal of picking up a package of stuff I’d ordered from a model-making supplier,
to which I added some ground pepper and some washing up liquid – both potential
ingredients for playing pranks.
Harmony came to the counter as I
was paying for my stuff.
“Don’t tell Pat,” I whispered,
trusting that by the inevitable process of osmosis that fuels gossip around the
base, my list of purchases would get
back to him soon enough, fuelling his imagination as he tried to figure out my
‘plan’.
That evening, as we were in the
Officers’ Lounge, I busied myself constructing a small lidded box from the
wood.
And humming.
It was the humming that finally
unsettled Pat – as I knew it would. He
threw a cushion at me and stormed out.
I counted Day Three as a total
success.
Day Four was characterised by Pat getting antsy. He was hovering around the door to my quarters
when I came back from breakfast and I know that, given his past and his
undoubted computer wizardry, no electronic lock is safe from Patrick
Donaghue.
I challenged him to explain what
he was doing looking sneaky in the
corridor, and although he looked a little sheepish, he swore he’d merely been
waiting to see if I responded to his knock and wanted to get breakfast, before
we went on duty.
“I’ve been up hours,” I told him,
adding, “I had a lot to do.”
He glared at me, and took himself
off to get his breakfast, while I very pointedly waited until he’d turned out
of the corridor before I opened my door and went in.
Later that afternoon, when we’d
finished our admin assignments, we wandered down to the Officers’ Lounge, as we
always do, and joined Grey and Blue who were on duty. Magenta and Grey went into a little huddle and were casting
suspicious glances in my direction while I sat innocently reading the
newspaper.
Finally, Grey asked, “It’s
Halloween tomorrow. Anyone got any
ideas about what we could do to celebrate?”
Blue cut in with a sharp retort
that he wasn’t in the mood for the usual tomfoolery, especially not with
Scarlet still in sickbay and seriously ill.
I nodded sagely. “I agree with Blue,” I said, “after all,
things can all too easily go belly-up at Halloween and we don’t want to tempt
fate, do we?”
“What’s that supposed to mean?”
Blue snapped. “Doc Fawn says he’s sure
they will find a cure. He and Dr Owens
are working like Trojans on it.”
“I know,” I replied, as soothingly
as I could – Blue can get really wound up on occasion – “What I mean is that I
don’t think it’s right to indulge in tomfoolery, or dick or harry foolery
either, for that matter, while he’s still ill.”
“Oh sure, you’re as innocent as a
new born babe,” Pat grumbled.
“This time it so happens that I
am,” I said. “Have you seen me doing
anything that could even remotely be described as tomfoolery?”
“Not seeing you do it, doesn’t
mean you aren’t,” Grey replied, giving me his ‘superior’ stare.
“You’re paranoid,” I said, folding
the paper and making to leave. “Both of
you.”
Out in the corridor I saw Destiny and Melody Angels wandering
towards the Lounge. I greeted them with my usual fulsome smile and a speech
that my happiness was complete having seen such undoubted poetry in
motion.
Destiny simpered and smiled, while
Melody, who knows me much better, rolled her beautiful, dark eyes heavenwards
and shook her head.
“You’re up to something, Fraser,”
she declared.
“Not at all. I am merely paying my compliments to the two
most beautiful women on the base.”
“Tell me, Rick,” Destiny purred –
the way she rolls the R at the start of my name is hot-wired to my libido – “do
you have plans for the ‘alloween party?”
“You asking me for a date?” I
grinned at her as she simpered again, and then dashed my hand against my
forehead in a theatrical gesture of despair.
“I’m fated to perpetual disappointment in my life, Angels,” I declared
in grandiose tones that would have done Blue justice. “The one year there isn’t going to be a Halloween party, Destiny
wants me as her date! Can I take a rain
check on that, Juliette?’
“No party?” Melody asked. “We thought you must be planning a surprise
one for us.”
I shook my head. “If anyone’s planning a surprise party,
it’ll be a surprise to me as well.”
They both looked a little
disappointed and as the door opened, I explained, “I’m not celebrating
Halloween out of respect for poor Paul.”
Destiny’s expressive eyes flooded
with tears. “Ah, oui, it would be unkind to do so without Captain Scarlet being
with us. You are a very caring man, Richard.”
“Hummph,” Pat said, as he walked
past us. “Believe that, Juliette, and
you’ll believe anything.”
