
A ‘Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons’ story
by Lezli Farrington
Blinding,
burning, cleansing flame, sterilising the whole world. Then darkness. Pain.
Hunger. Ravaging thirst. Sickness that turns bodies inside out. Then… Then
nothing…
I am Rose
Metcalfe, and this is the end of the world. I will be three hundred and one years
old when it happens – when the last human on Earth dies. After all the advances
that have been made within my lifetime; advances that have increased the human
lifespan to well beyond a century, and have increased the quality of life on
Earth, it will all come to an end. Unless I stop it from happening…
She turned up the collar of her thick uniform
coat against the biting December wind as she gazed up at the church, elegantly moonlit
on this dark, clear night. The place had been one of the few places she had
been able to turn throughout her career, despite the fact that she had never
been a God-fearing person. This place had been a sanctuary away from the
pressures of home; somewhere she could escape from the rest of the world for a
few hours, even back in the early days, when the world discovered the terrible
truth about their extra-terrestrial enemies. Her secret had been passed down
through the priests who had led the parish since that day, so that she never
needed to fear meeting a new one and having to explain her situation over again
whenever she felt the urge to leave her real life for a brief time, and speak
to someone away from the military. Gravel that gleamed white in the moonlight
crunched beneath her boots as she approached the sanctuary.
Father O’Connell looked up
from his task of removing spent candles as he heard the doors open. A small
figure in a heavy, dark military overcoat and matching boots entered and looked
down the rows of pews for him.
“Welcome, Major,” he greeted
her, instantly recognising her unique eyes, glowing slightly in the darkened
area at the back of the church. He abandoned his box of tea lights and moved to
meet the woman in the aisle. As he drew closer, and she moved into the light,
he could clearly see her young face flushed with the cold, but troubled and
conflicted.
“Is there anything I can
help you with tonight, my child?” he asked her automatically, cursing himself
even as he uttered the word ‘child’. He knew that the youthful countenance
before him, framed by short jet-black hair flattened beneath a Spectrum
officer’s cap, was misleading – although she looked around twenty, this woman
was much older.
“I apologise for the late
hour, Father,” she said, her voice betraying British roots, although she had
spoken with a clear American accent when they had first met. O’Connell now knew
that the accent had been affected, but he was not certain exactly what her
native tongue was; although always interpreted by his Universal Translator, she
had occasionally spoken in French, Russian and even the ancient Irish language
that his mother had preferred to use, ‘lest it die out completely’. All had
seemed to have perfect intonation too; there was no trace of the
mispronunciation that the UT somehow managed to convey in its translations.
“Will you hear my
confession?” she continued, oblivious to the thoughts suddenly running though
the priest’s head.
O’Connell frowned for a
moment. This was something that she had never asked to do before, although he
knew that his predecessor had once heard her confess. Once.
“Certainly, Major,” he
replied, sweeping his hand towards the ancient confession box.
“Forgive me, Father, for I
have sinned,” Indigo recited with her eyes closed, recalling the words that she
had learned so many years ago. She was not a Catholic, but sometimes she liked
to have the counsel of someone outside the organisation and the opportunity to
get things off of her chest. Father O’Connell was a wonderful listener, one of
her favourites in fact. Normally she spoke with him whilst they sat in a pew,
but this, she felt, required the formality and secrecy of the confessional. “It
has been… um… seventy-four years since my last confession.
Seventy-four years would
take it back to the early days of Father Maguire’s tenure – and before Father
O’Connell’s birth! I really must stop calling her ‘child’, he
reminded himself sharply.
“Thirty-six years ago,”
Indigo continued, her voice shaking slightly, “I killed my father.”
Father O’Connell drew a
sharp breath before responding. “Major… Rose, your father killed himself.”
“But I practically handed
him the wires,” she countered. “I could have stopped him, prevented him having
to do it in the first place.”
“No one has to commit
suicide, Rose,” the priest argued, not unkindly. “You are not responsible for
your father’s death.”
“Yes, I am,” Indigo
countered her voice barely above a whisper. “If I hadn’t refused, hadn’t denied
him the only thing that would make him happy, he would still be alive. And I
could have stopped him.”
“I don’t understand,”
O’Connell said. “What could you have possibly done; how could you have foreseen
your father’s choice?”
“How odd that you should
phrase it like that,” Indigo said bitterly. “One of the so-called ‘gifts’ that
I have is precognition. It comes from the same sense that I have for time and
temporal distortion. I don’t fully understand it and it took over two centuries
for me to hone that particular ability to the point that I could gain
impressions of future events – foresight, as you call it. But I never foresaw
what my father did. But even without that supernatural ability, I should have
known what would come.”
*****
“What do you want for your birthday? There’s only four days left!”
Scarlet looked at his daughter.
Last time she had asked that question, he had not been sure whether to ask this
or not, but now he was.
“I want to die.”
“What?” Indigo’s voice shook. Her
eyes widened and even her hair seemed to pale.
“I want my life back; to grow
old,” he explained, urgently, not wanting her to get the wrong idea, “to retire
peacefully to Winchester with a Labrador and lots of grandchildren. And then I
want to die. Three hundred years is too long to be thirty-one.”
Indigo swallowed hard, opened her
mouth to answer, and then closed it again, finding that she couldn’t speak.
“Rose, please,” Scarlet pressed.
“That’s all I want. One last present. I’m fed up of birthdays.”
“I…” Stricken, Indigo ran from
the Promenade deck, slamming all of her mental barriers into place to keep
Scarlet out of her head. Fighting tears, she made her way to the Amber Room and
with practiced ease she tapped into her inherited Mysteron abilities and, using
a trick she had only mastered recently, disappeared from view and made it into
one of the lifts to the Flight Deck.
Quickly, before anyone realised what was happening, she launched Angel
Two, one of the fastest space and atmospheric shuttles in the whole sector,
matched only by its sisters, Angels One and Three. It sped towards Earth and
entered the atmosphere before Lieutenant Blue’s voice sounded on the comm.
unit, ordering her to return to base immediately.
Swiftly she shut down the comm.
unit and began to probe the internal systems of the tracking device, finding
the weak point and melted the circuit chip beyond recognition. It would be
simple enough to fix the fault, but it prevented the system from functioning.
She also removed her dog tags and melted the one that acted as her personal
tracker. The agents in Spectrum had all been implanted with subcutaneous
tracking and identification devices many years ago, and Indigo thanked her
lucky stars at that second that her retrometabolism had prevented her from
being chipped in the same way and that she had retained her traditional dog
tags.
The shuttle exited the upper
atmosphere and Indigo altered the direction of travel towards Western Europe,
specifically a large island.
From the still-functioning sensor
system, Indigo knew that she was not being followed – Starbase had not sent
anyone after her. She was safe. Of course, if anyone wanted to find her, they
could. It wasn’t too hard to figure out where Indigo was headed – home.
Indigo moved restlessly around
the wooded area of her family estate in Winchester, feet crunching on the hard
ground. She was thankful for her Spectrum boots, and that she hadn’t been out
of uniform when she had left Starbase. She did wish, however, that she had
thought to bring either her coat or the keys for the house – and preferably
both. However, wandering the woods in the cold suited her mood. She walked the
familiar paths for what seemed like hours until she came to the lake. She still
didn’t know why the lake was such a comforting sight for her – at the age of
fourteen, whilst staying with her grandparents, she had drowned in it;
definitely one of the least pleasant ways to die. Fortunately, Ingrid, her
grandparents’ collie, had managed to drag her lifeless body from the lake and
summon the help of her grandparents.
Everything had changed so much
since those early days. Things had seemed so simple back then, when she was
newly retrometabolic, before the horrors of the war had truly caught up with
her. Life on Cloudbase was never easy, and people were lost to the Mysterons on
a horrifically regular basis, but her doting father and godparents had honeyed
it all for her, hidden the worst things from her. Right up until the moment she
received her own colour-code, things were almost perfect. Then everything had
gone downhill, and she had seen things that no one should ever have to see and
done things that she would never completely forgive herself for. The war
escalated into something Spectrum had never expected, and officers – friends –
fell thick and fast, whereas she lived on, reviving each time she was killed in
the line of duty. As she worked on honing her unique abilities in order to
fight the Mysterons, she became more aware of the people around her, as if she
had been given a window into their souls. Whilst she was never truly telepathic
with anyone except her father, she could sense strong thoughts and emotions.
And she felt every death like a knife, slicing through her very being, creating
wounds that would leave scars, so unlike her physical injuries. Every time the
survivor’s guilt overwhelmed her, she returned to the lake. Sometimes she swam,
other times she just stood by the edge and contemplated the cool surface.
The war was long-since over now,
but still a violent faction of Mysterons wreaked havoc occasionally, and every
time she had to kill one of their agents, instead of releasing the tortured
human soul from Hell, she relived the same event in her mind, haunted by her
failure so many years ago, the agent she hadn’t been able to save.
Still, after all this time, the
long years and longer decades, she felt drawn to the lake, a simple body of
water that was so soothing on most occasions, and a way of venting frustration
on others. With a grunt, Indigo sat down on the hardened grass edge and angrily
threw pebbles into the still water.
*****
“Why?”
“Pardon?”
“Why
were you angry? If I am to help you, I have to understand everything. As do
you.”
Indigo
sighed, recognising the psychology behind the priest’s question. “I don’t know.
I guess I was angry with myself for taking off like that, with them for letting
me go. I’d acted like a child; taking off in a fit of pique because I didn’t
like something I heard; I was two hundred and sixty-four years old, for goodness sakes! I
suppose in some ways I felt betrayed too, like he wanted to abandon me, and
then I blamed myself for driving him away. And I was berating myself for not
noticing the changes in him that might have made me realise what he wanted me
to do, if I’d paid attention. Three hundred years is too long for a human to
live, even now. He had lived his life to the full and then some.
“I
suppose there was a bit of hurt involved too – something that he’d said touched
a raw nerve in me. He wanted to retire surrounded by grandchildren, and that
was something that was never going to happen. I’ve never been able to have
children because of the retrometabolism, and I doubt that I ever will. It’s
just not a priority for the scientists to find a way around it. It never
normally bothers me; I’m not the maternal type, but just then, when he said
that, it hurt. And even now, I know that I can’t fulfil his dream. The only way
it’ll happen is if he has other children, and they’re okay.
“Anyway,
eventually I got my act together and went back to Starbase. The general wasn’t
overly happy, but no one has had the guts to court-martial either me or my dad
for a hundred years. General Claret didn’t ask why I’d left, and I didn’t tell
her. Don’t think I could have faced it if she had, to tell you the truth.”
*****
Captain Vermilion had
deliberately sought Indigo out after his duty shift. No one had seen her since
her return to Starbase the day before, and he was beginning to get worried. He
had never seen her act as irrationally as she had - nearly three days ago, now
- and he needed some kind of reassurance that she was all right, or soon would
be.
Their relationship was
complicated. They had bonded instantly, the massive age difference seemingly
insignificant. Both were only children of Spectrum families; Vermilion had lost
his father at an early age, Indigo her mother. They had first met when
Vermilion was a child, then again when he was a cadet, training at Koala Base
in Australia. She had been there to test some new equipment for detecting and
neutralising a Mysteron threat and had joined him in the cafeteria one
mealtime. She’d recognised him instantly, and he her. He could never forget
those eyes. He’d stared at her as she placed her tray on the table and sat
down.
“It’s always the same,” she’d
laughed. “I bet you had nightmares about Mysterons for weeks after you first
met me, Jonathan.”
“Jack,” he had corrected her. “I
guess people look at you a lot.”
“Only when they don’t know me,”
she had told him, smiling. “After a while they stop bothering, but I wasn’t on
your ship for long enough for you to get used to me.”
She had looked around. “The
facilities have improved since I was a cadet,” she’d noted, and then laughed.
“Do you know, they made me wear blue contact lenses for weeks whilst I was
here, then on every ground assignment I went on for years.”
“Why?” he had inquired, curious.
She had looked puzzled. “Well,
no-one knew. Oh!” she’d exclaimed, a look of comprehension dawning. “Anything
to do with the Mysterons was classified back then, Rainbow Clearance. Civilians
and normal military did not know, nor were they to know that Major Scarlet was
a Mysteron. The whole planet would have been in uproar. By the same reasoning, no
one could know that I was half-Mysteron, not even the cadets here until they
completed their training, hence the contact lenses.
“It was a different world back
then. The Mysterons were a new threat, and the population of Earth was scared.
If news were to get out that there were former Mysteron agents working for
Spectrum, we would not have been able to function as a unit. We would probably
have been shut down. The truth was only revealed when the world was ready to
hear it.
“I was glad for that. It meant
that I could be myself finally. No more hiding or lucky escapes from certain
death, all that kind of thing.”
She had looked at her one-man
audience and blushed slightly, highlighting her girlish features. “I’m sorry; I
didn’t mean to ramble on at you.”
“That’s okay,” Jack had replied,
enthralled. He tried, and failed to imagine a life before the Mysterons. True
enough, most were no longer hostile. The two races had long ago officially put
aside their differences and worked in harmony together. However, the Mysterons
were an extremely long-lived race, and some could not forgive the terrible
mistake made by one human man, Conrad Turner, more infamously known as Captain
Black. He had turned the weapons of the exploration vehicle he was commanding
against the peaceful Mysteron base in a moment of confusion and started the
longest war Earth had ever seen.
That much was history, taught at
school, but the woman sitting before him had lived through most of the war; was
the daughter of a former Mysteron Agent, a human killed and recreated to serve
as a body to the non-corporeal Mysterons, someone to do their dirty work. Her
father had been alive at the start of the war, had lived life before the
Mysterons, and was still alive. The idea was intriguing. The chance to discuss
the world, before space travel was commonplace, where Spectrum was confined to
one planet was something he had wished for, for a long time. Jack had studied
the history of Spectrum and the War of Nerves at school, and researched further
when his interest was piqued. But to meet the one of the two people who had
actually lived it, who had seen the first space cruisers leaving the solar
system at, what now seemed a snail’s pace, but then had been the fastest speed
possible. They had seen the first aliens come to Earth and had known the first
alien members of Spectrum.
Her eyes studied him, amused,
almost as if she was able to read his thoughts.
“What makes you think I can’t?”
she’d said, startling him.
“C.. can you?” he stuttered. “Can
you read my mind?”
Indigo laughed teasingly. “Only
when it’s written all over your face. I’ll tell you about it, if you really
want to know.”
