

A ‘Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons’
story for Christmas
by Polly Amber
The sky
was heavy with the promise of snow as off-duty Spectrum Captain Paul Metcalfe
drove his silver sports car down the tree-lined avenue which led to his childhood
home on the outskirts of Winchester.
“Christmas
at home seems to bring out the ten year old in me again,” he quipped as he
drove on to the sweeping gravel drive that led up to his parents imposing
Georgian home.
“It’s
kind of your parents to invite me too,” replied his front seat passenger Dianne
Simms.
“My
mother likes to have people to fuss over, especially at this time of year. It’s
a pity I’m an only child.”
“Oh so
lonely,” crooned Dianne as she caressed her boyfriend’s arm.
“Well
not tonight I hope.”
“Do you
think your mother will put us in separate rooms?”
Paul
frowned. “I hadn’t thought about that. No, I think she’s fairly broadminded,
after all we are in the two thousand and sixties rather than the nineteen
sixties.”
“Actually
the nineteen sixties were pretty wild, by all accounts.”
“That’s
if you can remember them.”
“Someone
must have remembered them to be able to write about them in the history books,”
replied Dianne. “That era certainly was a good time to be a young person. There
was so much to discover. Space was waiting to be explored. If we only knew then
what we know now.”
Paul did
not answer. The car tyres scrunched to
a halt at the bottom of a set of mellow stone steps. Paul applied the
handbrake.
“What a
lovely old house. I almost expect the servants to come out to open our car
doors for us and carry our luggage,” said Dianne.
“We
usually give them the day off on Christmas,” joked Paul as he opened the car
door for Dianne. He then walked round to the boot of the car to retrieve their
luggage.
“Now I’m starting to feel nervous,” admitted
Dianne. “Do you think your mother will like the flowers?”
“They’re
beautiful… and so are you,” he added as he planted a butterfly kiss on her
cheek.
Doctor Fawn sat at his desk in the corner of
the Spectrum Cloudbase infirmary. He was filling in the report sheet for the
day. Until half an hour ago there had been nothing serious. Most of his day had
been taken up with issuing flu jabs for the personnel who were returning
Earth-side for the Christmas holidays. There had been four sore throats, three
gippy tummies, two migraines and a dental extraction – or should that be a
partridge in a pear tree!
Doctor Fawn switched the angle poise lamp
off; the bulb was starting to get hot. He replaced the top on his pen and
closed the file of patient notes to which he had been adding. The dental
extraction patient who had an impacted wisdom tooth had been referred to the
dental surgery but the dentist had called for the doctor’s assistance to stop
heavy bleeding. The patient was discharged with a wad of cotton wool padding
his cheek out like a hamster. Doctor Fawn was just about to congratulate
himself for having a completely empty sickbay when he received an urgent call
for a gurney.
The doctor was disturbed by a knock on the
infirmary door. “Come in,” he called without turning around.
A tall but not particularly attractive woman
in her mid-forties, wearing a Spectrum uniform, entered the room. She
introduced herself as Lieutenant Mocha and announced that she was the officer
in charge of Health and Safety.
“I’ve
been expecting you,” answered Doctor Fawn. “I suppose you will want a full
report.”
“What
can you tell me about the accident? I trust there will be no lasting damage to
the patient.”
“He’ll be
as right as rain in a few hours. Is it really necessary to submit a full
report?” queried Doctor Fawn, who didn’t really want the extra work at the end
of a busy day. “I didn’t see the accident; I can only tell you that the patient
was brought to me unconscious and with a broken wrist.”
“Any
accident which occurs on Spectrum property to a member of Spectrum personnel is
my concern,” explained Lieutenant Mocha in the high handed manner of someone
addressing an indolent child. “I am
required to investigate the incident and make a full report.”
“You
should really speak to Captain Blue; he will be able to explain what happened.
“I
intend to speak to everyone involved. But first I require you to furnish me
with a report on the patient’s condition when he was admitted.”
“I’ll do
it later,” said Doctor Fawn flatly.
Lieutenant
Mocha swept from the room. Doctor Fawn shook his head and went back to his
desk.
