Project KingSilver
A Captain Scarlet
and the Mysterons Story
By Lady Hawke
Copyright December
29, 2002
Dreams can
sometimes be our greatest assets in creating stories. This tale is based on a
dream sequence (dated 7/16/02) I experienced while on a recent trip to Mt.
Rainier and the Pacific Northwest. During that two weeks' vacation, my mother
and I drove through the Montana Rockies on our way east, then north into
Canada. While in Montana I discovered the perfect setting for such a
subconsciously inspired adventure. All it needed was a little fleshing out, a
touch of reality, a smattering of logic and some conscious inspiration.
Enjoy! Lady Hawke
Part One
The morning was drizzly
and dark for late spring in the Arizona desert. The pair of Spectrum officers
sprinted from their saloon, parked in the open lot, to dodge the dampness.
Together they strode into the main lobby of New Apache's Timberland Power
Complex. There, they were directed to their destination by the receptionist.
Upon reaching the supervisor's office, Captain Ochre opened the door for his
partner. With a nod of gratitude Captain Scarlet stepped past his friend and
entered the plush space.
"Gentlemen,"
Supervisor Garrett addressed as he rose from behind his monstrous mahogany desk
to shake their hands. "Welcome to my little corner of the North American
universe. Please sit down."
"Thank you, Dr.
Garrett," Scarlet answered. He settled into an over-stuffed leather arm
chair and tugged his cap from his head. "Your facility is quite a universe
in itself. We spotted it from the road some forty-three kilometers away. We've
come as requested. What can we do for you?"
Garrett cleared his
throat and brushed his flumping, gray-streaked bangs away from his high
forehead. "I... uh, have a problem I think needs your attentions," he
admitted. "It's one of my inspectors. According to my staff, he's been
acting strangely and won't talk about it. He's denied the existence of some
unusual events."
"Unusual events,
Sir?" Ochre inquired. He slid a warning glance Scarlet's way.
"Yes," the
older man elaborated. "I've been getting reports from my workers down on
level three that equipment has been malfunctioning and some settings on the
primary generator may have been tampered with. No one seems to know who's to
blame, and my inspector denies anything unusual even happening."
"Sounds like an
internal problem," Ochre surmised. "Why bring Spectrum into
this?"
"Well," the
supervisor ventured. "I've heard how you gentlemen, your organization, are
in charge of these sorts of things. You know, mysterious character changes.
It's not like Horatio to deny responsibility for his assignments. It's his job
to ferret out any malfunctions and lapses in code procedures. I just don't
understand his actions. I think he's a Mysteron."
"Sir,"
Scarlet began slowly, leaning forward in his chair to explain. "Do you
know what a Mysteron is?"
Garett blinked.
"Of course I do, Captain. Doesn't everyone? Someone's hypnotized my on-site
inspector. He's acting irrationally. Someone has him under a spell, some sort
of mind-control. Horatio's become a puppet. A Mysteron, I tell you."
"Ah, I see,"
Scarlet answered leaning back again into his leather chair. "Dr. Garrett,
we've not received any Mysteron threats regarding your Arizona facility. What
you've just described is a person who either requires counseling or is
suffering a severe mental impediment." He rose to his boots and tucked his
cap under his arm. "I suggest you suspend this inspector pending a
complete psychological profile and offer a leave of absence to recover.
Spectrum has other duties more pressing than personal grievances, I'm
afraid."
"No, wait, Captain
Scarlet," Ochre interjected. "It wouldn't hurt to take a tour of the
power plant while we're here, would it?" The slighter officer stood beside
his partner and considered the worried brow of Garrett. "Sir, I'm sure
you're in possession of a complete and itemized report on these discrepancies?
We could take a look at them for any possible patterns," he suggested.
"Of course,
Captain. Thank you!" The man climbed from his chair and plucked a thick
folder of loose papers already perched upon one corner of his desk. "These
are the inspection and log reports from the generator engineers. You'll notice
the conflicts in them right away. I can't explain how Horatio could see nothing
wrong when the engineers cautioned him on malfunctions warnings. According to
these status reports, the system is due for a complete overhaul."
"Overhaul?"
Scarlet echoed taking the folder from him. "You have a malfunctioning
generator operating when it's in threat of a breakdown?"
"Of course not,
Captain," Garrett defended. "I wouldn't gamble with my men's lives.
I've ordered a temporary shut-down. The generator could blow if it were
neglected. I've got it on stand-by, as a backup to our backup. Pending that
complete overhaul. The problem is: I need a recommendation from my chief
inspector to authorize that overhaul. Taking a generator completely off-line,
especially the primary one, for a matter of three weeks or more is a major
responsibility. We'll need to make other arrangements. Our backups aren't meant
to run for that length of time. I need authorization, but Darling isn't going
for it."
"Darling's your
chief inspector?"
"No. That's just
it. Horatio Darling is my second. My chief inspector is already on
medical leave and out of the picture for another month. I'm relying on
Darling's judgement to get this thing moving, and he's denying that there's
even a problem. So, gentlemen. You see my quandary."
Scarlet was shaking his
head. "I still don't see a need for our intervention, Doctor. Though I
agree to the seriousness of your dilemma, this sort of incident just doesn't
fall under Spectrum jurisdiction." Ochre cleared his throat suddenly and
caught his partner's eye. With a slight jerk of his brown-haired head he asked for a moment in private. Scarlet
took the hint. "If you'll excuse us a moment, Dr. Garrett." The two
Spectrum captains stepped to the far side of the lavish office.
"Captain,"
Ochre began. "We're here. There may not be a Mysteron threat, but
something's fishy. Can't we at least look into it? Be on the safe side before
making our recommendations?"
Scarlet blinked.
"I believe we already have."
"You have,"
Ochre corrected. "Listen, I know you'd rather be assigned the mission with
Captain Blue testing out that new SPV remote device, but Colonel White assigned
Magenta to that since his expertise is with electrical engineering. I'm the
detective. We're here to solve a mystery. Let's do it."
With a tilt of one brow
Scarlet reminded, "I technically outrank you as field commander
here."
"Yes, and if we
were to have it your way, we'd be back on Cloudbase manning the radar room and
data center. Drudgery if you ask me. This at least offers us a puzzle. Aren't
you the slightest bit curious about the reason a trained professional isn't
able to recognize his duty nor even the truth of it?"
"Perhaps he's
delusional," Scarlet quipped with a dry frown.
"Oh, come now.
You'd rather do grunt work than let me play Sherlock Holmes?" Ochre
challenged with an enticing grin.
With a relinquishing
sigh, Scarlet shared his levity. "All right," he contended.
"I'll contact Cloudbase with an update. You arrange for the tour of the
generator in question and an interview with this schizophrenic inspector."
"SIG, Doctor Watson!" Ochre quipped with a
sloppy salute. He spun away from his partner to consult with Garrett.
Within the quarter hour,
the two Spectrum officers were being escorted to the plant's primary generator.
Ochre carried a Mysteron detector slung over one arm. The man was taking no
chances. Their guide, a certain Miss Chandler, was extolling the virtues of
Timberland's state-of-the-art facilities. "The primary generator services
the greater metropolitan area and its suburbs, with enough kilowatts to power a
million homes in the dead of space. Our capacity hasn't yet been peaked. We're
able to sell the surplus electricity to the outlying suburbs of Jasper, Benton,
and Tucson."
"She sounds like
your average walk-through tour guide," Ochre whispered through the corner
of his mouth to his partner beside him.
"And we're
walking," Scarlet whispered back with a smirk.
"Our facility is
completely employer friendly," Chandler continued, innocent of the
comments. "With a coffee and gift shop, a state-of-the-art cafeteria,
fitness center and even a full-time day care center on the grounds."
In the next moment the
British captain's words were serious once more. "Uh, Miss Chandler. Could
we pause for a moment?" he asked. They were standing in a long hallway
beyond which stood the massive double security doors to the primary generator
for Arizona's main power facility. To her quizzical glare he elaborated,
"You said if we had a question..."
Her perplexity melted
to a smile. "Of course, Captain Crimson."
"Yes,"
Scarlet answered with a frown. What professional tour guide was oblivious to
the names of her guests? Even as Ochre chittered beside him, the correction
wasn't worth the British captain's time. They would be returning to Cloudbase
within the hour, after all. "How long has the primary generator been
off-line?" he asked with a poke to the bulky folder cradled in one arm.
"Just since yesterday.
The backup generator can partially compensate for the difference in output, but
we're no longer generating any surplus."
"In other
words," Ochre ventured. "You're losing money."
"Well, yes,"
Chandler agreed. "But the community's safety comes first."
"Glad to hear it,
Miss Chandler," Scarlet answered. "Could we see the primary generator
now? And we'll need to meet with the inspector as well."
"He's in his
office, Captain. He's asked not to be disturbed."
"We're sorry, but
we'll need to see him," Scarlet answered with a frown.
"I'll handle it,
Captain," Ochre offered.
Plucking the security
access card from Miss Chandler's hovering hand, Scarlet nodded and responded,
"Good. Keep in touch. I'll meet you back here in twenty minutes. If
there's a problem-"
"I'll be ready if
he tries anything," Ochre assured with a chin tilt toward the detector.
"Don't worry."
"I will, Captain.
It's my job."
"SIG." The
two split up: Scarlet following the hall to the generator room while Miss
Chandler escorted Captain Ochre to Horatio Darling's private office off the
main corridor. Slipping the entry card along the security slot, Scarlet waited
for a chime that announced his acceptance. He stepped inside. Among the
rumbling hum of working backup motors, Scarlet entered the main generator
chamber. The high arched ceiling was divided by heat expelling fans eight feet
in diameter. Braces curved down to support the expansive walls which housed the
plant's primary turbine generator. It's massive bulk squatted like a silver
tiger, half-submerged in a swamp awaiting a passing deer. The floor beneath it
sank to cradle its cylindrical casing. Steel support beams impaled the beast on
two sides. At the moment the mechanical creature sat silent, awaiting its next
command to awaken. No one seemed to be present to answer his several questions,
so Scarlet wandered toward the humming noise which indicated the backup
generator's location. There he found four technicians stationed at a massive
control center, monitoring output and heat levels.
"Excuse me,"
the British captain announced after clearing his throat. "If I might have
some assistance here."
"You're from
Spectrum, aren't you?" one of the men in the gray coveralls asked in a
Texas drawl. "We heard you were coming."
"Yes. I'm Captain
Scarlet. We're here to determine if the primary generator has been tampered
with."
"Oh, yeah,"
said another tech stepping away from his control panel to nod Scarlet's way.
"You're here to see if Darling's a Mysteron."
"Right,"
Scarlet agreed with a sour purse of his lips. Here we go again. "Could one
of you explain what's been happening to the primary generator? Why did it need
to be shut down?"
"Oh, it's not shut
down," argued the first. "It's only on standby. One flick of a few
switches and it'll be hummin' Dixie."
"Standby? You mean
part of it is still active?"
"Sure. It's
maintenance systems and diagnostic programs are still running. We're using them
to pinpoint the gremlins."
Scarlet blinked at the
two men. "Gremlins, eh? So what have you found out so far? I have Dr.
Garrett's full report here." He indicated the portfolio beneath his arm.
"It's not
complete. We're still looking into everything that seems to be wrong. We've
already fixed some things, but other malfunctions don't seem to be software
related. Dr. Garrett's told you about the planned overhaul, right?"
"Yes,"
Scarlet answered. "He's waiting for Mr. Darling's permission."
"Politics,"
the first technician sighed. "Come on. I'll show you what we've found out
so far." The man led the Spectrum officer to his console and began a
litany of strange events which, to this point, their inspector hadn't seemed to
notice.
Captain Ochre knocked
on Mr. Darling's office door. When there wasn't an answer, Miss Chandler offered
a sympathetic brow. "I told you he didn't want to be disturbed."
"We'll see about
that," Ochre answered and tugged out his Spectrum-issue pistol. He knocked
again. "Mr. Darling? This is Captain Ochre, of Spectrum. I wish to speak
with you." Still no answer issued from the barrier. "Got another one
of those access key cards?" he asked his guide. With a nod, Chandler
plucked a second entry card from her jacket pocket and handed it over. Ochre
holstered his gun. With the Mysteron detector in one hand, the man swiped the
card through the security slot with the other. "Stand back," he
advised the woman. The door unlatched with a little click and swung open.
Inside was total chaos. Chandler, peeking past Ochre's shoulder, sucked in a
gasp. Papers and files were scattered everywhere. The desk chair had toppled
onto its side. A pair of legs protruded from the far side of the desk.
"Darling?" Ochre inquired. He set the detector down atop a pile of
disheveled work and knelt to inspect the man. One press to the victim's throat
and a glance at the dark burned spot to his chest told all. "He's dead.
Murdered."
"No!"
Chandler gasped again. "What happened?"
Ochre's eyes were
already scanning the office, his stint with the World Government Police Corp
kicking in like a survival instinct. "Looks like an electrocution,"
he offered, spying the man's desktop computer. The device's wiring had been
ripped from its base. The plugs were still securely attached to the wall
socket. In Darling's clutched and blackened hand was gripped a length of the
heavy cord. "Don't touch anything, Miss Chandler," Ochre advised.
"I don't think the surge protector was functioning."
"Did he kill
himself?" Chandler suggested.
"Not likely,"
Ochre ventured, seeing the puddle of cold coffee spread across the computer's
keyboard and dripping onto Darling's body. A broken mug lay upon the floor
beside the inspector. The man's jacket was stained with the still wet brew.
"I think someone with insulated gloves may have taken advantage of an
accidental spill. The computer lines were yanked out from the front of the
desk. Darling's on the opposite side of the desk."
Chandler's eyes swept
the chaos around her. "Someone was looking for something. All his reports
are tossed about. The file cabinet's been dumped."
"What kinds of
files would he have kept there?" Captain Ochre asked even as he caused his
cap mike to slip before his lips.
"Everything
pertaining to the maintenance of the generators. All his inspection reports,
maintenance files, even the schematics for the control panels."
"Ochre to
Scarlet," the Spectrum officer announced into the tiny microphone.
"Inspector Darling's dead. We found his computer destroyed and him
electrocuted in his office."
Scarlet's answer was
grave through Ochre's built-in ear set. "Any idea why?"
"Someone murdered
him for files on the power generator. Everything here is in shambles. There's
no telling what was taken."
"Any clues it was
the act of the Mysterons?"
"Not sure,"
was Ochre's reply as he regained his feet. "Electricity kills Mysterons.
You usually don't flirt with your Achilles’ heel."
"SIG,"
Scarlet sighed in reply. "Gather what you can. Update Cloudbase. I'm
staying to lock down the generator room. We may have a saboteur about."
"SIG, Captain
Scarlet." Ochre grabbed Chandler's arm and squeezed. "I need you to
go to Garrett's office," he insisted. The woman was nodding stiffly at
him, as if she were still in shock. "Have him lock down the entire
facility. We have a murderer loose, and we don't want him to get away."
Within minutes sirens
blared and the security doors to all sections of the power complex were cycling
closed. No one would be able to leave their section or exit to the outside.
Even emergency fire exits were blocked by bars of steel-reinforced aluminum
alloy which swung down from within the doorjams and blocked all escape.
Arizona's Timberland Power Complex had now become a tomb. Captain Ochre watched
over the removal of Inspector Darling's body. Could a Mysteron duplicate now be
roaming the grounds, perhaps trapped within the walls of a crucial section of
the power plant's workings? "Don't be surprised, Dr. Garrett," Ochre
warned, "if someone claims to see Darling about the plant. A Mysteron copy
looks and acts just like the original. If he's planning something, he's no
doubt already where he wants to be. Sabotage is his motive."
With a distrustful eye,
Supervisor Garrett none-the-less agreed with a nod from the open doorway and
announced, "I have security sweeping through the complex, section by
section from my office back to the deepest storage closets and maintenance
bays. Drills have had it done in five hours, but this might take a bit
longer."
"Agreed,"
Ochre concurred. "How many sections will need to be cleared before we can
get into the primary generator room?"
"Nine," was
the answer. "I'm in communication with my engineers. They're safe for the
moment, and the backup generator is operating at peak efficiency."
Ochre nodded.
"Captain Scarlet's said the same." As if in telepathic contact,
Ochre's shoulder epaulettes began to blink crimson. His cap mike descended to
his pursed lips. "Yes, Captain," he answered.
"Tech Jeremy and I
have finished a preliminary reconnaissance of the generator room. No sign of
Darling's doppelganger. We may have to admit the Mysterons aren't even involved
here."
With a shrug Ochre
agreed, "You may be right, but we still have a mystery. One man is dead.
Files are most probably missing, and the generator's definitely involved."
He turned to the plant's supervisor. "Give it to us straight, Doc. What's
the worst-case scenario here if sabotage is the plan?"
Garrett's dour frown
spoke encyclopedic. "These generators create their output by using a
process of nuclear hydrology. The fission of water molecules under high
pressure and heat creates a by-product of ionized oxygen and leaves heavy
hydrogen fuel to burn running the turbines to generate electricity."
"So, in a way,
you're using hydro-electric power," Ochre surmised with a shared frown.
"Plenty of flammable fuel, both in the pure oxygen and the heavy
hydrogen." With a decisive sigh Ochre asked the question both he and the
waiting Scarlet needed answered. "What sort of explosion are we talking
about?"
"Great enough to
leave us dust at the bottom of a chasm to rival Meteor Crater about 100 miles
north of here."
"Great
Space!" Ochre heard Scarlet exclaim into his headset.
The American captain
had to agree. "We'll need to shut down the backup generator," he
announced with grim certainty. "Expel the oxygen by-product and purge the
hydrogen reserve to avoid such a tragedy. Is there another power plant which
can provide energy to New Apache in the meantime?"
Garrett raised a finger
in warning. "This facility was designed to monopolize the southern Arizona
quadrant. We've already put the Roosevelt Dam complex out of business with this
new technology. We have no other outlets, save perhaps Las Vegas's contract
with Hoover Dam Power Delivery in Nevada. You're talking the total
blackout of New Apache and its surrounding suburbs. That'd be hospitals,
schools, government and emergency facilities relegated to emergency generators.
We can't shut the grid down."
"Then you've got
to get these blast doors open so we can scour the place for some type of
detonator," Ochre insisted.
"But... But you
said worse-case scenario. That doesn't mean it'll come to pass."
Ochre's brown eyes
narrowed in his frustration. "You plan on sitting around and gambling with
the odds?"
Scarlet was speaking
into his ear again. "Captain. We need to get the complex evacuated of all
non-essential personnel. It's the first step."
"SIG, Captain.
I'll forward the order to Supervisor Garrett right away." The cap mike
flipped back to his visor. Turning back to the plant's head, Ochre passed the
buck. He was almost surprised when Garrett agreed without a protest.
"I'll get on the
station-wide PA right away, Captain. We'll override the lock down to our
emergency escape routes, and I'll post security along the way in case Darling
does show up."
"Very good. Let's
roll." In moments, the evacuation plan was implemented, and a channel of
security doors was released from lock down to allow the personnel departure
from the lower security areas of the power complex. Now in Garrett's security
office, Captain Ochre overlooked the procedure, his eyes shifting between a
bank of monitors fed by cameras installed throughout the facility. "How
long will this take? I want the generator room opened up."
"You can't have it
both ways, Captain," security chief Holland grumbled as he sat scanning
the flicking TV screens as well. "A lock down is a lock down. Either you
want to trap the rat or let it loose to call in its cousins."
"I want to get to
where I can be of some use," Ochre countered from the chief's shoulder,
one determined fist squeezing the back of the man's chair. "This
evacuation is all well-orchestrated. Safe and standardized. The real action and
danger is in that generator room with my partner. He could use my help."
"Don't toss your
cap in the mud, Captain Umber," Holland advised. He threw a non-committed
wave over his shoulder at the Spectrum officer. "Once everyone's out,
we'll begin a systematic shut down of the security protocols."
"And how long will
that take?" Ochre asked again ignoring the misnomer.
"We should get to
the primary generator room in a couple hours. Until then, I have a coffee pot
over there," Holland announced with a flick of a finger to the far side of
the security office. "It's fresh as of this morning."
"Terrific. Bad call,
bad coffee." And he could have been back, safe and quiet, on Cloudbase
manning the radar screens. Instead, his brilliance had brought him to the brink
of doom, watching a flood of maintenance staff, cafeteria workers and child
care aides coursing down the opened channels like water from an opened spigot.
With a futile sigh Ochre rumbled, "You got real cream?"
Captain Scarlet stood
back and silently watched as the generator techs and maintenance engineers
continued to scour the room for anything out of the ordinary. They spoke in
tense whispers. Occasionally the words 'dead' and 'murdered' could be
discerned. The plant's staff was wondering the reasons and motives behind
Darling's demise. As the British captain stood by monitoring the temperature
and pressure gauges for them, he eavesdropped on their conversations. The team
of eight was concerned for their own safety. They had previously enlightened
him on the specifics of their inspector's strange behavior. Horatio Darling was
a dedicated man, a father of two teenage boys. Divorced two years ago by his
wife of nineteen years. He had been a quiet man, who rarely expressed his
private challenges. Could he have been a prime candidate for a mental
breakdown? As inspector, the responsibilities of work, added to the tragedies
at home, could have been enough to send Darling over the edge.
When the conversation
was interrupted by a base-wide announcement, Scarlet's curious eavesdropping
turned to genuine concern. "Timberland staff. Please be advised. Total
evacuation of non-essential personnel will be complete in twenty minutes.
Please double-check your rosters that everyone has left the building. All
active staff with orange or above clearance are to continue on lock down status
until further notice. Security sweeps will begin on Level One and work their
way down to Three, clearing the way of unauthorized staff as they go."