For some reason, Indigo took him
under her wing and told him everything he had ever wanted to know about the
War. They met for meals every day whilst she was assigned to Koala Base
assisting the scientists, and they discussed all manner of things. He knew that
she pulled strings to have him assigned to Starbase when he received his
commission and, somehow, he found that he didn’t care. He enjoyed the time they
had spent together at Koala, and their friendship continued to flourish aboard
Starbase. Major Scarlet seemed to adopt him as a second child, after a brief
period of unease, the cause of which Vermilion had never discovered even to
this day. It was Scarlet, also troubled, who had suggested that he try the old
crew quarters, and had given him a list of access codes, along with the
locations of the quarters they related to.
The corridor that he walked down
was only illuminated by emergency lighting, and had been abandoned for years.
It had been quite a busy place once, with officers’ quarters through each of
the doors he passed; back when this was Cloudbase, before it had been
incorporated into Starbase. The subsequent refurbishments to the base, that had been carried out to ensure
its survival in space, meant that
the living quarters were relocated into one of the new sections, and these
rooms, once so high up on the base, were now towards the bottom and had been
abandoned for many years. There were plans for them to be upgraded to meet
modern standards and used as accommodation for temporary members of staff and
those who were just passing through between assignments, but the funding had
not come through yet, and the whole section of the original base remained
unused, although not off-limits.
Vermilion walked right to the end
of the corridor and turned back to retrace his steps. This was the best point
from which to start his search, as all the rooms listed as likely candidates
were towards this end of the deck, starting with the first door on the left.
This, according to his list, had been Indigo’s quarters from 2089 until the
refurbishment. He punched in the number that Scarlet had provided and the door
slid back obediently, revealing a darkened, empty room. Switching on his
flashlight, he searched the interior of the small residence thoroughly to be
sure, including the bathroom and sleeping area, but she was not there.
Carefully ensuring that the door
was locked behind him, he looked again at his list of suspects, and matched
them to his map of the deck. The next door along was that of the commanding
officer’s quarters. It was listed as a last resort, only on the merits that as
a child, Indigo had been close to the first C/O, Colonel White. Scarlet had had
to dig into the computer archives to get the code for that lock, considering
that the rooms had passed through several pairs of hands over the years.
Vermilion bypassed it in favour of the next-door neighbour, the only set of
quarters on Cloudbase designed for a family. It was in these quarters that
Indigo had lived as a child, and up until some three months after receiving her
commission, when she and Scarlet vacated the quarters in favour of the base
colonel and his pregnant wife. Scarlet had given him an odd look when imparting
that information, but Vermilion was more interested in finding his friend than
whatever Scarlet had been thinking about at that time, although he made a
mental note to look up the identity of the colonel in 2089.
He tapped the security code into
the electronic lock, and the door slid back silently, revealing instant signs
of habitation. A door was open to the left of the living area, through which a
soft light was shining. Quietly, Vermilion made his way to that door, pausing
only when he entered the small bedroom. Unlike Indigo’s barren single-occupancy
quarters along the corridor, the bed was still in this room. Upon it sat
Indigo, hunched up against the headrest and the wall and wrapped in a blue
blanket. Her boots, vest and cap lay discarded at the foot of the bed, and she
was simply staring at the lantern that she had set on the desk, apparently lost
in thought.
“Rose?” he said softly, stepping
into the room and laying a gentle hand on her blanket-covered arm.
Dully, Indigo raised her eyes to
meet his, but made no further acknowledgement of his presence.
“Please, Rose,” he implored her.
“Tell me what’s wrong.”
Life stirred slightly behind her
alien eyes, and he sat on the bed beside her. Hesitantly, she began to explain
where she had been, stumbling at first over her words, then more fluently as
she told him what had caused her flight and poured her heart out to him as she
hadn’t done for almost a hundred years.
*****
Indigo lifted her head from her
hands and looked despairingly at Captain Vermilion. Her alien eyes seemed
distant, yet at the same time brimmed with tears.
“Can I do it?” she said, echoing
his earlier question. “I don’t know. My only successful experiences with this
have been with much younger Mysteron Agents. Dad’s… well, he’s been like this
for two hundred and eighty-six years. That’s hundreds of times older than what
I normally deal with. It gets harder the longer they’ve been Retro.
“It takes it out of me, it really
does. That’s why I’m so scared. I think I might lose everything if I do this,
and I’m not ready for that. I might not even survive. As much as I love him, I
can’t do what he wants me to.”
Vermilion clasped her hands in
his own and met her gaze. “Rose,” he said softly, “your father ceased to be a
Mysteron Agent two hundred and eighty-six years ago. That influence isn’t there
any more. I’ve seen you battle them before on their own level, and win more
often than not. This is no Mysteron. Your father’s done the hard part for you.
You just need to stop him from retrometabolising.”
“But I don’t know how I do that,”
she whispered. “It’s just something that happens. I want to help him, but I
don’t know how.”
Vermilion brushed away the tear that rolled down her cheek and leaned
over to envelope her in a hug. “He
wouldn’t ask if it wasn’t important,” he said eventually. “Just think about
it.”
She nodded sadly. “I owe him
that.”
She grew quiet, until eventually
she relaxed in his arms and her breathing grew steady. Vermilion sighed softly
and stretched out his long legs, contenting himself with simply holding her
whilst she slept.
*****
The priest nodded in
understanding. “You were trapped between your love for your father and your
fear of killing yourself, and I assume, him, in the process.”
“You’re very observant,
Father,” Indigo commented dryly.
“It comes with the collar,
child,” the priest said. “I know what you’re thinking before you do. So, that
was the day before his birthday. What happened on the actual day?”
*****
Indigo managed to avoid direct private contact with
her father all the next day, but could not help but see the questioning glances
he directed at her from across crowded rooms.
She knew that there was a party planned; had had a hand in
planning it, but she did not feel inclined to attend, and knew that her father
would feel the same. If she agreed to his request, the process would likely
take all night, and was a deeply personal experience for both participants; if
she refused, he would not want to go to the party at all.
Her
thoughts cascaded in her head. Her father, who had raised her almost
single-handedly since her mother had died,
just after her eighth birthday, wanted to experience life as he once had. He
had denied himself the solace of another loving relationship after his second
wife had died; very likely
scared of losing another person he cared for, and had remained single. He was
lonely and needed to live as he once had, as a human.
She,
on the other hand, had known no other life. An unusual child due to her genetic
make-up, her retrometabolism had kicked in at thirteen. She had never truly
lived as a human, never experienced growing old. She had also shied away from
love. She had left the only man she had ever been serious about because she
couldn’t be what he wanted her to be: a doting wife who would give him the
family he wanted. His infatuation with
her came from the certainty that she would be there when he got home, as it
were - he didn’t have to worry about her being killed on a mission. She
couldn’t say the same, and had not felt secure enough to commit herself
afterwards.
She
wasn’t sure if she could give up the life she had and become something new, or
die in the process of helping her father, for she was certain that those were
the only two possible outcomes of this insane request.
Fear
rose in her as there was a knock at the door. Only one person still knocked -
everyone else used the door chime. She answered it through a voice command to
the computer, and her father walked into the room.
“Hi,
Daddy,” she said, her voice shaking. “Happy birthday.”
Scarlet
stood awkwardly in the sitting area. “Have you thought about it?” he asked hopefully.
Indigo
refused to meet his eyes. Instead, she stood with her head bowed, her lashes
lowered, in front of the fish tank that had once belonged to her mother. “Yes,”
she whispered. “I… I’m sorry, Daddy. I can’t do it.”
Scarlet
looked crestfallen. “I understand,” he said softly. “It was a lot to ask.”
Without making eye contact with her, he turned and left.
The
next few days were torturous. Scarlet became more withdrawn than ever, and
refused to speak to anyone unless in the line of his duty, and even then not to
Indigo. Vermilion caught up with her on the nightshift on Starbase control
deck. During the night, one Major was left in charge whilst the duty captain
monitored satellite transmissions and communications. Due to bad luck, Indigo
and Vermilion had drawn Christmas Eve as their night shift. Indigo was deep in
thought, lost in her own little world, and absently turning a cup of coffee in
her hands.
“Major?”
he said, formally, remembering that he was on duty, then, “Rose?”
She
snapped out of her reverie. “Sorry, what were you saying?”
“Are
you still thinking about it?”
“Yes.”
She paused and drew breath, which seemed to calm her. “I’m going to do it.”
When
he didn’t reply, she continued. “I’ve seen what it would mean to him for me to
give him back what the Mysterons took away all those years ago, and I know that
knowing that he’s happy, means more to me than my fears about losing what I
have. I have to do this.”
“When?”
“Tomorrow,”
she said, smiling. “Maybe I couldn’t give him the birthday present he wanted,
but I can give it to him for Christmas instead.” She took a sip of her coffee.
Vermilion
shook his head, glad that the tension in his friend finally seemed to be gone.
“I can’t believe that you two still celebrate Christmas.”
She shrugged, smiling. “I
told you years ago that it was a different world back then. Religious festivals
were upheld fairly rigorously. Maybe not as much as in previous times, but we
still celebrated Easter, Christmas, Lent and all the others. I had friends who
celebrated Eid after Ramadan and others who celebrated Rosh Hashanah and
Chanukah. That’s all changed now. Besides, we don‘t celebrate it like we used
to, just like we don‘t celebrate our birthdays like you do.”
“When
is the next official party, anyway?” Vermilion asked, picking up his own cup of
coffee from where it was perched on the top of his console. Scarlet and Indigo
only celebrated every twenty-fifth birthday nowadays, as they had seemed to
loose meaning after a while; any other parties arranges in the intermitting
years were arranged by other members of Spectrum as an excuse to let their hair
down.
“This
is the short wait, between his and mine,” she said teasingly. “Only eleven
years until my two-hundred and seventy-fifth.”
“And
you call that short?” Vermilion retorted, choking on his coffee in shock.
“Well,
it’s fourteen after that,” Indigo countered reasonably. “Anyway, eleven years
isn’t all that long - not from my perspective, anyway.”
“Easy
to say from your side of two hundred,” he shot back, checking his board for any
aberrations. “For me, it’s almost half of my lifetime!”
The sound of Indigo’s cup
smashing on the floor diverted his attention from the scanner readouts. Her
face was drained of colour and her eyes unfocussed.
“No,”
she whispered, so softly that Vermilion barely caught it. Her chalk-white face
was distressed. “No, you can’t.”
Before
Vermilion could question further, she had left the control room and was running
through Starbase corridors.
Indigo grabbed the railing
with both hands as she skidded to a halt on the uppermost deck of the engine
core. She overbalanced slightly, and lurched unsteadily over the barrier,
seeing plainly as she did so, her father, three floors down, clad in his
Spectrum uniform and standing much too close to the primary outlets on the
generator.
“Daddy!”
she screamed, using both her voice and her mind to get his attention. “Please,
don’t do this!”
Scarlet
looked up to her. Even from this height, she could see his handsome, young
face, resigned, sorrowful, yet determined.
‘I’m
sorry, Rosie,’ he thought to her, using the link that had
summoned her to this place, the link that they had fought to be able to use to
the extent that they now could. Scarlet’s thought carried with it the pain in
his heart, and terrible confirmation of what Indigo knew she had felt before. ‘This
is the only way. Goodbye, sweetheart.’
‘Daddy,
please,’ she begged, using all of her power to make him
hear the thought, even as his eyes closed. With his face still turned upwards
towards her, he reached out both his hands and grasped the live electricity
conduits. Thousands of volts ripped through his body for the second he was in
contact with the current, before his muscles convulsed, making him release the
outlets, and he collapsed to the floor, dead long before he hit the ground.
*****
Every
single person on Starbase felt the telepathic cry of distress and horror that
came from the mind of Rose Metcalfe that moment. Psi-sensitive and
non-sensitive individuals alike were caught up in her grief, although they
would not realise what the cause of the disturbance was for many hours.
Jack
Svenson, who had left the Control Room not long after his friend, heard the
scream that echoed around the core, louder than he would ever have thought
possible from the tiny woman, saw her collapse, still grasping the guardrail
with all her strength, her eyes never leaving the blackened form three decks
below.
Swiftly,
he approached her, knelt on the deck and pulled her to him, making her turn
away from the body. For long minutes, all she did was to sit stiffly in his
arms, drawing choked breaths, until eventually her eyes filled with tears and
she clutched to him, sobbing. Gently, he rocked her, stroking her dark hair and
forcing himself not to look at the body of her father.
General
Claret was not in the best of moods as she stalked towards the engine core. The
alarm had sounded in her quarters the instant that there had been a power
fluctuation, and after she had recovered from the intense sensation of loss she
experienced for no apparent reason, she contacted the Control Room to get an
update, only to receive no response at all. Instantly, she roused Lieutenant
Blue and sent him up to the Control Room to take command whilst she went to
meet the engineers at the core. If Indigo and Vermilion didn’t have a damn good
excuse, she would have their commissions for dereliction of duty.
Lieutenant
Almond was waiting for her at the last junction in the corridor before the
access to the core. The chief engineer was wringing his hands nervously and
refused to meet her eye.
“Do
you know what caused the power failure, Almond?” she barked at him.
“Yes,
ma’am,” Almond replied, very quietly. “Er, you might not want to go in there
right now, ma’am – it’s still a mess, and, well, you Centaurans are known for
your sense of smell…”
“What’s
that got to do with anything?” Claret demanded, becoming increasingly irritated
with the human. She could feel her gills begin to flush, as they always did
when she was annoyed, and they prickled uncomfortably in the dry atmosphere.
“Well,
ma’am, you see, there’s been a suicide,” Almond said eventually.
“Suicide?”
Claret repeated in disbelief, lowering her voice so that it would not carry.
“Who? Oh no, not…” She stopped speaking as she connected the dots – Indigo
missing from her post, with Vermilion also gone; the intense telepathic
broadcast that had almost overwhelmed her earlier, the electrical failure…
“Scarlet,”
she concluded in a flat voice.
Almond
nodded pathetically. Claret had to remind herself that he was an engineer, not
a field officer, and resist the urge to throttle him for being so wet. The poor
man was not used to death the way that the field agents and starship crews
were, and he had obviously seen the burned body for himself. She remembered the
first time she had seen an electrocuted Mysteron agent, and knew how Almond
felt. It was not a pretty sight.
Quickly,
she pushed past Almond and strode down the corridor to the engineering gantry.
She could smell the stench of cooked flesh before she reached the doors to the
core. She steeled herself against the distasteful odour and continued. The
doors opened obediently for her, answering her earlier suspicions. On the floor
of the deck, in a tangle of limbs, were Indigo and Vermilion. The young man
looked up at her as she approached, a helpless look on his face.