“Paul, how lovely
to see you.” Mrs Metcalfe welcomed her son with a kiss. Paul could hear the
harmonious sound of the King’s College Choir singing ‘Hark the Herald Angels’
coming from the drawing room. Mrs
Metcalfe turned to Dianne and kissed her on the cheek too. “What beautiful
flowers, thank you so much. I will put them in a vase immediately.” She took Dianne
by the hand. “Come, you can help me. We will leave the men to have a chat by
the fireside. I aim to make this a perfect Christmas.”
Dianne
glanced hesitantly at Paul as she was enthusiastically dragged off by his
mother for an impromptu flower arranging lesson.
Paul was shaking hands with a distinguished
looking, grey-haired man in his mid-sixties. General Metcalfe stood tall and
upright with the posture of a trained military man. He had been out walking the
dogs. Paul couldn’t help but notice that his father was oddly dressed. So
muffled up against the cold you would have thought he had been out dog-sledging
with a pack of huskies. Paul realised that his father was getting old and was
bound to start feeling the cold. A pair of energetic golden retrievers
gambolled on the front lawn.
“It’s
starting to snow,” noticed Paul. He rubbed his nose. There was a definite nip
in the air.
“Is Jack
Frost nipping at your nose? That’s a good enough reason to open the best malt
whiskey,” answered his father.
Paul concluded from his father’s quirky turn of phrase that
he must have been at the whiskey a little earlier. He followed his father into
the grand hall which had been decked with bows of holly and garlands woven with
tartan ribbon and pine cones. His eyes fell upon the eight foot high spruce
tree glittering with tinsel and fairy lights. His mother had certainly
surpassed herself this year. There were mingled smells, the pine needles,
mulled wine and something else; a sweet, hot smell that he couldn’t quite place.
“You’ll never guess who we met at church this morning,”
announced General Metcalfe as he led his son in to the drawing room. Paul felt
the warmth of the open fire glowing in the stone hearth. And he smelled
something sweet … the same sweet smell he had noticed in the hall but in here
it was stronger. He cast his eyes over the glowing embers in the fireplace;
chestnuts … yes it was the smell of roasting chestnuts.
Paul became aware of another person
standing, warming himself in front of the fire. The man clad in a long black
coat had his back to the door. He turned around as Paul entered and he offered
his hand. “Hello, Paul.”
In spite
of the heat from the fire Paul froze. “What are you doing here?” he gasped.
General
Metcalfe interceded, “I thought you would be surprised. Conrad was saying just
before you and Dianne arrived how long it had been since he last saw you.”
“And how is the lovely Dianne?” inquired the visitor.
“Conrad
Turner! How can this be possible? What brings you to Winchester?”
“See, I
told you that you would be surprised,” said the General gleefully. “Conrad has
a wife now and a couple of children, tiny tots with their eyes all aglow who’ll
find it hard to sleep tonight.”
“They
know that Santa’s on his way,” continued Conrad Turner. “He’s loaded lots of
toys and goodies in his sleigh.”
Paul
clapped his hand to his cheeks. This was surreal. This whole scene could not
possibly be happening.
“I
invited them all to stay with us,” explained General Metcalfe. “Would you
believe they were staying in a hotel just a few yards away?”
“We were
travelling back from Heathrow. We should really be in America by now staying
with my wife’s parents, but the planes have been grounded because of a
terrorist threat. It started to snow so we pulled in to the nearest town to
find a hotel.”
Paul was still trying to make sense of the
scene. His father looked just like his father but he had been acting a little
strange. There was an air of false bonhomie about him; and as for the jumper he
was wearing - a red Fair Isle knit! Paul could only assume that it had been
hand knitted for him by a close friend. In normal circumstances his
father would have consigned it to the nearest charity shop.
However, the biggest shock of all was the
sight of the smiling dark-haired man who now stood in front of the fire. Paul
was sure this man could not possibly be here. Codenamed Captain Black, Conrad
Turner had disappeared following a disastrous mission to Mars. At first it was
assumed he had suffered a mental breakdown. Spectrum officers carried out an
extensive search but failed to find him. He was rumoured to have died from
radiation poisoning following an alien attack. His body has never been found
and subsequent sightings of him confirmed the belief that he had been taken
over by the unseen alien entity in retribution for launching an attack on their
settlement. In his capacity as Captain Scarlet of Spectrum, Paul Metcalfe had
worked closely with Captain Black and had formed a strong friendship.