I tried to stifle my sniggering, but Melody noticed and raised one eyebrow in cynical interrogation. I winked.
With an exasperated sigh she
called after Magenta. “Wait for us,
Pat!” And she pushed Destiny away
towards Magenta as she hissed at me: “You’d better behave yourself, for once,
now you’ve said that.”
So, you can see what I mean, can’t you?
I wasn’t doing anything but they all thought
I was planning something. Even though
the only one who might fully appreciate that joke was me, I was enjoying
myself. I am a firm believer that not
everything has to be shared with the general public. Well, I’d have to be wouldn’t I?
I faked my own death to join Spectrum and that’s the biggest joke of
all.
Day Five was Halloween. I was up before Magenta was stirring and
when it was time for him to appear, I left my quarters and waited for him,
leaning against my door and smiling.
When Pat’s door opened he was
standing some way back, no doubt to avoid any booby traps. I waved cheerfully.
“Top o’ the morning to you, Paddy,
me-boyo. You after eating some breakfast?”
Pat has never appreciated my
cod-Irish accent and he wasn’t enjoying it now.
“With you? Do you think I’m mad? I don’t want salt in
my coffee instead of sugar, or plastic fried eggs with my ham.”
Over the years I’ve perfected an
expression of injured innocence. I
framed my face into it now and said:
“Pat – this is me: I’ve told you
I’m not out to be a prankster today.
Don’t you believe me?”
“No; I know you, Fraser. You can resist anything, except temptation.”
“Well, that’s a nice thing to say to
your partner. I give you my word – as a
cop – that I’m on the level.”
Magenta laughed. “Your word as a cop? Like I’ll believe that’s worth the paper
you’d write it on. I’ve known more bent
cops than you’ve had hot dinners.”
This was an old ploy. Pat’s previous experience was of the other
side of the law from mine. Usually I’m
quick to defend my brother officers, but I’m willing to accept that not all
were whiter than white.
By now we were walking towards the
refectory, Pat keeping his distance across the corridor. As we approached the dining room, we could
smell the food and Lieutenant Flaxen joined us, tripping off the escalator from
the lower floor, as usual.
“Morning, Flax,” I called
out. “Have a good trip?”
Audrey Geffen’s a friend of mine. We have an understanding that goes back some
years now. I think she fancies me – or she did at one point, although that’s
mellowed into a tolerant friendship, now - and I can trust Aud; she’s a good
girl.
“Good morning, Captains,” she
replied, with her usual vague salute.
“Flax, let me warn you,” Pat said,
“it’s Halloween; beware of Ochre, especially a genial Ochre. He’s planning something, I’d bet my bottom
dollar on it.”
“I’m not!” I protested, with a
wink at Flax that I made sure Pat noticed.
“If you’re out to help him, you’ll
get into trouble, Lieutenant,” he told her.
“Me? Why would any one ask me to help them? You know I’m a walking disaster when it comes to playing tricks,
Captain Magenta. I can’t even remember the punch lines to jokes,” she added,
with a wry grimace.
“I also know that you’d do
anything for this… this cop.”
“No, I wouldn’t. Not anything.” Flax blushed like a
schoolgirl.
I pushed open the door and stood
aside to let her and Magenta go in first.
He let her pass him and waited for me to go after her, explaining that:
“I want you where I can see
you. I don’t want any whimsical notices
pinned to my back.”
I glanced behind me to see him
squirming to catch a glimpse of his back in the chrome-trim of the door.
Symphony and Blue were already
eating and we joined their table.
“Morning, all,” Karen trilled,
moving over to make room for us.
Blue glanced up and nodded a
silent welcome. We’ve been pretty hard
pressed of late and lost some good men over the past month or so, and, in the
natural sunlight of the refectory, I could see that Adam Svenson was still
looking the worse for wear. Although
the colonel had called up the reserves and there were plenty of new faces on
board the base doing the routine jobs to give us – the elite squad – a break,
it wasn’t helping Captain Blue.
With her usual great timing, Flax
asked, “How’s Captain Scarlet today?”
Symphony frowned at her and then
looked with concern at her boyfriend. Blue
was eating toast and had his eyes fixed determinedly on his plate. Finally he said:
“No change.”
Flustered, Flax started to tip
sugar from the table-top sprinkler into her tea and the top came off, spilling
the entire contents of the glass jar into her cup.
I couldn’t help myself: I
laughed.
