a "THUNDERBIRDS" story
by Polly Amber
Thunderbirds is a Gerry Anderson production licensed by Carlton International Media limited. The character of Marjorie Cholmondley-Brown is my own creation.
A gleaming,
silver and blue rocket streaked over a shimmering, turquoise ocean. It appeared to be almost invisible, as it
reflected the midday sun in a blinding flash.
If you had blinked, you would have missed it, for this magnificent craft
was the fastest in the world. Its jet engines blazed streams of fire across a
cloudless blue sky. Thunderbird One was the impressive scout craft belonging to
International Rescue. It was the first
to reach the scene of a disaster, and it was required on almost every rescue
mission.
Pilot Scott
Tracy, flew wearily over his Pacific island home. He opened a communication channel and radioed his father Jeff,
who was waiting at their base.
"This is
Thunderbird One, requesting permission to land."
"Permission granted. Good
work Scott."
Thunderbird One hovered in the sky, as the
mighty craft resumed an upright position. Scott then fired the retros, and began a reverse
descent into what appeared to be the family's swimming pool With a churning, grating sound, powerful
motors hauled the pool, plus several tons of water to one side to reveal a
hidden underground chamber. With expert
precision, Scott manoeuvred his craft into the docking position, where it was
secured firmly by mechanical clamps.
While it was being trundled back into it's pre- launch position, Scott
took off his sweat-stained uniform, placed it in a laundry bag and changed back
into civilian clothes. As he left, he
secured the hatch and stepped out onto the gantry. Although he was exhausted, he felt a smug sense of satisfaction -
another job well done and another success for International Rescue. He stepped from the gantry and stood with
his back against the wall. He then
grasped two fake lamp brackets, which activated a swivel mechanism. A section of the wall turned around, and
Scott found himself once again in the living room and operations centre of
Tracy Villa - The secret headquarters of International Rescue.
One of his
younger brothers was engrossed in a chess match with a studious looking young
man who was clearly winning the game.
"Th-that's ch-checkmate, I believe, Gordon."
"Aw
sucks!" The copper haired young man slammed down his last remaining chess
piece in submission. "I don't know why I bother. You always wipe the floor with me."
"B-but
that was q-quite a ch-challenging game, Gordon. Y-you're getting b-better each
time. You c-can b-beat Alan and s-sometimes Virgil."
"Huh.
Anyone can beat Alan," retorted Gordon, earning him a sulky glare from the
youngest member of the family, who for once bit his tongue and chose to ignore
the remark.
"Oh. Hi
Scott," acknowledged their father Jeff, who was sitting at his desk
shuffling some papers. "Virgil is on his way home. So everything went smoothly?"
Scott yawned
and slumped into an armchair "Yeah, no problems. We managed to locate the potholers,
and we were able to use the Mole to get part of the way to them. They were just kids, about Alan's age. You know it never ceases to amaze me how
stupid some people can be. After a night
of torrential rain, these silly kids decided to go pot holing. They took one torch between the four of
them, a few mars bars and a bottle of mineral water. They were totally ill equipped, and dressed only in jeans,
trainers and cagoules."
"Bet you
gave them a piece of your mind then Scott," interrupted Alan, who had been
on the receiving end of Scott's sharp tongue many times himself. Alan had a somewhat reckless nature, which
tended to land him in trouble. It was
usually Scott who managed to get him out of it, but he knew that Scott's bark
was worse than his bite
Scott felt a little guilty, remembering how one of the
rescued potholers, a young girl of about seventeen, had burst into tears. He
then softened and patted her on the shoulder, as he led them all to a waiting
ambulance.
"Well,
they knew nothing about the geography of the area they were exploring," he
continued. "The rock was particularly porous in the area where they were
trapped. Part of the tunnel collapsed
due to the weight of the waterlogged soil."
"Wasn't
it risky to use the Mole then?" interjected Jeff.
"No. We went through a
layer of rock and came in as close as we could. Then Virgil had to use the suction equipment to remove the earth
blocking their escape route. We were
worried about water getting into the Mole's circuits. When we reached those kids they were up to their necks in
water."
"Was anyone
hurt?" asked Jeff.