"I assume Darling
had top clearance," Scarlet cut in, asking the nearest technician who was
gently adjusting the flow rate of water into the fission reactor buried three
quarters of a mile beneath their feet in the subterranean caverns of southern
Arizona.
"He had access to
everything, Captain Scarlet. He was our inspector. His and Chief Gerrand's
files held everything about this place. Where things were stored. How things
worked. Access codes into restricted areas with green-only clearance.
Everything. A Mysteron agent could use that information to send this place the
way of the dodo. We're one of a kind here. The first. State-of-the-art. And
we're all about to be blown, ashes to ashes."
"Charming
visuals," Scarlet quipped. "But I have faith in your team to find any
booby traps. You know this place as well as he did, and there are eight of
you." Then a thought to what the tech was doing made him question,
"Could he have gotten into the fission reactor chamber itself?"
"What? You're
joking, of course. There's enough pressure and heat down there to drain you
of water."
"What about
radiation?"
The tech nodded once.
"There's some. We use certain isotopes to trigger the fission reaction in
the hydrolytic chamber. But why go down there?"
"How do you
monitor and maintain the fission chamber?"
The tech's face
betrayed his discomfort. "Through our control panel here, and in person,
in environmental suits. Exposure can only be tolerated for twenty minutes or so
at a time. The maintenance staff travel in shifts to the caverns to monitor
moisture levels, acid content of the springs, and-"
"Acid
content?"
"Sure. We get our
reactor water from the subterranean springs which flow through the cavern. The
springs have a high mineral content. We have to use leaching filters to purify
the water before we pump it into the reactor core. Otherwise the acids in the
spring would hinder a stable nuclear reaction. Destroy the holding tanks and
even the core eventually."
"Acid,"
Scarlet repeated to himself. "It'd be a slow process, but none-the-less
effective."
"What's
that?" the tech spat back, obviously stressed at the overly curious
Spectrum agent.
"Nothing. How do
you purge the acid? What do you do with it?"
The tech's finger
pointed to the 20 inch diameter conduits along the floor. Scarlet followed the
white piping with his eyes as it traveled along the length of the room, then up
the wall to a junction pipe. This disappeared through the bulkhead to another
room. "Holding tank outside," the man explained even as his own eyes
were focused on his control panel. "Used for chemical cleaner. Another
company's baby."
"Which
company?" Scarlet asked.
Now the technician's
reddened and strained face contorted into frustration. "Why do you even
need to know? You're looking for a bomb here."
"Not
necessarily," was the Spectrum agent's retort. "I'm trying to
understand what I'm seeing here. I haven't noticed any malfunction or glitch in
the generator monitors yet. Mr. Darling may have been partly telling the truth.
Who is next in charge here, after the inspector?"
Again that pointed
finger. This time toward a scowling older man attentive at a station near the
far wall of the backup generator. "Him. Mr. Wonderful Copeland. He's our
unit supervisor."
"You don't like
him. Why?" The attitude was clear.
With an impatient sigh
the tech spat, "He's a bully. Wants everything yesterday. Not the social
type."
"I see. Would this
Mr. Copeland have any reasons to discredit Inspector Darling?"
"I suppose
so," the technician answered eyeing his instrument panel. "They're
brothers-in-law, you know. Copeland's been wanting a position as inspector for
at least two years now. Ever since he got in under the wire with our
hydro-nuclear union deal. Not many of the other Roosevelt Dam staff did when
their hydro-electric plant closed down."
Scarlet scowled.
"You're sure he wants Darling's job?"
"Of course. Ask any
of the staff here. Mr. Wonderful's put in for a promotion five times in twice
as many months. Since our chief inspector, Tom Gerrand, left for his medical
leave."
"Yes, I heard
about that. What happened to Mr. Gerrand?"
"Accident. An
exhaust pipe gave way under pressure. He took acid burns to his lower
extremities. Been out most of the year for recovery and therapy. He'll be back
in another month or so. I hear he was in this morning for an unofficial
visit."
Scarlet nodded. This,
too, coincided with what Supervisor Garrett had said while he and Ochre were in
the man's office. "Thank you, Mr.-"
"Timony, Sam
Timony. Glad to help spread the gossip. Now, if you'll excuse me. I need to
inject some fuel into the reactor. The turbines are in need of a boost."
"Of course, Mr.
Timony. I appreciate your time." Captain Scarlet stepped away and lowered
his cap mike to update his partner. "I've got some news which may be
relevant," he told Ochre. "It seems the generator unit supervisor and
our Mr. Darling are related. They're also in competition for a promotion."
"Man, I wish I
were down there with you!" Ochre cursed. "You're in on all the good
dirt. I'm stuck in the security center watching people exit the complex like
rats from a sinking ship. Real exciting!"
"There apparently
has been some strife between Darling and a Mr. Copeland ever since Copeland
came to work here from the shut down Roosevelt plant. Please have the man's
security files checked. I'm going to have a talk with him, myself."
"OK, but be careful,"
Ochre advised. "If he's our man, he's a murderer, and he may still be a
Mysteron."
"My senses tell me
otherwise, but I'll be cautious. Thanks." Scarlet's mike retracted. With
an eye to the perpetually busy Timony, Captain Scarlet strode from the tech's
company toward the far side of the room. He had some questions to ask Mr.
Copeland. His intentions were to be interrupted yet again...
Suddenly, an alarm
announced another base-wide communication. "Timberland staff. Caution. It
has been brought to our attention that one of our day care students has not
been accounted for. Please be attentive to this. She's our current priority.
Find her. Her name is Cheryl Adams, daughter to Tina, one of our data analysts.
She was last seen playing a game with five other girls, approximately three
quarters of an hour ago. Her location should be somewhere near sector 13. Keep
abreast of this and report in as soon as you've found her. Her safety is our
top priority right now."
A new siren blared from
inside the generator room. "What's that for?" Scarlet asked the man
he was approaching. Technician Jeremy waved him away and blurted something
about an override switch as he trotted by. Copeland, the unit supervisor, was
standing at his station his dark eyes intent on the readings from the reactor
core. "Mr. Copeland," Scarlet called the man. "Stop what you're
doing." The other man's eyes were frantically scanning his readouts,
fingers playing over his controls. "What are you doing?" Scarlet
demanded as Copeland continued with his task, oblivious to the Spectrum
officer's caution.
"Leave me alone,
Captain. I have an unscheduled breach in the safety perimeter. Someone's down
there who's not supposed to be. I may have just found our man."
Scarlet stood beside
the reactor supervisor and considered the blinking red light at the mapped
boundary of the reactor. "A saboteur?" he asked.
"Possibly,"
was the terse reply.
"I was coming over
here to question you on that very account, Mr. Copeland. Are you aware your
brother-in-law has been murdered?"
"That idiot? Of
course, but he's not my brother-in-law. Geraldine and he have been divorced for
two years. I've been Darling's G-damned gopher since Gerrand left for his
medical leave. The sap."
"I warn you, Sir.
That kind of attitude makes you a prime suspect in Darling's murder, Mr.
Copeland."
"He's dead. What
else can I say?" the generator supervisor spat, fingers still dancing
across his panel. The man's eyes were intent upon his readouts which were
showing video feed from the caverns housing the reactor core. "Tomorrow's
another day. Or it might not be if I can't find this devil messing with our
generators."
"Do you have
someone in mind?"
Another high-pitched
siren whistled its alarm. "Damn." Copeland glared past the Spectrum
captain to his team stationed at the backup generator controls. "Shut it
down, Timony! We've got an overload in the coils." From the far side of
the room Sam Timony nodded and smacked his palm down on a red toggle. The
humming generator stationed at the far side of the room powered down moments
later.
"What
happened?" Captain Scarlet demanded.
"Tell ya when I
got time," Copeland growled back. "Timony. Power up the primary
generator. Hurry before we have an overload in the reactor. Power's building up
to critical levels."
Just then, Scarlet's
microphone dropped and his epaulettes blinked yellow. "What's going on
down there, Captain?" Ochre demanded.
"I'll let you know
as soon as I do."
"Garrett's
cancelled the lock down. I'll be there in five minutes."
"No. It's too
dangerous. We've got malfunctions and a saboteur loose. You're safer if you
evacuate with the rest of the staff."
"No go, Partner.
I'm part of the rescue team now. Looking for that girl. Your section's next.
Someone said the kids were playing hide and seek. Little Cheryl could be down
there or even in the reactor core chamber."
"But how? She wouldn't
have the access codes-"
"Her mom lets her
play at the data storage computers. Cheryl's a wiz kid with computer
games."
"Then she could
have inadvertently learned the codes," Scarlet surmised. "I'll get a
suit on and go down there, myself. If the girl is there, she'll need protection
from the core's heat and radiation. There's no time to lose!"
"Captain, what
about the saboteur?" was Copeland's urgent reminder even as the Spectrum
officer tugged an environmental suit from a wall hook.
"That's your job
now," Scarlet assured. "I'm the only one to go down there.
Understood? I'll not risk anyone else. Find that bomb, if it exists, Copeland.
These are your people. Save their lives." As the British captain slid the
protective helmet over his chin, he incited, "Be a hero."
With the help of Tech
Jeremy, Captain Scarlet cycled through the safety lock and closed himself
within the vertical shaft tube that would send him below. "The way is well
marked with indicator lights. Take a map. They're in the wall pocket,"
Jeremy instructed. "I'll guide you from up here, as soon as I get to the
monitoring station."
Captain Scarlet nodded
through his sealed helmet and poked his intercom button. "SIG. I'll find
her." He sank into the floor a moment later. The elevator descended
through layers of bedrock and deposited him nearly four thousand feet below the
complex's Level Three. The door slid open to the high pitched hissing of
escaping steam and the suffocating pressure and heat of a hydro-fission
reactor. Scarlet stepped out into the chamber suddenly microscopic beside the
actual reactor core. Another poke of the helmet control allowed his voice to
transmit into that tortured space beyond the protection of his suit.
"Cheryl? Cheryl Adams? Are you down here?" No answer. He hadn't
really expected any.
Instead, Tech Jeremy
announced into his helmet earpiece, "I have a life reading bearing 277
degrees, to your left, Captain Scarlet."
"Right. Heading
that way," Scarlet agreed. He stepped heavily forward in his weighted and
stiff suit. "No one in sight," he said. "It's rather noisy down
here. She may not have heard my call." Scarlet poked his address button
again. "Cheryl? Are you down here, darling?" He peaked around a mass
of conduits and piping which were labeled: Danger. Contents Under High
Pressure. "I've come to return you to your mother, Cheryl." There
was still no answer. "Jeremy? Am I close to her? Can your monitors see
anything?"
The response wasn't
encouraging. "I'm not sure, Captain. The blip I'm getting shows a
position, and you're in the general area. Could she be hiding?"
"There's nothing
here, Mr. Jeremy, except high pressure pipes."
There was an unnerving
pause on Jeremy's end. Then a hesitant reply. "I'm looking at the layout
schematics. Those pipes are filled with the leached minerals from the spring.
They're pumped up and out of the plant using high pressure to an outhouse
storage tank up here. It'd be impossible for anyone to be hiding in
there."
"Not even a
Mysteron," Scarlet mumbled to himself. "What if you're getting a
false reading?"
"Another
malfunction? I suppose it's possible, but-"
"Wait! I heard
something," Scarlet interrupted. "Cheryl?" he called again.
"Come out from back there. The game's over. You won. But it's time to go
home, now." Scarlet stepped up against the massive bank of
polymer-composite piping. His cumbersome helmet not only protected him from the
heat of the chamber, but it also prevented him from seeing around the congested
conduits which followed the contours of the cavern and up through its roof.
With a grim frown, he tugged the safety seal loose and yanked the helmet from
his head. "Cheryl! It's very dangerous to be down here," he yelled
into the noisy reactor room. "You've got to come out!"
Then, as the captain
set his discarded headgear atop a conduit, a new voice from its inset earpiece
urged, "Captain Scarlet! We have a build-up of pressure. You've got to get
out of there!" It was Captain Ochre, now present in the main generator
room thousands of feet above. "Captain? Can you hear me?"
There was, of course,
no answer. Having ducked his head down into the shadowed mass of
twisting pipes and seeing nothing, Scarlet had knelt to clamber in amongst the
tangle. "Cheryl, darling? Are you back here?" He knew the girl was
being exposed to the pressure and heat of the nearby reactor core. Within
twenty minutes the environment would become unbearable to himself. Yet the
child was down here with no environmental suit. Perhaps the girl, somewhere
enclosed within the conduit mass, was already unconscious or near death. He had
to find her.
Despite the close
quarters Captain Scarlet inched among the pipes letting his eyes wander the
lengths of exhaust ducts. On his gloved hands he slid forward to a juncture
where the conduits joined together and ducked into a composite channel which
harbored them like a rain gutter up the reactor chamber wall and through the
ceiling of the cavern to the facility above. As he scrambled forward to inspect
the open-ended channel a voice stopped him.
"Captain Scarlet.
Where are you?" It was Captain Ochre and he was close. Scarlet had heard
him without the aide of his rejected helmet.
"I'm back here, amongst
the conduit pipes," he answered his partner. "Get back to the
surface, Rick. It's too dangerous down here."
Ochre's reply was
disturbing. "You're telling me? The pressure in the exhaust pipes is
building to a critical level. And the main generator's malfunctioning. They
can't scram the reactor fast enough. We've got only minutes to evacuate. The
core's going to blow."
"Go, then,"
Scarlet demanded from within his tight quarters. "I haven't found the
child yet." Though his concern was for his partner, Scarlet's eyes were
still busy searching the darkness of the channel pipe. Within its depths, there
was just enough room for a child to crawl before the duct harboring the exhaust
pipes turned vertical.
"I'm here to help
you," came Ochre's stubborn response. "Keep talking and I'll find
you."
"Rick, you idiot.
I'll be fine. You're not the indestructible one, remember?" Scarlet
harangued. "Get out of here before there's not two molecules of you left
for Fawn to patch together."
"Not on your life.
I'm here to save your obstinate skin. It's too late for the child. Get out of
there. Now. That's an order, Captain."
With a grimace Scarlet
had to admit his possible defeat. The potential to save one child's life was
far less instrumental in the war against the Mysterons than even he wanted to
admit. There were casualties in any war. He just didn't like to think that such
a young life might have to be sacrificed for his continued existence. After
all, a core breach might indeed be the permanent end of his partner and
himself. As he made the decision to abandon his search, Captain Scarlet heard a
small cough. "Cheryl?" he called again. Leaning down to ground level
the British agent ducked his head inside the conduit channel. A dark mass was
just visible at the terminus where the ductwork curved toward the ceiling.
Squinting his watering eyes in the warmth and dampness of the reactor chamber
Scarlet could discern the mass to be a curled figure wedged within the channel.
"Cheryl. Can you hear me? Come to me, darling. Everything's going to be
all right." With a grunt Scarlet shoved his arm in beside his head. In the
cramped space, it was all that would fit. "Cheryl!" The curled up
child did not respond but she did move within her hiding place. She was still
alive.
"What's going
on?" Ochre called.
"I found
her!" Scarlet hollered back over his hunched shoulder. "But I can't
reach her." The British officer made a hasty and desperate decision. In
the cramped space of the exhaust conduits, Captain Scarlet unzipped his environmental
suit and tugged its bulk from his shoulders. "I'm going in after
her," he informed his partner. "How much time do we have?"
There was a slight
pause in Ochre's answer. He was no doubt consulting with Tech Jeremy above.
"Only minutes," was the disheartened reply. "We need time to get
clear of the facility. There's an evacuation chopper waiting for the generator
crew now. You've got to get to her quick, Paul, before they leave without
us."
"Give me a
countdown, then," Scarlet answered back, even as he kicked his boots free
of the environmental suit. "I'm going in."
"Hurry!" was
Ochre's urgent response. "Five minutes, forty-two seconds."
With a grim nod Scarlet
slid down onto his belly and slipped his hands and arms into the open channel.
"Come on, darling," he continued to entice. "Your Mummy's
waiting for you. She wants to take you out for some nice cold ice cream. Now
doesn't that sound wonderful right now?" Scarlet's own forehead was
dripping with sweat, his back heaving with the effort to slide forward within
the confined space. "Help me out here, Cheryl. I can't reach you. Give me
you hand."
The curled body of the
girl did not stir. The child had grown still. Only a moan escaped from her
throat.
"Four minutes,
twenty-five seconds," he heard Captain Ochre inform. "Hurry, Paul!
Jeremy says the engineers are evacuating now. I don't know how long they'll
wait for us."
Grunting, the Spectrum
captain tried to reach further into the channel. The high pressure exhaust
pipes answered him with a shared groan. "Cheryl. Please! Give me your
hand. I can't reach you. Your mum's worried for you. You don't want to see your
mummy cry do you?" It was obvious that the heat and confinement had taken
their toll on the young girl. She was unresponsive to his urgings. He tried one
last desperate shove forward into the channel. He stretched his fingers out,
straining for contact with the child's reposed foot. The pipes above him
creaked with the growing pressure of the malfunctioning pumps. Within minutes,
the power plant was going to rupture like an over-inflated balloon.
Just as that unsettling
image occurred to him, one of his fingers scraped against Cheryl's slack
sneaker. He was almost there. With a desperate kick Scarlet nudged himself
tighter into the opening and strained forward anew with one hand. "Come
to-"
Something had a hold of
his boot. Someone was tugging at his extremities. Wedged within the channel as
he was now, Captain Scarlet could not hear past his own labored and gasping
breathing. His fingers dug into the dust of the passageway. "No!" he
bellowed. "I've almost got her!"
That's when the
expanding pressure against the exhaust pipes won its battle against
confinement. A pipe cracked. It spurted its hot contents into Scarlet's face.
The heat was immediately felt, followed by the searing burn of mineral acids
against flesh. The next sensations were the ear-shattering bellow of Scarlet's
own agony, followed by the sudden jolt in his gut as Ochre gave a final,
life-saving tug. He was yanked from his self-inflicted tomb. Captain Scarlet,
born out onto the heated floor of the core chamber, was accompanied by a flood
of stinging acid which flowed out with him like a deadly afterbirth.
"Paul!" Captain Ochre yelped as gloved hands bore him up from the
burning river. "My God!"
Unable to maneuver in
the cramped space among the now popping pipes and his own torment, Captain
Scarlet allowed his friend to drag him from the conduits. Ochre then hoisted
him up onto his suited shoulders for the scramble back to the elevator shaft.
Sometime during those first few moments of their ascent, the torment of
Scarlet's injuries stole his consciousness from him and there was no more pain.
From within the safety
of Timberland's emergency evacuation helicopter, Captain Ochre witnessed the
violent demise of the power station. The Arizona desert rose like an enormous
swollen pimple which burst forth in a brilliant cloud of expanding gases. The
force of the explosion expelled earth and debris eight miles into the
atmosphere and generated a seismic concussion which leveled the bluff on which
the Timberland Power Complex had perched. Silently, Ochre thanked the stars
that the closest human inhabitants were safely beyond the perimeter of the
devastation. The isolation of the underground caverns and its surrounding
wilderness had forced the power company to build its plant far from the
populated centers of New Apache and its nearby suburbs. No doubt the surviving
personnel were now grateful for their daily lengthy commutes to work. Their
homes and families were safe. But their future employment was questionable.
As the chopper flew
over the outskirts of New Apache, Ochre noticed the dreary darkness to the
metropolis. It was as if the very city were in mourning, cloaked in the shadow
of rain and obscuring cloud cover. Within the meteorological gloom, not a
single street light was lit. The roadways were packed with bottle-necked
traffic and stalled signals. As the aircraft descended toward Mercy Hospital's
roof helipad, two more emergency helicopters rose into the mist. "Looks
like your friend's going to have company," Tech Jeremy observed from the
seat beside him. "Lots of traffic accidents, no doubt, with the power
outage."
Ochre bit at his lip.
He turned to consider the man lying supine on the chopper's stretcher, his
Spectrum uniform dirtied and moth-eaten from the acid. Captain Scarlet's head
and arms had been hastily treated with an alkaline spray and wrapped in sopping
bandages to counteract the effects of the corrosive bath to which he'd been
exposed. "We won't be staying, Mr. Jeremy," Ochre informed kicking at
his discarded environmental suit, abandoned once his partner had been dragged
onboard. "Captain Scarlet'll be receiving special attention from our staff
physician back on Cloudbase. He'll get the best of care, be assured."
"Well, then,"
Jeremy answered as the Timberland helicopter settled onto the hospital's
landing pad, "best of luck to you both. He'll need all of it if he's going
to survive."
"Thank you."
As the chopper was evacuated, nurses rushed the vehicle to attend to the
wounded. Several of the plant's engineers had suffered minor burns, cuts and
bruises from their hasty retreat from the critical generator room. One gurney
slid to a stop beside Ochre and the slumped companion draped in his arms.
"He'll be fine," the American captain informed waving the woman off
with a flick of his chin. "Attend to the others. A Spectrum chopper's on
its way here now to pick us up."
"But, Sir. We got
word of a critically injured passenger onboard. Extensive acid burns. He needs
immediate decontamination in order to save his life."
Ochre drew a tight
frown and grumbled. "I'll handle it, Nurse. Now leave us."
The medic opened her
mouth to protest but must have been intimidated by the man's fiery glare.
"Yes, Captain." She hurried off with her gurney.
Within minutes Symphony
arrived with Dr. Fawn and nurse Templeton aboard to assist the grim Ochre in
loading their injured comrade onto the Spectrum helicopter. "Took a dose
full in the face, Doc," Ochre informed. "It's not pretty."