The
Christmas celebrations, as few and far between as they were in Spectrum, were
cancelled as news of Major Scarlet’s death spread throughout the organisation.
By midday, the news was halfway across the sector and outside of the Spectrum
bandwidths, becoming more and more convoluted as it was passed from mouth to
mouth. General Claret was forced to make a statement on the public newscasts,
although she left the exact circumstances deliberately vague, citing an
accident aboard the base. She had trouble planning the short speech because it
was rare that the lives and deaths of Spectrum agents were made public
knowledge. Scarlet and Indigo had been different – for longer than she could
remember – their identities were not secret, as was the norm for Spectrum
agents. It was rather difficult for the British aristocracy to overlook the
fact that one particular title, within the peerage, had resided in the same
hands for the last two and three-quarter centuries, and it did not take a
genius to make the connection between this Lady and the Mysteron reconstruct
who served Spectrum. The secret had come out before Claret had even been born.
In
the end, Claret opted simply to say that Lady Rose was taking some time away
from her duties to mourn her father, and made the polite request that she be
left in peace. The piece was delicately worded and delivered precisely to any
journalist who cared to record it. Only on hearing her message broadcast on the
vid, later that evening, did Claret realise that her voice had trembled
throughout the short speech.
*****
“What has made you think of all this,
suddenly?” Father O’Connell asked when Indigo had calmed herself.
She gave him a wan smile. “I
turned three hundred in September, Father,” she explained. “It’s a big
milestone, and I can see now why my father wanted me to take his immortality
away. I understand what drove him to take his own life. And, of course, the war
keeps me thinking about it.”
“Why is that, Rose?”
“It all started because he
died,” Indigo said simply. “Whilst my father was alive, the pacifists amongst
the Mysterons could keep a lid on things. Once he died, things fell apart, the
Martian Civil War started, and then, just to cap it all, the Mysterons
re-declared War on Earth.”
“I think you’re reading too
much into the timing of the Martian War,” Father O’Connell said soothingly.
“You think so?” Indigo
queried scornfully. “I was on Mars when it all broke out. I was in the
government chambers with the First Minister when the insurrection happened. I
fought in the Martian Civil War – I was the only corporeal being there,
something that protected me. I barely escaped with my life, and that was only
because they hadn’t been expecting to find me there. The Mysterons can do a lot
of damage to each other, but their method of attack only works on other
non-corporeals.
“The political dynamic
hinged on him being alive. Those who supported the war knew that whilst the two
of us lived, there wasn’t much chance of them ever winning, and a very real
chance that we could find a way to defeat them once and for all. When he died,
I was a wreck and they took their chance whilst my defences were down and there
was no other person who could fight them on the level that we did. All because
I was afraid of what would happen to me. That’s why I have to go and put it all
right; put things the way they should be.”
O’Connell paused to digest
the information. When he realised just what she had said, his eyes opened wide.
“No! You can’t go and change history just to save your father’s life!”
“Father, we are going to
lose this war if I don’t stop it now,” Indigo said firmly. “The Mysterons will
succeed in their plan to eliminate all life on Earth, unless I stop it before
it starts.”
“What about Spectrum’s
Temporal Orders?” the priest argued. “Causality?”
“The brutal, drawn-out end
of the human race?” Indigo countered. “It will
happen unless I do this. I can sense it, and I’m not the only one. The decision
has been made. I leave at midnight.”
“Then why did you come
here?” the priest asked in desperation. “What was the point in you telling me
this if your mind is already made up? You must have known that I’d try to talk
you out of it.”
“I had to tell someone what
we’re trying to do,” said ominously. “In case we don’t succeed. Someone has to
know that we tried.”
Major Indigo strode onto the
bridge of the S.S. Endeavour precisely on time, at 07:45, Greenwich Mean
Time, having stowed her holdall in her assigned quarters. As expected, General
Claret and Colonel Vermilion were waiting for her.
“Are you ready?” Vermilion
asked her, concern evident in his voice. He alone knew that she had been to the
old church and spoken to the priest there, and he knew how much it would have
hurt her to discuss the subject he knew must have come up. It still hurt him to
think of what had happened, what had driven the man he considered as close as
family to take his own life, but Vermilion masked his own pain in deference to
her.
“Absolutely,” she replied,
taking in her old friend’s face. “You know, I’m actually excited.”
Claret shook her head at the
look of childish glee on Indigo’s face. She had never worked out why it was
that, in the most serious of circumstances, when she should be concentrating
the hardest, Indigo seemed to release her inner child. Still, Indigo was the
only person who could pull this off, and she was the best field agent Spectrum
had.
“Is your ship ready,
Colonel?” Claret said aloud, addressing Vermilion.
“Aye, ma’am, Spectrum is
Green,” he replied formally. “The Endeavour is fully supplied and
overhauled, our crew is assembled and at their posts. We’re just waiting for the
word, ma’am.”
Claret reached out to shake
Vermilion’s hand – a human gesture that she was still getting used to after
forty years in command of Spectrum.
“The word is given,
Colonel,” she told him. “You are cleared to leave orbit at your leisure; once I
have left the ship, of course. Your mission briefing is as before.” She gave a
wry smile. “Please don’t make me regret giving you a ship to run around the
galaxy in, Vermilion, after all the trouble you used to cause on Earth,” she
added with a wicked glint in her purple eyes. “Don’t do anything I wouldn’t
do.”
“Wouldn’t dream of it,
ma’am,” Vermilion chuckled. “Major Indigo will surely keep me in check.”
“That’s what I was afraid
of,” Claret muttered.
Indigo laughed along with
the senior officers. “We’ll behave ourselves, General,” she promised.
“You had better,” Claret
responded, pointing her webbed fingers warningly at the pair. “If I hear you
two have been up to your old antics again, you’ll be back here so fast your
feet won’t touch the deck. Now, be on your way, Endeavour, and may
Fortune cast her light upon you.”
As soon as Claret had left
the bridge, Vermilion settled himself into his chair in the middle of the
command centre. “Major Indigo, please take your station and prepare to leave
orbit.”
“SIG, Colonel,” Indigo
acknowledged the order faultlessly and moved to take her seat at the helm.
“Captain Cerulean,”
Vermilion continued, “are the calculations complete?”
“Yes, sir,” the scientist
replied from Vermilion’s left. “The temporal coordinates are locked.”
Vermilion inclined his head
towards the large African man in thanks before moving on to his next target.
“Captain Wheat, has the structural integrity been upgraded according to the
specifications for the temporal jump?”
“Aye, sir,” Wheat, the chief
engineer confirmed. “The whole ship has been reconfigured for this mission.”
“Excellent,” Vermilion said.
“The last thing we need would be for the ship to fall apart around us.
Lieutenant Opal,” he continued, addressing the shimmering, but otherwise empty space
beside Indigo. “Is our course plotted?”
“Aye, sir,” replied an eager voice
through the radio receiver installed in the navigation console. “Our course
to the singularity has been entered, avoiding the major shipping lanes and
patrol routes.”
“Very well,” Vermilion
concluded. “Major Indigo, take us out of orbit at one quarter light speed and
continue on Opal’s course.”
“SIG, sir, one quarter light
speed,” Indigo confirmed, her fingers dancing elegantly over the controls at
her fingertips.
Secluded in his quarters
several hours later, Vermilion studied the crew roster for the Endeavour.
His assignment as its commanding officer was temporary, but he felt it prudent
to at least make an effort to get to know the people that would be making this
monumental journey with him. The number of staff was minimal – just enough to
cover each of the three shifts. There was no excess, up to and including the
fact that his First Officer was doubling up as the Alpha Shift helmsman.
The crew was mainly human,
as was usual with Spectrum, with a few aliens thrown in for good measure. Two
of the three scientists on board were Centauran, the exception being the
section leader, Captain Cerulean; the Chief Engineer, Captain Wheat was
Khameri, and the Beta Shift helmsman and navigator, Fuchsia and Cerise
respectively, were a Geminian partnership. In fact, the only helmsman or
navigator who was in any way Terran was Indigo, who partnered Lieutenant Opal
on the Alpha Shift.
Vermilion had never served with
Geminians before, although he knew that they were extremely efficient. The
trouble was that they were so in tune with each other that they sometimes
forgot about the people around them. They rarely left their homeworld, or, at
least, they tended to travel on Geminian vessels. The ones that did leave the
bosom of their race were often doctor/nurse pairs looking to expand their
horizons by studying interspecies medicine. This pair were indeed a rarity, and
Vermilion was looking forward to seeing them in action. Geminians were
telepathic, but only with their partner, with whom they were bonded at birth in
a male-female paring. They lived together from the moment the youngest was
born, grew up learning the same things and always went into the same career, working
next to each other. When maturity came, the partnership became mates; when
death came, they died together, neither able to survive without the mental
presence of the other.
Khamerus Prime was populated
by two different humanoid species, both of which were known as ‘Khameri’. The
two races lived side by side in harmony. Unusually, both species were
indigenous to Khamerus, and so shared some similar characteristics, although
there were distinct differences. One of the races had evolved in the desert areas
of the planet, and tended to be tall and willowy, averaging about seven feet
tall, and were bald with dark red skin and five fingers and a thumb on each of
their hands; the others hailed from the more temperate regions, and were
shorter in stature, averaging around five-and-a-half feet, with paler, pink
skin, generally black hair and possessed a fully prehensile tail around the
same length as their body. These days, there tended to be people of both
species living in each environment, and intermingling was possible, although
not common. Wheat was one of the rare crosses, possessing both the dark skin
and extra finger of his mother’s desert tribe and the hair and tail of his
father’s people.
The Centaurans were a
familiar race to Vermilion, having served on Starbase under General Claret for
so long. There were a great many of them in Spectrum these days, although their
numbers still lagged far behind the human members, and they were an amazing
species as far as Vermilion was concerned. Their diminutive stature and slender
limbs meant that they did not make very good foot soldiers, but their
incredible adaptability and inquisitive minds made them ideal Spectrum agents.
They were an amphibious species, possessing both lungs and gills, although the
former did not develop properly until the onset of adolescence. As such, all of
the dwellings on their oceanic homeworld were underwater – and what magnificent
cities they were. Vermilion had been lucky enough, as a young man, to go down
to their capital, and he had been astounded by the almost ethereal beauty of
the place. Even the Earth Embassy, which had been built specially for the
air-breathing Humans, was created in keeping with the rest of the architecture
– constructed of white stone, with a high roof and plenty of arches. The whole
city looked as if it had been lifted out of a fairytale. He often wondered why
the Centaurans left their beautiful home to join Spectrum.
The Centaurans appeared as
ethereal as their cities, with skin tones of varying shades of pale purple,
shifting from lilac to pale violet, and slender, petite frames with delicate
facial features framed by wispy, light hair that grew darker with age. They
were also telepaths, although their abilities were not restricted to one
individual, but their whole race. Their brainwaves were sufficiently different
from most other species that they were not able to ‘read’ them, a fact for
which Vermilion had been extremely grateful for when he encountered a whole
host of extremely beautiful women on their homeworld, and had entertained some
despicable thoughts about several of them. The exception to this was, for some
bizarre reason, Mysteron constructs, and by extension, Major Indigo. She’d
joked once that it was just as well that she was perfectly capable of keeping
up with a Centauran telepathic conversation, because she sure as hell struggled
with their spoken language, due to some of the syllables commonly used being
extremely difficult for Humans to imitate. An added bonus of this happenstance,
for Spectrum, was that the Centaurans were capable of detecting Mysteron
agents.
After going over the crew
roster twice, Vermilion decided to seek out his First Officer and challenge her
to a chess rematch. He still owed her at least three meals, but he was feeling
lucky tonight.
*****
Indigo grinned as Vermilion
ran his hand absently through his hair, recognising the familiar gesture at
once. She had seen him do it a thousand times, just as an old friend used to
do.
“What?” he demanded
indignantly, scrutinising the chess board carefully.
“Just thinking about the
mission; a Svenson and a Metcalfe, fighting side by side, against the odds, to
save the world. Just as it should be.”
“I don’t get you,” Vermilion
said, perplexed. He committed himself to a move, and immediately regretted it
when Indigo took the knight he had just uncovered.
“Oh, c’mon, Jack,” Indigo
said in exasperation, toying with the piece she had just removed from the
board. “You know your dad wasn’t the first Svenson to join Spectrum.”
“Yeah? What of it?”
Vermilion challenged.
“You never looked him up,
did you?” she realised. “I thought you would have done by now. All right then,
I’ll give you this one gratis, but next time you do your own research.
Right at the beginning of Spectrum, just when the first War of Nerves started,
my father’s field partner was Captain Blue. They were a great team, if somewhat
troublesome, by all accounts. They didn’t always play by the rules.” Indigo
grinned. “Remind you of anyone you know?”
“Us, not playing by the
rules?” Vermilion said innocently, moving his bishop into a vaguely threatening
position. “When have we ever done anything that might be considered as outside
the rules, or contravened orders, or broken every single regulation in the
manual?”
“Quite,” Indigo agreed,
laying on the sarcasm with a trowel. “What you evidently have been too lazy to
discover is that Captain Blue is your great, great, great, great, great,
great-grandfather, Adam Svenson.” She counted the ‘great’s on her fingers. “And
my Godfather,” she added for good measure. She fished around in her bag and
pulled out an old book. She flicked through the pages – paper pages! – until
she found what it was she was looking for. She handed the book to him and
tapped one of the pictures with her fingernail very gently.
“Don’t touch the photos,
whatever you do,” she warned him dramatically. “You’ll get fingerprints on them
if you do and damage the photo-paper.”
“Real photos? On paper?”
Vermilion was incredulous. “I didn’t think these existed outside of museums!” He
touched the very tip of one finger to the paper page of the book.
“Yes, well, be careful,” she
reiterated. “That is me, Mom, Dad and your- God, I hate the word
‘ancestors’. Makes me feel old.”
“Rose, you are old,” Vermilion pointed out.
“Is that kid you? You haven’t changed much. But…” He lifted the photo album up,
tilted it back and forth as if trying to make the image perform some kind of
metamorphosis, then set it back onto his lap.
“Now do you see why I
remembered your face from the Europa? I couldn’t believe how much you
look like Adam, eight generations later. I tell you, you could pass for him, if
we ever needed to travel to the twenty-eighties.”
“And his wife looks like my
Aunt Carole!” Vermilion exclaimed.