"No. They were cold and
hungry and mighty scared, but a night in the local hospital will soon see them
okay. I just hope they have learned
their lesson. If people took the right
precautions, and a bit of time to check the weather conditions before embarking
on their so called adventures, then there would be fewer calls on our
services."
"Overworked and underpaid, eh Scott!" teased Alan.
Scott was too tired to rise to the bait.
"You do
look all in, Son. You've been up all
night. That's the second rescue you have been on, and it's not even
lunchtime. Try and grab some rest,"
suggested Jeff. "I'll call you when lunch is ready."
Scott
acknowledged weakly. He was looking forward
to a hot shower, lunch, and an opportunity to catch up on the sleep he had
missed. He made his way to the privacy
of his room. He wanted to just collapse
on to his bed, and sleep for a solid eight hours, but he was aware that his
discarded uniform was filthy, and his hair and face, caked with mud. Flinging the bag of clothes into the laundry
basket, he walked to the bathroom and ran the shower. While the warm water was massaging his aching shoulders, he heard
the distinctive whine of Thunderbird Two’s powerful engines, as it came in to
land on the palm fringed runway. Virgil
would be even more exhausted than he was.
Both of them
had been called out the previous evening.
Firstly to the Australian Outback, where a bush fire was raging out of
control. The authorities had realised
they were fighting a losing battle.
Their equipment was having little effect on the ferocity of the
flames. They called for assistance from
International Rescue, when the fire threatened to engulf a nearby town. Several homes had already been destroyed,
and the town's remaining inhabitants had been advised to pack their most prized
possessions, and then evacuate the area as quickly as possible. A few stubborn people had refused to move,
but the main concern was the local hospital.
It lay right in the path of the fire, and many of its patients were
recovering from major surgery, and were too ill to be moved.
Scott had
been first on the scene to assess the situation, and then set up a mobile
control unit. He was swiftly followed
by Gordon and Virgil in Thunderbird Two, which carried a pod containing the Firefly,
water cannons, and earth moving equipment. The fire authorities had been
battling for hours. Virgil and Gordon
realised that not even their far more sophisticated equipment could quell the
firestorm swirling around them. As soon
as one blaze was extinguished, another sprang up to take its place. The fire was merely playing leapfrog with
them.
Gordon had
been assigned to the Firefly. He was
alarmed at the speed the fire was travelling.
Virgil noted the rising panic in Gordon's voice as he reported that
fires were springing up all around him, threatening to encircle him. The exterior of the firefly became almost
red hot, and the temperature inside the cab was threatening to overwhelm
him. Scott, who was monitoring the
conversation, could hear Gordon's voice becoming weaker. Gordon felt as if he was being baked alive! Scott immediately ordered him to pull
out. Gordon swiftly reversed the
Firefly to safety, but when he tried to open the door of the cab, he cried out
in agony. The metal handle on the
inside was red hot. When Gordon pulled
his sleeve away he saw an ugly red burn puckering the palm of his hand. He pulled his sleeve over his other hand,
and managed to open the door. Wheezing
and gasping, he tumbled on to the scorched ground.
Gordon
declined the offer of medical assistance, and despite his injury, refused to
stand down. The fire was hurtling
nearer to the hospital and every available pair of hands was needed. After a brief consultation with his
brothers, Scott decided that they would use the earth moving machines to create
a barrier around the hospital. Then they would try to alter the course of the
fire and force the flames to retreat down an already scorched path of
destruction.
It had taken
several more hours to get the blaze under control. Eventually the raging inferno had dwindled to a manageable fire,
which could be left in the hands of the local authorities. Tired and dirty, Virgil, Scott and Gordon
headed for home. Just as they were
nearing the island, John had radioed with another call to rescue the trapped
potholers. Scott flew directly to the
scene. Virgil landed briefly to drop
off Gordon, who had sustained superficial burns to his right hand, and to
exchange the pod containing fire-fighting equipment for the one containing the
Mole and underground rescue equipment. Then he too, flew off to join his
brother.
Virgil
entered the room, twenty minutes after Scott and just as dirty. As he walked in, one of a row of portraits
on the wall started to flash. It was
the portrait of his brother John, on board Thunderbird Five.