"I believe you,
Captain," was all Fawn blurted even as he began his ministries and the
aircraft rose into the dreary sky. The flight to Cloudbase was swift but
frustratingly silent for the medical team. Fawn forwarded his instructions to
Dr. Topaz onboard the flying Spectrum carrier, and all was ready for Scarlet
when Symphony landed some forty minutes later.
Ochre, after dutifully
reporting to Colonel White the demolition of the Timberland plant, was soon in
attendance outside one of Sickbay's recovery rooms. He would be the one to
report the tragic news to his field partner. It was Ochre's right.
The information of
Timberland's fate had to wait, however. Dr. Fawn forbade the man's entry. "He's
resting, Captain Ochre. I don't want him disturbed."
"Scarlet... Paul's
recovering. Isn't he?" the American inquired. "His face. It was...
Well, it looked like it'd been melted away."
"The injuries to
his face, head and upper torso were severe, but his healing abilities are
tending to them now. It's his right eye I'm concerned with."
"His eye?"
Ochre prompted.
Fawn shrugged. "As
soon as I finish my report, I'll be sending it up to the colonel. As I'm sure
you will be with yours." The doctor waved the captain off and returned his
attentions to his medical clipboard. As Fawn scribbled something down he
mumbled to himself, "Got to prep for surgery soon."
Ochre, forgotten,
sought solace in the officer's lounge. There he found Captain Grey pondering a pile
of data sheets. "Need some help, Brad?" he offered half-heartedly
stepping down into the well at the room's center.
"What?" Grey
glanced up from his seat with a twisted smile. "No jokes today,
Richard?"
Ochre only shrugged and
sank into another cushioned chair. "Too tired," was his answer in a
loud exhale. "I saw death today, and I'm not in the mood for levity.
Sorry. Catch me another time."
Grey set the paper in
his hand down atop the pile. "Want to talk about it?"
"Yeah, but first
to Paul. Looks like I owe him an apology." Ochre refrained from
elaborating, so after a tense moment of silence his compatriot just nodded and
lowered his eyes again to his research. It wasn't but mere minutes before Ochre
bolted from the chair, too restless to relax. "Let's just say, it was all
my idea to stay," he blurted, "and now there are people dead because
of it. One of them a little girl."
Grey took the outburst
as a confession worthy of some consoling. "You can't blame yourself for
the explosion. From what I heard from Green, you rescued Captain Scarlet just
in time. You're the hero this time, Rick. Let's celebrate."
"I prevented Paul
from rescuing a trapped little girl who'd wandered into the reactor room. He
was reaching for her when I pulled him away. I'm almost sure I heard him say he
had her, but then... Then I guess the pipe burst and he screamed. I had to get
him out or we'd both be dead. He was risking my life and his. I ... I
made a decision, and now the girl's dust. Hell, the whole place is dust. One big
molten crater in the desert. You should have seen it, Brad." Ochre
ballooned his arms up around his head. "Poof! And it was gone. Now there's
an emergency blackout of over two hundred square miles. No electricity, no
lights, no TV, nothing, for who knows how long!"
"And you're
blaming yourself for all of it?" the older Grey stammered climbing to his
feet to confront his pacing friend. "Don't even start that, Fraser. It's
not in your character to brood. That's Scarlet's department."
"Yeah, well he's
going to blame me for some of it. Just wait. I stopped him from rescuing that
girl. Now a young mother's lost her only child. My fault."
Grey shook his head.
"Sorry. You're not getting my sympathy. The Mysterons aren't picky about
their victims. To them she's just one less Earthchild."
"There weren't any
Mysterons," Ochre growled with a swipe of his arm. "There was a
mystery to be solved, and I made Paul stay so I could play detective."
"And if you'd
returned to Cloudbase, then what? Would the power plant still be there? Would
the little girl still be alive?"
"I... I don't
know, Brad," Ochre sighed sinking again into the supporting hug of a
chair. "I'm the one who ordered the lockdown, the evacuation. I guess I
got the ball rolling for a facility-wide search. We were looking for a bomb,
some sort of saboteur. We didn't find one. Instead... Well, I'm not sure what
happened. The place just started to fall apart. The backup generator seized,
then the primary was brought back online. Then it malfunctioned, and the
core began to overheat. Malfunction followed malfunction..."
"Sounds like it
was out of your hands, Rick," Grey admitted. "You did what you could.
There were how many people in that facility? Three hundred? Four hundred?"
When Ochre didn't answer Grey continued, "Of those, how many died?"
"Five," Ochre
murmured from his slump. "Two security, two of the generator techs who
couldn't abandon their stations 'til we got free of the reactor core, and the
girl. It should have never happened."
"But it did."
Captain Grey lowered a hand to rest atop his comrade's sagging shoulder.
"You did your job. You saved people. You saved your partner."
"Yeah," Ochre
agreed quietly. "Let's hope Scarlet sees it that way."
Dr. Fawn accepted the
broadcasted information with a stoic nod and stomped from his office to the
recovery room to witness the awakening. "Hold on there, Captain," he
urged as he saw Scarlet struggling against his nurses to vault from the bed.
"You haven't finished recovering yet. Settle down, there."
"Dr. Fawn,"
the British officer answered through the bandages which still covered his face
and head. "I... I can't see. I'm... Suffocating."
"Back off,
Templeton. Give him some room," the physician ordered his nurse as he
himself shouldered his way to the bed. "Scarlet. You're all right. Just
settle down or you'll injure yourself more. Don't make me have to sedate
you." The Spectrum captain finally relaxed his struggles. "Good. Now
lie back down and let me have a look." With a calming hand on the man's
shoulder Fawn checked the tightness of the protective bandages which protected
his healing hands and continued his soothing litany. "Now, you're going to
have to trust me, Captain. You suffered severe injuries to your face and upper
extremities. Do you remember what happened?"
"It was
dark," the patient mumbled from within the facial wrappings. "Hot. I
was reaching for a... A child. A little girl," Scarlet recalled. His body
tensed again beneath the doctor's capable hands. "Her name was Cheryl. Is
she all right, Doctor?"
Though Scarlet couldn't
see it, Fawn smiled soothingly and admitted, "Right now we're concerned
with your recovery, Captain. Now, if you'll just relax we'll take off these
bandages and have a look-see. Agreed?"
Scarlet's shoulders slumped back
against the raised platform of the bed. In his silence there was compliance.
"That's better." Dr. Fawn reached up to release the clip securing the
lengthy swatch of medicine soaked bandage. "There was an accident,"
he explained. "The exhaust pipes for the power plant's reactor water went
critical and hairline cracks must have burst under the pressure. The whole
story isn't known yet. For the past three hours, scientists and crime scene
investigators have been combing the site with their equipment. Gathering
clues." The top of Scarlet's head revealed the re-growth of hair and
healthy scalp where once the acid had dissolved it. "Looking good so
far."
"What happened to
the power plant, Doctor? Tell me," the patient insisted, his torso tensing
again to sit up. Scarlet's bandaged hands fumbled to grip Fawn's arm.
"I'm getting to
that, Captain. Physician's prerogative. All in due time." Scarlet's
reluctance for patience was evident in his slow dip back to the pillow.
"Captain Ochre was down in the reactor core room with you. I've been
looking over his report and it seems he saved both your lives."
"Then the girl is
OK," Scarlet surmised as Fawn peeled the wrapping from his forehead and
ears. New skin glowed pink where once bone had gleamed.
"Ochre saved your
and his own life, Captain. The girl and four others perished in the
blast, I'm afraid."
"The blast?"
Scarlet repeated jerking away from the doctor's ministries. In his frustration
Scarlet clawed at the bandages himself. "The power plant-" He swiped
the gauze from his eyes and opened them. The man blinked then grimaced at the
brightness within Sickbay. Scarlet groaned. "I... Doctor. I still can't
see. What's wrong?"
"It's only
temporary, Captain," Fawn reassured as he eased the wrappings from the
man's clutched fists. "The burst pipes contained not high pressured steam
for the generators but exhaust acid. The acid was under high pressure, itself,
when it contacted your skin. It destroyed your eyes, but they're re-growing as
we speak. The right eye socket suffered the greatest damage. I had to remove
the entire optic nerve in an emergency surgery some two hours ago. I must say,
you're doing quite well for the extent of the damage."
"But what of the
girl, Doctor Fawn?" Scarlet insisted as the discomfort of his hasty
actions kicked in. One freed hand rose tentatively to caress the sunken socket
where his right eyeball had once perched. Within his grimace he gasped,
"Why couldn't I save her?"
In Scarlet's blindness,
he couldn't see the reluctant shrug of Fawn. The captain could no doubt hear
the physician's weary sigh, however. "There just wasn't time. The facility
was on the brink of self-destruction. The acid carrying conduits gave way.
Captain Ochre was just able to drag you from the backwash before your entire
body was consumed. As it was, your epidermal layer has had to regenerate along
your upper torso and arms. For some reason, you'd removed the only protection
you had down there."
"The environmental
suit," Scarlet recalled as he again elbowed himself back onto his pillow.
It seemed he was starting to realize the latitude of recent events. "And
the girl. Cheryl. She was inside that channel. She was alive when..."
Fawn patted the injured
captain on the arm. "I'm sorry, Paul. If she was alive when you tried to
rescue her, she didn't survive long amidst that acid bath. The explosion of the
plant sealed her fate and the fate of four others. Ochre barely got you and
himself out in time to talk about it."
As Captain Scarlet
released a weary, pain-wracked sigh he murmured, "If only... I had had
more time."
"That is the wish
of millions who grieve the loss of another, Captain. Rest now. I'll look in on
you later." As Fawn left the recovering captain, he shook his head.
"Happens to the best of us feeling, caring humans." The doctor knew
all too well the sinking sensation of losing someone. A physician couldn't
afford to grow calloused or complacent. Lives were always worth the gamble.
Captain Scarlet had experienced more than his share of tragedies. Sleep would
do the man good.
Within the day two more
weary travelers were to return to Cloudbase. Captains Blue and Magenta reported
the partial success of their SPV trials. As they sank on twin rising stools
within the command center, Blue spoke up first. "Well, Colonel. We're off
to a good start," he told his commanding officer. Colonel White accepted
the assessment with a serious stare. "Spectrum's Technology Agency agrees.
The remote control device needs quite a few modifications, but we feel it'll
come in quite handy in the future."
"I see,
gentlemen," White finally droned. "I'll be expecting your full
reports by morning. Until then, if you'll excuse me. I have much work to attend
to." The colonel's pale eyes again sank to the data readout set within his
circular desk.
"Sir,"
Magenta spoke up, still seated. "Is there something wrong?"
In answer White raised
a stern brow and rumbled, "A puzzle, Captain. One I'm still trying to
piece together myself."
"Captain Ochre's
good with puzzles, Colonel," Blue suggested standing beside his mission
partner. "Have you asked him to help?"
White's brow furrowed
into a scowl. "I'm afraid Captain Ochre is one of the puzzle pieces, Blue.
The Timberland Power Complex was destroyed earlier this afternoon. Captains
Ochre and Scarlet barely made it out alive. Yet there doesn't seem to be any
Mysteron involvement. And so there lies the puzzle, gentlemen."
"Well, Sir,"
Magenta suggested rising from his stool as well. "I'm willing to help.
Just fill us in on the details."
"Though I
appreciate the offer, Captain, you two have your own mission briefs to contend
with. The ability to remote maneuver an SPV in an emergency may well prove a
useful tactic in the future. You are to stay abreast of the research and
development of this new device. Keep me informed."
"SIG," the
two captains chimed accepting their dismissals and marching from the control
center with just a perplexed glance Green's way. In answer, the lieutenant
shrugged his shoulders. It was the younger man's signal of his current
inability to inform them of what he knew. It would have to wait until Green was
off duty. Blue nodded his understanding and shepherded his Irish-American
partner out the exit. "We'll get to the bottom of this," the taller
man assured into Magenta's ear.
"Yeah,"
Magenta responded with a nod. "Let's go find Rick. He'll give us the
lowdown."
According to Destiny
Angel and Captain Turquoise, playing poker in the lounge, Ochre was currently off
duty and in his quarters. "Ah, the poor man," Destiny lilted.
"He was so miserable and tired. There was just nothing more he could have
done."
"Done? Done
what?" Blue prompted with raised hands. "Come on, guys. Fill us in.
We're clueless."
"Yeah. Just got
back ourselves from a mission," Magenta chimed in beside him.
Turquoise shrugged his
broad shoulders and explained, "Rick saved Scarlet's life this afternoon.
Pulled him from an acid bath in an underground cavern, and they just made it
out alive before the whole place went kablooey!"
Blue stepped down into
the lounge and sank onto a bench. "And I thought Pat and I had fun,"
he stammered. "Are they OK? Where's Paul?"
"Captain Scarlet
is in Sickbay," Destiny informed as her poker partner slapped his winning
hand down onto the table. "Ach, John Watie. You win again, eh?"
In that instant Blue
was on his feet and heading for the door. "Then that's where I'm
going."
"No, wait!"
Turquoise warned scooping in his chips. "Dr. Fawn's forbidden anyone to
see the captain until morning. Scarlet's still recovering. Not to be
disturbed."
Blue paused by the
exit, Magenta now at his shoulder. "Wait a minute. John, did you say an
acid bath?"
Turquoise's dark
features were shadowed by his concern. "I didn't see it myself, but I
heard from Rick. Must have been pretty gruesome. If it had been any one of us,
we'd be dead right now. Dead with no identity save our dental records."
Blue's thin lips
flinched into a momentary grimace. "Thanks, John. But I am going to
see Fawn about this." He turned to his mission partner. "Get working
on that report for the colonel, Pat. I'll be with you as soon as I see
Paul."
Magenta nodded his
understanding and assured, "I'm sure Scarlet will be just fine. Good luck
sweet-talking Fawn."
"Thanks."
Captain Blue strode off into the bowels of Cloudbase, his long legs taking him
swiftly to the doctor's domain. Once inside Sickbay, he found Dr. Topaz on
duty, updating patient files and tending to the strained calf muscle of Captain
Ebony. "Playing tennis like a man again, Rochelle?" Blue taunted with
a sparkling smile that reached to his ears.
Ebony waved the
American away. "Oh, get off me, Blue. I can beat you Seven-Love any day.
Even with your manly man arms," she chided back in her rich Nigerian
accent. "You can come kiss my racket tomorrow at fifteen hundred."
Blue chuckled.
"I'll meet you there," he promised folding his arms over his light
blue-clad chest. "Julia," he redirected at the attending physician.
"I came to see how my partner's doing. Is he up to a late night visit? Pat
and I just got back from the field. Long day."
"Captain Scarlet's
has been longer, I'm afraid," Dr. Topaz testified in a serious tone. The
woman finished wrapping Ebony's exposed calf with a supportive Ace bandage and
advised, "Keep it elevated for a few hours, Rochelle. Hot and cold
compresses every twenty minutes. Oh, and no tennis matches with this brute for
at least three days. Understood?" Topaz shot a warning glance Blue's way.
In response the man spread his arms innocently but didn't challenge the
doctor's prescription.
"If you say so,
Doctor," Ebony agreed sliding down from the exam table to land gingerly on
her good leg. Topaz handed her a crutch. "You still owe me a match, Big
Boy," the female captain assured as she limped past Blue and out the
sickbay's door.
"Looking forward
to it," Captain Blue called after her. Then he returned his attention to
the on-duty physician. "So, may I?"
"May you what? See
Captain Scarlet?" Even Topaz seemed to be in a teasing mood, though with
far less humor in her dark green eyes.
"Are you going to
make me beg, Miss O'Donnell of County Kerry, Ireland?" Blue chided in his
best mimic of her deep accent. Then the mischievous glitter to his blue eyes
was gone. "Come on. I know Dr. Fawn doesn't want him disturbed. If he's
sleeping, I'll just poke my head in and be grateful he's still breathing."
He had many times witnessed his partner in far more serious conditions.
After another teasing
silence Topaz sighed her resignation. "All right. I'll let you poke your
head in, but don't tell Fawn I let you."
In response, Blue zipped a finger across his closed wide lips. He followed Julia Shannon O'Donnell to one of the main recovery rooms. There, through the windowed door, she allowed Blue a peek at his partner. On the bed, Captain Scarlet lay sleeping peacefully, his hands and eyes again wrapped in bandages. "He suffered major damage to his epidermis. But because of his unique abilities, he'll be as good as new in a few days."
Blue blinked away from
the sight of his friend. "Days? Not hours?"
"If you want to
know the specifics, Captain, you'll have to ask Dr. Fawn." With a
sympathetic smile she squeezed his arm. "Go on, now. I'm sure you have
something more pressing than babysitting the good captain here. Get out of my
Sickbay, Adam. I'll see you again in the morning."
Blue took the hint and
nodded his good night. The American captain was to return promptly in the
morning, however, just as promised. After a quick breakfast with Symphony and
Grey, the trio headed down to visit their favorite indestructible comrade. Fawn
met them at the door. With a raised hand he stopped them. "Not yet,"
the doctor advised. "I need to re-examine his injuries before I release
him. I believe there's a staff meeting at oh-eight-hundred. We'll both meet you
in the command center then." Argument dropped. In Fawn's domain, he ruled
supreme. Even the apologetic eye of Topaz did little to soften the words.
Captain Scarlet would meet them in an hour.
"Have a seat,
ladies and gentlemen," Colonel White directed as they gathered in the
conference room on Cloudbase's command deck. Blue slid a seat out for Symphony
as Grey did so for the crutch-toting Ebony. As Captain Ochre entered the room,
all in attendance turned expectantly to greet him. "You slept well, I
hope, Captain," White offered as the rest of the staff released their
deflated greetings.
"Sorry I'm late,
Colonel. I stopped by Sickbay to try and see Captain Scarlet."
"I understand
he'll be attending the meeting shortly. What we need to discuss involves him as
well. Please, Captain." White waved him to a chair. Magenta nodded his
greetings as Ochre slid into the seat beside him, opposite Harmony who, like
Symphony, was not currently on standby in the Amber Room. "Spectrum
staff," Colonel White announced. "I called you together to discuss a
concern of mine. You're aware that we're currently experiencing a lull in
Mysteron activity. As such, I'm sure we are all on edge awaiting their next
threat. What it will be is anyone's guess. That it may arrive at any moment is
a certainty. Therefore, I'm initiating ship-wide maintenance drills to deal
with this lull effectively. My concern centers around some staff members who
have grown ill-fatedly complacent of late, risking their safety and injury over
clearly non-Spectrum issues. As a cohesive organization, we must maintain order
and discipline."
The expectant silence
in the room could have shattered glass. Ebony swallowed loudly. Tennis wasn't
normally a hazardous sport. Straining her calf muscle wasn't exactly risking
life and limb either. "Sir?" she stammered from her seat.
"Yes,
Captain," White allowed.
"Well, Sir.
Symphony and I did get carried away with our competitiveness yesterday, but my
injury should be fully healed in another couple of days. Colonel, I didn't mean
to fall over my own feet going after Symphony's wicked slice."
Again that suspended
air of uncertainty. Then Colonel White did something he rarely allowed his
staff to see. He smiled. "Ebony," he admitted. "Your bout with a
challenging tennis match isn't the carelessness to which I was speaking. I was
referring to Captains Scarlet and Ochre's recent mission."
"Were you waiting
for us, Colonel?" Dr. Fawn announced then from the open doorway. The
entire assembly of Spectrum officers spun in their seats to smile at the return
of their friend. Beside Fawn Captain Scarlet nodded his greetings to his
colleagues. Dressed once more in his standard uniform and cap, he was again
whole. The only outward sign of injury was the odd and out-of-place black patch
the British officer wore over his right eye socket.
"Welcome back,
Captain," White acknowledged from his seat. "The doctor has described
your ordeal to me. I hope you're not in any great discomfort."
Scarlet cleared his
throat and stepped up to the empty chair waiting for him. Everyone's gaze
followed him as he gingerly settled into it. "The eye still pains me a
bit, Colonel. But thank you, Sir. I'm glad to be back on duty."
"Light duty only,
Colonel," Fawn corrected as he too took a chair. "Scarlet's missing
eye is a temporary handicap. Until it's fully regenerated, he's still on
medical leave."
"Of course,
Doctor," White agreed. "Now, then. As we are all here, allow me to
elaborate on our predicament." The colonel continued with his current
point of argument. "As Spectrum personnel, we have a devout responsibility
to the people of the Earth. We're an elite force against the Mysterons, our
sworn enemy. Spectrum is the only organization to do this vital work, and as
you are all highly trained professionals, we must keep our objectives in focus.
Captain Scarlet. You were field commander on this most recent mission. As such,
it was your responsibility to evaluate the situation, to determine whether the
Timberland Complex was under Mysteron threat. I realize you have been
recuperating, but you may now report your findings. Was there evidence of
Mysteron involvement at the Timberland power plant?"
With his one still red
and inflamed eye, Captain Scarlet glanced toward his mission partner before
answering. "Sir. The plant's supervisor, a Dr. Garrett, had asked a
Spectrum team to investigate the strange and self-defeating behavior of their
inspector. The mission was assigned to Captain Ochre and myself, as we were in
the vicinity of the North American complex.
"After our meeting
with Dr. Garrett, I had determined that the plant's inspector, a Horatio
Darling, was perhaps suffering from a mental impediment. This was later
confirmed as likely after speaking with his co-workers, Sir."
"So, your
findings, Captain?" the colonel prompted.