Blue sprang to his feet, his face
like thunder and the cold-fire of anger blazing from his pale-blue eyes. Even though he is usually the most tolerant
and patient of men, he can be very intimidating when he wants to be.
He pointed a finger at me.
“That’s enough, Ochre. You play one more prank today and I will
take you apart!”
Flaxen, her face red with
embarrassment, was repeating, “Oh, I’m sorry; it was an accident, an accident…”
I looked up into Blue’s angry face
and said as reasonably as I could, “How do you imagine I had anything to do
with that? I haven’t touched it since I
sat down and you and Karen were here already.”
We stared at each other and I
refused to look away. Blue’s an
intelligent and habitually reasonable man; the infrequent, albeit breathtaking,
flashes of temper he exhibits are soon over.
He swallowed and dropped his gaze before mine.
I realised I’d been holding my
breath and exhaled slowly.
“Sorry, Captain,” Blue said. “I wasn’t thinking straight.”
“No worries; we’re all worried and
on edge, Adam.”
Karen had been helping Flax sweep
up the mess onto a tray, but now she stopped and laid a hand on Blue’s
arm. He glanced down at her and gave a
dry smile.
“I’d better go,” he said, realising
he was now the undivided centre of attraction for the entire refectory.
“Finish your coffee,” Karen said
levelly.
I didn’t think Adam would take any
notice of her, but she gave him a stern glare and flicked her gaze towards his
seat. Slowly, he sat down and took a
gulp of his coffee.
Flaxen took her tray back and got
herself another cup of tea, while I ate my ham and eggs and Pat chewed through
his cream cheese bagel.
Slowly, like a sleeping giant
beginning to wake, the noise of conversation rose around us and people got back
to their own business.
By lunchtime I was ready for a
break, having spent the morning going over the base security records and
checking any number of the other mundane, yet essential, admin jobs that fell at
each month’s end; but I knew there really wasn’t going to be time for me to
enjoy a well-earned lunch hour at the canteen, so I marched into the Officers’
Lounge hoping to grab a cup of coffee and a few cookies – at least.
Grey and Magenta were huddled
round the drinking tap of the kitchenette, while Symphony was helpless with
laughter on the couch and Melody was standing behind her, grinning from ear to
ear. As they heard the door open, all
of them turned to see who had arrived and Grey bellowed:
“Ochre! What the hell did you think you were playing at?”
“Playing?” I asked, really bewildered by what he’d said.
“The place nearly flooded.” Grey turned away and Magenta threw me a
threatening glare.
I looked at the speechless
Symphony and then to Melody.
“Nolie,” I said, feeling aggrieved
at this less-than-effusive welcome, “can you
explain to me what that idiot is talking about?”
Melody looked at me with some
sternness.
“Come on, Rick; you know well
enough. Patrick went to fill the coffee
jug with water to make a fresh pot, and the tap started to spray water
everywhere!”
“Maybe it’s sprung a leak?” I
replied, starting to move towards my colleagues to offer my help.
“Push off, Fraser,” Magenta
growled at me. Now I was closer I could
see that the front of his uniform tunic was much darker, soaked by the fountain
of water from the tap. “You’ve done
enough damage.”
“I’ve done nothing,” I
protested.
“Oh, go tell that to the Marines,”
Grey almost snarled at me. “We know
your warped sense of humour, Ochre; we don’t need it written out for us to know
when you’ve been up to your tricks.”
“What? What are you talking about?”
My temper was rising at this totally unjustified accusation. “I haven’t done anything to the tap. Last time I came in here Blue had made the
coffee and I was fool enough to drink some of it, that’s as close as I got to
the water tap.”
“Are you accusing Adam of
tampering with the tap?” Symphony, who has hearing like a bat at times, stopped
laughing and leapt to the defence of her boyfriend like an angry tigress
defending her only cub.
“I’m not accusing anyone of doing
anything,” I exclaimed. “All over the
world, washers wear out, taps break, and no one’s done anything to them except
use them for a while. I told you guys
that I wasn’t planning to play any pranks for Halloween this year.”
“Oh yeah, that’s right,” Magenta
said, assuming an expression of ironic innocence. “You said you were too concerned about Scarlet to play the
fool. And we believed you, didn’t we,
guys? Like hell we did.”
Now I really was angry. “You’re
all paranoid,” I said, and walked out of there with my head held high.