Virgil groaned and clapped a grimy hand to his sweat
stained brow. "Surely not three in
a row!"
"Go
ahead John," announced Jeff.
"Father,
I am receiving a faint call that appears to be coming from a remote island in
the Scottish group known as the Western, or Hebridean Islands. A man has reported seeing a plane crash into
the sea. He says that he has not been
able to contact the coast guard, as the island has no electricity and the
batteries on his radio are low."
"Did you
receive any calls from the plane before it went down?"
"Negative. There must have
been a sudden malfunction. I have
checked with the coastguard, and they have not received any calls."
"Hmmm,"
murmured Jeff thoughtfully.
"Are we
going to respond Father?" queried John. " I was informed by the
coastguard, that they are experiencing dense freezing fog. They will not be able to safely mount a
rescue unless visibility improves... by then the crew will almost certainly be
dead."
"Okay,
John. We're on our way!" Jeff hit
the alarm button.
"Just
our luck. They say accidents always happen in threes," complained Virgil,
swiftly downing a mug of coffee that Kyrano had just brought in.
"G-gee
V-Virgil, that's tough! You don't even
have time for a sh-shower or a sh-sh-sh..." Brains' stutter was always
worse when trying to make the small talk he thought was expected of him. The Tracy boys had never teased him, but
they sometimes had to bite their tongues, and resist the urge to finish off his
sentences. Gordon glanced at Alan and
saw a smile flicker across his lips.
"Shave,"
finished Brains.
Alan's face
cracked into a broad grin, he tried to suppress a chuckle. Gordon, who seemed to have an almost
telepathic link with his youngest brother (not to mention the same type of
schoolboy humour) laughed out loud and earned a swift rebuke from his father.
"Gordon," snapped Jeff. "I'm sure there is something
useful you could be doing, even with an injured hand. Kyrano could do with some help in the kitchen."
"Yes Sir,"
replied Gordon meekly, and bit his lip to stop himself laughing again.
Jeff turned his attention to Virgil. "Go and get yourself cleaned up. Scott will go and make an initial assessment If the plane has deliberately ditched into
the sea, there may have been time for the crew to don lifejackets. If they have managed to escape they won't
last long in the water. Thunderbird One will be able to use heat-seeking
equipment to locate them. Alan, you can
go with Scott to operate the winch and the camera."
"F.A.B.,
Father. I can also give him a prod if
he starts to doze off at the controls."
Alan raced
toward the passenger lift. He was the
pilot of Thunderbird Three, a huge red space rocket. But as rescues in space were few and far between, he shared
duties on board Thunderbird five with John, and assisted Virgil and Scott, when
required.
Scott dashed
into the room looking dishevelled. His
hair was still wet from his shower and standing up in spikes. "I'm on my way, Father. Tell John to fill me in with the
details."
"Sorry,
Scott," apologised Jeff. "I know you have just got in, but it's just
one of those days."
Scott shrugged and grabbed the lamp brackets, which
swung him out of sight.
Grandma who
had been sitting, quietly reading, on the balcony, noisily slammed her book
shut, prompting Jeff to glance in her direction. She regarded him with a tight-lipped stare.
"Something on your mind, Mother?"
"Well
since you ask.... yes. Can't you see
that young man is plain exhausted? He
went out twice yesterday, and that's his third call out in the last twelve
hours. You're not glued to that seat
behind your desk, Jefferson Tracy!"
Scott
accelerated to a maximum 7,000 mph as he crossed the equator and flew north.
"How
long will it take to reach the Western Islands?” asked Alan from the cramped
passenger seat.
"About
another hour, I guess. I should start
thinking about getting some warm clothes on.
It's the depths of winter in that part of the world."
Thunderbird One was equipped for every change in
climate. It carried all weather
protective clothing, skiwear and climbing equipment. Plus several changes of clothes and uniforms.
"Perhaps
we could look in on Penelope after the rescue," suggested Alan.
"We'll
have to see. We can't just go landing
on her front lawn; she has got her cover to maintain. But it would be nice to see her again."
Alan switched
on the navigational computer and called up a map of the Western Islands. He began to study it intently. After a while Scott called to him.