Ochre's lowered head
clearly showed his reluctance to hear the verdict. Any other officer might have
spoken up and taken the blame or defended his actions. Richard Fraser chose to
default to his friend's judgment. "Sir, once the crisis was upon us, we
had no choice but to stay," Scarlet asserted. "Up until the reactor
core became critical, Captain Ochre and I were fully involved in our
investigation and a search and rescue operation."
"Yes," White
confirmed with a scowl. "Captain Ochre mentioned that in his report. A
missing child, it seems. The mother had allowed this child access to classified
materials and the facility's security codes." The colonel consulted his
own copy of Ochre's official report before continuing. "This child was
involved in some game and got lost in, of all places, the plant's reactor
core?"
"She'd been
playing hide and seek, Sir," Ochre elaborated his brown eyes still lowered
to his partner and colleagues. From across the circular table Grey considered
his friend with a sympathetic expression. The fellow American had already
experienced Ochre's regret.
"At what point did
you even consider this mission none of Spectrum's business, Captain?" The
colonel's question was directed toward Scarlet.
"Sir," the
man began. "I was ready to dismiss Supervisor Garrett's request almost
immediately and return to Cloudbase."
"What changed your
mind?"
Again, the British
officer considered his mission partner with his one strained eye before
answering. "Captain Ochre, Colonel. He urged me to investigate further, in
case there was indeed some Mysteron involvement."
"That's the truth,
Captain Scarlet?" White demanded.
Now Scarlet's
hesitation was longer than momentary. It was instead Ochre who answered.
"No, Sir. I wanted to stay to solve the mystery of the inspector's
behavior and the generator malfunctions. At the time, I was curious about
solving a real life crime, whether or not Mysterons were involved. I was reluctant
to return to station duty. That's what I put in my report, and that's the
truth, Sir."
White didn't yet seem
satisfied. The superior's steel eyes slid back to Scarlet. "Captain?"
"Colonel... I
agreed with Ochre's reasoning. There hasn't been a Mysteron threat in several
weeks, and I too was... Was itching to do something other than monitor a duty
station here on Cloudbase. So I made the decision to stay and help with
Garrett's dilemma. It... It sounded like a good idea at the time."
"At the
time," White grumbled. "We are not in the business of meddling in
civilian affairs, Captain Scarlet. You and Ochre, despite your high and good
intentions, risked your lives unnecessarily. Conversely, your interventions may
very well have saved the lives of nearly all of Timberland's personnel. For
that, you are to be commended. However, I can not condone such a breach in
Spectrum policy or discipline. From any of my officers, least of all my senior
staff. Is that clear?"
"Yes, Sir,"
both Ochre and Scarlet echoed.
"Now, because of
these recent failings, I'm considering you both for monitor duty during the
upcoming maintenance drills," the colonel informed. Next, he considered
the assembled staff. "Discipline and reason, people, are what keep Spectrum
focused on our responsibilities. Never forget we are what stand between the
Mysterons and the fate of Earth." There was a long moment of silence
before White added, "That is all." Cloudbase's officers rose from
their seats and quietly left for their duty stations. But as Ochre moved to
flank Scarlet at the exit, Colonel White interrupted, "Captains. May I see
you a moment in private?"
The hesitant blink of
Captain Ochre was filled with trepidation. They'd both just been reprimanded
before their colleagues. Now it seemed the colonel was readying for the second
volley. The conference room door shut the two captains in with their superior.
Lambs to the slaughter. "Can we help you with something, Colonel?"
Ochre began. Scarlet humphed beside him. A typical Ochre misdirection strategy.
"Yes, Captain. You
can." With a heavy sigh the colonel continued, "I'm curious why you
didn't follow regulation procedures. It's beyond me why you two thought you
could solve such a massive problem on your own. The Timberland facility was a
two year-old, state-of-the-art complex. Surely it had contingencies for such
troubles as they seemed to be experiencing. Were you not aware that no Mysteron
threat had been announced regarding the station?"
"Sir,"
Scarlet began. "The Mysterons haven't always been honorable in their war
of nerves with Earth. In the past their plans have many times been initiated
prior to their broadcasted threats. Mysteron agents have been put in place to
sabotage facilities long before Spectrum's been brought up to specs."
The colonel nodded.
"Your point is well supported, Captain. Did you two enjoy your little
jaunt into the civilian sector?"
Ochre swallowed and
exchanged an uncertain glance to his partner at the sudden change of subject.
"Sir?"
"I have another
mission for you." Now Ochre's glance to Scarlet was a quizzical glare. In
answer, White elaborated. "Captain Ochre. I'm assigning you civilian duty
to the University of Criminal Technology in Montana, United States. There've
been some rumors going around that a certain professor there has developed a
listening device which can infiltrate our secure transmissions."
"Someone's tapping
into Spectrum's communications, Sir?"
"It would seem.
I'm sending you and Lieutenant Green in to investigate. You'll be in civilian
garb for your own security. I'll be assigning your undercover identities once
we've gotten clearance from the university's own security chief."
"And me,
Sir?" Scarlet asked, his head tilted against his obstructive eye patch.
"I realize,
Captain, that Dr. Fawn has you on restricted duty for the next two days, but I
need you assigned to this mission as well. It seems the professor in question
is a past graduate of West Point. A fellow colleague of yours. A certain Dr.
Denver Castillo. Your job is to get close to him. Distract him away from
university and determine whether he's a Mysteron agent or simply a pawn for
their needs."
"KingSilver,"
Scarlet murmured, eye absently roving the conference table.
"Pardon?"
White retorted. "This alleged listening device is called the KingSilver
Scope. You're aware of its existence?"
Scarlet blinked from
his private reverie. "No, Sir. Dr. Castillo. It was his nickname at West
Point. Self-assigned if I recall." The captain raised a hand to his patch,
his good eye creasing in discomfort. "I'm sorry, Colonel," he mumbled
before lowering his hand and continuing. "He was fencing champion three
years standing. Even after graduation KingSilver was occasionally challenged by
undergrads." Scarlet straightened his strained shoulders. "He was
never beaten."
"You knew him
well, then. Will he remember you?"
"Assuredly, Sir.
I was one of only two who nearly beat him at his own game."
Scarlet instinctively rested his right palm over his gun handle. "He's a
brilliant strategist, and a loose cannon, Sir. If he's a Mysteron or in league
with them, then he's a real danger to Spectrum."
The colonel sat back in
his chair and released a decisive sigh. "I see I've chosen the right man
for the job. Captain. Are you up to the challenge?"
With a stiff nod the
British agent assured, "I'd say I'm the only one. I won't let you down,
Colonel."
Now it was White's turn
to nod. "Very well. You'll leave immediately. Ochre and Green will follow
you to Montana shortly."
"But, Colonel.
What about our monitoring duty during the upcoming drills?" Ochre
reminded.
With the hint of a
smirk White rumbled, "Consider this assignment payment in full, Captains.
Dismissed."
"SIG," the
two snapped in response. "I'll contact Dr. Castillo immediately,
Sir," Scarlet added.
As the two officers
left their superior's company and strode toward their quarters to pack, Ochre
spoke up first. "Paul," he stumbled. "I'm... I'm sorry about the
girl. I really am. I heard those pipes give way and I guess I panicked. I just
grabbed you and pulled."
There was a long moment
of silence with just the stomping of boot steps before Scarlet answered.
"I'm sorry too." He had not turned to look at the man.
"I know you were
close to reaching her. Time just ran out for us."
"Right," came
the curt response.
With a heavy sigh Ochre
grabbed his field partner's arm and halted his retreat. "Look, Scarlet. I
know you're angry at me for all of this. And I'm grateful you wanted to soften
the blow to the colonel, but I'm a big boy. I can take the responsibility for
my actions. I screwed up. I know it. You didn't have to cover for me."
"No, Rick. I
didn't." Scarlet's one eye glared at the American. "I was the field
commander. It was my judgment that kept us there. I should have listened to my
inner voice of reason. Colonel White was right. I risked both our lives."
"But you heard the
colonel. Together we saved all those people. With the evacuation-"
"We didn't save
everyone, Captain. I'll have to live with that inability for the rest of my life.
I had her, you know." Scarlet held up his gripped fist to illustrate his
conviction. "I had her at the tip of my fingers and you pulled me away.
You blew it. Partner." Scarlet yanked his arm back and strode away.
"Not everybody's
perfect, Blackbeard the Indisputable!" Ochre blurted as Scarlet
disappeared down the hall. "I said I was sorry," he murmured after
him. But his field comrade hadn't heard him. Instead, under the guise of an old
invitation, Captain Scarlet solitarily left for Montana within the hour.
As he piloted his
Spectrum jet away from Cloudbase and toward North America's western seaboard,
Captain Scarlet swallowed his strife and thought to his present mission. He
contemplated the last time he had been in the presence of Dr. Denver Castillo.
Three years, two months, and several odd days ago, the communications
specialist had bumped into the Spectrum captain while on vacation in Miami,
Florida. The man had been thrilled to see his old fencing partner, and had even
invited Metcalfe up to his new cattle ranch outside Butte, Montana. "Gets
me away from the stuffy computers and out under some real clean air,"
Castillo had said. Though Paul Metcalfe had not accepted the invitation at the
time, the British citizen had graciously thanked his former sparring companion
for the offer.
Now, it seemed he was
inadvertently taking the scientist up on his former overture of friendship.
"Bloody Hell," Scarlet vowed. Gingerly he landed the SPJ at a North
American military airfield. His singular perspective, he quickly realized, was
a definite handicap. He nearly brushed wings with an Air Force fighter jet
taxiing out to the runway on his way in to the terminal. Scarlet swore against
his frailty. He didn't wish to deal with it at the moment. It was too much of a
distraction.
Later, in the pilot's
locker room Scarlet switched into his civilian garb and persona. With a duffle
bag of belongings, Paul Metcalfe took one last look at himself in the mirror.
"Captain Ochre's right. I do look like a pirate," Scarlet brooded
rubbing at the regenerating eye beneath the patch. With a derisive stomp back
out to the vehicle depot, he slid behind the wheels of a waiting Chevrolet
convertible. Moments later, the British captain was speeding away from the
airbase, heading for the highway.
Within three hours the
Spectrum captain was turning onto County Route 15, driving past the old
abandoned copper mine outside Butte's city limits. Atop the recycled mountain
of debris, condominiums sparkled in the afternoon sun between the natural
bluffs. Castillo's ranch was just 75 miles further north. The scientist's
directions had put it on the outskirts of the mountain town of Helena, Montana.
Scarlet would soon be in the presence of the self-famous "King of the
Silver Blade".
His mission was a
gamble. The British agent was going in with no comm.device save his intradermal
locator implant. With it, Cloudbase would know his exact coordinates. But
because of the risk of discovery, no other form of electronic device was dared.
As it was, Scarlet's unique recuperative abilities would dissolve the locator
chip within the 48 hour timeslot for his objective, despite a thick Teflon
coating Fawn had applied to curb his body's absorption.
He found Castillo's
KingSilver Ranch set back nearly a quarter mile in from the highway. Access was
along a lonely dirt path bordered by alpine spruce nearly fifty feet tall.
"His ego hasn't deflated any, I see," Scarlet murmured to himself as
he drove up to the front gate and hacienda-styled estate. The ranch house was
surrounded by miles of flat valley floor, spotted with mountain shrubs and
grass and penned in by a series of barbed wire fences. Within these mile wide
enclosures were Castillo's collection of grazing cattle, a sturdy breed of red
and white Longhorns. Beyond the home was a northern spur of the U.S. Rocky
Mountains, an expanse the scientist had called the Big Belt Range. All this sat
nestled within Montana's Helena National Forest. Scarlet overlooked the scene
and smiled at the beauty of it. Each rocky summit was tipped in eternal snow.
He remembered that, during their brief conversation, Castillo had told Scarlet
the trout were running in the creek behind his home, and the deer were
plentiful in the hilly lowlands surrounding Hauser Lake beyond his property.
The weekend visit might even prove relaxing, with all the comforts of an
eccentric bachelor's paradise.
As Scarlet pulled his
rental car up to the hacienda's front entrance, a ruggedly bronzed man with
slicked back blonde locks and designer sunglasses floated out from the massive
doors to wave his hello. "Metcalfe, my boy. Welcome to my little domain.
Glad to have you." The lilting richness of the man's continental accent
was marred by the truth of his American heritage. Scarlet knew, Castillo had
been born and raised in the south of Bronx. Years of practice and persistence
couldn't completely disguise the nasal quality of an Hispanic born New Yorker.
The platinum dyed hair did little more than cap his cloak of royalty in a
jester's crown. Scarlet rose from his car and nodded his greeting as Castillo
waltzed over, despite his burly frame, to extend a hand. "Good of you to
come, Metcalfe. I've always wanted to share my self-made wealth with my devoted
friends from the old school. My, you look wonderful. Time has been kind.
Except, I see, you've lost an eye to an unfortunate accident. Terrible, my
friend. You must tell me all about it. Come inside, Paul. I have refreshments
waiting for us on the back veranda. I've got a marvelous view of the deer
meadow and the mountains. I can't wait for you to see it all."
"No doubt,"
Scarlet interjected snatching up his duffle before Castillo dragged him away
from his vehicle. This was going to be a very interesting weekend.
Colonel White had just
given clearance for Captain Ochre's jet to depart for Montana when Captain
Magenta, seated at the comm. station, stammered, "Colonel! I've got a
strong incoming transmission. I think it's-"
THIS IS THE VOICE OF
THE MYSTERONS. WE KNOW THAT YOU CAN HEAR US, EARTHMEN. WE HAVE NOT FORGOTTEN
YOUR INDISCRIMINATE ATTACK ON OUR MARTIAN COMPLEX. THE MYSTERONS WILL NEXT DEAL
AN ABSOLUTE BLOW TO THE MEMBERS OF SPECTRUM AND TO EARTH ITSELF. WITHIN THE
NEXT 48 HOURS, YOUR GREAT KNIGHT WILL FALL TO A KING. BEWARE THESE WORDS,
EARTHMEN. WHAT WAS OLD IS NEW AGAIN.
"Colonel!"
"I heard it,"
White grumbled. "Get Captain Blue up here immediately."
"Do you want me to
recall Captain Ochre and Lieutenant Green, Sir?"
"No, but get them
on the horn. I want their input."
"SIG."
Magenta spun on his control panel to initiate his orders. As he did so, the
Irish-American ventured, "Do you think the Mysterons mean to interfere
with our mission to Montana's University of Criminal Technology?"
"I do indeed, Captain,
and it looks like Captain Scarlet is the target yet again."
"Sir?"
Magenta's fingers paused from their flight across his data readout.
"Our great
knight."
"And a king...
KingSilver!"
"Exactly. But we
have the upper hand this time."
"How so, Sir?'
"This almost
certainly confirms that Castillo is a Mysteron. We need only get word to
Scarlet of the danger."
"But, Colonel.
Remember. Captain Scarlet's devoid of all electronic devices. His precaution.
He only has the locator chip. How do we contact him?"
"That's where Blue
comes in, Captain Magenta. And time is of the essence." Within minutes,
Captain Blue trotted onto the command deck. "Ah, Blue," the colonel
advised. "I have a very special assignment for you. You must save Captain
Scarlet from an old enemy." Swiftly, the commander-in-chief of Spectrum
outlined his instructions for his agent. "I'll be forwarding additional
instructions to Ochre and Green. Your job is to monitor Scarlet's visit to
Castillo's ranch."
"But, Colonel.
Captain Scarlet's already been there for at least six hours."
"And he's no fool,
Captain," White countered. "He knew of the danger. He's secretly
armed. But be aware. You are not to make your presence known to Dr. Castillo.
Is that clear?"
"Yes, Sir."
"Take an SPV and
remain at a distance. Surveillance and stealth, Captain. If we play our enemy
right, Captain Black himself may be enticed into the fold."
"What about the
monitored communications, Sir? Isn't that what you said this mission is all
about?" Blue inquired.
"Exactly. And
we're going to keep the airwaves busy with updates every hour on the
hour." The colonel's steely eyes rose to his comm. officer. "Captain
Magenta. Do you have Captain Ochre yet?" When the captain nodded, Colonel
White addressed his field officers. "Captain Ochre. I have new orders for
you..."
Captain Blue arrived at
a Montana military airbase where he picked up a Spectrum Pursuit Vehicle. As he
buckled in and closed the hatch, he poked the starter button. The pursuit
vehicle roared to life. "Now. On to the KingSilver Ranch and Captain
Scarlet," he announced to his transport. As an afterthought, Blue unzipped
his breast pocket and fingered the electronic device nestled safely inside.
Magenta had tossed the thumb-sized component to him before Blue had left
Cloudbase.
"Here, Partner.
This might just come in handy," Magenta had said. Captain Blue had gazed
down at the capsule his compatriot pitched into his palm.
"Why, Patrick.
You're still up to your old crimes, I see. How did you manage to smuggle
this-"
"Shhhhh!"
Magenta had silenced with a raised hand and a glance back through the open door
to the command center. "It's one of the prototypes. They had over a dozen
of the things. If we're lucky they won't notice this one's missing. Good luck,
Adam. Keep our friend safe." Blue had then nodded his thanks and headed
for the hangar bay beneath Cloudbase's open flight deck and his waiting SPJ
there.
Now the remote control
unit was snuggled within his vest pocket, awaiting a chance to prove its worth.
Blue smiled to himself. "This time, I get to be the hero." He
barreled down the highway passing slower, more petite vehicles in his Spectrum
armored tank. He had to get to Castillo's ranch before anything happened to
Scarlet. Mysterons, after all, never made empty threats.
Within Castillo's
rustic and weapon-studded dining hall, statues of medieval knights stood sentinel at either end of a long, dark
wood dining table. Setting down his napkin, Captain Scarlet slid back further in
his chair. "Wonderful, Dr. Castillo," he sighed. "I haven't had
a genuine Longhorn steak in a long time."
"Please, Paul.
Call me Denver. There're no titles between friends, are there?"
Now Scarlet sat up
straighter in his seat, grilled dinner forgotten. "Now, that's the part
that's puzzling me, Denver. To be honest, I never thought you considered us
friends. I assumed you fancied me more a... A fencing rival," he asserted
with a slight wave to the menacing decor.
Castillo's dark eyes
lit up with avarice. "Ah, my one true love." He cleared his throat.
"Yes, my friend. I do fancy you a competitive rival. Of the many cadets at
West Point, you were one of only two who ever had any chance of beating
me."
"That was several
years ago, Denver," Scarlet reminded. "I haven't competitively fenced
for nearly as long."
"Are you up for a
rematch, then? Just a friendly bout between friends?"
"Friends?"
Scarlet challenged. "You use the word like a leash, Doctor. I'm here on a
previous invitation. To enjoy the peace and beauty of your hacienda during a
brief hiatus. The idea of sporting a blade again seems almost a drudgery. I
have enough of that at my place of employment."
"And what might
that place be, I wonder?" Castillo inquired, laying his refolded napkin
down beside his empty plate. "You never did mention your vocation when I
last saw you in... Miami was it?" When Scarlet only offered a twisted
half-smile of silence Castillo went on. "It must be a dangerous
occupation. The loss of an eye. Surely that wasn't done pushing papers across
an executive's desk."
Scarlet tilted his head
away from the ranch owner. "It was during business hours that I fell to a
certain mishap, that’s true. But the wound is healing."
"Ah, a recent
injury, then. Pity. Singular vision is quite a handicap when it comes to any
hazardous profession. Take fencing for instance. One eye deprives you of your
depth perception. It's a wonder you can even drive a vehicle." Again the
man's contention was answered by silence. Castillo chuckled at the obstacle to
his curiosity. "A man of few words. I remember that about you, Metcalfe.
You were never one to dribble loquacious. Nor did you ever back down from a
challenge, if I'm correct."
"I'm no
coward," Scarlet defended. He twisted his one-eyed view to another angle.
"But I'm sure, by morning, you could effect a satisfying challenge. Some
quail hunting, perhaps? Out beyond this mountain refuge?"
"Hunting?"
The word nearly spat from the self-made aristocrat's mouth. "Here you are,
a fellow warrior of one of the most ancient of military arts, and you want to
go quail hunting? Why, a much greater adversary lurks in another beast of two
legs. One with far more intelligence and stealth." Castillo popped from
his chair and smacked the table with an open palm. "A challenge, then. As
a warrior, you would not refuse. I challenge you to a friendly duel of the
blade, Mr. Metcalfe. Mano a
mano. I will even give you first
touch."
Now Scarlet rose from
his chair and slid it forward against the dining table. "A challenge, you
say. With my obvious handicap? How could I hope to win?" The Spectrum
officer's repartee was as smooth and intricate as the damask tablecloth.
Castillo's eyes fell to
his place setting. "True. It is an unfair contest. Perhaps you could think
of some way to even the odds." His gaze rose as did the man's slick smile.
"I'll let you sleep on it. Surely your long drive has left you weary. I've
shown you all about my ranch this afternoon. Allow me to show you to your
bed."
With a half bow to his host,
Captain Scarlet swept his hand toward the dining hall's exit. Castillo snapped
his boots together crisply and led the way to the entry hall and great room.
There a grand staircase spiraled up to the hacienda's other floors. Beyond it,
through many multi-storied glass panels, Castillo could admire his domain. The
Spectrum agent now gazed out those panes to see the darkening azure to
twilight. Anticipating the evening would afford a spectacular cloak of stars,
Scarlet shadowed his fellow West Point alumnus up the steps. On the third
floor, at a carved oak door with wrought iron hinges and latch, Castillo
stopped. "Here you are. The view from the balcony is glorious. Please
indulge yourself before you settle in, my friend."
'Thank you,"
Scarlet murmured in reply. He reached for the heavy latch.