“Father, could you leave us for a
moment? Conrad and me have a lot of
catching up to do,” requested Paul.
“Of
course, I’ll just go and see if your mother could do with a hand in the
kitchen. I expect she’s wrestling with the turkey. Everybody knows a turkey and
some mistletoe helps to make the season bright.”
Paul
slammed the door shut, anger burning inside him. He turned on Conrad with
uncharacteristic venom “What’s going on? None of this is real, is it? You’re
doing things to my head.”
“Calm
down Paul,” said Conrad. “I thought you would be glad to see an old friend
again.”
“My
friend Conrad Turner is dead.”
“How can
you be sure? My friend Paul Metcalfe died after falling from the London Car-Vu
and yet here we both are!” Conrad poured another glass of whiskey. “To life
after death,” he toasted and drank the contents of the glass down in one gulp.
“I’m very much alive, Paul. Shake my hand, you’ll find it warm.”
“No. I won’t come near you. It’s some kind of Mysteron
trap. What did you do to my parents, you bastard?”
“The patient seems a little agitated,” voiced a concerned
night nurse.
“He will
be waking soon. He will be able to tell us what happened,” replied Doctor Fawn
“It’s my
fault,” Adam Svenson announced as he stood by the patient’s bedside. “I should
have been there. I shouldn’t have let him do the job on his own.”
“The
Health and Safety Officer is looking for you, Captain Blue,” said Doctor Fawn.
“I wouldn’t want to be in your shoes. She seems a formidable lady.”
“She is.
She found me; gave me a lecture for nearly half an hour.”
“Did she
tell the colonel?”
“I don’t
think so; we were officially off duty at the time. We just happened to be in
the wrong place at the wrong time. We sorta got roped in.”
“Couldn’t
say no to a couple of pretty angels?” guessed Doctor Fawn.
“That’s
about right, I guess.”
Fawn
smiled. His patient stirred and moaned,
and the doctor patted his cheek. “Come on now, time to come back to the land of
the living again.”
“That
joke’s wearing a bit thin,” said Adam.
Conrad Turner sat down on one of General
Metcalfe’s leather wing chairs. “Your parents are quite safe. Dianne is
safe. You forget I was in love with her
once. Why would I hurt her? I know about you two. But what could I expect? I
have been gone for so long. Time moves on and girlfriends move on. I am not
bitter and I mean you no harm. You are quite safe too. The Mysterons have
released me.”
“What do
you mean? Is this a truce?” asked Paul.
“Yes, I
suppose you could call it that. For the last three years the Mysterons have
observed the ways of Earth people. The Mysterons struggle to understand them –
I mean us. The Mysterons are the perfect race. Their technology can reconstruct
anything or anyone.”
“So what do the Mysterons really want from us?
This isn’t just about retribution for the attack on their planet. They
obviously want more.”
“The
Mysterons want to understand the ways of the Earth. Particularly
Christmas; they have never seen anything like it.”
“Of
course I should have guessed this
whole scene has been conjured up by the Mysterons – ‘chestnuts roasting on an
open fire, jack frost nipping at my nose’. I couldn’t understand why my nose
was feeling so cold while the rest of my body was warm. The Mysterons have
re-created Christmas from a selection of old Christmas songs.”
“We
wanted to create the perfect Christmas. We want to share Christmas with the
people of Earth.”
“But you
just don’t get it, do you?” Paul threw up his hands in exasperation. “Christmas
is supposed to be all about giving, and being together with the people we love.
It’s about maintaining a tradition and a religious belief that has been handed
down through generations. Why should I trust the Mysterons after all they have
done to us? They don’t want us as their equals; they just want our planet and
human beings to use as their slaves.”
“The Mysterons have visited many planets
inhabited with many forms of life. Only Earth is compatible to the way their
planet was many millions of years ago.”
“You
mean Mars was once like Earth?”
“Very
similar; Mars was shifted out of orbit after a collision with an asteroid. As a
result, the atmosphere heated up and many of our people died. We had to adapt
to survive.”
“Does
‘adapting’ mean killing the human host to take its body?”