“Carole? No way! Adam’s wife
was called Karen, or Symphony if she was on duty. She was an Angel.”
Vermilion frowned. “But the
Angels all have names of precious stones.”
“Not back then, they
didn’t,” Indigo said, her face more animated than it had been for a long time.
“That only came in 2080, after my mother died and they decided that they needed
a way of systematically naming the Angels. The first six were Destiny,
Rhapsody, Symphony, Harmony, Melody and Prophecy. Rhapsody was my mother.
Originally there were five Angels, before I was born. Prophecy was brought in
as a replacement whilst my Mom was on maternity leave, but they decided that
the team worked so well with six pilots that she stayed on.”
She sat beside him and
turned the pages of the album back until she reached a picture of six women,
wearing what were recognisably Angel uniforms, even now, three centuries later.
“I knew I had one of them,” Indigo said triumphantly. “Destiny is the blonde on
the left, that’s Melody beside her, then Harmony, the next ones you know, then
Prophecy on the end. The photo below is the captains at the time; Magenta,
Ochre, Blue, Scarlet, Green and Grey.”
She stretched across him to
move her second queen onto his back row. “Checkmate,” she said smugly.
Vermilion checked the board
in dismay. His king, immediately threatened by the queen, was pinned in by the
other queen and a bishop. The knight that Indigo had taken in the previous move
had been the only thing that would have been able to intercept the queen.
At that moment, the klaxon
signalling the shift-change sounded.
“Have we really been that
long?” he asked, checking his watch, then looking at the state of the table
beside the chessboard. Several mugs cluttered the area, along with the vestiges
of their meal, which had been a stir-fry with several kinds of Centauran
vegetables.
“Go on, I’ll tidy this lot
up,” Indigo said affectionately, gesturing to the pile of crockery.
“I can’t let you do that,”
he argued half-heartedly. “You need to get some sleep too, before tomorrow.”
“Only a couple of hours,”
Indigo reminded him, returning the chess pieces to their container. “Now go.”
Vermilion stifled a yawn.
“All right,” he conceded. “Goodnight, Rose.”
“Night, Jack,” she replied.
Indigo waited until
Vermilion had left before acknowledging Opal’s presence. She had seen the
Mysteron enter just before he left; to her, the being appeared as a brilliant
green glow, the same colour as she
saw in the aura of replicants, but to human eyes, the being was invisible
unless it wished to be seen.
‘How much do you remember
from the beginning?’ she asked it as she piled the plates and cups onto a tray.
‘Not much,’ Opal confessed. ‘I was
very young then; I’m not much older than you, Rose. One of my first true
memories of the War is my mother’s death.’
Indigo, still hazy on the
Mysterons’ method of reproduction, knew that her mind was translating the term
‘mother’ from something she didn’t really understand. The remark spiked her
curiosity, though.
‘What happened to it?’ she asked.
‘It was killed by our own
kind,’ Opal
told her sadly, but with a hint of pride in the thought. ‘It helped Captain
Black fight against their control, and protected him from the Group whilst he
carried out his own intentions when he was directed to kidnap you when you were
seven. Its protection allowed Captain Black take control of his body and to
hand you over to Spectrum, instead of taking you for the Mysterons. Without its
assistance, Black may not have managed to resist the Group for as long as he
did.’
‘Your mother was killed for protecting me?’ Indigo asked incredulously.
‘My God, I never thought about anything like that. It never occurred to me
before.’
‘The Group was very angry,’ Opal recalled. ‘Black
was punished and my mother suffered torture for many days before it was
executed; but its resolution to do what was right, even though it knew what the
outcome would be was what convinced me that the war was truly unjust, and that
I could not stand by and watch the others annihilate your mother’s species.’
‘I probably owe my life to
your mother,’
Indigo thought. ‘I wish I could thank her.’
‘You already have,’ Opal responded,
overlooking, as it always did, Indigo’s confused pronoun. ‘By surviving to
bring the war to an end and allowing peace to come to our people, its sacrifice
was not in vain. That would have been thanks enough for my mother. Please do
not be discomforted by this knowledge. My mother was a martyr to the cause of
peace. A great many of our people were swayed by her actions. Perhaps not
initially, but the seed of doubt was planted.’
Indigo nodded thoughtfully,
her eyes falling back to the photo album, still open on the table. The people
in those pictures were all now long dead, and some had died at the hands of the
Mysterons, but how many more people might have died if not for Opal’s ‘mother’?
Would there even be an Earth left for them to save now? It certainly wouldn’t
be Indigo saving it, at any rate. She remembered the incident Opal had referred
to; knew that Captain Black’s mission had been to take her and transfer his own
powers to her. She would have been the Mysterons’ primary agent on Earth, under
their control and doing their bidding; and with the power she wielded, Indigo
knew that the Mysterons could have made good on their threat to exterminate the
human race.
‘I am proud of my mother for
its actions, Major,’ Opal insisted. ‘Please, I did not mean to distress you with this.’
‘You haven’t,’ Indigo reassured it; ‘thank
you for telling me. Shall we continue?’
There was a slight shimmer
in Opal’s amorphous form that Indigo knew from long association with other
Mysterons to be their way of expressing nerves. However, Opal only delayed
briefly before replying. ‘Yes, of course,’ it said. ‘Have you told
Colonel Vermilion yet?’
Indigo scowled. ‘Sort
of,’ she said. ‘He’d only object if he knew the full details and make a
fuss. It’s better off this way.’
‘If you say so, Major,’ Opal acquiesced. ‘You
know Humans better than I do.’
Indigo ceased her tidying, and Opal moved
forward. Its brilliant green glow surrounded her, and she closed her eyes and
opened her mind to let it in.
‘Breathe,’ Opal chided her, with a
hint of amusement in the thought.
Indigo hadn’t even realised that she was
holding her breath, to avoid inhaling the Mysteron. Experimentally, she drew a breath;
everything felt normal, and Opal did not appear to be in any distress. Then,
without warning, the Mysteron joined with her, overwhelming her momentarily
with senses far in excess of her own. Information flooded into her mind faster
than she could cope with the influx, and it took all her strength not to pass
out. Slowly, drawing on her many years of self-taught discipline coupled with
some Centauran practices that Claret had taught her, she blocked out the
unfamiliar sensations. Almost immediately, she felt Opal’s regret and anguish,
as keenly as if it were her own. There was no longer any need for communication
between them – they were as close to one and the same individual as they were
ever going to get; gradually, Opal introduced its own senses into Indigo’s
mind, allowing it time to become accustomed to the additional input. Suddenly,
they understood the potential the Mysterons had seen in her all those years
ago, the being she could have become if not for Opal’s mother and Captain
Black.
Their eyes flew open, burning their
characteristic luminescent green, but with an intensity she had never managed
alone. The power of the Mysteron coursed through her veins, exponentially
enhancing the abilities she already possessed.
Vermilion let out a deep sigh as he lowered
the lights in his quarters and prepared for bed. He didn’t know why he still
tortured himself by staying so close to Indigo, trying to persuade himself that
the platonic friendship they had was what he wanted, that he didn’t feel for
her what he once had. The time that he could have pursued anything more was
gone, the physical age difference too large. At fifty-nine, he was too old to
pursue a woman who was physically speaking around thirty years his junior,
someone who would be forced to suffer when he succumbed to the inevitability of
death. If she even felt the same way.
Enough was enough. After the mission was
over, and Scarlet was alive again, he would leave quietly and stop torturing
himself.
*****
Vermilion frowned as he
entered the bridge at the start of Alpha Shift. Both Indigo and Cerulean were
at their stations, along with Lieutenant Bisque from Engineering and, he noted
with interest, Doctor Chartreuse was also there, seated calmly one of the spare
seats alongside his own. Opal, however, appeared to be missing. Of course, the
lieutenant could be there, but normally it had the decency to distort the air
around it to appear visible to the humanoid crew of the Endeavour. Damn
the Mysteron, if it had vanished!
He looked up at the black
hole on the main viewer as he made his way to his seat. They had arrived, and
it was now or never.
“Is everything ready for the
jump?” he asked the crew. There was a chorus of assent from the officers.
“Major, are you prepared?”
Indigo turned briefly, allowing
him to glimpse her glowing eyes. “Aye, sir,” she replied, sounding oddly
distorted. It took Vermilion a moment
to realise that three voices had spoken in unison: one from Indigo herself and
both Indigo’s and Opal’s from Opal’s speaker. “We are ready.”
We. Vermilion should have
realised exactly where Opal was. The ability to make the ship time-travel to an
exact destination largely relied on the Mysterons’ ability to see in four
dimensions. It was an ability that Indigo shared to some degree, but not well
enough for their mission to succeed, not enough to sense the distortions of the
black hole that would send them back through the years. It had been her idea to
enlist Opal’s help. It was one of the Mysterons who did not support the war,
and was willing to cooperate and serve with Spectrum in order to put an end to
it. She had never mentioned anything like this in her explanation of
coordinating the manoeuvre, however. He would have forbidden it absolutely,
which was why she had probably not mentioned it to him. Damn her!
“Execute slingshot
manoeuvre, Major,” Vermilion responded smoothly, not letting his discomfort
show.
“SIG,” Indigo/Opal replied.
Indigo drew a deep breath
and closed their eyes, reaching out and feeling the gravity well of the singularity,
probing the distortion in time and space that it caused. The helm responded to
their thoughts, and the starship accelerated, heading ever nearer to the event
horizon. One wrong move now and they were history, along with the rest of the
crew.
Although they had made a
show of carefully calculating forces and planning flight paths, Indigo and Opal
had never intended to use them and they threw the Endeavour into the
slingshot using pure instinct. They heard the bridge explode into a cacophony
of shouts as they deviated from the plan, although it was probably by no more
than a few feet, or a slight difference in speed; all their concentration was
on getting the Endeavour through this intact and in the right time, and
they stood a much better chance of doing that using the superior Mysteron
fourth-dimension sense than computers and mathematical models.
“Colonel!” Cerulean shouted
as the ship entered into a low and rapid orbit around the black hole. “They
have entered the slingshot closer to the event horizon than calculated.”
“Damn them!” Vermilion
cursed vehemently, pounding his fist on the arm of his chair. Why hadn’t he
seen this coming? Why hadn’t he learned that Indigo would never change, and
would always continue to do things her own way? What use was it in his
outranking her if she didn’t listen to him once in a while? They had been
friends for so long that he often forgot that she was different to the rest of
the human race, overlooked the fact that she had luminous green eyes,
telepathy, telekinesis and other words starting in ‘tele-’. The bright green
rings sweeping the helm controls, however, reminded him sharply that she was
not entirely human. Two rings he could have just about coped with, their
presence generally being the sign that Opal was performing some task, but four
interlocked rings was a little too unnerving for him, especially considering
that Indigo’s eyes were shut and head leant back against the headrest, as if
she were resting.
He was about to voice a
question to Cerulean, but suddenly, the universe seemed to change. Cerulean
seemed to be moving in freeze-frame, as did Bisque. Only the combined Mysteron
being posing as his friend and first officer seemed unaffected physically by
the phenomenon, the interlocking rings continuing to sweep the helm console
unhampered by the time distortion for what seemed like several minutes, but
could easily have been seconds, until the bridge seemed to return to normal and
a sickening jolt in his stomach told Vermilion that the ship had decelerated, ever
so slightly out of synch with the inertial dampeners.
“Has it worked?” Vermilion
asked his officers.
“Certainly,” Indigo/Opal
responded instantly. “We have arrived on schedule.”
“Confirmed,” Cerulean agreed
in a shaky voice. “Scans of the neighbouring systems show planetary position
consistent with December 2336. The computer will need a moment to extrapolate
the exact date.”
“December sixteenth,” Indigo
interjected. “Twelve hundred thirty hours, Earth GMT.”
“Cerulean?”
“Exactly right, sir,” the scientists
confirmed in surprise. “To the minute, according to the computer.”
“Set a course back to Earth,
then,” Vermilion ordered. “Standard cruising speed.”
“SIG,” Indigo/Opal
responded. “Executing now.”
“And then I want to see you…
two… in my office,” he added. “Immediately. Cerulean, you have the bridge.”
“Of course,” ‘they’ replied,
setting the automatic pilot and following Vermilion to a door at the back of
the bridge, leading to the Colonel’s private office.
Vermilion didn’t say another
word until the door was safely shut and Indigo was sat on the chair before his
desk. He decided not to take his own seat, but paced the small room behind his
first officer until she turned. Her face was serene, eyes glowing gently.
He wheeled on her with hard
eyes. “Why didn’t you tell me what the pair of you were planning? You can’t
just undermine my authority by making a decision that could have put the whole
crew in jeopardy. The chain of command is there for a reason – I am responsible
for this crew and this ship, not to mention this mission.”
“You wouldn’t have agreed,”
Indigo said, her voice taking on an ethereal quality. “This was the only way
that the journey would be successful was if we combined our abilities. The
computer couldn’t compensate for the natural fluctuations in the gravity well –
we could and did.”
“You’re damn right I
wouldn’t have agreed,” Vermilion raged. “I would have thought that sheer common
sense would have prevented you from doing something so stupid! Christ, Rose,
you spend your entire life avoiding exactly what you’ve just done. Did you ever
think that this could be just the chance the Mysterons were looking for to take
you once and for all? What if something else sneaked into your head along with
Opal?”
“There was no danger,” the
being responded in the same even tone. “We both took every caution to ensure
that no additional minds merged with our own.”
Vermilion looked deeply
sceptical as he tried and failed to read his friend’s face. Even her eyes were
different now, although he would never be able to explain the change.
“Are you even still in
there, Rose?” he asked desperately, his spleen vented for the most part, and
concern for his friend taking over.
“I am still Rose,” she
replied. “Just as I am still Opal. I know that you do not understand fully what
we have become, more than our separate components. Our awareness of the
universe has never been surpassed by the Group. You are correct, Colonel: this
is what the Group desired, many years ago, and with good reason. However, I do
feel that it is time for us to divide ourselves, for the time being.”
With that, she fell silent
and her head drooped forwards as if she was asleep. Vermilion watched, unable
to look away, as the air around Indigo shimmered with Opal’s characteristic
disturbance. As the distortion grew away from the tiny body and coalesced into
a vague sphere, Indigo slumped in her seat. Alarmed, Vermilion leaped the few
feet that separated them and checked for a pulse and breathing. Both were
present, if a little ragged, and even as he checked her over, she regained
consciousness. Vermilion felt his heart skip a beat as she met his eyes, dazed
but back to normal. It was definitely her behind those bright green eyes now,
not whatever she and Opal had become together.