"Oh, and don't
forget about our duel. We'll warm up a bit after breakfast. Work out the rust,
so to speak." The man's reptilian charm was only rivaled by his devilish
sarcasm. "Good night, then."
"Night,"
Metcalfe echoed and stepped into his room. Closing the door between them,
Scarlet flicked a switch and marveled at the continued opulence of Castillo's
castle in the Rockies. The spare bedroom was both spacious and abundant with
the bulky trappings of wealth. From the antique four-posted canopy bed to the
heavy Pendleton bedclothes, to the gold framed oil paintings upon the stuccoed
walls, the room overflowed with Castillo's weighty egotism. "Great Scott.
How does the floor uphold it all?" he wondered aloud. His duffle had
already been placed upon the bed. Castillo had several servants working for
him. So far they had been silent and discreet. Probably a coping mechanism to
avoid their master's leering attentions. Swiftly, Scarlet routed through his
bag. His standard-issue pistol was gone, of course. Castillo had probably
ordered a servant to search the belongings for anything hazardous to the
tranquility of the scientist's domain. If Scarlet was lucky, Castillo'd return
the weapon upon his leave.
Meanwhile, the Spectrum
captain needed to get to his rental car. Within it, beneath the passenger's
seat, he had stowed a spare gun. So, with the room lights dimmed for effect,
Scarlet stepped out to the balcony to do a bit of star gazing and stealthy
reconnaissance. Beneath those winking stars, he slipped his elasticized belt
from his waist. He looped it through the wrought iron railing. Then, straddling
the barrier Scarlet swung over the balcony, descending to the second floor
stoop leading into the stairwell. With both feet planted, the Spectrum agent
released his belt. It obediently retracted to its original length. Using it to
return to his room would be a far greater challenge, but Scarlet was focused on
the present task at hand.
He remembered Castillo
previously mentioning that his convertible had been garaged near the servants'
outbuilding, on the north side of the ranch house. With that information,
Scarlet leaped down to ground level. Giving the revealing windows a wide berth,
he prowled forward, along the rear of the house and past the Olympic-sized
swimming pool. On the far side of the ranch he could just make out the dim
outlines of the petite huts the servants called home. Beyond them was a
towering two-storied garage and storage loft. By avoiding the widely spaced luminaries
upon the path, Scarlet was finally able to bolt to his target. Luckily, the
building was not locked. The local wildlife, it seemed, had no interest in
learning how to handle doorknobs. There was no one else about, except perhaps
Castillo's staff, for miles in all directions.
With one last glance
toward the shadowed house, Captain Scarlet lifted the latch to the garage's
side door and entered its dim interior. He found his Chevrolet. It was parked
beside the curving silhouette of a vintage silver Aston Martin DB5. "This
Yank thinks himself another James Bond, does he?" Scarlet murmured.
"Typical." He lifted the handle to his car's passenger side then
slunk down against the building's cold cement floor. Ducking his hand beneath
the seat, Scarlet felt for his spare pistol. It wasn't there. "No,"
he grumbled and waggled his fingers under the seat once more. After a thorough
search of his rental car, the Spectrum officer had come to one conclusion. Dr.
Denver Castillo had ordered his valet to search the vehicle. The gun was gone.
Captain Scarlet was now officially unarmed. "Bloody Hell."
"Do you need
something, Sir?" a deep voice inquired.
Scarlet nearly jumped
into his sports car. How could he have been so distracted that he'd allowed
Castillo's valet to enter the garage without his knowing? "Sorry," he
apologized. "I was looking for my... My watch. It seems to be missing. I
remember it last while motoring. I thought perhaps it'd slipped off and landed
down along the floorboard of my car. Wanted to set the alarm for morning."
"Well,"
answered the servant tugging his coat closer against his chilled shoulders.
"I can arrange for a wake up call, whatever time you want, Sir. And I'll
have a look myself in the daylight. Not to worry. We'll find your watch, Mr.
Metcalfe. For now, you'd best get inside. Temperature drops rapidly in these
parts once the sun goes down. I'll walk you back to the house."
Scarlet stumbled over
his excuse. After all, he hadn't exactly made a typical exit from the domicile.
"No. Thank you. I think I'd like to look about a bit. The mountains are
even more imposing in the evening. My. Don't they just black out the sky?"
"Yes, Sir. Shall I
tell Master Castillo you're out here, Sir?"
"No. Please don't
disturb him. I'll be coming back in shortly. I was hoping to hear a coyote's
call. I hear they're about in these parts."
"Why certainly,
but please don't stay out long. It can get down to freezing quickly." It
was true. Even now, the Spectrum captain regretted slipping out in only his cotton
shirt and denim jeans. A shiver racked his shoulders at the thought.
"Right," he
answered with a nod. "Good night, then." The valet returned the
sentiment and moved on. Scarlet was alone again. With a rub to his sleeves he
followed the servant after a fashion and was again beneath the vault of stars.
"What next, Captain?" he asked himself with a glance skyward and
another shiver. Scarlet didn't really need much sleep since his fateful rebirth
some four years earlier. If he simply waited for the remainder of the house
staff and his host to retire for the night, he should be able to continue his
silent reconnaissance. The Spectrum agent decided to return to his room.
Question was: which method? Should he tramp to the front door and knock or
attempt to rescale the back wall of the hacienda without the assistance of his
climbing apparatus? With a sigh, Captain Scarlet retraced his footsteps and
gazed up to his third floor balcony. "Bugger me," he gasped into the
frosty night. A puff of heated air accompanied his words. This was the price he
paid for going civilian. His uniform belt could be equipped with any number of
devices, including a tiny climbing grapnel and wire. But since all links to his
Spectrum identity were to remain a secret, the undercover captain had to rely
more on his wits than his absent trinkets.
With a forceful leap he
was able to snatch at the bottom railing to the second floor patio. He hauled
himself up with a grunt and strain of muscles. Finally throwing his leg over he
slipped down into the enclosed space. "One more to go," he gasped.
Straightening he strained his one eye skyward for a glimpse of his dangling
belt. If he could grab at that or a wrought iron support bar, Scarlet could
repeat his performance and be snug in his bed for a few hours rest before
continuing his self-guided tour. He calculated the distance and closest hand
hold and leaped upward again. His probing fingers brushed against the cold of
metal then slipped off. His balance sent him outward, over the second-story railing.
The miscalculation ended in a spine jarring crash against the home's stone and
cement patio. Hearing his skull whack like a bowling ball upon the ground
Scarlet next felt the spinning sickness of its disorientation.
"Damn," he grunted as his vision shrank to a white pinpoint.
Suddenly, there was a howling in his ears. A blinding brightness assaulted his
narrowed vision. Scarlet fought to stay conscious even as two of Castillo's
staff hailed the perimeter alarm and rushed out with drawn guns to accost the
intruder. "It's... It's just me," he mumbled even as his senses left
him.
He awoke in his
temporary lodgings some time later, his head and back throbbing but otherwise
with senses returned. "My God, Metcalfe, you gave us a scare!" he
heard Denver Castillo spout. "How could you have enjoyed the scenery so
much you wanted to fly out and join it?"
"Fly?"
Scarlet grunted shuffling himself beneath the hefty covers to sit up.
"I..." His memory came rushing back. "I guess I was dizzy with
admiration," he lied. "I didn't mean to lose my balance. Couldn't
catch myself."
"Obviously, since
you nearly cracked your skull open on the patio. I warned you about singular
vision. Anyway, I'm glad to see you're all right." Castillo rose from the
chair he'd slid beside the bed. "I'm heading off to bed now," he
announced. "My nurse will stay to keep an eye on you. I canceled the
emergency flight to the hospital when you mumbled something about being
impossible to kill."
Scarlet swallowed.
"I spoke in my sleep?"
"In your delirium,
more likely," Castillo snorted. "Really, Metcalfe. You have an
awfully high regard for yourself. Bit of a daredevil, I'd say. Just the sort of
man I'd kill to have a spar against. But now that's impossible, it seems, since
you've gone and knocked yourself insensible. Besides, there's a pressing matter
at the university I've been called in to amend in the morning. Seems some
journalist yahoos have been snooping around asking a lot of questions about my
new project."
Scarlet's still swimming
head cleared to Caribbean clarity. Ochre and Green. And it was his job to keep
Castillo occupied and away from the university no matter what. He decided to
misdirect the man. "Denver," he began rubbing at his still throbbing
head. "I was hoping you'd stay and show me more of this wonderful place.
You'd leave your guest to his own devices for the whole weekend? You saw what
it got me tonight. A royal rap on the chump."
"Well, my boy. I'd
take you with me, but you're in no condition to travel. The KingSilver Scope is
quite a beautiful piece of communication technology. It can detect the spit of
a fly on dung in Western Africa. With it, I can monitor every Earth and Moon
transmission. I can even spy on that elitist fraternity of control freaks,
Spectrum. And I'm about to expand that bubble to include the very Mysteron scum
who have threatened our beloved planet."
Revealing no outward
reaction to his host, Scarlet innocently asked, "This project of yours.
You named it KingSilver?"
Castillo seemed
surprised at the comment. "Well, of course. It's only the most powerful
hunk of working steel in all the galaxy. It's my personal masterpiece."
"Are you required
to attend to this 'masterpiece' first thing tomorrow?" Scarlet snatched
the bandage from his head and crumpled it in his fist. "I'd love to see
it. And perhaps I'd be up to the challenge of that duel after all, KingSilver,
old boy. You've got me intrigued about your fencing skills. Surely you've lost
your touch by now. You're a communications specialist, by Scott, not an expert
duelist."
That doubt elicited the
desired effect. Castillo puffed out his chest and lumbered up his spine.
"A duel, then? You're feeling up to the challenge, eh? I can prove to you,
I've lost none of my prowess. But, still, I'm afraid the contest is one-sided,
or one eyed to be exact."
Ignoring the poke,
Scarlet swung his legs from the bed and stood up before his opponent.
"Then I have the solution," he stated. "We'll both be equally
handicapped. You can wear an eye patch as well."
There was sinister glee
in the man's rugged face. "By God, you do have a competitive spirit. Oh, I
am going to enjoy this! We'll see how you are by morning, my friend. If you are
well, then we'll have a bit of sport. After that, I'll take you to see my life's
pride."
"Agreed,"
Scarlet said with an outstretched hand. Castillo gripped it like a vise and
sealed the deal in a single downward thrust.
After a wide
circumventing of the KingSilver Ranch, Captain Blue had set up his temporary
camp atop a flattened spur of a nearby Montana peak. The climb up had been a
challenge for the Spectrum Pursuit Vehicle, but by extending the tank treads
for extra traction, the SPV was capable of surmounting an almost vertical
obstacle. The armored vehicle then squatted camouflaged among the gray granite
of the Rockies. Silent and waiting.
With high powered night
vision binoculars gazing west, Blue had lain flat atop his stony perch and
witnessed his partner's mishap at the balcony. "Damn it, Paul," he
had rumbled into the chilled night air. "Now you've gone and done it.
He'll see how quickly you recover, and he'll get suspicious. If he's not
already a Mysteron, that is," Blue contended. He peered through his
binoculars once more. "I've got to warn you somehow, but I haven't figure
out by what yet."
As another hour passed
the sentinel American captain had watched Scarlet's removal to his bed and
Castillo's walk out onto the balcony to overlook the scene. Blue observed with
trepidation as Castillo removed the British agent's belt from the railing.
"Now, that does it, Scarlet. You're toast." Then, as Blue continued
his vigil, some hope. Colonel White had informed him of Castillo's love of a
good challenge, especially in the art of fencing. Through his binoculars Captain
Blue could just make out the happenings within Scarlet's bedroom. He witnessed
his partner's rapid recovery. The scene ended on a handshake and a triumphant
twirl of Castillo's sword hand. It was the classic signal of a challenge met.
Captain Scarlet had just given himself a second chance. "If only I could
hear what's being said," Blue grumbled, his warm breath wisping about his
ears like a phantom Santa beard.
Vigilance mingled with
patience and fatigue as the night wore on. Blue was grateful for the hour he
had spent in the Room of Sleep back on Cloudbase. For now his muscles ached
with the solid coldness beneath him. The mountain was no more accommodating
than a mausoleum. Through his heavy jacket, Blue's elbows pounded with the
torture of his weight against the rock face. Yet, he continued his
surveillance. The lights in the ranch house were now all extinguished but a
few. Soon, there was no movement within. Still, Blue kept watch. He hadn't been
partnered with Scarlet for as long as he had and learned nothing of the man's
character. "Come on, buddy. Where are you?" His quiet plea was
answered by the ruffling of curtains. Captain Scarlet stepped out upon his
darkened balcony once more and gazed out upon the expanse of rangeland.
"Finally!" Blue quipped triumphantly. He had been waiting for this
moment.
Scrambling to his
vehicle, the American agent smacked the release button for the SPV's massive
hatch to swing outward. He leaped inside and activated the tank's headlights.
"Let's see if you remember your Morse Code, partner." With a series
of taps to the control panel Captain Blue spelled out just three letters.
S-I-R. That was all he was willing to risk. Swiftly, Blue shut down the
lightshow and jumped from the SPV. He popped the binoculars again over his
eyes. What he saw was encouraging. Upon the balcony, Captain Scarlet nodded and
gave a wave to the mountains before disappearing again inside. "Great! He
got the message." Blue lowered his night scope and frowned at the
implications. "Now, if only that bull-headed Brit will heed the
warning." Blue had noticed that Scarlet was fully dressed for a nightly
prowl about the hacienda. Atop the bluff, Captain Blue sighed his resignation.
The rest of the night for him was peaceful, interjected only by the occasional
cry of a coyote.
Captain Ochre lounged
upon the hotel bed reading a local newspaper for any hint that their day's
folly had made an impact. "Look here, Griff. It says the university's
considering postponing the launching of its new communications satellite, the
KingSilver Scope."
Lieutenant Green poked
his head out from the washroom towel poised upon his glistening head.
"Bully for us, partner," he replied. "I guess you instilled some
doubt into those operators after all."
Ochre was smiling
proudly upon his propped pillows. "It's my devilish wit and charm, my boy.
Never forget that." Then his face sank to seriousness. "I just hope
Captain Scarlet can delay Castillo's arrival onto the scene 'til at least
tomorrow afternoon. We'll need to sneak inside that place just before sunrise
and dismantle that monster's receiver. It was pure luck we gained the unnerving
trust of one of those impressionable university interns. Coulton was more than
willing to allow us 'journalists' full access for our so called exclusive with
Butte's Montana Post."
Now Green stepped out
from the bathroom wrapped in a terrycloth robe and sporting the towel about his
neck. "Luck and an old favor cashed in by me, you mean," he reminded.
"Gwendolyn's my date after this is through. You can have your pick
of the rest of her sorority house."
Ochre was grinning
again. "Old girlfriends do make good bedfellows in the spy business, don't
they?"
Green wagged a finger
at him. "You, my friend, have been reading too many Ian Flemming novels.
I'm no double O, and neither are you."
Ochre sat up atop his
bunk and pouted. "I'll take that as an insult, Griff. I'm not asking you
to risk your neck dodging security. You can stay here if you like. I'll go in
myself. It's what I'm good at. You've finished your assignment, evaluating the
threat of that thing. Spectrum'll need to recalibrate all its communications
technologies to plug up that scope's sensitive ears."
"Microwaves be
damned, Rick. I'm still pondering the problem myself," Green admitted as
he moved his discarded camera to settle into a plush chair beside his bed.
"Maybe we ought to blow it up. That'd be quick and painless. Less
expensive and time consuming too."
"Nah," Ochre
countered with a dismissing wave. "The colonel'd never go for it. There's
a lot of worth in that device. As long as our communications are kept
scrambled, the KingSilver Scope can go on eavesdropping to its transistor's
content. In fact, Spectrum may have a vested interest. Did you hear that guy, Hammer?
I overheard him say something about tests to be conducted once that thing's in
space. They're going to probe the solar system for other transmissions. That
can only mean on thing."
"Castillo and his
gang want to listen in on the Mysterons?"
"Yeah, and if
that' so, then Spectrum's likely to fund continued research for the thing.
Castillo'd be a joint partner in Earth's defense."
"I don't know,
Rick," Green countered standing and staring out the hotel's window. The
starry night sky was shrouded in the lights from the parking lot below them.
"Castillo doesn't seem like the sharing type. You heard Captain Scarlet.
The man's a loose cannon."
"And brilliant and
greedy. We wave enough dineros in front of him, he'll change his mind and sell
us the damn monstrosity. You'll see." Ochre's voice deepened to
seriousness once more. "Spectrum could use a new weapon in its arsenal
about now." He rose from his bed and drew on his boots. "Anyway,
enough of this lounging around. Time to get back to work. I'll need to review
those facility schematics again before I can break in and throw my monkey
wrench into the deal."
"I'm coming with
you," Green assured as he pulled another outfit from his duffle bag.
"If I don't, you're likely to snip the wrong wire and totally disable the
device. We only want to stall their trials until the Mysteron threat is over
and Spectrum can off load that device to a safer hidey hole."
Ochre nodded in
understanding. "If the Mysterons get their grubby little
whatever-they-haves on it, the Scope will be dust. Maybe we should forward our
plan to tonight. The sooner the better. I'm not tired. What about you?"
"I'm not sure,
Rick. The colonel said dawn. He's busy distracting the Mysterons and Castillo's
crew with a gamut of false Spectrum reports. The colonel doesn't get out much.
Let him have his fun. Chances are the Mysterons know about Castillo's toy by
now, but they've decided to ignore it. Scarlet's the target, remember?"
In response, Ochre
rolled his eyes. "How can I forget? He's a burr in my side at the moment.
Right now I don't know whether to mount the cavalry to save his arrogant ass,
or let that professional swordsman, Castillo, run him through just for good
measure."
"Why?" Green
stammered pausing in his dressing. "Did you two have words?"
Ochre sighed and slid
into a chair at the desk. On it sat their fake journalist IDs and the day's
winnings: a detailed map of the university's technology annex, press passes,
and most importantly, Green's acquisition, the KingSilver Scope's blueprints.
"He blames me for the death of that little girl at the Timberland power
plant. I can't refute it, really. But he's so inflexible about it. I tried to
apologize and he turned around and bit my head off."
Green smiled as he
zipped up his tunic. "Your head looks fine to me, Rick."
"Well, the truth
is, it was my suggestion to stay, and his prerogative to leave. We stayed and I
prevented him from saving the girl. Period. End of story."
"Knowing Captain
Scarlet, he probably blames himself, more than he does you," Green tried
to reason.
"Still doesn't
make it any easier, Griff." Ochre's dark eyes rose to meet the
Trinidadian's. "I don't want to lose his friendship. Or his trust."
The American captain shrugged and rose from the desk. "If he'd act more
normal and less like an egotistical despot, I'd be able to forgive the both of
us. Hell, we all make mistakes. I just can't measure up to Scarlet's. And
truthfully, I'm glad I don't. I'm not indestructible. I have feelings too, and
right now I don't feel so deserving."
"Sounds like sleep
is just what you need to find your focus again, Captain," Green advised.
"Going back to the university right now would be foolish. Let the colonel
run things. We follow his orders."
Ochre humphed.
"Orders. That's what got me into trouble in the first place." Then he
fell silent poised between the desk with its paperwork and the soft hotel bed.
"All right. There's no sense in wearing myself out and being useless again
when things get tight. Thanks, Griff." Captain Ochre flopped down onto the
bunk and kicked off his boots. "Just give me a couple hours. Then I'll be
ready to tackle those schematics you bribed off of Coulton." The American
was snoring within minutes. Green only smiled and shook his head before
returning to the task at hand, preparing for stage two of their mission.
The first glow of
sunrise filtering through the room's curtains found Captain Scarlet dressed and
shaved. From the wall mirror over his private vanity, the British agent was
scrutinizing his healing eye. Beneath the patch the lens was now regenerated
but still clouded. The best Scarlet could see was a thick haze like the
condensation on a frosted windowpane. "Bugger me," he murmured again.
"What's taking so long?" Reluctantly, he followed Dr. Fawn's
precautions and replaced the protective patch over his still healing wound.
Scarlet was still handicapped, ready or not.
During his nightly
visitation to the recesses of the KingSilver Ranch, Captain Scarlet had found
nothing unusual. His inner sixth sense had not alarmed him to Castillo's hidden
identity. There was no indication that the man was either a Mysteron nor a
criminal. Dr. Castillo was admittedly rich. Far richer than the Spectrum agent
was, having graduated from the same military academy. Yet Scarlet's instincts
were still piqued. Something was about to go wrong. He just wasn't sure what.
The Spectrum agent he had communicated with high on the mesa was most likely
Captain Blue. He had tried to warn Scarlet of a threat to his life or to the
mission. That much was clear. The Mysterons were most definitely involved. And
for that one reason, Scarlet had not slept at all last night.
Once he was groomed to
his satisfaction, the British captain strolled downstairs to the spacious great
room. He looked back. Beyond the multi-storied window panes, the Rocky
Mountains were silhouetted against a bright new day. Pausing to appreciate the
view Scarlet was nonetheless aware of his host approaching from the dining
hall. "Ah, my friend. And how are we feeling this morning? Rested and
well, I hope."
"Well, thank you,
Dr. Castillo."
The man held up his
hand in protest. "Please, Paul. I told you to call me Denver. I trust your
head is none the worse for wear. Swelling down?"
"I'm fine,"
Scarlet reiterated. Castillo was studying him with a critical eye. Scrutinizing
his opponent for weaknesses, no doubt. At the moment Scarlet only suffered from
one.