"Hey
Alan, you've gone quiet. I need you to
keep talking to keep me awake."
"Oh, I
was just looking at the map. There is a
heck of a lot of islands here. Can you
call up John and ask him if he has been able to pinpoint the transmission of
that call?"
"Why
don't you call him yourself?"
Alan flicked a
switch and John's face appeared on the screen.
"Hi
Alan. I suppose you want to know if I
have been able get a fix on that call."
"Yes,
John. We should reach the British Isles
in another hour."
"Well no,
Alan, I haven't."
Alan was taken aback.
The instrumentation on board Thunderbird Five was almost capable of
picking up a needle in a haystack, and John was usually super-efficient.
"Why
not?"
"Probably because of interference.
It could be due to the storm they had earlier. The transmission was very brief and I was unable to track
it. The man I spoke to had a strange
accent."
"Scottish," cut in Alan.
"Yeah,
some strange mangled dialect, anyway, he said that he had no electricity, and the
batteries on his radio were low. Then I
lost him completely, but I have managed to narrow it down a bit. The call came from somewhere in a group of
islands in the South."
"Yeah
I've got them.... Talk about a drop in the ocean."
"Sorry. It's the best I can do. They're all uninhabited as far as I
know. Used to be a testing ground for
chemical weapons in the early part of the twenty first century."
"Chemical weapons! Are they
clean?" asked Alan in alarm.
"Yes
they've been cleared. I checked them
out with the British Government, and they have been deemed safe for habitation,
but they have just been left to let nature take its course."
"Okay, John. Thanks."
"Good
luck" John prepared to sign off but Alan called him back.
"Oh
John, before you go, has anyone else reported seeing the plane go down?"
"Well,
no. Now that you mention it, they
haven't. Well, not to me anyway."
"Don't
you think that's odd? When a plane goes
down surely there's more than one witness."
"I don't
know, Alan. We're talking about a
remote area here."
"Well,
has anyone reported a plane missing?"
"Not as
far as I know. Do you want me to check
with the coastguard?"
"Yes,"
replied Alan. "Yes, I do."
"F.A.B."
"What's
wrong, Alan?” asked Scott. “You sound a
little wary."
"I
dunno. It's just an uneasy
feeling. Call it bad vibes."
An hour later
Scott was flying over the British Isles. He cut to cruising speed and swooped
in low over the Hebridean Sea. The
islands were shrouded by a thick mist.
He opened a channel to his father.
"Go
ahead, Scott," instructed Jeff.
"Have
arrived at the rescue location. The
time is 16.45 Greenwich Mean Time.
There's dense fog, visibility is poor, and it's nearly dusk. I'm going in for another sweep with the
thermal camera to see if we can detect any survivors. To be honest I have my doubts."
"F.A.B.
Scott."
"I'll go
down and operate the camera," volunteered Alan. "Keep her steady for
me."
Alan left the
cockpit and made his way to the hold.
He opened a hatch in the side of Thunderbird One, and released the
remote controlled camera. Using his
instruments, he guided it down to the shallow, rocky seabed surrounding the
small cluster of islands.
'This is
going to take some time.' thought Alan.
He had one eye on a screen relaying pictures from the seabed, and his
other on the screen next to it magnifying pictures of the coastline Scott was
flying over. He was hoping to spot a
life raft or a dinghy, or even a body washed up on a beach.
After
nearly an hour of painstaking searching, in murky water, there was still
nothing. Scott called back to
base. "We have just completed
another search of the area and found nothing."
"Not
even any signs of wreckage?"
"No
nothing at all. The mist is so thick,
it's hard to see anything."
"It
could be that John's caller was mistaken.
John has been unable to re-connect with the caller so it may even be a
hoax."
"That's
all we need. Some time wasting idiot,
who just wants to bring a bit of excitement into his sad little life."
"Okay,
Son. Call it a day and get back."
"F.A.B."
Suddenly, the
camera picked up a small light aircraft lying on its side on a rocky
ledge. Alan called out to Scott. "I've got it, Scott. I'm relaying the picture to you now."
"Any
signs of life?"
"Negative. If there is
anyone in that plane - they're dead."