It’s all very well being a
practical joker; but it’s unfair that your reputation condemns you, unbelieved,
when you’re an innocent man. But, I
was damned if I was going to let them see how hurt I was.
I left the Officers’ Lounge and
went down to the canteen after all, so annoyed by the false accusations that I
was damned if I was going to work my allotted lunch hour. I pushed open the doors and walked in to the
longest line I’d ever seen in the place.
Nurse Ingram was at the back and she caught sight of me and rolled her
eyes.
“Hiya, Gorgeous,” I said, giving
her my most charming smile. I knew
Ingram fairly well and knew she was a good sport for all her starched ways and
disapproving manner, but this time she was scathing in her reply.
“Don’t you gorgeous me, Captain Ochre.
I wouldn’t put it past you to have engineered this.”
I sighed, and asked with a sinking
heart, “Engineered what?”
“A power cut in the kitchens this
morning. None of the food’s cooked.”
“Nothing to do with me,” I
asserted, as several people turned to glare at me. “How could it be?”
“You’re the most notorious
practical joker on Cloudbase,” she replied.
“I’ve heard Captain Scarlet talking about the things you get up to.”
“Well, today I’ve not been up to
anything.”
“Says you,” she retorted in a tone that verged on
insubordination.
I was almost as surprised as I was
annoyed. I never expect to be treated
with kid-gloves, but I guess my rank means I do get treated with respect
despite everything and her attitude embarrassed me.
“I don’t have time to waste
waiting,” I said, providing myself with an excuse to leave. I walked out, feeling very conscious of
several pairs of eyes boring into my back.
I finally managed to scrounge a
sandwich from the lunch provided to the on-duty Angels in the Amber Room. Harmony and Destiny seemed pleased to see me
and didn’t once accuse me of playing any pranks. In fact, they were most attentive and I was flattered by the way
they crowded around me, plying me with titbits from their buffet trays. It put me back in a good mood, and I bid
them a cheerful goodbye. I strolled
back to the admin offices, smiling at the base staff I passed and nodding
‘hello’ at those I knew. I became aware
of the smiles of a number of people who passed me by, but was feeling too
cheerful to do more than smile back.
Coming along the library corridor, I ducked inside to see how Flax’s day
was progressing.
“Hi there, Flax,” I called, as she
was busily thumping merry hell out of the keyboard.
She spared me a glance. “Hello, Captain.”
I frowned; Flax is a good friend
of mine, as I said, and she’s always so pleased to see me she’ll stop what
she’s doing for a quick chat.
“Something wrong, Audrey?”
“I’m just finishing the urgent
information report Doctor Fawn asked for on the toxicity of every commercial
weed-killer,” she muttered. Banging
her hand down on the enter key, she sat back and smiled up at me. “Happy Halloween,” she said.
“No, it isn’t,” I replied. “Everyone’s assuming I’m responsible for
every little thing that’s gone wrong,” I explained and told her about the tap
and the kitchen power failure. “I’d
have died of hunger if the Angels hadn’t taken pity on me.”
She smiled and I grinned back
before walking away to the magazine stand where the latest news and current
affair journals and hobby magazines were displayed. I never got there, because Flaxen laughed out loud and I turned
to see what was funny.
She came up to me and reached out
her hand to my back. I felt a little
tug and she produced a sheet of paper with the picture of a jester printed on
it. Someone had superimposed an inexpertly
drawn picture of my face over the original.
“‘You too can live the Vida
L’Ochre. Just ask me how’,” she read out and sniggered.
“What the?” I grabbed it off her. “Who the hell did this?”
“I’d assume it was the Angels,”
she said, a huge smile on her face.
“Just goes to prove, there’s no such thing as a free lunch, Rick.”
It took me a while to calm down, I
admit it. I stormed out of the research
library and was heading back to the Amber Room to have it out with them, when I
met Magenta.
“Whoa! Slow down,” he called after
me, as I pushed past him.
“I’m going to sort those
duplicitous bitches,” I snarled, brandishing the poster under his nose.
He took the paper from my hand and
studied it for a moment, before his face lit up with amusement and he
chuckled.
“Oh, come on, Ochre,” he
said. “Where’s your sense of humour
now? Just because you’re on the wrong
end of a prank for once, you’re having a hissy fit?”
“I’ve told you all, until I’m sick
of telling you, I haven’t played any pranks today!”