"Well, then. Won't
you join me for a light breakfast? When I spar, I prefer a light meal to a
heavy one. Certainly don't wish to be weighed down." He led the way into
the dining room where Castillo's staff had set a table with fruit and light
pastries. Scarlet accepted the seat offered him and settled the damask napkin
upon his lap. "My nurse said you dismissed her just minutes after I left
you last night. Said you insisted she go."
Scarlet again noticed
his host's critical eye. "I was feeling much better. I... I was
uncomfortable keeping her up for my sake."
"That's her
job," the ranch owner acknowledged as he forked some fruit onto his plate.
"Please help yourself." Scarlet followed suit, selecting from the
platter the servant held beside him. "I would not have wanted it on my
conscience if you had slipped into a coma from your injuries. Surely you are
too stiff and sore for our little match of skills this morning." Castillo
was still testing him, Scarlet realized. For what purpose he could not tell.
"Perhaps you were able to work out your stiffness last night while
searching through my belongings, eh?"
Scarlet blinked, his
hand poised above the fruit platter, a slice of cantaloupe dangling from his
fork. He set it down to answer. "I did no such thing, Doctor. If your
staff saw me wandering the grounds last night, then it is true. I was restless.
Sleeping in a new environment is always a challenge."
"I see,"
Castillo replied. "And what of the belt I found dangling from your room's
balcony?"
Again Scarlet blinked
at the oversight. Yes. He had forgotten that bit of incriminating evidence. The
outfit he presently wore came with its own matching leather belt. "Forgive
me, Doctor. I... I had-"
"Lost your watch.
Yes. My valet reported the incident to me this morning. Strange of you to
misplace a harmless watch while bringing far more lethal objects into my home."
There was a spine riveting silence between them for a long moment. Scarlet let
Castillo reveal his knowledge first. "Weapons, Mr. Metcalfe? Two hand guns
to be exact. Can you explain yourself, please? Tell me why you've come to
collect on a three year invitation just as I prepare to open the hearts and
minds of my fellow Americans?" Scarlet sipped stoically at his water glass
and said nothing. "There is only one explanation." Castillo raised
his arm and waved at the dining hall's entrance. Scarlet turned to watch as two
heavy set men in uniforms stepped in. Their guns were drawn, but the Spectrum
captain couldn't tell whether the safety latches were still engaged. Castillo
rose from his seat, his hands atop the table. "You, sir, are a Mysteron spy,"
he announced.
Scarlet nearly choked
on his water. Swiftly he swallowed and glanced between the hired musclemen and
his host. To Castillo's obvious surprise, Captain Scarlet set his glass down
and chuckled. "Good guess, Doctor. But you're way off." Scarlet rose
from his seat as well, breakfast forgotten. "I am curious about
this device you've created, however. I have a vested interest in its
capabilities."
Castillo's dark eyes
narrowed to lasers. "Who are you? Who do you work for?"
Straightening before
his adversary Scarlet replied, "You know who I am. We attended West Point
together. Who I work for isn't important right now. Suffice it to say, I'm a
member of an organization intent on keeping Earth safe from brilliant
financiers who would rule the world through their powerful machines."
Pushing his chair forward against the table the British captain calmly touched
napkin to lips before replacing the cloth beside his plate. "If you'll
excuse my bluntness, Dr. Castillo, you're under arrest for unlawfully monitoring
government and secret coded transmissions."
"You can't be
serious, Metcalfe," Castillo exploded. "You're unarmed. You can't
arrest me. I still don't know by what authority you claim to have that
right." The ranch owner shoved his chair back and sneered. "Your
arrogance has won you one chance, Metcalfe. I will go with you, speak with your
superiors if, and only if, you prove to me you are the better man."
"A duel for your
freedom? No deal, Doctor," Scarlet reprimanded.
There was a Mysteron
quality to the ranch owner's smile when he assured, "You have no other
choice." The uniformed men leveled their gun barrels on Scarlet's chest.
When the captain didn't immediately protest, Castillo's smile softened.
"Come, my friend. Let the game begin." He waved his opponent out
toward the hacienda's entry hall. With stoic compliance Scarlet led the way.
"We shall make it a fair fight," the ranch owner assured as they met
in the spacious hall at the base of the massive spiral staircase. By the dining
room doors Castillo's sentinels kept guard. Little did either know, a pair of
distant blue eyes also watched them through the wall of glass beyond the
staircase. "I've chosen our weapons," the communications genius
informed. With an upheld hand, two of his servants entered from another door,
each carrying a scabbarded sword and silk sash draped over an arm. "We
will match skills and courage. I will win."
Scarlet, eyeing the
accouterments nearing him ventured, "And how do you propose to even the
odds, Doctor? Remember my handicap."
"Of course. Look.
My assistant has brought me mine."
As the British captain
waited, Castillo carefully fitted a jewel-studded patch over his left eye.
"Sorry, old chap, but I didn't exactly have one to match yours."
"The jewels suit
you, Denver," Scarlet conceded with a sarcastic pout. "I noticed;
it's also over your weaker eye."
To this comment
Castillo merely shrugged. "Didn't have one to fit my right eye, as yours.
This'll have to do. Now to the sash." As Scarlet stood, his assistant wrapped
the long silken sash about his waist. Castillo's did the same. "Now we
look the part. Don't you think?"
"Is this some sick
game to you, Castillo?" Scarlet accused spying for the first time the
choice of weaponry. As the assistants drew the blades from their scabbards, it
was apparent. Both epees were pointedly not fencing weapons. This pair was
lethally guilded in fine edges. No protective buttons graced the tips.
"You plan to play for blood."
Again that
non-committed shrug. "I plan to win at any cost, my friend."
"I'm not your
friend, Castillo. I'm simply a... A policeman of sorts. I'm here on official
business. This duel isn't necessary to prove my authority."
"Oh, but it is,
Metcalfe. It is. You see, I have all the good intentions in the world. I'm an
independent spirit, freed now from the rules of West Point's brainwashing. The
world deserves to know the truth about hypocritical regimes and Spectrum's
meddling. And yet, it was that delightful military academy which taught me the
concepts of discipline and winning for winning's sake. May the better man be
left standing, then," Castillo finished saluting his blade. Before
formally presenting his sword to his opponent, however, he stabbed it toward
the vaulted ceiling. "Forgive me. I forgot one important detail. As I am
the owner of this abode, and therefore have the right to protect myself and my
property, I feel it only necessary to add one more rule."
"What is that,
Castillo?" Scarlet sighed as he tested the weight of his rapier, gripping
the mounting with the clutching fingers of his right hand.
"You see, my boy.
You threatened my life by bringing weapons into my home. Your intentions were
stealth, dishonesty and entrapment." Castillo's blonde head tilted in
irony. "Therefore, you forfeit one arm to the match."
"What-?"
Scarlet's assistant snatched his left wrist from behind, then, and shoved it
against his spine. Though the Spectrum captain struggled, the man's grip was
fierce. Castillo's armed goons shuffled to cover him with their pistols.
"You will fence
one-handed," his opponent explained as the servant wrapped Scarlet's wrist
tightly within the belted sash.
Released, the captain
tested his bonds. They were firm. His left arm was securely pinned behind him.
"This is your sense of honor, Castillo?" Scarlet challenged.
"You didn't learn this tactic from West Point Military Academy."
Castillo smiled.
"No. I learned it along the back streets of New York," he attested
breaking into his childhood accent. "You learn early how to survive amidst
the gangs of your youth, Metcalfe. Oh, but I forget. Your upbringing was a bit
more civilized." The man guffawed harshly and saluted his epee once more.
Bending his knees and raising his left arm, Castillo took up the stance of a
readied opponent. The scientist lowered his foil into the starting position. "En garde," he quipped.
Though Captain Scarlet was now triply handicapped, his
muscles went into defensive mode as the ranch owner leaped forward for a
vicious thrust. He was able to parry the attack and sidestep for a better angle
of offense. The twin blades whizzed and whirled, contacting in metallic chimes
of deadly accuracy. It seemed, at first, that the two competitors were evenly
matched, despite Scarlet's deficit. The British captain overcompensated by
pivoting from the waist, twisting his torso and bending his knees in unison
with his opponent's moves. The combatants cavorted about their lethal ballet.
Then came the first touch.
With a gasp, Scarlet
received the graze to his shoulder. Blood trickled beneath his sliced sleeve.
Grimacing with determination, the Spectrum agent doubled his guard and swung
his saber within centimeters of Castillo's ear. "Very good, Metcalfe. I
see pain fuels your fight. Keep it up. I've hardly broken a sweat." The
man twisted his sword about for another parry, this time to Scarlet's blind
side. Unable to focus properly on the approaching blade, the captain couldn't
block the swing and flinched at the sting to his right rib. It was all Captain
Scarlet could do to avoid the multitude of attacks Castillo threw at him. They
spun about each other. Scarlet retreated as Castillo renewed his assault with
an almost sadistic vigor. Suddenly the captain's boot kicked against an
obstruction. He had backed up against the spiral staircase. "Ah!" his
adversary exclaimed. "It's an Errol Flynn moment, Mr. Metcalfe. What are
you going to do?"
Panting from the
exertion, but still not bested, Scarlet smiled crookedly and spun to launch
himself up the flight to the second floor landing. "I'll take the high
road, if you don't mind," he asserted from his lofty perch. He was not
surprised when Castillo growled and rushed after him. Scarlet was ready for the
attack this time. With his strategic advantage he easily dodged his opponent's
thrust and returned it with a forceful swing of his own. Castillo yelped,
instinctively grabbing at his wounded thigh. Blood oozed from the gash in his
pant leg. "Touché," Scarlet hissed with a defiant smirk.
In his frustration and
pain Castillo ripped off his eye patch and snarled. The man then shoved himself
forward even as Scarlet galloped up the next flight of twirling stairs.
"Damn, you, Metcalfe. Where did you learn to fence? The movie
theatre?" Though the Spectrum captain knew his own unique endurance would
outlast his adversary's, Scarlet's girded arm threw him severely off balance.
Now, with Castillo free of his one handicap, the Spectrum officer was in even
more dire straits. His only option was to outlast and out-maneuver his
attacker. So much for detaining the man, he thought. Perhaps
Ochre and Green were having better luck with their mission.
With a whispered call
to his partner, Captain Ochre waved Green over. The younger man checked his
clearance between the mass of computer banks before he skidded to a crouched
stop beside the KingSilver Scope's huge telescoping base. "Almost there,
Griff," Ochre attested as another volley of stun beams hissed past. The
captain hunkered down further behind his hiding place.
"So much for
staying invisible," Lieutenant Green panted from the protection of the
towering device. Heavy footsteps were tramping their way. "Now what?"
In answer, Ochre tugged
a pistol out from his camouflaged jacket. "Simple. I distract while you
finish our mission." He ducked his left hand into another pocket and
extracted the folded schematics of the scope's control panel. He handed them to
Green. "Good luck, partner."
"Don't get caught,
Mr. Bond," Green chimed back with an infectious smile. "And thanks
for the fun. This is better than a workout at the gym any day."
Ochre winked at him.
"Promised you excitement. Ready?" With a nod from his companion the
Spectrum captain launched himself to his feet and squeezed off a few
distracting shots before sprinting back between the machines scattered about
the university's technology lab. Behind him, Green stood in the shadow of the
telecommunication satellite’s superstructure. With a quick glance up at the
folded wing-like receiving panels of the dormant machine, Green took his
courage. He allowed his legs to propel him to the far side of the lab where
stood the bank of controls which operated the device. Now all he had to do was
remove the proper casing and duck inside amidst the electrified wires to the
housing box which cradled the satellite's heart, its specially designed
trans-receiver crystals. All this he had to do while a legion of campus
security constricted on their location.
So far they had evaded
the two brutes which had been dispatched to investigate the tripped silent
alarm. Ochre had apologized profusely for getting the pair so far inside the
university grounds only to have allowed a secondary security system to slip by
his keen attentions. Now, they had separated, and it was Green's nibble fingers
which pried the transistor housing from its respective cabinet. Gingerly he
slipped inside the cramped casing and scrutinized its inner workings. Green was
suddenly grateful for the time he had spent at their hotel studying the
telecommunication device's control schematics. The satellite itself was
equipped with a safety net of electrified panels. Far too dangerous a target
for the two saboteurs. This was much easier and still produced the same end
result: disabling the giant eavesdropping monstrosity.
"Hey!" a deep
voice hollered. The sound of more gunfire echoed within the lieutenant's
cramped space. Green was just extracting the twin receiver crystals from their
berths when someone grabbed at his arm. He flinched. As the lieutenant clutched
the crystals tight he was tugged free of the cabinet. Before he could swing his
improvised weapons, however, recognition kicked in.
"Come on,"
Ochre urged releasing his grip of Green's arm. "We've outworn our
welcome." Together they sprinted for the emergency exit. Ochre shoved the
door open setting off yet another alarm. Green was right behind him. They
paused upon the building's grassy courtyard with its gated generator shed.
"Now what?"
"We're whisked
away," Green offered pointing a free finger skyward. Descending from the
blue was a WMRTV media helicopter. It landed just meters away on the open
courtyard. "Our getaway car," the younger man quipped to his
partner's puzzled brow. The rotor-generated wind kicked grass clippings and
dirt into his toothy smile.
The helicopter's side
door slid open and a hastily disguised Lieutenant Cobalt stuck her hooded head
out. "You guys call a cab?" she yelled.
As a battalion of
campus security bolted from several exits and hollered their protests, Ochre
and Green rushed in through the helicopter's hatch and flopped into its extra
seats. "Thanks for the speedy service," Ochre panted, relief evident
on his ruggedly charming face.
From the cockpit
section the pilot turned attentions on the sudden passengers even as the
chopper again ascended into the clear morning sky. "It's a good thing
Green had a backup plan in case you two got caught," she asserted with a
southern drawl.
"Melody!"
Ochre spouted. Then he sobered and cleared his throat. "Well, I always
think a backup plan is a good investment. The lieutenant and I make a pretty
good team, don't you think?" Beside him, Green nodded and
handed the purloined communications crystals over to Cobalt who stowed them in
a padded case.
Though her eyes were
again on her piloting, Melody Angel nodded and answered over the roar of the
helicopter's rotors. "Brawn and brain. Makes a whole team, to me."
Understanding the references to each of the two mission agents, Lieutenant
Cobalt giggled. She leaned forward to help Ochre buckle in.
Laughing without humor,
Captain Ochre shooed the young woman's attentions away and snapped the belt
himself. "That's two for two for me. But this time the place didn't
explode, and no one died." The borrowed media chopper dove away from the
scene. It headed back toward the city of Butte. "I hope we're not planning
on sticking around to be on the evening news. Our counterfeited press passes
won't flush under scrutiny. And camouflage doesn't go well with Spectrum
regs." Even now the captain was stripping his dark jacket for the ochre
vest Cobalt handed him. "Thanks." Beside him, Green was changing into
his uniform as well. He'd already kicked off his dark shoes in exchange for his
color-coded boots.
Melody shook her head.
"Temporary trade. I've got a Spectrum helicopter waiting for us at the TV station.
Better update Cloudbase, Captain," the Angel advised. Popping his
regulation kepi atop his brown-haired head, Captain Ochre did just that.
Yawning atop his own
lofty perch, Captain Blue pressed the binoculars, now set for daylight viewing,
once more against his tired eyes. He knew he needed sleep, but his partner's
life was far more important right now. He had informed Cloudbase of the
previous night's events. Now, as the sun had risen, Captain Blue awaited the
next stage of Scarlet's peril.
With tense
anticipation, the American captain had watched as Scarlet had descended the
spiral stairs to the dining hall for breakfast. Blue assumed the duel would
follow shortly afterward. What he hadn't anticipated, was the seriousness of
the confrontation. As he gazed through his high-powered lenses into the
hacienda's great room, Blue squinted past the spiral staircase to the two
figures standing with gleaming blades between them. The magnification of his
Spectrum binoculars couldn't make out the fine details of the duel. Captain
Blue could, however, discern the severity. "Blazes," he cursed out
loud. "They're not just sparring." As the duelists maneuvered between
the windows the American gasped. Captain Scarlet's left arm was trussed like a
Thanksgiving turkey. "Damn. Castillo's going for blood," Blue
rumbled. "Or worse." With a twitch of his cheek the blonde captain's
cap microphone was before is lips. "Captain Blue to Cloudbase. Colonel.
Captain Scarlet's in trouble. Should I intervene?"
His superior's reply
couldn't have been more auspicious. "You have a go, Captain Blue. Ochre
just relayed his report. The KingSilver Scope is dead in the water. Move in and
recover Captain Scarlet."
"SIG,
Colonel." Blue cut his transmission short and scrambled to his feet. Once
inside the SPV he tossed his discarded coat onto the copilot's seat and yanked
the spare power pack from its storage closet. Swiftly he slid it into the frame
of the vehicle's utility hover pack. Strapping himself into the contraption, Blue
exchanged his regulation blue cap for a matching colored helmet then stepped
out through the SPV's open hatch. He hit the ignition button. With a jerk and a
puff of displaced air, the hydrogenic fuel cell propelled the Spectrum agent
into the sky. "Hold on, partner," he vowed. "I'm coming."
Scarlet found himself
cornered between the glass plated window and corridor wall of Castillo's third
floor guest quarters. His opponent's rapier was poised for another attack.
"Give it up, man," the Spectrum agent reasoned bravely as he
defensively swiped aside the lethal thrust. "You can't win."
This bold statement
caused Castillo to stall his charge. He studied the sweaty features of his
adversary. "How can you-" Then he paused, his jaw dropped.
"You're hardly out of breath. How-"
"Sorry,"
Scarlet growled with a sword swing forward and a twist that broke him free of
his trap. "But that's classified." Castillo gulped another breath and
renewed his fury. The man's skill was formidable, that was certain. The Spectrum
captain sustained two more hits to his shoulder and arm even as he backed up
again toward the staircase. The last went deep into the muscle of his sword
arm. Scarlet growled at the strike and lifted his rapier to intercept
Castillo's next assault. The twin blades slid together up to their guards. The
two men stood breath to agonized breath. "You can't win, Castillo,"
Scarlet reasserted into the man's twisted, glistening face. "You can't
hurt me."
Instead of causing the
confusion the Spectrum captain intended, Castillo roared in defiance and shoved
his slighter opponent back against the staircase railing. In the same fateful
movement, his saber came up with a ruthless swipe. The steel contacted flesh
and bone, severing Scarlet's hand at the wrist. For a gruesome instant, the
captain's weapon and still gripping digits were suspended in the air above the
great room. Then they toppled to the floor below. Scarlet gasped at the sudden
pain and surprise of the vicious attack. Instinctively he buckled against the
agony. His tethered arm jerked to cover and protect the horrible injury, but
the silken sash had not yet loosened through his continued struggles. As the
captain half-crouched before his enemy, breath suspended, Castillo sneered back
in triumph. "Who are you?" he demanded.
With a voice airy with
anguish, the dark-haired agent rasped, "Captain Scarlet, Spectrum."
"Spectrum? Of
course!" the man spouted. "Always the military man, Metcalfe. From a
line of military men. The WAAF wasn't powerful enough for you? You had to go
work for the elitists? And you're afraid my little satellite will bring down
your organization when I reveal its secrets to the world." Castillo's
mouth dropped into a haunting cackle. "You've just signed your death
certificate, Captain." With that, Castillo drove forward thrusting his
rapier deep inside Scarlet's vulnerable gut. With a violent crack, the impaled
captain felt the weapon snap in two against the wrought iron railing behind
him.
At the rear of the
hacienda's immediate property, Captain Blue soared in over the extravagant
gardens and in-ground pool. He was halted at the boundary of the plate glass
windows. "Only one way in," he confirmed. Releasing the altitude
control lever of his hover pack, Blue slid his pistol from his hip. A single
high powered explosive shot from the gun's barrel. Suddenly a booming
concussion sent glass shattering inward to the marbled floor and staircase. The
American agent shoved his directional toggle forward and swept in through the jagged
opening. He leveled his gun on the combatants. "Hold it right there,
Castillo. Captain Blue, Spectrum. That's my partner you have. Let him go."
The command did little
good. With perhaps no regard for his own safety, Castillo swung burning eyes
back to his gasping opponent. Scarlet hung, still crumpled against the broken
sword. Castillo's free hand rose to wrench the patch from Scarlet's eye. Blue
watched helplessly as the swordsman's dark glare of fury met with constricted
blue. "You're free, Captain Scarlet." With an upward thrust, Castillo
sliced through the captain's tunic to his sternum. "Good end, fair
knight," he hissed. The momentum of the assault propelled Scarlet off his
feet and backward over the railing.
"No! Paul!"
Blue hollered as his friend toppled like a rag doll to the white marble floor
twenty feet below. With a heavy thud Scarlet landed on his back, his body
twisted unnaturally in a grotesque position. But as Blue was torn between
retribution against Castillo and the rescue of his friend, a pair of security
officers at the home's front doors covered their escape with a shower of
bullets. Captain Blue grunted as one projectile found his helmet. Another
slammed against the hover pack's altitude lever. Disabled, the contraption
whirred to the floor. Blue was just able to catch his fall and return fire, but
the hasty assailants had exited the scene, leaving the massive front doors
swinging open.
"Come back!"
Blue heard Castillo call after them as he unlatched and shrugged off his
malfunctioning and sparking pack. The swordsman's desperate frustration and
anger was suddenly redirected to the second Spectrum agent. "I won't allow
you to arrest me either, Captain," he avowed. The ranch owner nearly
skirted the stairs to the first floor in five awkward bounds. Blue watched as
Castillo's broken sword flew from his hand and the man bolted to the nearest
wall. There hung a display of medieval weapons. Castillo swiftly chose the
sturdiness of a broadsword and spun on his new adversary.