"Can you
get me a better picture? It's a bit
fuzzy. I'll go lower and try to keep steady.""
"Okay,
Scott I'll bring the camera round to
the front of the plane. There may be
bodies trapped inside."
"Can you
see anything?"
"No,
Scott. I can't see anyone. The plane's empty... Hey wait, what's that? ... No, it's just
debris. Oh, that's a better picture. The plane looks rusty. Scott, this plane isn't the one. It's rusty and covered with barnacles. It looks like a military plane, a relic from
the Second World War. It’s..."
Alan was unable to finish his sentence. A sudden explosion rendered him deaf, and he
felt as if he was flying in slow motion.
Then his head struck something hard and he lost consciousness.
Scott
desperately battled to regain control of Thunderbird One. Beads of perspiration formed on his
brow. The unexplained explosion had
thrown the craft into a spin. He knew
that he was going to have to make a forced landing. He had the choice between land or sea. The sea would be freezing.
The pounding waves concealed dangerous rocks. Even if they managed to avoid injury, without a protective
wetsuit, both he and Alan would succumb to the cold. Land would be the better choice; he knew that he had to keep the
nose cone up to avoid a fatal crash landing.
He looked around desperately for a clump of trees to cushion his
landing, but the best thing he could find was a dense clump of bushes. If he
could manoeuvre Thunderbird One towards them, they might stand a better chance
of escaping unharmed. The ground was
getting nearer all the time.
"Hold on
Alan!" he called "It's going to get bumpy."
Peering from
the cover of a camouflaged bunker, a
pair of black, evil eyes peered into binoculars, and watched with smug
satisfaction as Scott wrestled to gain control of his stricken craft. A stocky, middle-aged man of oriental
appearance gave a slow sinister smile.
"Good,
good. My plan is working."
The Hood was
an archenemy of International Rescue, and the evil half-brother of Jeff Tracy's
loyal assistant, Kyrano. He had always
coveted Thunderbird One, but today his quarry was Thunderbird Two. The booby
trap placed in the old warplane had been intended to disable Thunderbird One,
rather than to destroy it. Although the
Hood hated its pilot, he was aware that he would be a useful person to have in
his power. Besides he knew that when
one Thunderbird arrived, the other would not be far behind. All he had to do was wait.
He retreated
to his makeshift hideout, a disused underground bunker, a relic from the last
world war. One of the rooms stored
crude protective clothing and breathing apparatus, now regarded as museum pieces. In another room, black drums of oil were
stored next to sealed red drums piled high to the ceiling. Bold black writing on each of the red drums
read ' DANGER TOXIC CHEMICALS'.
The Hood
drummed his fingers impatiently on a table and cursed to himself. He was not in the best of moods. He realised he had been double-crossed and
was plotting his revenge. A crooked
Government Official who had been ordered to destroy the stockpile of chemicals,
had seen an opportunity to line his own pockets. He sold the cache to a
terrorist organisation. The leader of
that organisation, the Hood himself - had been assured that transport for this
cargo would be taken care of. The
promised ship should have arrived yesterday, but there was still no sign of
it. The Government Official appeared to
have vanished from the face of the Earth.
The Hood mentally added his name to the many others on his hit
list. But one name topped that list -
International Rescue and in particular Scott Tracy. The Hood, who gained his name from his ability to disguise his
appearance, donned a battered oilskin
coat and muddy boots. Then he placed a latex mask over his face and topped it
with a tousled brown wig. He squeezed
his ample form through a hatch at the top of his bunker, and watched as
Thunderbird One, trailing smoke and flames, neared the ground.
Scott closed
his eyes. This was it. He aimed for the clump of bushes and hoped
for the best. He braced himself for the
impact. He heard a scraping, grating
noise, as Thunderbird One dragged along through the foliage, then its tail hit
the ground. A sudden jolt reverberated
up his spine. He felt a sharp pain in
the back of his neck and cried out as a fire extinguisher fell from its
mounting and smashed across his console, catching his left wrist.
"Ouch! Oh great! There goes my communicator."