“The
Mysterons merely make use of the bodies that are expendable. People die
everyday. The body is disposed of. We are able to make use of the body. We can
regenerate it. Man no more may die! We re-cycle; it’s very good for the
planet.”
“You
engineer a death in order to replicate a body for your own ends,” snapped Paul.
Conrad
waved an empty whiskey glass. “We are in the midst of death, my friend.”
“I am
not your friend. My friend left this body. You are a cadaver. You are hollow.
You have no soul. You have no life.”
The
former Captain Black gave a sinister smile. “It takes one to know one.”
“He’s coming round, Doctor,” called Captain
Blue.
Doctor
Fawn rushed to his patient’s bedside to ease him into a sitting position. “Easy
now, don’t try to sit up too quickly, you’ve taken quite a knock to your head.
You could still be suffering a concussion.”
“I’m
fine, don’t fuss.” Captain Scarlet swung his legs over the side of the bed and
stepped into his shoes.
“Hey,
you’re not going anywhere yet,” said Doctor Fawn. “I need to check on your
wrist.”
Scarlet
waved his left hand in a couple of circles and then waggled each digit in turn.
“See, good as new. I can play the piano again.”
“Well
you couldn’t before,” Blue quipped. “As for your rendition of The Christmas
Song – Nat King Cole you ain’t!”
Doctor Fawn walked over to his desk to take
a call. “Captain Scarlet, I have someone here who has been waiting to have a
word with you.”
Captain
Blue grimaced. “It must be Lieutenant Mocha – Health and Safety.”
Scarlet
groaned. “Tell her I’ve had a relapse.”

Lieutenant Mocha finally had her hour. A
recovered Captain Scarlet was summoned to Colonel White’s office together with
Captain Blue and angels Rhapsody and Symphony. Colonel White looked suitably
irritated. Lieutenant Mocha looked smug.
“There
really is no excuse for this,” snapped the colonel. “I have better things to
do. What were you thinking about? Do you realise that this ridiculous incident
has wasted a lot of time?”
“With
respect, Sir, we were off duty. We were in our own leisure time,” began Blue.
Colonel
White cut him short: “What would have happened if there had been an alert? We
had one of our best men lying injured in sickbay, all because of a blatant
disregard or ignorance of the Health and Safety rules. And you, Captain
Scarlet, should have known better.”
“I’m
sorry, Sir. I’m partly to blame,” admitted Rhapsody. “I decided it would look
nice to have the Christmas lights running around the big picture window in the
Amber room. The window was too high for me to reach, so I asked Captain Scarlet
to help me put them up.”
“I’m
afraid we all had a couple of glasses of mulled wine,” said Symphony. “We put
on a tape of old Christmas songs just to get us in the mood.”
“Now I remember The Christmas Song!”
exclaimed Scarlet. “ ‘Chestnuts roasting on an open fire, Jack Frost nipping at
your nose’! That explains a lot!”
“You’re
a terrible singer! That’s why I left,” retorted Blue. “When I came back you
were lying at the foot of the ladder, out cold, with a garland of fairy lights
around your neck
“Do
either of you have a certificate of competence to work at height?” asked
Lieutenant Mocha in all seriousness.
Scarlet
looked at Blue who burst out laughing. “Competence to work at height? We work
at 40,000 feet above ground level! How’s that for competence!”
Lieutenant
Mocha who had been waiting for her moment launched into a tirade. She had a
look on her face that could sour cream. “Captain Scarlet, we are all aware of
your amazing powers of recuperation, but it would have been a very different
story if Captain Blue had been at the top of the ladder instead of you. You
both failed to check that the ladder had been properly secured. Neither of you
holds a certificate of competence to work on ladders that extend to more than
twelve feet. And you, Captain Blue, failed to adequately foot the ladder whilst
your colleague secured the fairy lights. You also admitted that you switched
the lights on to test them whilst they were still coiled in the box. That
constitutes a fire risk. You also replaced a fuse while the lights were still
connected to the electricity supply. Have you any idea how many people
electrocute themselves while trying to replace the fuses on a string of fairy
lights?”
“I’m sorry, you’re right. I should have been at the foot of the ladder
whilst Captain Scarlet was fixing the lights, but I left to fetch the coffee,”
said Blue guiltily.