Dropping his helmet
beside the useless hover pack Blue scrambled to the side of his fallen comrade.
Scarlet, barely conscious, murmured through his pain, "Adam? I
think...my...my leg is broken." He was bent oddly upon the white marble
floor, his left arm pinned beneath him. With his sliced wrist and abdomen
bleeding profusely, Scarlet groaned and closed his weary eyes. Blue tore his
concerned gaze away from his partner to see Scarlet's severed hand laying
beside his shoulder. The limp fingers still loosely gripped the rapier's
handle.
"Paul. Stay with
me, buddy," Blue consoled, but the British captain's chest had stopped
rising. Captain Blue had little time to contemplate his friend's passing, however.
Castillo was limping toward the pair intent on inflicting more injury.
"Stop right there, Castillo," Blue demanded raising his pistol to the
advancing swordsman. "I know you're a Mysteron, and bullets won't kill
you. But they will slow you down."
Castillo, sword at the
ready, laughed. "What are you blathering about, Spectrum pawn? I'm no
Mysteron. But you are a dead man for sure."
From his awkward stance
upon the floor, Blue squeezed the gun's trigger. The shot missed by
centimeters. Castillo rushed forward whipping the broadsword in a great arc. Blue gasped as his pistol
went sailing across the great room to collide with a suit of armor standing
beside the dining hall doorway. As Castillo pivoted for a second swing Captain
Blue grunted and snatched up Scarlet's dropped sword. The American captain
rolled away from the lethal swipe. Leaping to his feet Blue faced the swordsman
in his own defense. He sucked in a decisive breath and blurted, "Sorry,
buddy, but my partner isn't dying for you today."
Denver Castillo grinned
at the taller man with the slender blade. "I'd gratefully take on a less
competent opponent," he assured. "En garde!" Castillo
again rushed Blue who raised his weaker weapon to intercept the attack. The
swords clanged together and Castillo withdrew with satisfaction. "Not bad
for an amateur," he chided. He surged forward again. This time Blue
awkwardly parried the blow with a twisted swing and a back step. This dangerous
banter wasn't getting him anywhere. As Blue thought to make a run for his
discarded pistol, Castillo took advantage of the opening. He plunged his wider
blade through his opponent's uniform to inflict a painful wound to Blue's right
shoulder. Gasping the captain snatched at the injury with his free hand. It
came away bloodied. Blue's grip upon his weapon loosened as his right hand
suddenly went numb. Captain Blue was losing the duel for his life. Stiffly he
raised his sword again, even as he dipped his bloodied left hand into his
jacket pocket. Within that hidden space he pressed a button on the remote
transmitter device. The cavalry was now on its way. Even as Blue barely fought
off the next two attacks, he kept an eye toward the picture windows.
Then, within the span
of minutes, Captain Blue had lost his weapon to Castillo's bulkier blade. The
captain's back was against the wall adjacent to the entry hall. "You
retreat," Castillo chided. "Is it from fear or perhaps defeat?"
That last was offered as a challenge sharp as the man's sword.
Blue, watching past the
professional swordsman, smiled and sighed his triumph. "No," he said.
"Just getting out of the way of that." As Castillo paused in his
assault to translate the meaning of the comment, he followed Blue's eyes around
to the partially demolished windows facing the eastern sun. Out beyond the pool
and garden an armored pursuit vehicle rumbled along in multi-wheeled
determination. With the distraction Blue leaned forward to poke the remote
device down Castillo's ruffled shirt. "Touché," he quipped
then vaulted aside as the SPV crashed through the house. Glass, iron railings,
and foundation stone blasted into the great room. Castillo screamed as the
armored vehicle never slowed its pursuit, heading straight for him.
Captain Blue, his head
sheltered beneath his scratched and bruised arms, didn't witness the man's
demise as the SPV ran Castillo down. Instead he gasped a dusty breath in the
aftermath of the crash then coughed. A rumbling vibration beneath him made Blue
unshield his eyes, however. The American captain scanned the scene around him.
The structure seemed to be crumbling. Dust and debris were raining down on his
head. The high support beams were swinging loose like pendulums toward the
floor. The whole place might collapse right on top of the wedged SPV. It was
time to leave. Captain Blue clambered to his feet.
Then he remembered.
"Paul!" Would Blue have the strength and time to rescue himself and
his partner before the walls came down around them? Scarlet lay in his twisted
heap upon the marble floor. Kneeling, Blue gingerly rolled his tortured friend
over and untied the silken sash from around Scarlet's waist, freeing his
trapped arm. Swiftly then, the American captain used it to secure his partner's
stab wound, grimacing at the bloody hole in the dead man's abdomen. Next, Blue
surveyed the area for something else to use as a bandage over Scarlet's still
oozing stump. "The dining room," he grunted shoving himself again to
his feet. Trotting into the adjoining room he returned with the damask
tablecloth. "Spared no expense, buddy," Blue quipped. He ripped the
cloth into large swatches of makeshift bandages. After attending to his
friend's wrist, Blue gently wrapped the severed hand and tucked it into his own
half-zipped Spectrum jacket. "Time to go, partner."
Blue stood and searched
the ruined great hall for an exit. The nose of the idling SPV was wedged
between the two walls of the entry foyer. Yet beyond that barrier the front
doors still stood wide open. "Our chariot awaits," Blue grunted as he
turned and gingerly lifted his partner up beside him. "Exit. Stage
left." With a growl at his injured and bleeding right shoulder Blue
dragged Scarlet's body to the main hatch of the SPV. "I know what you're
thinking," he told his deceased friend. "Now that's the way to hire a
hack." Blue shoved Scarlet forward propping him against the SPV's fender.
Around them the walls creaked. "Sorry," Blue continued. "Didn't
I tell you? The SRD we tested hasn't been perfected yet. It's really not
supposed to rundown its driver." Suddenly, the nearby crippled staircase
groaned then twisted upon its axis. In a mangled heap it collapsed to the
marble floor. Blue flinched at the concussion. "Definitely time to
go," he gasped and palmed the recessed hatch release.
Nothing happened.
"What the-?" Blue tried again. Still no response. "Damn
it." With a tired fist the American agent pounded the obstinate armored
door. Then one of the hacienda's support beams cracked loose and plummeted from
the vaulted ceiling to impact the SPV's roof. Blue ducked beneath the
protection of the vehicle's wheel well. "That's it," he grumbled
peeking out to check for other falling rubble. "We're leaving the hard
way." Tapping the remainder of his strength, Captain Blue hauled Scarlet
back to his feet. He draped the Briton over his good shoulder. Then, limping
with the effort, the American captain maneuvered his dead friend around the
rubble of the collapsed staircase, the crashed back wall and through the
shattered glass littering the floor. With a painful grunt Blue hefted Scarlet
out into the brightness of a warming morning. Behind him, the ranch house
continued to shift and settle. By the time the Spectrum pair had reached the
demolished sculpture garden beyond the in-ground pool, a deep roar announced
the demise of the KingSilver Ranch. Grimacing from beneath his burdened
shoulder Blue watched the home crumble atop the trapped SPV. With a sigh he
asked, "Now what do we do?"
He needed to get
Scarlet back to Cloudbase. Dr. Fawn had to attend to the man's wounds. But
then, how could he alert Cloudbase in the first place? Both his Spectrum cap
and the damaged helmet were now buried beneath the bulk of the KingSilver
Ranch. With a weary groan Blue had to admit, "Hindsight is twenty/twenty,
my friend." He draped Scarlet upon an undamaged garden bench and sank upon
the grass beside him to think. His shoulder hurt and Blue felt his strength
failing. The loss of blood was making him woozy. Then a stabbing thought jolted
him from his stupor. "The deadline." Swiping his dirtied sleeve aside
Blue considered his watch. "Still over eight hours. Damn." The
Mysteron threat to Captain Scarlet's life had not yet expired. He had to get
the man to safety. But where?
Clambering back to his
boots Blue surveyed the damage to the house. Timbers, stone and adobe had
sealed their armored escape vehicle beneath tons of debris. He swung his gaze
around to the only other large building left standing. "The garage!"
Leaving his partner where he lay, Captain Blue sprinted off to the two-story
construction. He swung the side door open and gasped. It was empty. All four of
the bay doors had been retracted. "The servants," he realized aloud.
They must have taken the vehicles in the rush to avoid being buried alongside their
boss. Even Scarlet's rental car was nowhere to be seen. Blue returned to his
charge.
"Sorry, Paul.
Looks like we're stranded here until Ochre and Green come looking for us."
The ascending sun was warming the dark earth around him. Blue could feel it
sapping what little strength he had left. "Got to find us some shelter
away from this house," he told his friend. "If the Mysterons bring
back Castillo, we're in trouble. I've lost my gun and the SPV." What a
vicious little fix he had gotten them both into. Then he recalled a geological
feature he had observed through his binoculars while parked up on the ridge.
"I think I just found our hidey hole, partner," he breathed and bent
to gather Scarlet again in his arms.
It had been a grueling
walk, but the cave Blue remembered seeing rose from the grazeland in a hump not
a quarter mile from the razed hacienda. Its interior was narrow and only
fifteen feet or so deep, but there was enough room for Blue to lay Scarlet out
and straighten the man's twisted limbs. "Be right back, pal. Need to cover
our trail," he gasped to his silent friend. With a dragging branch Blue
swept away all evidence of his stumbling footprints. Upon returning, Blue
disguised the cave entrance with a few more branches. He then promptly collapsed
in his discomfort and exhaustion just within the cave opening. With a heavy
sigh, Blue considered his motionless charge. His work was incomplete. In Blue's
haste to conceal them from Castillo, he had not thought to check his comrade's
wounds. Yet Blue was too tired to play doctor. Scarlet would heal within hours
even if left alone. Still, there was the little bundle laying beside his
partner's hip. With a grunt of resignation Blue rolled onto his knees and
crawled to Scarlet's side. Unwrapping the parcel Blue grimaced at the pale and
cold hunk of flesh within. As he tried to reattach Scarlet's severed hand, he
secured it with a bloodied strip of the tablecloth. "You know. I really
wish you were alive to help me with this, old buddy," Blue ventured.
"Hope I'm putting it on straight." The hand flopped loosely within
its makeshift bandage. It was the best the exhausted American could do. Next,
Blue re-inspected the bloody gash to Scarlet's abdomen. Unbuttoning the man's
tunic he spread the sliced and bloodstained shirt. To Blue's astonishment, the
skin beneath had begun to mend, the blood already dried within the fabric. Blue
sighed and shook his head. "If only I could do that," he said wincing
at his shoulder wound.
Sidling again to the
cave entrance Blue made use of the remainder of the dusty tablecloth to bandage
himself as best he could before collapsing in a heap. "Don't worry,
partner," he murmured from his slumped sentinel stance beside the partly
concealed opening. "I'll keep watch while you rest." One look back at
his partner revealed that Scarlet was still not breathing. His friend was still
dead. "For however long it takes," Blue assured. The American captain
just needed to rest his eyes for a few minutes.
O O
Sitting inside their
Spectrum helicopter Ochre listened intently to Captain Magenta's worried words
from Spectrum's command carrier. As his cap mike swung back to his visor, Ochre
relayed the problem to his companions. "Cloudbase has lost contact with
Captain Blue at the KingSilver Ranch. He was sent in to rescue Scarlet. We're
ordered to rendezvous there and find Blue's SPV."
"SIG," Melody
Angel acknowledged and lifted the aircraft into the air above WMRTV's station
building. From the rooftop helipad, Lieutenant Cobalt waved her farewells.
Ochre waved back and watched her trot away to the station's stairwell down.
Then, adjusting altitude and course, Melody piloted the chopper north toward
Castillo's ranch. They'd arrive within the hour.
In the dimness of the rock
cave, Captain Scarlet sucked in a life-returning breath. Blue roused from his
faintly slumber by the door. Shivering in the chill of the afternoon's shadows
he smiled at the familiar and encouraging sound. "Thatta Boy," Blue
murmured. The American promptly faded back into his exhaustion. It would be
over another hour yet before the two friends would exchange words. Scarlet's
wounds were still healing and both captains were in no shape to face danger
once more. Peril would soon lurk not far from their cool shelter, however.
Below their little hollow bluff, two eerie green circles hovered over the
buried Spectrum Pursuit Vehicle. Though the armored tank was still intact and
functional, its dinged fender soon glowed a ghostly pale. Then the stalled
engine roared to life. The Mysterons had taken control...
Lieutenant Green
checked the scanning locator device he gripped in his palm as Melody hovered
the chopper over the ruined ranch site. "I'm getting a reading,
Captain," he told Ochre. "Captain Scarlet's below all right. He's
nearby."
"Could he be
trapped somewhere in that wreckage?" Ochre responded eyeing with
trepidation the massive pile of smoking rubble beneath them.
Green only shrugged.
"I'm not sure. We'll need to get down there to be sure."
Melody called over her
shoulder, "What about Captain Blue? He could be injured or even..."
The Angel pilot never finished her sentence. The hacienda's carcass shifted and
came to life as it birthed an armored Spectrum tank. "Look! The SPV!"
Green grinned joyfully.
"They're all right!"
"Good for
Blue," Ochre chimed in as he watched the SPV speed away along the ranch's
drive then make a steep turn onto the highway and roar north in a cloud of
pursuing dust. "Hey, where are they going?" His cap mike swung down
to his lips. "Captain Blue. Captain Scarlet. Come in." Only static
answered his hail. As Ochre's microphone slipped back to its visor he added,
"That's odd. Better follow them, Melody."
"SIG," the
Black woman acknowledged. The Spectrum helicopter dove out into the Montana
afternoon to give chase.
It was only minutes
later that Lieutenant Green happened to glance down at his locator device.
"Wait, Captain!" he cautioned. "Captain Scarlet's locator chip
says he's still back at the ranch house. What do you think it means?"
Ochre bit his lip.
"Either the ranch house is a ploy or that SPV is." He made his gut
decision. "Melody, take me back to the ranch house. We're splitting up.
Green, give me that tracker device. You and Melody swing back and stay with the
SPV. Continue to try and contact it. Understand?"
"But,
Captain," Green protested as he handed his partner the scanning unit.
"What if it's a trap?"
Frowning Ochre had to
admit, "I let Scarlet down once. I'm not planning on doing it again. You
two have your orders. Is that clear, Lieutenant?"
Downcast though his
dark eyes were, Green answered, "SIG." The helicopter ascended into a
wide curving arch that brought them back on course with the KingSilver Ranch.
Swiftly Melody descended to within a few feet of the ground. "Be careful,
Rick," Green called as Ochre leaped from the hovering craft. He spun and
waved them away before considering the easiest way inside the collapsed ranch
house.
As soon as he'd ducked
his head within the home's shredded front doors Ochre realized this was a job
for the Spectrum rescue team. He called for reinforcements. "I'll need a
crew of earth movers here," he said into his cap mike. "The place is
a mess. Looks like the SPV drove right through the joint." He frowned at
the interlocking puzzle of timbers and adobe bricks. "If they're trapped
somewhere inside this, I just hope we can get to them in time." As he
waited for the squad to arrive the captain used the locator tracker to
pinpoint, as best he could, the internal location of Captain Scarlet. The
device told him to look beyond the crumbled facade and deeper into the
wreckage. Surveying the mess, Ochre decided to circumvent the house hoping for
another way in.
At the rear of the
collapsed hacienda Ochre was to receive the first of his two surprises.
It was another hour
later that Scarlet's eyes slide open. He stiffly sat up to evaluate his
surroundings. Recalling his last conscious thoughts, he grimaced and checked
his injuries. His almost completely mended hand, his healed eye, and finally
the slumped Captain Blue. "Thank you, Adam. You saved my life that
time," he murmured to his sleeping partner. With a grunt Scarlet tried to
climb to his feet in the cramped space of the cave. Painfully, he slouched
forward cradling his still healing abdomen and the organs within. The cave
entrance was in shadow. Where was he? Had Blue taken him by hover pack
somewhere secluded? And why weren't they on Cloudbase? The last thing Scarlet
recalled was his partner's daring arrival through blasted windows and flying
glass. Now, they were no longer within the hacienda.
Gingerly stepping over
his slumbering friend, Captain Scarlet exited the cave to overlook their stance
upon an east-facing hill. The Rockies were aglow in the full glory of
afternoon. "Purple mountains, majesty," he murmured recalling the
patriotic song of his partner's home nation. He turned west and spied less
grandeur. The ranch house was nearby, only about a quarter mile away, and in
complete ruins. Its smoking hulk sprawled like an adobe tortoise baking in the
sun. "Ouch," Scarlet acknowledged then scanned the site with hooded
eyes. What had happened after Castillo had stabbed him? He felt like an old shoe
to which a terrier had taken a fancy. His left leg still ached, his right hand
was numb and nearly useless, but he had survived death yet again. Time and a
good meal would handle the rest of his recovery. Until then, though, he would
be weak. As he stood to survey the devastation below Scarlet suddenly felt
dizzy with fatigue and sank to the perch of a rocky outcrop beside the cave
entrance.
He needed to know why
they were still on the scene. Why Blue hadn't driven them to the nearest
airport for a return trip to Cloudbase. Their mission had not yet been
accomplished, then. Perhaps Captain Ochre and Lieutenant Green had been
unsuccessful in shutting down the KingSilver device. Captain Scarlet rubbed at
his tired eyes, testing his vision for clarity. Yes, his eye was completely
healed now. He had at least overcome that handicap. But where was Castillo?
Beneath the rubble of his mansion? There was only one source for his answers.
He needed to awaken Blue.
Unwillingly Captain
Scarlet tramped back inside the cave, brushing aside the concealing branches to
reveal his dozing partner. The American's face was pale. His right shoulder had
been hastily bandaged with what looked like the remnant of a damask tablecloth.
Remembering his own wrappings Scarlet smiled at his friend's resourcefulness
within a no doubt perilous situation. Then serious concern returned to his
gaze. His partner was injured. Blue had not the resources of his own
retrometabolism to regenerate from his wound. Scarlet could not ask his friend to
accompany him where only he could go. "Sorry, partner, but I'll just have
to find the answers for myself." Re-covering the cave entrance for safety,
Captain Scarlet headed down slope to the remnants of Castillo's empire in the
Montana sun.
Captain Ochre swung his
body forcefully east. "Now, what in the -?" The tracker device had
told him that Scarlet was not within the ruins of the house after all, but
farther east of its location. He glanced across the sculpture gardens with
their wide tracks of trampled greenery to the grazeland beyond. Raising his
voice he hollered, "Captain Scarlet!" He listened for an answer. The
sun, past its zenith, was glaringly vibrant upon the open brush and reddish
soil. By sheltering his eyes beneath his hand, in the distance he spotted a
figure stride his way. "Scarlet!" he called. The man's light shirt
was stained dark, and he seemed to walk with almost deathly determination. But
the raised hand of acknowledgement had the air of a military man hard pressed
to give up the fight. It was Captain Scarlet, all right.
Before Ochre could
jaunt off to join him, a shifting of rubble caught his attention. He turned
around to see a dusty figure in a swashbuckling sash climb from the ranch's
wreckage. "Sir!" he called rushing back to the collapsed patio to
assist. "Are you all right?" It was then that Ochre noticed the man's
dangling hand with its gripped sword. This must be Castillo. "What
happened here, Doctor?" the Spectrum captain asked.
"I'm... I'm not
sure," the man stammered weakly pressing free hand to head. "I was
attacked."
"You all right,
Sir? Here," Ochre advised holding out his open palm. "Let me take
that sword from you. We'll find you a place to rest. I'll recall the
chopper."
"No, no,
Captain," Castillo assured stepping away from the officer's extended hand.
"I'm fine. Just a little shaken." He raised dark eyes and smiled.
"Looks like I'll be rebuilding my home from scratch."
Nodding Ochre watched
the man straighten and recover. "It's amazing that you even survived,
Sir." Then his hackles rose. Captain Scarlet hadn't been in the house.
Blue was still nowhere to be seen. The hacienda was a twisted wreck. And
Scarlet had a Mysteron death wish upon him. "How did you escape
without harm?" Ochre inquired his eyes narrowing at the still dangling
broadsword. His own hand ascended toward his holstered weapon.
From behind him he
heard Captain Scarlet holler, "Rick! Look out!" The sword rose with
lightning swiftness, but Ochre was ready and dodged his torso away. As Castillo
made another swing Ochre drew his pistol only to have it smashed from his hand
by the clever swordsman. The captain bent against the blow, his hand jarred and
numb from the impact. Castillo wasn't finished, however. The broadsword surged
above Ochre's bowed head. A single swipe would have sealed the captain's fate.
But then someone shoved Ochre aside. Scarlet rushed in to parry the thrust with
a swing of a broken tree branch. Ochre watched as his friend held the combatant
back with repeated swipes of his makeshift truncheon. He could also tell
Scarlet wasn't winning the battle. Castillo was far more powerful in his
attack, wielding his sturdier weapon with the grace of a champion. Woodchips
flew from Scarlet's cudgel. The British captain could barely hold his ground
nor his improvised sword. The man's hands seemed weak.
Ochre tore his eyes
away from the conflict to recover his lost pistol. It had slid to the edge of
the in-ground pool. As it teetered toward the water, Ochre made a daring dive
to the pavement to snatch the gun back before it tumbled into the deep end. He
almost missed. His jarred hand was sluggish in its response to his commands.
With a grunt he climbed back to his feet and turned to see Castillo
triumphantly thrust his sword deep into Scarlet's upper chest.