He winced as
he moved his head, and began to feel a little dizzy. He held the bridge of his nose until the dizziness subsided. His neck was hurting. He massaged it and rotated his
shoulders. Then he wiggled his fingers
and toes. He was still in one piece, but the same could not be said of the
radio. It shorted out in a shower of
blue sparks and the whole console panel went dead. Suddenly, Scott snapped to his senses and remembered that Alan
was still in the hold.
"Alan?"
he called, as he began to unbuckle his seatbelt. "Are you okay?" Receiving no reply, he was just about to
check on his brother, when he heard a voice calling to him from outside,
"Hey! Are
you alright in there?"
Scott peered through the window. The stranger emerged
from out of the mist. "Are you
alright?" he repeated
Scott opened the hatch and called out to the man who
was hurrying towards him. "Yeah, I
think so. Do you know where I can find
a phone or a radio?"
The man
stopped about four feet in front of Scott.
He gave a twisted smile, raised his arm and fired a knockout dart into
Scott's neck. Scott had the sensation
of being stung by a bee. He looked at
his shoulder and pulled out a tiny dart.
He just had time to utter a quizzical,
"why?"
He toppled from his cockpit. He was unconscious when he hit the ground.
At the
stately home of generations of the Creighton-Ward family, Lady Penelope was
supervising the last minute preparations for one of Foxleyheath's most important
social events.
This year it
had fallen to her to organise the Candlelight evening soiree in order to raise
funds for the church roof. One hundred
thousand pounds was needed. Lady
Penelope sighed. She had sold just thirty-five
tickets.
"Now should
we arrange the chairs in a semi circle, Parker? Less formal, I think."
Her assistant,
Aloysius Parker, carried on, obliviously arranging the chairs in regimental
lines.
"Parker.... I said..." began Penelope and then she stopped,
realising that Parker was still ignoring her.
"Parker!" she called sharply.
He jumped smartly to attention, and began to pull wads
of cotton wool from his ears. "I
beg your pardon M'lady. H'ai didn't
quite catch what you said."
Penelope smiled.
She couldn't blame Parker for the precautions he was taking. The voice
of Marjorie Cholmondley-Brown had the musical resonance of fingernails being
scraped across a blackboard. As
chairperson of the Women's Institute, Church Council and almost every other
charity in Foxleyheath, she took it upon herself to offer her services as
soprano every year. No one dared refuse
her. In spite of her domineering
character, she was what was known as a 'good egg'. But this year's ticket sales had sadly reflected the public
opinion of her dubious talents.
"Penelope, my dear,"
boomed the sturdy middle-aged lady, as she strode noisily across the
wooden drawing room floor. Parker
noticed a line of chairs vibrating as if registering the after effects of a
small earth tremor. "Penelope, how
lovely to see you again."
Penelope felt herself being clasped to the tweedy
bosom of Lady Cholmondley-Brown who smelled ever so slightly of dog. Trying to disentangle herself from the old
girl's vice-like grip, she gesticulated to Parker to take her coat.
"Thank
you, Parker." Lady
Cholmondley-Brown thrust a heavy overcoat into his arms. Then she opened her
handbag and took out a throat spray.
"I hope we get a good turn out, tonight."
"Yes, so
do I."
"I think
I will have another little practice session.
Go through a few scales to lubricate my vocal cords" Parker groaned. "I do hope we have an audience who are
able to appreciate the art of music," continued Lady Cholmondley-Brown.
"You know, Penelope, the last time I did a recital my aria was completely
ruined by one of those infernal mobile telephones."
"Oh
dear, do excuse me, Marjorie," interrupted Penelope "I need to go
over some last minute details with the kitchen staff. Parker here will to see to your needs, But you will have to speak
up, he's a little hard of hearing."
Penelope allowed herself another wry smile as she
heard Lady Cholmondley-Brown's voice haltingly barking out orders to poor
Parker.
Grandma Tracy
was in a quandary. The meat was almost
cooked and the vegetables would be past their best if she waited any longer
before she dished up the dinner. Should
they eat now or wait for Scott and Alan to return? She decided that the decision should be up to Jeff.
"I would
wait awhile. They should be on their way home now. I'll give them a
call." Jeff was surprised when he
received no answer. "That's odd. I
told them to head for home nearly an hour ago.
I can't raise them on the radio.
Maybe they have found something after all."