“Please don’t blame Opal,”
she begged him in a whisper. “I pulled rank.”
“Oh, now see, that I can
believe,” he responded with a sigh of relief, pulling her closer to him, as if
embracing her would make it more real for him. He only held her for a few
seconds before turning towards the non-corporeal member of his crew.
“You’re dismissed,
Lieutenant,” he said, not unkindly. “Please return to navigation.”
“SIG,” Opal replied through the
radio receiver on Vermilion’s desk. Promptly, the Mysteron vanished through the
door leading back to the bridge.
“What am I going to do with
you?” Vermilion groaned. Finally
allowing himself to sit, he walked wearily around his desk and lowered himself
into his chair with a thump. He ran a hand through his still-blond hair as he
contemplated Indigo and wondered, not for the first time, why two such
opposites as himself and Indigo had remained such close friends after all this
time. People had often commented on what a striking team they made when they
were field partners; the tall, blond, tanned man and the tiny, raven-haired,
pale woman always raised eyebrows. Only after people got to know them did they
realise that their equally opposing personalities complemented each other.
Whilst he looked like the last of the Vikings, Vermilion was gentle and
patient, whereas Indigo, underneath decades of self-control, was every
commanding officer’s worst nightmare; impetuous and unafraid of disobeying
orders when she felt she was right, coupled with a quick temper that matched
her late father’s in its ferocity. It was exactly those exasperating qualities
that would make her an excellent colonel one day, when she allowed herself to
be promoted, but Vermilion understood her reasons for refusing any further
promotions, ones that would take her away from the field whilst she was still
more than capable of serving.
“Put me up in front of a
firing squad?” she responded, recalling something she had been told as a
teenager. That incident had been before the discovery of the electron rifle, of
course.
“Don’t even joke about
that,” Vermilion said, scandalised. “Besides, we don’t do that these days.”
“I know.”
“Forgive me for asking,
Indie, but there’s something else about your plan that bothers me,” Vermilion
said, narrowing his eyes at his First Officer. “Something else that you’ve left
hazy.”
“Oh, what’s that?” Indigo
asked innocently, knowing full well what he was about to say. She knew exactly
which part of the plan of action was still unclear.
“How do you plan on getting
onto Starbase, exactly?” Vermilion inquired. “It’s not as if we’re going to be
able to glide up to an airlock and walk on. You and I, at least, are already
there. Granted, I’ve changed since then, they might not recognise me straight
away, but you haven’t.”
“You’ve not changed that
much,” she replied, her tone gentle, but not as if she was trying to flatter
him or butter him up, preparing him for something she knew he wouldn’t like.
He fixed her with a hard
stare, until she relented.
“Opal’s going to help me,” she
told him. “It can teleport me from the ship to Starbase if we come to a stop
just outside their sensor range. We’re lucky in a way; next year, the sensors
will be upgraded, and we wouldn’t be able to pull this off. Once I’m on board,
and they know where I’m from, you shouldn’t have a problem with coming on board
yourself, if necessary. I don’t recommend that we do too much mingling with the
crew of Starbase in this time, even though by this time tomorrow, hopefully,
our knowledge of the future won’t be worth a dime.”
“Amen to that. Doesn’t mean
I like your plan,” he added, “but at least you have thought it through.”
It took them another ship’s
day to make the return trip, having to make similar detours as during the trip
out to the black hole. They couldn’t risk coming across any of Spectrum’s ships
of this era before arrival at Starbase. There would be too many awkward
questions. Chief Engineer Wheat fretted over fluctuations in structural
integrity caused by a malfunctioning power conduit in the field emitters.
Although the fault wasn’t causing them any problems at the time, without
repairs they wouldn’t survive the return journey. There was no hiding anything
now, no possibility that Indigo could just go in and back out again unnoticed –
they had to dock and make repairs at Starbase.
Captain Cerulean compiled a
sensor report for the journey, noting particularly that the gravity field of
the black hole had fluctuated during the slingshot orbit. Calculations
indicated that had Indigo and Opal used the original flight path, the Endeavour
would have emerged from the ether approximately a hundred years earlier than
planned – if it survived at all. It didn’t stop Vermilion smarting over them
having left him out of the loop, but it slightly diminished his desire to
court-marshal Indigo when they got back to their own time.
A ship’s day after leaving
the vicinity of the singularity, Indigo brought the ship to a stop, just beyond
the horizon of Starbase’s sensors.
Major Scarlet was careful not
to attract anyone’s attention as he moved through the corridors of Starbase and
moved into those of Cloudbase, heading towards the very quarters that Vermilion
had found Indigo in the day before. After the horribly brief conversation with
his daughter during which she had destroyed what was left of his spirit, he
wanted to be alone, and these rooms were the best ones on Starbase for that
purpose. No one came down here any more; no one had any reason to, except him
and his daughter. His mind automatically steered him to the door he wanted, and
he punched in the security code without looking at the panel.
It took him a while to
realise that he wasn’t alone. From an armchair that inexplicably still
furnished the room, two circles of green light shone into the darkness. Even as
he saw this, he felt a wave of nausea rise in his stomach. Despite his attack
of the blues, so to speak, he quickly put two and two together. The presence of
a Mysteron on the base pushed all other concerns from his mind, and he reached
for his gun, only to find that it wasn’t in its holster. Why should it be, on
Starbase?
“I’m glad you came here,”
the Mysteron said conversationally, her voice devastatingly recognisable. “It
was a toss-up between here and next door, and I would have hated to have to
come looking for you, especially considering what I’ve just done to you
upstairs.”
“What do you want?” Scarlet
demanded wearily. “There’s been no threat announced yet.”
“Threat?”
As the Mysteron spoke,
Scarlet’s mind suddenly clicked that he had just seen his daughter, not ten
minutes ago, alive and well. Unless the Mysterons had changed their modus
operandi…
He felt, belatedly, the
Mysteron probing at his mind, and he pushed her away. It occurred to him as he
did so that a) he wouldn’t have been able to block her out if she really wanted
to stay, and b) that gentle touch was definitely that of his daughter, and
although there was something different about it, there was none of the
malevolence present that he would expect from a Mysteron Agent.
“It’s not what you think,”
Indigo said quickly. “This might be a little hard to swallow, but I’m from the
future.”
“You’re a Mysteron,” he said
weakly, still reeling from the reaction of his inbuilt detector.
“No… oh, I know what it is,”
she said with dawning comprehension. For a moment, she grew very still, then,
before Scarlet’s eyes, a phosphorescent green haze seemed to seep from the
pores of her skin, coalescing into a free form hanging in midair as it moved
away from her. The dizziness ceased immediately.
“I hitched a lift with Opal
here, so that I could get on board Starbase without question,” Indigo
explained, waving a hand towards the green haze. “I thought that there might be
a few too many questions if I tried to come in through a more conventional
route.”
Although she was making no
further attempts to probe his thoughts, Indigo had completely lowered her
shields and opened her mind for his scrutiny.
“I’m from the future,” she
repeated. “Thirty-six years from now, in fact.”
Scarlet knew that she was
speaking the truth. There was no way that she could lie to him whilst she was
so unguarded. “Why?” he asked simply.
Indigo stood. The full foot
separating their heights meant that she had to look a long way up into his
face, but she did so without complaint and took both of his hands in hers.
“I have to repair a mistake
I made,” she whispered, a smile playing at her lips. “Happy birthday.”
Scarlet’s eyes widened. “You
don’t mean…?”
The smile broadened, and her
bright eyes sparkled in the dark room. “Yes, I do,” she said simply. “C’mon,
we’d best be somewhere less remote, just in case it all goes wrong.”
Having relocated to
Scarlet’s current quarters, they sat side by side on the settee in the living
area.
“Opal will keep an eye on us
whilst we are linked,” Indigo told him. “It’ll raise the alarm if we get into
trouble, but I don’t think we will.”
‘It never hurts to be
cautious,’
Opal said, a note of humour in its thought.
“Opal?” Scarlet queried the
name. “I thought that Mysterons didn’t have names.”
“It’s a colour code,” Indigo
said, rolling her eyes. “This is Lieutenant Opal. It’s the navigation
officer on the Endeavour.” When Scarlet didn’t say anything in return,
Indigo continued, “Opal’s mother saved my life in New York, that time when I
was a kid. It protected Captain Black from the other Mysterons whilst he handed
me over to Spectrum.”
Scarlet only nodded. Unlike
Indigo, who embraced the Mysteron part of her heritage now that the conflict
was over and the peaceful faction was in control on Mars, he preferred to
distance himself from the Mysterons as much as possible, and still struggled
with the fact that their two races were now at peace with each other. In his
eyes, the Mysterons were, and always would be enemies, but this new information
did not sit well with his stereotype of the race.
Indigo could see that he was
struggling to assimilate the information. “Don’t worry too much about it just
now,” she advised. “Just relax.”
She reached out and gently
laid her hands on either side of his face. Her eyes closed, and for a moment
Scarlet studied her tranquil expression; felt her at peace with herself, as she
had not been for many years. Within seconds, though, her features took on a
worried look, although Scarlet barely had time to notice before something
happened. Fire raced along every nerve in his body, searing pain lancing though
him, and he could not prevent a cry escaping him, a cry echoed by his daughter.
Her hands felt like branding irons against his face, her presence like wires in
his brain. Surely this was wrong – this couldn’t be what she had intended to do
to him…
As suddenly as it had
started, everything stopped. An icy chill was left where there had only been
flame, so cold…
*****
Lieutenant Opal turned to the only person it
knew who could help its friend. Unfortunately, when it found her, she seemed to
be rather upset, and Opal hesitated. She had always appeared so strong, that it
had trouble associating the hunched-up figure that was sobbing into a cushion,
with Major Indigo. At first it wondered, absurdly, if it had the wrong room, as
if that could be anyone other than Rose Metcalfe, but the bubbling fish tank in
the corner of the room satisfied it that this was the correct place.
“Major Indigo?” It intruded quietly into
her mind, so as not to disturb her.
“Go ‘way,” she said aloud,
indistinctly, her words muffled by the cushion.
“Major, I need your help,” Opal insisted, slightly
more urgently. “Your father needs your help.”
That got her attention. Opal
felt her reach out towards her father, and realise that something had happened.
“What…?”
Opal explained everything in
a telepathic burst of images and memories, rather than in the words that Indigo
generally preferred. She was already on her feet and out of the door before it
had finished. She turned from her door to Scarlet’s in a practiced move,
unlocking the door using telekinesis rather than typing the code in manually.
Indigo did a slight double
take when she saw herself and her father on the sofa, both unconscious. Despite
Opal’s information, she had not quite been prepared to see her own face.
“Indigo to Sickbay,” she
called out, activating the comm. system by vocal command. “Medical emergency in
Major Scarlet’s quarters. Two teams required on the double!”
“What seems to be the
problem, Major?” Doctor Mint’s voice sounded throughout the room.
“No time to explain, it’s a
long story,” she said frantically, checking both casualties for life signs.
“Just get the teams here.”
The med-techs arrived in no
time, carrying two gurneys between them. Indigo stepped back, allowing two of
them to lift Scarlet effortlessly onto one of the gurneys whilst the other two
did the same with the unconscious Indigo.
“’Ere, what’s goin’ on?” one
of the techs blurted when he saw the patient, whose eyes fluttered slightly.
Indigo stepped up to the side of the gurney, and shielded her eyes from the
bright lights above. A hand reached out to grasp hers as her double’s eyes
finally opened, struggling against oblivion. Bright blue eyes.
“Did it work?” she whispered
urgently.
“Yes, it did,” Indigo answered reassuringly,
knowing instinctively that she was telling the truth.
Doctor Verdant hurried over
to assist his colleague as the orderlies wheeled Scarlet and Indigo into
Sickbay. Mint barely afforded him a glance before turning his attention to his
hand-held medical scanner, which was currently pointed at Scarlet. The device
whistled alarmingly and Mint hit the side of it in irritation at the obviously
incorrect reading and rescanned his patient.
Verdant pointed his own
scanner at Indigo the moment she entered Sickbay, and in his hurry to check his
patient, he never noticed the officer who accompanied the unconscious pair. The
scanner let out a piercing whistle, matching that of Mint’s instrument.
“That can’t be right,”
Verdant said, studying the readout.
“No retrometabolism?” the
visitor remarked. “It’s exactly right.”
Both Mint and Verdant looked
up sharply at the familiar voice. Major Indigo was standing in the doorway, out
of the way of the two doctors. Verdant looked back at his patient, then back at
the figure in the doorway in disbelief.
“Quarantine them!” Mint
shouted, coming to his senses first. “If their retrometabolism has shut down,
they’re susceptible to infection.”
The med-techs obediently
whisked the two patients to one of the quarantine suites. Both doctors wheeled
on Indigo.
“Would you mind explaining?”
Verdant demanded, arms folded.
“General Claret?”
“What is it, Blue?” Claret snapped at her
aide. She had been in a foul temper ever since Major Indigo had taken off
without authorisation four days ago, and there seemed little chance of it
abating in the near future.
“Doctor Mint reports that Majors Scarlet and
Indigo have been discovered unconscious in Major Scarlet’s quarters,”
Lieutenant Blue reported timidly. “He also says that you should get down to
Sickbay as soon as possible. He doesn’t want to speculate until you’ve ‘seen
for yourself’, he says. Something about Indigo.”
“Nothing more?” Claret growled. “Very well,
I’ll meet him there in five minutes.”
“SIG,” Blue said, moving to restore the audio
connection to Sickbay when another light flashed on his board.
“General, we’re being hailed by the… the S.S.
Endeavour,” Blue advised, reading his display. “It’s showing a Spectrum
registry, but there’s no record of it in the computer. I’m interfacing with
their computer for the registry details. They’ve only just crossed the sensor
horizon, but it’s close enough.”
There was a slight pause, then: “That can’t
be right!” Blue exclaimed, his dark eyes wide with astonishment. “General, the
registry is showing a launch date of July 10th, 2367!”
Claret frowned. “The tri-centenary? That’s
not for another thirty-one years! Who’s commanding, dare I ask?”
Blue touched a few controls. The poor young
man looked utterly confused. “Colonel… Vermilion.”
“‘Something about Indigo’,” Claret repeated
softly. “Things are starting to fall into place. And, of course, you never get
one without the other. Well, put him on, Lieutenant.”
Claret turned to the vidscreen, which
promptly came to life, displaying the familiar countenance of Vermilion, aged
by many years but still very recognisable.