“And I
will be more careful in future,” added Scarlet with his tongue firmly in his
cheek.
“Just get
out of my sight, all of you,” grumbled Colonel White.
“Yes
Sir. We’re sorry, Sir.”
Lieutenant
Mocha lingered by the side of the Colonel’s desk. “I hope you didn’t mean me
Colonel,” she said.
“No of
course not,” replied Colonel White.
“Good,
now while we are on the subject of Health and Safety, there are a few things I
would like to go over with you regarding the coming festivities.” She thrust a
wedge of paper in front of him. “Firstly, if you must have festive decorations,
they must be put up by a competent person who has experience of working with
ladders. The appointed person must attend a two days training course to obtain
a certificate of competence to work at height. The decorations must not exceed
a height of ten feet. They must not impede the doorways or the fire exits. They
must not trail across any machinery or computer equipment which is liable to
generate heat. The decorations must be
flame retardant. The same goes for artificial Christmas trees. The baubles on
the Christmas tree must be shatterproof.
On the subject of the Christmas dinner,
coins or lucky charms must not be placed in the Christmas puddings. They
constitute a choking hazard. The turkey must be thoroughly defrosted before
cooking. The danger of salmonella is always present and food poisoning would be
a catastrophe for your understaffed sickbay.
It goes
without saying that alcohol must be restricted. Bearing all this in mind,
please ensure your colleagues enjoy a safe and happy Christmas.” And with that she left.
Colonel White was rather taken aback at her
abrupt departure. He knew Lieutenant Mocha wasn’t one for small talk, but if
you got her one her favourite subject – Health and Safety, you couldn’t stop
her. She was a diligent and loyal officer but regarded by her colleagues as
being somewhat stuffy. Colonel White wished she wasn’t so pedantic; his ears
were still ringing. He was beginning to get a headache and he was due to say a
few words at the carol service this evening. He hadn’t even begun to think
about writing his speech. He thumped his fist on a scarlet button on his desk
console. He knew who he was going to delegate this task to.

The small chapel smelled of pine and candle
wax. Reverend Green greeted the worshippers who filed in for the carol
service. Spectrum was a multi- faith,
multi-cultural organisation, but his chapel was packed to the seams. The carols
were sung with gusto. Voices lubricated by mulled wine that had been served
with mince pies earlier in the evening.
Captain Scarlet had hastily prepared a
fitting speech for the assembled congregation. Colonel White was suitably
impressed and now stood at the altar beside Reverend Green to address the
congregation. The colonel shifted his weight from his left foot to his right
and began to speak.
“We come
to give thanks for the birth of Jesus who was born so that man no more may die.
Our earthly bodies were designed to grow old and die; but we take comfort in
knowing that the soul transcends death. We hope to live on. We are threatened
by an alien race able to give us just that
– eternal life, but as we have seen for their own ends.
The
Mysterons will never be superior to us. They lack the empathy that makes us
human. They may be able to replicate and regenerate bone, tissue and muscle but
they can never replace a soul.
I would like to take this opportunity to ask you
all to pray for the soul of a man who once was a good friend and colleague.
Captain Black, Conrad Turner. We may now see him as our enemy, a puppet of the
Mysterons. We must not forget this man once lived and worked and joked with us.
We do not know if the mind and soul of Conrad Turner still lives on in a body
enslaved by the Mysterons. A part of me hopes that his soul does still live on
and yet another part of me hopes that it does not.
The perfect Christmas for all of us would be
for peace between the Mysterons and Earth. The perfect Christmas present would
be for Conrad’s soul to be released from evil.
Christmas is not about the presents, the food
or the tree. It’s about making the world a better place. We must pity the
Mysterons who may be highly evolved but are little more than machines. They
watch us. They need us. They strive to become what we are.
Be wary and be watchful, but above all, have
a safe and happy Christmas.”

Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons is a Gerry
Anderson creation licensed by Carlton/Granada
‘The
Christmas Song’ was
written by Mel Torme and Robert Wells in 1946.
It has been performed first by Nat King Cole, and many other artists in
the following years, amongst them, Bing Crosby, Frank Sinatra, Natalie Cole, the
Jackson Five, Twisted Sister and Celine Dion.
"CHRISTMAS FAN
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