“Not even one?” Magenta looked me
straight in the eye and raised his black eyebrows as he gave me a quizzical
look. “Not even a ‘let’s lead them all
up the garden path’ style prank? Hmm?”
I blustered a bit and snatched my
paper back. “I can’t help what you
chose to believe.”
“No, but you can play along with
it; can’t you, Rick?”
“I didn’t do anything!”
“Okay, I believe you, but why does
that mean no one else should?”
I opened my mouth to snap back at
him, but the justice of his comment hit me and I shrugged. I looked down at the dancing cartoon of
myself, clad in a red and ochre-coloured jester’s outfit. It was really quite clever.
“They don’t really think I look
like that, do they?” I said, pointing to the sketched face. “Because, if they do, I might as well give
up dating now and become a monk.”
“It’s not that bad a likeness,”
Magenta said, as he fell in beside me and we strolled back along the
corridor. “I thought Nolie managed to
capture the essential mischief in your expression.”
“Nolie? Melody drew it?”
Magenta nodded. “She had drawing lessons at the finishing
school her folks sent her to.”
“They wasted their money,” I
joked.
He sniggered. “You should have
seen what the pictures the others
drew of you looked like,” he retorted.
“Now that really was the trick and not the treat!”
“What happened to the
other drawings?” I had visions of similar drawings to this one being posted up
all around the base with distorted images of my face on them. I’m not vain – not by a long chalk – but I
could imagine the endless teasing that’d create and I wasn’t in the mood for
it.
“Don’t panic; I shredded them.”
“Phew; thanks, Pat.”
“Don’t mention it, Rick. After all, we’re partners, aren’t we?” He put a hand on my shoulder and I felt him
press something into the small of my back as he strode away, laughing.
I couldn’t reach whatever it was
he’d stuck there, so I walked back towards the library, keeping my back to the
wall and sidling past people as they approached. I got some funny looks, but it was better than being made a
laughing stock by whatever Pat had stuck to my uniform vest.
“Aud,” I called out, as I slipped
through the door. “Where are you? Magenta’s only gone and stuck something else
on my back. I can’t get it off, I need
your help!”
She emerged from the office,
shaking her head, and beckoned me over.
I turned my back to her.
“Don’t you dare laugh,
Lieutenant,” I warned her. “Even if
it’s as rude as I expect it is.”
It took Flaxen some time to make
me believe that there was nothing there.
She stood and watched me with an amused grin on her face as I took my
tunic off to check for myself, and then rolled her eyes heavenwards when I had
the grace to smile apologetically for not trusting her.
“Americans; you’re all just like
little kids at Halloween, aren’t you?”
she said and chuckled. “Captain
Magenta really did have you going for a minute, though!”
‘Yeah, nice one, Patrick,’ I thought wryly, but I couldn’t help joining in with her
laughter, nevertheless.
I guess I owed him that one, at least.
Author’s Notes:
This story is a corollary to
‘Cordyceps’ – a sub-plot that didn’t really fit in, but which refused to be buried.
The title is, of course, a play on the words of the Ricky Martin song, ‘Living
the Vida Loca’.
It seemed ideal for a first-person narrative, and who better to tell a story about practical jokes, than Captain Ochre?
I know that Ochre has the reputation
of being a practical joker, and we’ve all enjoyed reading about his exploits
from time to time, but I find it hard to believe he’d always be the man behind
the pranks, or so insensitive not to notice the mood of his companions and the
base.
I don’t know who was playing
the pranks this time – if they were pranks and not just coincidences –
certainly, no one’s admitted it so far.
Maybe Ochre will have to employ his other known skill – as a detective –
and do some investigating, if he wants to find out.
I would like to thank my
over-worked beta-reader, the ever efficient Hazel Kohler, without whom, my bad
grammar would become apparent to all.
She is a star!
As is our wonderful webmaster –
good old Colonel Chris, herself. What
would we do without the website and the forum to keep our fandom alive? Respect, Chris!
Captain Scarlet and the
Mysterons™ belongs to Carlton International, and they probably belong to
someone else by now. The series was
devised and created by Gerry and Sylvia Anderson and has entertained children
of all ages for over 40 years – not bad for some puppets, eh?
I hope you enjoyed reading the
story – a little ‘treat’ after the gory ‘trick’ of ‘Cordyceps’?
Happy Halloween.
Marion Woods
October 2009