“Welcome to 2336, Colonel Vermilion,” Claret
greeted him as her suspicions were confirmed.
“Thank you, General,” Vermilion replied with a
smile after only a slight hesitation, caught out by Claret’s salutation. “I’m
sorry if we surprised you.”
“That’s certainly one way to put it,” Claret said
dryly. “Is your First Officer aboard Starbase, by any chance?”
A fleeting expression of concern passed over
Vermilion’s face, quickly suppressed. “Yes, ma’am, she is. I apologise for
her intruding, but we thought it best if she completed her mission before we
revealed ourselves.”
“‘Her mission’? Is there any chance you might
enlighten me as to what’s going on?” she asked acerbically.
“I’ll gladly explain as much
as possible, General,” Vermilion said. “Our SIF suffered some damage during the trip, and
we can’t return until it’s fixed. Could we dock at Starbase to make repairs?”
Claret nodded. Making any kind of trip with a
malfunctioning SIF was dangerous. “We have some space available. I’ll get
Lieutenant Blue to send details to your helmsman.”
“Thank you, ma’am,” Vermilion said politely. “I’ll
see you when we dock.”
“SIG. Starbase out.”
The screen winked off and Claret turned to
Blue. “I want them in quarantine,” she ordered. “They can borrow engineers if
necessary, but no one from the junior staff – colour-coded engineers only. I
only want Colonel Vermilion to leave the ship, none of the rest of his crew.”
“SIG,” Blue acknowledged, keying instructions
into his console, thoroughly confused.
*****
Vermilion practically ran to Sickbay, the
moment that Security released him following a short discussion on the ground
rules with Claret, rules he had agreed to in an instant. The nurse that he
almost ploughed into did a double take before pointing him towards one of the
isolation rooms furthest from the main entrance and wards. The windows of the
ward were blacked out, but the door to the atrium was not locked, as it would
be if there were quarantine patients in there. The door opened obediently as he
approached, revealing Doctors Mint and Verdant deep in conversation, their
backs turned to the observation window so that the occupants could not lip-read
what they were saying. They looked up, startled.
“Colonel Vermilion, I
presume?” Verdant asked smoothly, taking in the newcomer with apparent ease.
“We were told to expect you.”
“How are they?” Vermilion
asked. Scarlet and Indigo appeared fine, to his eyes, both reclining on beds
and chatting to each other.
“They are in perfect
health,” Mint answered, stealing a glance at his colleague. “Fortunately, their
immune systems appear to be functional against current diseases, otherwise they
would be facing a difficult time over the next few months. If it had not been,”
he continued, seeing Vermilion’s blank look, “they would have no defences
against any disease that has developed over the last three centuries. They
would be facing an intense regime of immunisations and supplementary medication
until their systems caught up, otherwise.”
“It worked then?” Vermilion
pressed. “They’re both normal now?”
Any reply was drowned out by
an alarm shrieking from the console behind the doctors. Indigo had leaped from
her bed upon seeing Vermilion, and was now standing at the door separating the
quarantine ward from this small room. Her absence from the sensors had set the
alarm off. With a sigh, Verdant silenced the alarm and opened the door.
“Jack!” Indigo cried,
rushing towards him, her blue eyes shining with joy. “Jack, it’s worked.
Everything’s going to be all right.”
Vermilion lifted her off her
feet as she approached him and spun her around. “I knew you could do it,” he
said as he set her back down again. He swept a piece of her dark hair away from
her eyes gently, and he saw clearly for the first time, that she was very
comfortable in his arms. Suddenly, without conscious thought, their mouths met
in a tender kiss that seemed to last eternity.
They broke apart at the
sound of a slight cough. Scarlet was also up, leaning casually against the
frame of the open door.
“I thought you said you
weren’t with anyone?” he said mildly.
Indigo turned, still in
Vermilion’s arms. She had the good grace to look slightly embarrassed, with a
delicate blush highlighting her youthful features.
“I er… I wasn’t,” she
replied.
“Paul!” Vermilion exclaimed,
his face alight with happiness at seeing his friend alive and well. “You don’t
seem surprised.”
Scarlet shrugged. “I’m not,”
he said. “It’s obvious to anyone with eyes that the two of you are crazy about
each other, even now, in your counterparts.”
“And I thought I was hiding it
so well,” Vermilion said ruefully. “You sure were,” he added, giving Indigo a
little squeeze.
“I thought I was,” she
commented. “Maybe not, though.”
“Not to me, my love,”
Scarlet told her affectionately. “You should have learned by now that you can’t
hide anything from your daddy.”
“Don’t tell them – us,”
Indigo said, horrified suddenly. She looked around Vermilion to ensure that the
doctors realised that they were included in the request.
“They slipped out whilst you
were otherwise occupied,” Scarlet said. “Don’t worry – I’ve kept my silence
this long. I knew you’d figure it out eventually. Now, if you really don’t want
them to find you out, I suggest that you separate.”
Something in the tone of
Scarlet’s voice made the couple spring apart, just moments before the main
doors opened to admit General Claret, followed by Major Indigo and a young
Captain Vermilion. Claret seemed to take in the presence of the duplicates with
relative ease, compared to Captain Vermilion, who flanked his Commanding
Officer protectively whilst staring at his older self.
“Majors, I am told that you
are both in perfect health and can be released from Sickbay,” Claret said, with
what looked suspiciously like a smile. “Obviously, however, I can’t allow you,
the ‘older’ Major Indigo, nor Colonel Vermilion, to freely walk the base. There
would be too many questions asked.”
“I understand,” Colonel
Vermilion replied. “We will confine ourselves to the Endeavour whilst
the SIF repairs are carried out.”
“We need not be quite that
drastic,” Claret said. “I realise that there are things that need to be said
between the five of you, especially considering that there has been quite a
dramatic turning point in your lives. I would ask that you restrict yourselves
to the Endeavour, your quarters here on Starbase and the corridors in
between – no further.”
“Of course,” Colonel
Vermilion responded.
“Also,” Claret continued, “I
would like to be fully briefed, as much as possible, on what has occurred. I
am, therefore, calling a meeting tomorrow at oh-eight hundred hours in the main
Conference room. You may all consider yourselves invited. Major Scarlet, Majors
Indigo, you are all off duty until then. Colonel Vermilion, please co-ordinate
your repairs with my engineers, according to the rules laid down earlier.”
“SIG.” The reluctant
response was uttered in chorus by the five officers, with the two pairs of
counterparts speaking in synch.
“Actually, I’ve had an
idea,” Claret said with a slight smile. “I know how much you like going back to
your old Cloudbase quarters, Major Indigo. I think that all those rooms are
still connected to the main systems, and lighting two of them wouldn’t cause my
engineers a problem. That solution will keep you on Starbase and away from most
of the crew. There’s even the old conference room down there that we could
use.”
The elder Vermilion looked
at his first officer, seeing her shining eyes pleading with him to agree. He
had to admit that he liked the idea of using those old rooms himself.
“It would be an honour,
ma’am,” he replied graciously.
Claret nodded briskly. “I’ll
make the arrangements and send an escort for you when the quarters are ready.”
She spun smartly on her heel and left the room.
“I think we need to get some
names sorted, if you’re staying for a while,” Scarlet said, slouching back on
the doorframe. “We could just about cope with these two,” he indicated to the
two Vermilions, “Captain and Colonel,
but you two are going to be more difficult.”
“My rank isn’t worth much
here, Paul,” Colonel Vermilion said. “I’m quite happy to drop my colour-code
for the time being.”
“As am I,” the blue-eyed
Indigo agreed. “That is, if you two don’t mind.”
“If it makes life easier,”
the green-eyed Indigo replied, “I don’t mind.”
“Sure,” Captain Vermilion
shrugged.
*****
Rose woke to find the room
shaking. Roused from her sleep, it took her a moment to realise that it wasn’t
the room at all, but her that was moving.
“I’m awake,” she mumbled as
she turned to see Jack.
Jack released Rose and
helped her to sit up. “Hurry up, Rose, or we’ll be late.”
Rose frowned. “Late? What
time is it?”
“07:50,” Jack replied
urgently.
Rose leaped out of bed and
pulled the spare uniform she had brought from the Endeavour out of her
closet. “Why did you let me sleep so late?” she demanded as she stripped off
her nightie.
Jack averted his eyes
politely. “I thought you’d be awake,” he said. “You’re normally the first up.”
“You’re right. Why… oh –
Jack, don’t be so ridiculous. You’re going to be seeing me like this a lot
more.”
Jack shook his head, still
not looking at her. “I can’t,” he said quietly. “You deserve a young man,
someone around the age you look.”
Jack turned as he felt
Rose’s hand on his cheek. “I want you,” she told him gently, but firmly. She
stood on tiptoes and kissed him gently before resuming dressing at top speed.
There was a delicate blush on her cheeks, and she looked slightly annoyed as
her hear popped out of her polo-neck.
“I didn’t think about
sleep,” she berated herself. “I should have remembered that I would need to
sleep more now.”
“Let me guess,” Jack said,
handing her a uniform tunic. “You went to sleep at around three or four, same
as normal?”
“Yes,” she growled, sitting
down to pull on her socks and boots. “There’s so much I’ll have to get used
to.”
“Welcome to mortality,” Jack
said teasingly, handing her a hairbrush.
Indigo pulled the brush
quickly through her short hair, before discarding the brush on the bed and
standing. She rubbed her eyes to get rid of the sleep deposits and glanced in
the mirror.
“It’ll have to do, I
suppose,” she moaned.
“You look perfect,”
Vermilion told her, pulling her towards him and kissing her. He pulled away
after only a few seconds and placed her cap on her dark head.
“Now, we need to go, or we
really won’t get there on time.”
Rose and Jack met up with
Major Scarlet just outside the Conference Room. Dark stubble shadowed his
cheeks and his vest wasn’t yet done up, and he was, like them, a minute
late.
“Look at you, you’re a
mess!” she scolded affectionately, reaching to fasten the zipper on his vest,
allowing him time to straighten his cap, which was currently at a very
precarious angle. “Did you oversleep, by any chance?”
“You too, eh?” he replied
with a smile, before stifling a yawn and rubbing at the bristles on his chin.
“Shall we go and bite the
bullet, Colonel Svenson?” Scarlet said, opening the door and allowing the
American to pass ahead of him.
Major Indigo and Captain
Vermilion were already seated around the table, along with Doctor Verdant and
General Claret, sitting in the centre, as the three older officers entered. The
general gave them a very stern look that reminded Scarlet sharply of Colonel
White. Despite the fact that Claret was a petite, purple woman, she possessed
that same authoritative persona that brought grown men to heel with ease.
Swiftly, Scarlet came to
attention, an action mirrored by the two temporally displaced officers at his
side.
“Please accept our apologies
for our tardiness,” Jack began when it was clear that he had drawn the short
straw by holding the higher rank. “Majors Scarlet and Metcalfe have experienced
some difficulties in adjusting to their new circumstances.”
Claret’s keen eyes studied
the errant trio carefully before questioning the use of name. “Major Metcalfe?”
“Yes, ma’am,” Vermilion
continued. “The major and I have decided to adopt our given names for the time
being, to avoid confusion between us and our younger counterparts.”
“I see,” Claret mused.
“Well, sit down, Colonel, Majors. We’re already late.”
Meekly, Jack, Rose and Scarlet
took vacant seats around the perimeter of the table.
Claret fixed each officer in
turn with a stern glare as her chair rotated slowly in the centre of the
circular table.
“I have called this meeting
in order to clarify the events of yesterday,” she said authoritatively. “I, for
one, am not quite sure I understand what occurred, nor what would cause two
senior Spectrum officers to break the most important of the Temporal Orders so
seriously. I trust that there was a good reason, Colonel Svenson?”
“Yes, ma’am,” Jack replied
briskly. “Without going into too much detail, without Major Metcalfe’s
intervention, a chain of events would be set up that would lead to the eventual
extinction of life on Earth.”
Claret looked deeply
unimpressed. “You’ll excuse me if I need a little more convincing, Colonel.
Whilst you are here, you are subject to my command, no matter who might be the
head of Spectrum in your time.”
“It’s still you, ma’am,”
Jack said. “However, the actual events that were to happen are not important.
As long as they do not occur, then we are justified in our actions.”
‘Rosie, what did I do to
make you come back and change me?’
The projected thought caught
Rose off guard. She hadn’t tested her telepathy since she had lost her
retrometabolism, had thought that it would have been lost along with her
indestructibility. Obviously, however, she had been wrong. If Scarlet could
still project, then the odds were that she could too.
She steadfastly looked at
Claret. ‘What makes you think that it was anything you did?’ she
projected back, ensuring that the thought was shielded from Claret.
‘There must have been something.’ The extra shielding hadn’t
taken into account the other telepath in the conference room. Claret and Jack
were still politely arguing, heedless of the fact that the three Metcalfes were
engaged in a telepathic conversation of their own.
‘I wouldn’t have altered
causality without a damn good reason,’ the younger Indigo continued.
Rose shifted uncomfortably
in her seat and stared at her hands, which were clasped on the tabletop. ‘I’d
rather not say,’ she thought to them.
Both Scarlet and her younger
self pressed the question, and under their joint scrutiny, Rose relented. She
doubted that she would have held up if Indigo really tried to get an answer
from her.
‘You committed suicide on
Christmas Eve,’ she told Scarlet, still not meeting his gaze. ‘Your death
precipitated a civil war on Mars, which then led to the start of the second War
of Nerves.’
The whole room fell silent.
Scarlet and Indigo were staring at Rose, who had her head bowed and her eyes
closed, looking very small and delicate next to Jack. Claret had stopped
speaking and looked very unimpressed at the three Metcalfes. Following Claret’s
lead, Jack had also stopped speaking.
“When you three have quite
finished,” Claret said icily, “I couldn’t quite catch what you were saying, and
I am certain that Captain Vermilion and Colonel Svenson didn’t, either. You all
know the rules regarding conversation in staff meetings: no telepathy.”
“Yes, ma’am,” Rose said, her
voice thick with emotion. Yesterday, she had been able to shut off her
memories, seeing her father alive again had made everything that had occurred
seem so very distant, but now it was catching up to her. That awful night
seemed like only yesterday, the pain still fresh and raw.
Claret could not fail to
notice. “I think we need to know,” she said, more gently.
“I know why you were keeping
your silence, Rose,” Scarlet said, sounding shaken but assertive. “I don’t mind
if you tell General Claret and Captain Vermilion.”