"Paul!" he yelled. Ochre aimed the gun Castillo's way even as Scarlet
buckled to the garden path. The swordsman raised his cutlass again into the air
as if to behead his enemy. "Stop right there, Castillo." Ochre gripped
his weapon and awkwardly squeezed the trigger. Though he was otherwise an
excellent marksman, the captain's bullet went wide. The bullet missed its
target by several inches. Castillo, flinching from the sound, re-steadied his
stalled arm for the hack downward. "No you don't." The second bullet
found its mark, hitting the ranch owner in the thigh. Castillo's sword dropped
to his side, but still the Mysteron clung to its handle. Ochre stomped closer
using his left hand to steady his pistol's grip. "That's enough," he
warned, ready to inflict yet another wound. Beneath Castillo's feet Scarlet lay
on his side clutching at the wound to his pectoral muscle and the vulnerable
lung beneath.
"Freeze,
Earthman," Castillo rumbled threateningly. "Or I will kill him. And
you."
"Not before I kill
you," Ochre assured, though he could feel his injured hand tremble about
his weapon's grip. There was no guarantee he'd hit his mark again. "We
could call a truce," he suggested with a twisted smirk.
At Castillo's feet
Scarlet tried to laugh then coughed at the blood filling his punctured lung.
"You can't bargain with a Mysteron," he groaned. "Shoot
him."
But as Ochre aimed his
weapon, Castillo laughed and settled his sword gently across Scarlet's throat.
"You can not kill me with that," the Mysteron assured.
The stalemate was
obvious. What Ochre needed was a distraction. But Melody and Green were still
out chasing after the fleeing SPV. Ochre was on his own. He lowered his pistol.
"I'm sorry, partner. I want to save you. But do you remember Cheryl?
Remember how I couldn't save her? Partner?"
From the dirt path
Scarlet gasped, "But-" Then he must have perceived Ochre's ploy. With
what strength he had remaining, Captain Scarlet reached out and grabbed
Castillo by the legs. One desperate yank and the man was hauled off his feet.
The broadsword went spinning even as Ochre aimed and fired at the toppled
swordsman. Several bullets to the Mysteronized Castillo's chest halted all
protests. There was a pause between the survivors before Scarlet coughed again
from the ground beside the fallen enemy. "Thanks, partner," he
rasped.
"Yeah," came
a new voice from behind them. "Thanks, Rick." Captain Blue leaned
against a tilted tree panting. "Paul just can't seem to keep his butt out
of trouble today." While both captains smiled at the new arrival, Blue
considered his field partner. "And you..." With a tired sigh he
admitted, "Glad to see your hand's OK." He chuckled at the imaginary
alternative. "I was afraid it'd be crooked. You'd have to do everything backwards
from now on."
From the garden path,
Scarlet smiled and rolled onto his knees to stumble back to his feet. "I'm
glad too," he grunted. "I think contrariness is what I've been up to
lately."
Grinning from sideburn
to sideburn, Ochre quipped, "Finally, I get to save the day." He
exhaled a stress releasing sigh and re-holstered his pistol. Then he bolstered
the swaggering Scarlet with a steadying hand. "You're welcome, by the
way," he said. "You can thank me by offering me a genuine longhorn
steak dinner."
"I'd oblige if I
could hire us a hack to get us away from here," Scarlet responded harshly
bracing his wound and coughing once again. "Perhaps," he gurgled with
a grimace, "an ambulance would be more appropriate."
With his own injured
shoulder slumping from weariness, Captain Blue raised his hand and concurred.
"I'll have one of those too."
Still smiling though
his eyes were rimmed in concern for his comrades, Ochre bowed deeply and
offered, "Your chariot awaits." His cap mike swung down to his mouth
and he recalled Melody and Green. "Project KingSilver is a wrap,
people," Ochre added to both of his audiences.
Melody soon confirmed
that the escaping SPV had shown little regard for other traffic upon the
highway, weaving in and out of cars at high velocity. Deemed a Mysteron red
herring, the Angel pilot had forced it off the road and into a sandy ravine
where the vehicle lay idle as if now disconnected from the Mysteron hive mind.
It would no doubt be safe to pick it up later, once all threats to Captain
Scarlet had expired.
Ochre checked his
watch. "Just another few hours, my boy, and you'll be free and
clear," he assured the now seated and slouching British officer.
The thrum of the
approaching rescue chopper caused Scarlet to smile weakly. "A lot can
happen in those few hours, Rick," he warned with another cough. This time
blood trickled about the corner of his lips. "But I've got the two best
men to protect me."
Both Blue and Ochre
took the compliment with proud grins and straight backs. Together they helped
their comrade onto the safety of the Spectrum helicopter. Meanwhile, Green
swiftly dispatched the Mysteron Castillo with a blast from the onboard electron
gun. They were all soon airborne for Cloudbase.
O O
Part Five
Within the safety of Cloudbase's infirmary, both Scarlet and Blue were allowed to heal from their battle wounds. When Ochre had finished presenting his report to Colonel White, he visited them with a cheery smile and a bottle of sparkling cider. "Here's to the resident heroes," he quipped triumphantly with a raised glass. With a trio of "Cheers!", all three partook of the bubbly, non-alcoholic beverage. As they sipped their congratulatory toasts, Ochre inquired about the Mysteron threat. "What do you think the Mysterons meant by 'what is old is new again'? Castillo? An old academy enemy, now new again?"
With great difficulty
beneath Fawn's bandages, Captain Blue shrugged and offered, "Perhaps it
was meant as a clue to how you were to die, Paul. By means of an old military
weapon. The sword."
Scarlet, more
contemplative, admitted, "Either way, our true enemy is the
Mysterons." He shifted atop his hospital bunk, trying not to kick Ochre
who had perched at its foot. "We'll have to take up the sword of struggle
again, no doubt," he urged. "The battle will start anew soon, and I,
for one, am very happy to be here to duel on."
Again their glasses
were raised into the air. "Here, here," Ochre chimed in still
smiling. "I suppose you've earned yourself a day off," he reminded.
"What're you going to do with it? Brush up on your dueling skills?"
Scarlet chuckled, then
winced at the memory and his still sore chest. "Not likely. No," he
admitted. "I have somewhere I need to go. Another battle site." The
man fell silent as he sipped the remainder of his cider, leaving his two
friends wondering the meaning of his words.
Colonel White called a
conference of his staff a few hours later to discuss Spectrum's most recent
activity. As Scarlet sat between his two recent partners, he listened only
absently to his superior's words. There was something more pressing on his
mind. A loose end which needed tying.
"Thank you for
coming, Gentlemen," White began. "As some of you may be aware, I
sanctioned a small crew of investigators from SIA to check out the Timberland
Power Plant site." Scarlet watched his superior focus cool eyes upon him
and he straightened from his private reverie. "To be truthful, I was
curious about the catastrophe." In his hand he held a thick report folder.
"Here are the surprising discoveries, gentlemen. It seems corners were cut
in the race to complete the plant for its April first deadline."
Ochre gasped at the
irony of the information. "April first, Sir?"
"Quite,"
White answered. The significance was not lost on the older man either. He
flipped open the folder and shared a data sheet with each of them. Taking his
copy, Scarlet could see that the single paper held a list of faulty equipment
and substandard installations which ultimately caused the demise of the
two-year old facility. "As you will see," the colonel explained,
"acquisition records show materials and equipment were purchased using the
principle of the lowest bidder. Something which many times ends in such
disasters." White’s eyes were grim with the consequences of this recent
calamity. "It would seem substandard parts and labor were acceptable to
heighten the profit margin on this plant's otherwise costly endeavor. It was
meant to be a state-of-the-art facility."
"But it ended up
being a ticking time bomb," Blue observed from beside Scarlet. "It's
a miracle only five died."
"Yes," the
colonel agreed morosely. "It seems we can thank Captains Scarlet and Ochre
and their almost prophetic foresight for that." White continued with his
report. "There were found to be microscopic fractures in the overheated
polymers of the exhaust conduits. The material composition of the pipes was
never rated for such extremes."
Ochre spoke up.
"But, Sir. There was nothing but dust left of that plant. How could a structural
analysis have even been made?"
Scarlet's mind had been
mulling over the events at the plant since its destruction. "Mr.
Gerrand," he explained for his recent partner. "Remember the chief
inspector had been injured by the acid as well? Dr. Garrett, the supervisor,
must have sent a piece of the piping out for analysis."
White was nodding.
"Exactly so, Captain."
"The second
inspector, Darling, must have wanted to spill the beans about the tests'
findings," Ochre caught on. "Someone kept him quiet. But who?"
Scarlet thought out
loud. "Who would have benefited if the truth had been kept under wraps,
enough to risk murdering Darling?"
"Garrett?"
Ochre offered. "But, then again. He's the one who wanted us to check out
Darling. Thought he was a Mysteron."
"Copeland,"
Scarlet murmured. "He wanted Darling's job. He would have wanted Darling
discredited."
"Would Copeland
have known about the defective parts and the real reasons behind the
problems?"
Colonel White smiled at
the two captains. "Gentlemen. You forget the primary motivating factor
here. Greed. Both Supervisor Garrett and Inspector Gerrand would have been involved with overseeing the construction of
the plant. Both would have also held stock in the plant's success. According to
employment records, they were planning to retire together in another
year."
"They would have
retired rich," Scarlet surmised, "had the faulty conduits and reactor
core equipment held out that long."
Ochre wasn't satisfied.
"But why risk such destruction and failure? It just doesn't make
sense!"
"One thing
more," White prompted. "Competition."
"That's
right!" Ochre spat. "That tour guide. She said they were selling
surplus electricity to neighboring suburbs. Garrett had said other power plants
had shut down because of the competition. Who, then, Sir?"
Scarlet smiled as the
realization hit him. There was only one other person. "It was the chief
inspector. Gerrand. We had staff records pulled, Sir. He'd worked for the
Roosevelt plant, too, before signing on as chief inspector for New Apache's
Timberland facility. After he was hurt, he must have felt it necessary to
sabotage Timberland by keeping the records hushed of the substandard
construction."
"Self-destruction,
Sir?"
"No, Captain
Ochre," White clarified. "Retribution. His coworkers at the Theodore
Roosevelt Dam were excluded from transferring to the Timberland staff after the
Roosevelt plant had shut down. By then Timberland had created its own labor
union, centered around the hydro-nuclear technology. Copied, I might add, after
Spectrum's own designs for our power packs. This, gentleman, was an opportunity
for the Mysterons to indirectly discredit Spectrum once again. Pitting our own
human weaknesses against us."
"What is old is
new again," Scarlet murmured. "North America will no doubt hesitate
to build another such fuel-efficient and worthwhile power plant now. Not only
was Timberland situated on a unique geological site. The hydro-nuclear fission
technology, itself, has been discredited." Then his eyes brightened and
Scarlet nearly popped from his chair. "Colonel! Gerrand was a
Mysteron?"
In answer Colonel White
shook his silver head. "We have, however, tracked him down. Gerrand's
under arrest for the murder of Horatio Darling. Your being at that plant was
nothing more than a coincidence, Captain Scarlet." White's brow rose in
irony. "It seems Gerrand had been there that very morning."
"He killed
Darling," Ochre submitted. "Knew we were going to interrogate him.
Find the truth in his files."
"Gerrand also
purged the computer," Scarlet realized. He looked at his mission partner.
"You said so yourself. The killer had used the computer to electrocute
Darling. All the files would have been fried."
"One thing,
Colonel," Ochre interrupted with a raised hand. "There was never a
Mysteron threat against the Timberland plant. How is it that they could have
even been involved?"
"Coincidence, my
boy," White argued. "There was no-"
"Sir!" Green
interrupted from his comm. station near the conference room door. "A
report from Montana, Sir. The University of Criminal Technology has been
bombed."
"The KingSilver
device?" Scarlet alerted swiveling in his chair to glare at the
lieutenant.
"The technology
annex has been flattened by an explosion. The news media's blaming a pair of
journalists who just yesterday were seen stealing the device's transmitter
crystals."
Ochre smiled then and
winked Green's way. "Looks like we're famous, Lieutenant."
"Captain,
really," White admonished with a searing glower. The colonel's attention
shifted again to his communication's officer. "Lieutenant, was anyone
killed? Was the device totally lost?"
Green, his eyes
unfocused as he continued to monitor the civilian channels, finally nodded.
"The KingSilver Scope and all its data were stored in that building,
Sir," he answered. "Three security officers and eight scientists were
killed in the blast. Investigators are on hand to determine the cause."
"Mysterons,
Sir?" Scarlet inquired. "Was that their target all along?"
"Perhaps,
Captain," White contended thoughtfully. "We may never know for sure.
Your death threat may have been another of their famous red herrings."
"The Mysterons
must have found out Castillo planned on monitoring their transmissions
next," Scarlet offered. "Saw that it was a threat, and destroyed it
before we had a chance to remove the device to a Spectrum safe house."
White was nodding.
"It would seem," he agreed. "Its loss will be a handicap. Castillo's
communications expertise would have been an asset had he been more forthcoming
and trusting in his research. The man would have been a benefit to the Spectrum
team."
"But you said it
yourself, Sir," Scarlet offered. "Greed. A human downfall. It's what
stopped Castillo from sharing. He wanted the glory all to himself." The
British captain exchanged glances with Ochre and Blue. "Dr. Castillo was
on a path of self-destruction just as the Timberland plant was," he
attested.
"Then we should
leave both incidents as a lesson to the human failings of greed and ambition,
gentlemen. I see nothing left for us to discuss here. You are all
dismissed." As the team of Spectrum officers rose from their seats, White
interrupted them once more. "Oh, and Captain Ochre. I have cleared an SPJ
for you and Scarlet. I'll expect your return within the day."
Ochre straightened his
back and nodded his gratitude even as Scarlet shot him a quizzical glance.
"Thank you, Sir." Once the two were out in the corridor together, Ochre
waved Blue a farewell and turned to his recent partner in explanation. "We
figured out where you wanted to go on your respite. Come on. I'm driving."
Without another exchange Scarlet followed the American to the hangar bay.
Clearance was given and the blue and silver streaked jet was soon in the air.
"I had a plaque made up for us," Ochre offered as he piloted the SPJ
toward the North American continent. With a chin jerk into the passenger
compartment he added, "I think it's befitting. Go have a look at it."
Scarlet rose from his
seat and strode to the back where he found a marble and brass plaque cradled
within a passenger seat. Silently he read the words. "Touché, Rick,"
the British officer finally answered. Ochre simply nodded and continued flying
their jet toward the southwestern sector of North America. They'd be landing
within the hour and switching to ground transportation there for their final
destination.
Where once had stood a
forested bluff, the Timberland site was now nothing more than a great steaming
hole in the Arizona desert. Captains Scarlet and Ochre climbed from their
Spectrum saloon and approached the crater's rim to gaze down into the
devastation. "Great Space," Scarlet murmured.
"You can say that
again," Ochre echoed. "You could play a score of soccer games within
that hole." The American captain took a look around the raised perimeter
of the crater and picked a scrubby site nearest the sun's last rays of evening.
"There," he advised with a chin jerk. "It's as good a place as
any."
Scarlet glanced toward
his partner's chosen spot and nodded. "None better," he agreed.
Together they climbed back down to their car and removed both the hefty marker
stone with its brass plaque and a small sapling the British captain had picked
up at a local nursery just outside New Apache. In two scrambling trips upon the
still loose strata the pair hefted the plaque and tree to the crater rim. With
a utility shovel Captain Scarlet dug the berth for the sapling as Ochre
watched. Next they gingerly slid the baby tree into its new home and Scarlet
scooped and tamped the fresh soil around its trunk. Then, standing to consider
his work, he murmured to himself, "From the ashes, new life."
"Amen,
brother," Ochre agreed with a hand upon the man's shoulder. "May this
site be remembered for its promise and its tragedy, so that none other can
follow in the same vainglory."
From the dusty quiet of
the memorial site a woman's lilting voice broke the silence. "Hello?
Hello! You are the men who came to the plant?" From the makeshift dirt
trail that led from the now destroyed and buried highway a convertible saloon
came to rest. Both Spectrum captains turned to see the woman slide from her car
and close the door. "I followed you from the last highway exit," she
called up to them. "Recognized the Spectrum symbol on your vehicle."
Scarlet cleared his
throat first. "Yes. We're from Spectrum." He and Ochre started down
the crater slope to introduce themselves. A small dust cloud accompanied them.
"I'm Captain Scarlet. This is Captain Ochre."
The woman, perhaps in
her late twenties, eyed the pair in the glaring colors of the impending sunset.
"You are the men who came to the plant at Supervisor Garrett's
request?" she asked again.
Scarlet answered truthfully.
"We were assigned to investigate a possible Mysteron threat here. There
was none."
She stood her ground
but did not accept either of the captains' hands to shake. Her dark eyes were
shadowed against the setting sun. "But something awful did go wrong.
Didn't it?"
"Yes, Miss,"
Ochre acknowledged. "The event is still under investigation, but it looks
like it was an internal problem."
"Does that mean,
it wasn't Spectrum's fault? Your fault?"
Scarlet glanced
sideways at his fellow companion then back at the woman. "It's a long
story, Miss. Are you a news reporter? We're not here to discuss our
involvement, I'm afraid."
"Well, then,"
the young woman offered her voice cracking with strain, "Could you tell
me... Tell me about my little girl? How... How did she die?"
Scarlet felt the blood
drain from his face. His hands grew cold in the desert breeze. "You're
Tina Adams? You're Cheryl's mother?" When she nodded and leaned back
against the hood of her vehicle, the British captain reached out to intercept her
fall. "I'm sorry." He only flinched slightly when her surprisingly
solid hand swung up to smack him like a brick across the cheek.
"I was told you
were gravely injured, Captain. That you almost died trying to save my
daughter," Mrs. Adams hissed. "You look just fine to me.
Coward."
"Now hold on
there, please," Ochre cut in shoving himself between the two before she
could assault Scarlet again. "We were here on another duty. We stayed to
help and evacuate the plant when things started falling apart. We risked our
lives to save everyone. We couldn't."
"But you were
right there! You were where my baby was. How come you couldn't save her?"
Ochre wasn't done
defending his partner's efforts. "How did she get into the reactor core in
the first place, Ma'am? How could she have known the access codes? That reactor
core was no place for a six year old child."
Now the woman's defiant
face crumbled into a canyon of grief. "I keep asking myself that,"
she sobbed. "And I can only blame myself. I killed my little girl."
As Adams crumpled in on
her sorrow Scarlet addressed the true guilt. "Carelessness killed Cheryl,
Mrs. Adams. None of this should have happened. The plant was built on a
pipedream, hastily constructed for the highest profit margin and by the lowest
bidder. All things considered, a lot more people would have died."
"But almost
everyone survived because the employees of the Timberland plant worked together
to evacuate the people safely," Ochre contended.
"Not everyone
survived, Mrs. Adams," Scarlet continued seeing the woman still needed
soothing. "And that fact will haunt me for many nights, perhaps for many
years. I tried to save Cheryl. I was so close. I didn't want to lose her,
but..."
"Captain Scarlet's
not perfect, Ma'am," Ochre defended when his friend grew silent.
"None of us are." Scarlet, beside him, had to nod at the reality. He
would ultimately outlive many he tried to save. "No matter how hard he
fights and how much he suffers to help make this world better Captain Scarlet
is just one man," Ochre asserted with conviction. Scarlet knew the unspoken
truth. The Mysterons were more powerful than any one man. Even an
indestructible one. That's why Spectrum had to work together, as a team, if any
of them were to survive.
"I'm truly sorry
for your loss, Ma'am," Scarlet said, tentatively reaching out to support
her slumping shoulder. Adams did not pull away.
After a moment of
somber silence, the woman dipped her head in agreement. "I guess we can't
all be heroes everyday. I'm sorry, Captain, for slapping you. My heart is
aching too much right now. I guess I was looking for an enemy to punish, and I
lashed out at you when you were just trying to help."
"It's quite all
right, Mrs. Adams. I share your grief. My heart aches as well. Though none will
see it, it's a scar I will carry with me always."
When silence strangled
between them once more Ochre straightened and quipped, "We have something
to show you, Mrs. Adams. Let me take your hand. The way up's a little
tricky." With a stout nod the woman let Ochre guide her against still
shifting soil to the crater summit. There in the vibrant shades of the fading
sunset's spectrum, a sprawling little sapling clung to the earth, beginning its
new life in the dirt of a previous tragedy. Beneath the scarlet maple Ochre
adjusted the marble stone to its final resting spot against the trunk. Then,
standing away from the marker he read the words engraved on the polished brass
plaque. "To the memory of Cheryl Adams and her childhood dreams of peace
and joy. May those dreams never die within the hearts of men."
After a long moment,
Adams murmured a "Thank you", then turned back to her convertible.
Her feet were heavy as she tromped down the blast-created hillside. Ochre and
Scarlet watched her glance their way once more before lifting a hand in
farewell and sliding behind the wheel of her car.
As Cheryl's mother drove away Scarlet pondered, "You know, Rick. Technology is a fabulous thing. But its worth to humanity is dependent on how it's used and not exploited." With a grim glare toward the massive crater left by the Timberland power plant he attested, "We could destroy ourselves without the help of the Mysterons. We humans can be our own worst enemy sometimes."
"Just not today,
partner," Ochre wished squeezing Scarlet's shoulder in emphasis. "Not
today."
O O
The End
Copyright December 29, 2003
Hope you'll enjoy my next Captain
Scarlet adventure, The Dungeon of Dragons, coming in 2003.
I'd be pleased to hear from my readers.
You can contact me at LadyHawkeUSA@msn.com
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