“I… I can’t believe it,”
Indigo said quietly. “I don’t believe that you would ever do something like
that, Dad.”
“I can,” Scarlet admitted in
a hoarse voice.
Rose looked up and met
Scarlet’s eyes. Her eyes were brimming with tears, but he could also see
comprehension there. She understood now what had led to the events of Christmas
Eve, what had driven his counterpart to take his own life.
“Perhaps I should begin?”
Scarlet offered. “I know the beginning of the story.”
“Thank you,” Rose said
softly.
“As you may have realised, I
haven’t been myself recently,” Scarlet began, sounding slightly ashamed of his
melancholy. “I have never been comfortable with the idea of immortality, and
with my three hundredth birthday approaching, all I could think of was the fact
that I wanted to be able to see an end to my life. Five days ago, I asked Rose
to reverse the effects of my Mysteronisation and shut down my retrometabolism.”
“That was why I left
Starbase,” Indigo interrupted softly. “I had to get out of here.”
Claret nodded her
understanding.
“I wish I hadn’t done that,”
Rose said. “I just needed some time away to sort my thoughts out.”
“It didn’t help,” Indigo
admitted. “I just felt more hurt and confused than ever.”
Rose nodded. “The fact that
it was bloody freezing didn’t help,” she said with a small smile.
“This is weird,” Indigo
said. “I know you’re me, but…”
Rose grinned. “Yeah, I
know.”
“Ladies?”
“Sorry, General,” the two
Indigos said in unison.
“I did a lot of soul-searching,
trying to put my fears at rest, but when Dad came to me yesterday, I couldn’t
go through with it. I’ve never known how I stop the retrometabolism when I free
Mysteron agents, and I’ve never been able to do that in replicants over a month
or so old. The few times I’ve tried, I came out of it so weak, without actually
achieving anything.”
“Over the next week, Paul
got progressively more and more withdrawn.” Jack took over the story from
Indigo. “Depressed, wouldn’t speak to anyone, spending all his off duty time
locked up in his quarters.”
“On Christmas Eve, Jack and
I had drawn the night watch together,” Rose said, her eyes unfocussed as she
remembered. “Just before midnight, I sensed what Dad was about to do. He was in
the core, standing next to the generator. I got there just in time to see…” She
broke off, unable to form the words.
“The worst of it was,” Jack
picked up the tale again after a moment of shocked silence, “we had only just
been talking about the reversal, and Rose had decided that she was going to do
it after all, for Christmas instead of Paul’s birthday.”
“We buried you in
Winchester, next to Grandma and Granddad,” Rose continued, tears flowing freely
down her cheeks. “Everything was arranged very quickly; we had a
private funeral on the twenty-seventh, with a memorial planned for the New
Year.
“On New Year’s Eve, I was on
Mars with the First Minister when the government was overrun by the war
supporters, seeing opportunity now that one of their biggest problems was out
of the way and the other was… distracted. They started a very vicious civil
war. Mysterons can do a whole host of very nasty things to each other when they
want to, and it wasn’t exactly a walk in the park for me, either. By New Year’s
Day, most of the ruling body was dead, and the peace supporters folded. I
barely managed to escape with my life. Lieutenant Opal distracted the new
leaders of the group mind whilst I fired up the engines of the Angel I’d
borrowed for the trip – legitimately, this time. Opal came back to Earth with
me, just in time for us to hear the Voice of the Mysterons declaring war
again.” Rose shuddered at the memory.
“The war has been going on
ever since then,” Jack said. “The Mysterons are managing to complete their
threats more often than not. There is no way we’re going to win this time.”
“Opal and I saw the end,
using that precognition sense – what would happen if we didn’t
manage to stop the war,” Rose added, sounding much stronger now, secure in her
conviction that what she had done was right. “Within a month, the Mysterons
were going to set off a nuclear bomb, big enough to irradiate the whole Earth.
Those who weren’t lucky enough to be killed in the initial explosion would have
been living on a dead world – crops would have failed, food stocks rapidly
diminish, people fighting each other to feed their families. But even if they
managed to feed themselves, they would have died of radiation sickness within a
year. By New Year, 2374, the Earth will be nothing but a ball of dirt, with
dead plants and animals lying everywhere, with no bacteria left to rot them.
“The only way to stop it
happening was to prevent the war from starting in the first place; by stopping
you from dying, Dad.” Rose smiled faintly. “After that vision, causality didn’t
seem to matter that much.”
There was silence. Then:
“You never told me that,” Jack said weakly. “Never said how it would
happen.”
“I can see why,” Vermilion
said dryly. “It’s not a pretty picture second-hand.”
“No, it’s not,” Claret
agreed, licking her lips nervously. “Are you certain that it has been averted?
Couldn’t the fact that Major Scarlet is no longer indestructible still cause
the uprising on Mars?”
“We considered it,” Rose
said. “One of the factors in the uprising was the fact that Dad had committed
suicide. Opal and I, along with a few other Mysteron refugees, think that even
the violent factions will respect the fact that Dad has renounced what they
still see as a ‘gift’, in order to live a peaceful life. They don’t understand
that the human mind is not designed to cope with living for hundreds of years,
so they couldn’t understand why he did what he did – they just saw it as more
violence.”
Indigo had her eyes closed.
Her older counterpart knew that she was searching for an answer beyond the
senses of her peers, seeing things that the human mind was not meant to see;
exhibiting a difference that most people could not accept about her.
“I can’t see the civil war,”
she said eventually, with a smile. “The peace will continue. Nothing that you
described will happen.”
Everyone knew better than to
ask how she knew. It was just one of those things that they had to put down to
bizarre Mysteron abilities. The clairvoyance was one of the spookier powers,
though, and Indigo tended to keep very quiet about anything she managed to
perceive through it, unless it was important. She knew it unnerved her friends,
and for her, it brought a whole new meaning to the phrase ‘déjà vu’. She
didn’t like using that particular aspect of her powers – she preferred to find
things out when they happened, and not before.
“Well, thank God for that,”
Rose said, laughing softly. “I’d have been really annoyed if we’d done all this
for nothing.”
Claret sighed and turned to
Dr. Verdant, who had remained silent throughout the relating of the events
leading up to Rose and Jack returning to this time.
“Doctor, I know you have
spoken to Major Scarlet and Major Metcalfe already, but I would be grateful if
you could brief the rest of us on the practical aspects of their altered
condition.”
Verdant stood up and glanced
at both officers for a final confirmation of their consent before beginning.
“Well, General, as you know,
Major Metcalfe’s actions yesterday disabled the retrometabolic process in both
her and Major Scarlet. Whether this is a permanent state of affairs or not
remains to be seen, considering that
Major Indigo has already regained her retrometabolism before - after it
apparently stopped in 2089.”
Both versions of Vermilion stared
at their respective Indigos, and even Claret seemed taken aback by the remark.
“I was electrocuted,” the
Indigos explained simultaneously, then flashed matching mischievous grins at
each other.
“This feels different,” Rose
said to the doctor. “This feels permanent. Then again, I thought it
would be permanent then, too.”
“Only time will tell,”
Verdant said, trying to get back on track. “For the time being, both Major
Scarlet and Major Metcalfe seem to be almost completely normal Humans. Their
immune systems seem to be coping with the change well, although I’m scheduling
several shots to ensure that they both remain healthy. I have already sent a
list to Doctor Chartreuse, so there is absolutely no chance of you getting out
of it, Major Metcalfe.”
“Damn,” Rose swore
playfully. Verdant was reminding her forcibly of Doctor Fawn, in anticipating
her trying to avoid Sickbay for as long as they were on Starbase.
“Both of you are physically
fit,” Verdant continued, “and as far as I can tell, Majors, you will both age
normally now. Again, though, only time will tell whether this is actually the
case. Of course, there are certain limitations now that you are not
indestructible, sleep being one of these. You must remember that you need more
sleep now, not just a couple of hours a night. Naturally, there will be a
period of adjustment whilst you get used to a new routine, but I can see no
reason not to release you both onto active duty. Only,” Verdant added, with a
twinkle in his eye, “no stepping in front of bullets.”
“Well, I can’t promise
that,” Scarlet said.
“Me neither,” Rose added.
Claret sighed in dismay at
the irrepressible pair.
“There is one matter that we
need to discuss, General,” Rose said more seriously as Verdant sat back down.
“What is that?”
“Unless we keep the chain
going, we’ll have a paradox – a true paradox – on our hands. I – Indigo, I mean
– will have to go to go back in time thirty-six years from now and do what I’ve
done, and explain this over – to keep the timeline going, so that Dad is always
alive, and the events that lead to what created my timeline can’t happen
again.”
“I know,” Indigo said
quietly. “I can do it.”
“I don’t think I can really
refuse, can I?” Claret said with a sigh. “Knowing what will happen without your
intervention, I can condone the breach of regulations. Now, are there any more
issues to discuss?”
At the negative responses
around the table, Claret called an end to the meeting. Doctor Verdant caught
Major Metcalfe before she left and they headed out together, with Rose waving a
dismissive hand at Colonel Svenson, which amused Claret greatly.
He’s still crazy about her,
even after all that time, she thought as she left the centre of the table and walked around the
perimeter.
Major Indigo and Captain
Vermilion were ahead of the others, talking in low voices, and they missed the
exchange. Major Scarlet, however, saw.
‘When will they work it
out?’
Claret asked with a tolerant smile, watching Jack walk forlornly back to the Endeavour.
‘Yesterday’, Scarlet replied, perching
on the edge of the next to where Claret was standing.
‘Yesterday?’ she reflected back at him.
Scarlet nodded. ‘In
Sickbay, just before you arrived with our versions of them. I was beginning to
lose hope.’ They lapsed into silence, contemplating what had been revealed
during the briefing.
“Paul, were you really that
unhappy?” Claret’s voice was tinged with sadness.
Scarlet stopped slouching on
the table and stood before her, his head bowed. “Yes, I was,” he admitted in a
low voice. “I thought about going down to the generator last night and doing
exactly what… what I did do in their alternate timeline.”
Claret took his hands in
hers. “I knew something was wrong, but I never thought for a moment that it was
that bad.”
Scarlet raised his gaze
slightly, from the floor to the hands that were holding his. “I tried to hide it, for Rose’s sake, but I
just didn’t want to go on living like that, with no end in sight. Now though…
Now I know that I will die, one day; that I’m not going to live forever…” He
smiled shyly at her. “I think I can live with that.”
*****
“Now, don’t forget that you
have to come back and do this yourself in thirty-six years time,” Rose reminded
her counterpart as they stood at the airlock linking Starbase to the Endeavour,
five days later. “Otherwise, the chain will be broken and we’ll have a true
paradox. Plus, I won’t have a job to go back to.”
“I won’t,” Indigo laughed.
“Are you sure you won’t stay a bit longer?”
“I’m sure,” her future self
replied. “We need to be getting back to our time. Look after Dad for me, will
you? I want to see him there when I get back.”
“No problem,” Indigo assured
her. “Make sure you look after yourself. Remember that you’re not
indestructible any more.”
“I know.” Without a further
word, the older Indigo turned and stepped through the airlock.
Vermilion approached Indigo
as the airlock cycled shut behind her, closing the ship off from Starbase.
“How do you feel?” he asked
her, noting the thoughtful expression on her face.
She gazed up at him, making
no attempt to hide the affection in her blue eyes. “Good,” she replied.
“Everything’s worked out well.”
“Better that I hoped,”
Vermilion commented, taking the tiny woman in his arms tenderly. “I just wish
I’d had the courage to do this forty years ago.”
“Forty years ago, I’d have
run a mile,” she responded sorrowfully. “I’ve always been afraid of getting too
close.”
“And now?” Vermilion asked
playfully.
“Well, I’ve changed since
then,” she replied, equally playfully as he bent to kiss her.
“How long is it to that
black hole?” Vermilion asked when they broke apart.
“Twelve hours,” Indigo
replied. “We’re travelling directly this time, instead of avoiding the
traffic.”
“That still leaves us plenty
of time,” Vermilion said cryptically. “Cerulean,” he continued into his comm.,
“set a course back to the black hole at cruising speed, and take us out.”
“SIG,” the scientist
replied.
There was a slight tremor
beneath their feet as the starship’s engines eased them away from Starbase.
Vermilion extended his arm
courteously to Indigo. “Would you care to join me in my quarters for a meal,
Major?” he asked, all innocence.
“Why, yes, Colonel,” she
replied, taking his arm. “That sounds delightful.”
Vermilion was rudely awoken
by Lieutenant Periwinkle’s voice sounding over the comm. Rousing from a dream,
he was slightly disorientated for a moment, until the sound of gentle breathing
and the warmth of another body in his bed reminded him pleasantly of the past
few hours.
Careful not to wake Indigo,
he slid from the bed and pulled on a robe before answering the screen on his
desk.
“Yes, Lieutenant?” he said.
“I’m sorry to have woken
you, sir,”
Periwinkle said apologetically, her lavender eyes taking his rumpled
appearance. “We have arrived at the singularity.”
A noise across the room
distracted Vermilion for a moment before he answered. “I’ll be there in fifteen
minutes, Lieutenant. Keep us at a safe distance from the event horizon until
then.”
“SIG,” Periwinkle replied as the
screen winked off.
Vermilion stood up and
walked back towards the bed. Indigo was already up, and the light from the
stars in his window backlit her slender figure perfectly.
“Did you hear?” he asked her
as she picked their uniforms up from the floor.
“Yes,” she replied. “Nearly
home.”
“Do you want to take a
shower first?” Vermilion asked her.
“You mean I have to go
alone?” she shot back playfully, heading towards the bathroom door and grabbing
his hand on the way. “It’ll be much more fun together.”
Exactly fourteen and a half
minutes after speaking with Periwinkle, Colonel Vermilion and Major Indigo
arrived on the bridge. It was the middle of ship’s night, and consequently,
there were only three officers on the bridge. Periwinkle was in command as the
senior lieutenant, as well as performing the science officer’s duties, and she
was accompanied by Lieutenant Sable of Engineering and Cadet Cinnabar at the
helm. Vermilion felt rather outnumbered; in an organisation that still
primarily human, despite the fact that their General was not, he was used to
seeing at least two Humans in a bridge crew at any time, and suddenly found
that he was the only full human present amongst this all-Centauran shift.
Consequently, the bridge was very quiet when he and Indigo entered. He
exchanged a glance with her, and could see that she too was amused, although
not surprised. The silence didn’t seem to bother her much, either, although it
unnerved him.
“Can you still hear them?”
he whispered, not wanting to disturb the three officers whilst he and Indigo
remained unseen from the three occupied stations.
“Yes,” Indigo whispered
back. “I’ve not lost everything, you know. It’s just a normal conversation,
though – nothing exciting. Oh, but that is…”
“What?”
“Oh, nothing,” Indigo said
with a little wave of her hand. “Girl stuff.”
Vermilion decided to make
his presence known, and strode purposefully towards his vacant chair. Indigo
followed close behind and took the seat to Vermilion’s right. It was,
technically, hers, as the First Officer, but as she had been acting as helmsman
for a majority of the mission because of her unique abilities, she had not yet
had the chance to test it out. It was quite satisfactory, she determined after
an experimental shuffle around, comfortable, yet not so soft that she would
want to fall asleep in it. Just right for a peacetime military ship.
“Lieutenant Periwinkle,
report please,” Vermilion asked the scientist.
“We arrived at the vicinity
of the singularity fifteen minutes ago, sir,” Periwinkle responded at once.
“The ship is at full stop, awaiting the execution of the slingshot manoeuvre to
return us to our proper time. The singularity does not show any signs of
dangerous fluctuation, and Lieutenant Sable advises that the SIF is at full
power. There should be no problems for the temporal journey.”
“Thank you, Lieutenant,”
Vermilion said. Before he could give any orders, Indigo stood, almost in unison
with Cadet Cinnabar, and they traded positions, Indigo sliding easily into the
helmsman’s seat whilst Cinnabar stood off to one side. As they passed each
other, Vermilion was amused by the fact that Indigo, who was small for a human,
was a full head taller than the Centauran female.
“Come and sit down, Cadet,”
he invited her, indicating to Indigo’s vacated chair. “You don’t want to miss
the show.”
“Thank you, Colonel,”
Cinnabar said graciously, crossing the bridge and hopping up onto the seat. Her
legs didn’t reach the ground when she sat back, but the minor inconvenience did
not seem to bother her that much. Vermilion was reminded that she was still an
adolescent, although already over thirty Earth years old. She would not reach
full height for another year or so, round about the same time as her shock of
white hair darkened.
“Ready to implement slingshot,” Indigo stated, bringing
Vermilion’s thoughts back to the present.
“Very well, Major. Execute.”
Vermilion still had some reservations about this return trip, but Indigo had
spent the last week convincing him that going forward was much easier than
going back, and she didn’t need the enhanced senses that Opal had given her to
perform the return trip. What worried him was that she wouldn’t say whether or
not she still had any kind of temporal sense now that she had lost her
retrometabolism.
Too late now, he told himself as her
nimble fingers danced over the helm, taking them into a fast, low orbit around
the black hole. He was sincerely glad that the Centaurans could not hear his
thoughts as they could each other’s. No sense in worrying them over this.
Colours swirled around the
ship as they picked up speed courtesy of the singularity, faster than the
engines of the ship could propel them. Breaking the temporal barrier seemed to
go far more smoothly on this occasion than the last. Only the slight shudder of
the inertial dampeners gave any indication that anything unusual had occurred;
there was none of the distortion that had disorientated him on the last trip.
“Did we make it?” he asked
as the Endeavour came to a stop a few light hours from the singularity.
“Planetary alignment seems
to indicate that we have arrived at a similar time to the one we left,”
Periwinkle said, studying her instruments.
“Indigo?”
“December 2372, definitely,”
she replied, sounding a lot less certain than she had when giving the date and
time on the previous trip. “Sixteenth or seventeenth, I think.”
“‘You think’?” Vermilion
teased. “Not very precise, is it?”
“Sorry, Colonel,” she said,
not sounding in the least bit apologetic.
“December sixteenth,”
Periwinkle supplied. “Twenty-hundred fourteen hours.”
“In that case, set course
for Earth,” Vermilion said. “Best possible speed. We don’t want to be late.”
“Aye, sir,” Indigo
acknowledged, sounding grateful. “ETA Starbase, oh-two hundred hours at top
speed.”
*****
There was a small reception
committee gathered at the airlock when it was finally opened. Vermilion and
Indigo stepped out onto Starbase to be greeted by a very familiar face,
although it was older than either of them remembered. Once jet-black hair had
become distinguished silver, and laughter lines now creased the corners of
bright blue eyes. Indigo stopped, almost disbelieving despite the events of the
past week. Tears of joy welled up in her eyes as she ran forward, into her
father’s arms.
“Hush, my little Angel,”
Scarlet said softly, stroking her hair as he had when she was a child, whilst
she sobbed into his chest. “Everything’s going to be all right.”
“Mince pie, anyone?”
There were groans from
around the table.
“I couldn’t eat another
bite,” Vermilion said, massaging his stomach. “I don’t think I’ve ever eaten so
much before!”
“I used to be able to eat
that much,” Indigo complained half-heartedly. “I guess that I still have a lot
to learn about my limits.”
“You’ll adapt,” General
Scarlet told her. “I remember that it took me a while to find certain things
out, too. Like not being able to gorge myself on delicious food, for example. I
think that retrometabolism was a blessing when it came to Christmas.”
“It certainly was,” Indigo
concurred. “How the hell are you still hungry?”
Former-General Claret was
peeling the foil case from a mince pie, having given up on her three human
companions. “Different digestive system,” she said. “Also, this is the first
time I’ve ever had Christmas dinner. I want to sample everything.”
“You certainly did a good
job making it,” Indigo complimented her. “Just like I remember.”
“I wasn’t sure everything
would come out right,” Claret confessed. “It’s my first attempt at anything
like this.”
“It was fantastic, Lanna,” Scarlet
said, giving his wife a peck on the cheek. “You’ve done yourself proud.”
“You would say that even if
I’d burned everything,” she pointed out.
“True,” Scarlet conceded,
after pretending to give the matter some thought. “But you’d know that I was
lying.”
“I have something that I need to say,” Vermilion announced
abruptly, setting down his wine glass and turning to Indigo.
“Rose, the past two weeks
have been the happiest of my life. I’ve wasted so much time ignoring how I feel
about you, time that I should have spent persuading you that I never cared that
you were different, that we could make a go of it. I don’t want to waste a
moment more.” He slid off his chair and knelt beside her. “Will you marry me?”
From his pocket he produced
a small box, which he opened to display the ring nestled inside.
Indigo’s eyes sparkled as
she looked at the ring, recognising it instantly. “Why, you old romantic!” she
exclaimed delightedly. “Of course I’ll marry you.”
Vermilion extracted the ring
from its case and slid it gently onto Indigo’s slender finger. The diamonds
surrounding the central ruby shone brightly, catching the light of the candles
burning low on the table. He stood, and she stood with him, gazing up into his
eyes. He bent to kiss her tenderly, although he was mindful of their audience
on this occasion, and reluctantly parted from his new fiancée after a few
moments.
“This calls for champagne,”
Scarlet declared, disappearing into the tiny kitchen for a moment, reappearing
with a champagne bottle and four flutes.
“I hope that’s
non-alcoholic,” Claret said half-heartedly, knowing her husband too well to
expect him to pay attention to the rules regarding alcohol. She had let the
wine slide, but this was going a little too far, even though she understood
that it was a human custom.
“Of course it’s not,”
Scarlet replied, scandalised, as he unwound the wire covering the cork. “I’m
not breaking with long-established tradition. You know as well as I do that we never
use non-alcoholic champagne in Spectrum. There was an… incident the one and
only time it was done.” The cork popped out of the bottle, and Indigo smiled as
she recalled the old story she had been told so often.
“You two have planned this,”
she accused the two men. “The bottle of champagne that you just happened to
have handy, this ring… Where did you find it? I thought it was lost for good!”
“It was in the house at
Winchester,” Scarlet told her, handing her a flute, filled almost to the brim
with fizzing champagne. “Behind one of the picture frames on the mantle in the
lounge. I found it years ago and put it away for safekeeping. You were off
world, on assignment, and I forgot about it when you got back. When Jack asked
me for your hand, just before you left Starbase all those years ago, I
asked him whether he would like to give you your mother’s engagement ring.”
“I wasn’t sure at first,”
Vermilion continued, picking up the story. “But then I remembered how upset
you’d been when you lost it, and I knew you’d be pleased to know it was safe.”
“And you hung on to it all
these years?” Indigo asked her father. “You’re more romantic than you let on.”
“Oh, he’s certainly that,”
Claret remarked. “When he proposed to me, we were on shore leave together. It
was the first time I’d been to the family house, and we walked through the
woods to the lake. He had a picnic of all my favourite foods, all of them fresh
from Centaura, and when he asked me, he spoke in Centauran, absolutely
word-perfect.”
Indigo let out a low
whistle. “That’s not easy,” she said. “Took me years to learn Centauran, and
I’m a linguist. The pronunciation is very difficult for us Humans, and that…”
She frowned for a moment, trying the phrase out in her mind. “That’s a real
tongue-twister.”
“That’s what you said when I
asked you to teach me, too,” Scarlet said with a smile. “The other you, that
is. It was worth the struggle, though.”
“The ‘other me’,” Indigo
repeated thoughtfully. “I still haven’t quite gotten used to that.”
“Neither have I,” Scarlet
concurred. “I have to keep reminding myself that you didn’t have the same life
as she did. You and Jack lived through thirty-six years of hell instead.”
“I still have problems
remembering that none of that ever happened now,” Vermilion agreed. “I always
hated stories about paradoxes when I was a kid, and now half my life has been
swallowed up in one. Not that I’m complaining – it’s great that none of it has
happened.”
“Bit weird, finding photos
of ourselves, together,” Indigo added. “I know things happened differently, but
it’s a real reminder of how different this place is to the one we left.”
Vermilion nodded and took a
sip of wine before speaking. “Is it normal, now?” he asked thoughtfully.
“Mixed-species marriages? I don’t think I ever heard of one before.”
“No,” Claret said
emphatically.
“It’s not common,” Scarlet
added. “Lanna was the first Centauran to marry outside her species, and I…
Well, I don’t have much of an option, do I? It never stopped me before.” His
words could have been serious, if not for the wide grin on Scarlet’s face. “There
are a few mixed couples now, mostly within Spectrum. I think we proved that it
could be done, and others weren’t afraid to follow once there was precedent.”
“And your proposal was so
lovely,” Claret said. “And before that, I thought that I was too old and too
sensible to be swept off my feet.”
“Never,” Scarlet said
smoothly. “You’re still in the prime of your life. Wait until you get to my age
before you start saying things like that.”
Claret and Indigo exchanged knowing,
tolerant glances. Now that she was getting over her wild elation at simply
being able to see him whenever she wanted, Indigo was starting to realise that
he was much happier than he had been for many years before she had changed him.
The prospect of eternal life no longer hung over him, and he seemed much more
alive now than he had been for the last hundred years. There was just one thing
left to complete the dream that he had told her about all those long years ago.
“Actually, I’ve got an
announcement of my own,” she said with a shy smile. “As I’m sure you remember,
Dad, Verdant and Chartreuse kept us under close scrutiny for the week following
our change, and Chartreuse has kept it up since we arrived in this time.”
“Yes, Verdant did the same
with me,” Scarlet confirmed as he handed a second flute of champagne to
Vermilion. “It took him about a year before he gave up on the weekly
physicals.”
Indigo nodded. “Well,
Chartreuse discovered something during one of those exams before we left. I
didn’t want to say anything just then, and it’s still very early days,
but I’m expecting a baby next September.”
“A… baby?” Vermilion
stammered. “You’re pregnant? That’s…” Vermilion’s expression changed in a
moment from one of shock to utter delight. “That’s brilliant!”
“A double celebration then,”
Scarlet declared with a wide smile. Quickly, he found a spare champagne flute,
filled it with lemonade and gave it to his daughter. Indigo gratefully traded
it for her champagne.
“A toast,” Scarlet said,
raising his glass. “To the future.”
The four glasses met at the centre of the table,
with Vermilion and Indigo echoing the toast. In unspoken agreement, they linked
arms and drank.
![]()
Well, what can I say? I’m not
really sure what the original inspiration was for this story, but I know that I
started writing it just after the first announcement of the Multiverse
Challenge back in 2003. It’s been sitting in the back of my mind since then,
until I began typing it up last month. I realised then that most of the action
takes place in the week leading up to Christmas, so why not enter it in the
Christmas Challenge as well?
There are some references to other
stories that I have written or am writing at the moment. There is one reference
to my first fan-fic, ‘Pride and Joy’, along
with several veiled hints at the rest of the story arc. I’ve tried to be as
vague as possible with those so that I don’t spoil the surprise (which is,
coincidently, the name of the next story in the series) that is coming… I think
that the identity Indigo’ s first love is obvious from P&J (and ‘The Gift’,
which isn’t part of the series), and Scarlet’s second wife is…
What, did you really think I was
going to be that nice to you?
Thanks as always to Chris Bishop,
who has encouraged me to write for the last five years, through my ups and downs
and through my multiple exam periods. She has been my rock, and deserves all
the praise she receives. Please keep up the sterling work, Chris!
Thanks also to Marion Woods, my
long-suffering beta-reader, for the expert use of a fine-tooth comb, and for her
words of wisdom. Any errors or omissions are my own.
I do not own the character of
Captain Scarlet, nor any of the original characters I may have mentioned from
time to time. They are the invention of Gerry and Sylvia Anderson, and belong
to Granada Ventures at the moment. Scarlet’s parents are the invention of Mary
J. Rudy, as is the engagement ring that Vermilion gives to Indigo, and are used
with kind permission.
All of the other characters
(Indigo, Vermilion, Claret etc.) are my own, as are the three alien species
that I mention. Any resemblances that may occur are unintentional.
It took me quite a while to notice
that my two main characters bear the same names as the two companions from
Doctor Who 2005, probably because I named my Jack nearly three years ago, and
Rose has been around for nearly five years now. I suppose I’ll just have to put
it down to one of life’s little coincidences.
The character of Jack has evolved
quite a long way in the last month or so – including acquiring a surname. I
never planned for him to be a descendent of Blue and Symphony. He originally
had dark hair and eyes (a bit like his namesake –Jack O’Neill from Stargate
SG-1, who is rather dishy, for an older man), and he and Rose were not supposed
to become a couple. Funny how things just seem to come out like that when
you’re stuck on a long train journey with a laptop and a plug socket (thank
you, GNER).
I hope you’ve enjoyed reading this
as much as I enjoyed writing it!
Have a prosperous 2006.
Lezli
22 December 2005 & 6 January
2006
Any comments? Email the author – supermarionation_fanfic@yahoo.co.uk