"You
could try Scott's communicator," suggested Virgil.
"I don't
know why Scott didn't keep me informed... Base to Scott are you receiving me?”
Still there was no answer. "Base
to Scott... Come in Scott... nothing,"
uttered Jeff after a pause.
Virgil and Grandma exchanged anxious glances. "Alan," suggested Grandma
"Try Alan."
Again there was no reply. An ominous silence fell upon the Tracy's living room. It was broken by Jeff. "I don't like it. I'm going to call John and see if he can get
a fix on them."
John's
handsome face darkened as Jeff relayed his concerns. Looking at a map on his computer screen, he magnified an image
and projected it to Jeff. It showed a
series of co-ordinates and a circle where the lines crossed.
"I can
confirm that Thunderbird One is still in the Hebrides. It's not moving, so it
must be on the ground."
This was the news that Jeff did not want to hear.
"Father.."
began Virgil shakily, not wanting to voice what all the others were thinking. "You don't think that Thunderbird One could have
crashed. Scott reported dense fog and
bad visibility...."
"Oh
Virgil...." cried Grandma wringing her hands.
"Now
don't lets go jumping to any conclusions.
There may have been some sort of malfunction, or some radio black spot…"
Jeff was trying to clutch at straws. Virgil
interrupted, "But Father they don't answer their communicators. Thunderbird One is on the ground with its
radio dead. It paints a bleak picture,
I'm going over there."
Grandma
looked accusingly at Jeff. "Scott
was worn out. He should never have gone
on that mission. Men make mistakes when
they are tired."
She left the
room with tears springing to her eyes. Tonight's dinner would be consigned to
the bin.
Jeff put his
head in his hands. His mother was right.
He couldn't bear to think that something terrible might have happened to
Scott and Alan. Seeing his father's
distress, Gordon walked over and put his hand on Jeff's shoulder.
"Don't
blame yourself, Dad. I doubt if you
could have stopped Scott going out. He
was like a shot from a gun. Scott's a
first class pilot. He doesn't make
mistakes, he's the best."
Jeff patted Gordon's bandaged hand. "You're all the best, but at the end of
the day, you're only human. Sometimes I
forget that. I'm sorry."
"It will
probably take Virgil about five hours to reach the Outer Hebrides, but I know
someone who could get there sooner."
"You're
right, Gordon. I will give Penelope a
call."
By eight forty-five,
the evening, and Mrs Cholmondley-Brown were in full swing. She had just warbled her way through 'Tit
Willow' and was now proceeding to murder what was supposed to be a moving love
song. Penelope wished that Parker had
left her some of his cotton wool. She
felt sure that the poor audience would gladly pay the cost of the church roof
repairs just to deaden the noise. She
suddenly became aware of a harsh bleeping noise coming from her silver
teapot. Mrs Cholmondley-Brown, who had
ears as sharp as the Labradors she bred, stopped singing abruptly and glared at
her audience. A large vein in her forehead started to twitch.
"I
thought I had told you all to switch off your mobile phones!" she
bellowed.
All eyes turned towards Penelope. She reddened and placed the offending teapot
in Parker's hands. "Another refill
I think, if you please, Parker."
Parker pulled the wadding from his ears. " 'As the old bat... I mean Lady Cholmondley-Brown finished 'er h'aria?"
"Yes,
Parker. I think this evening will have
to be brought to a close."
Once he had
left the crowded room, Parker twisted the lid of the teapot to reveal Jeff
Tracy's voice. "H'aim afraid 'er
Ladyship h'is a bit tied up on h'account of 'er soiree."
"Her
what?"
"It's
some sort of musical bash, for charity."
"Well I
need to speak to her urgently," demanded Jeff.
"Very
good, Sir."
As he opened
the wood-panelled drawing room doors, Parker could see Lady Penelope pointing
toward the smoke alarm and apologising profusely. When she saw Parker, she realised that she was needed urgently,
"Oh
dear. This is not the best of times. Tell Jeff I will be with him
shortly." She clapped her hands to command the attention of her muttering
guests.
"I would
like to thank Lady Cholmondley-Brown, our soprano, Veronica Sommers, on violin,
and also Reverend Charles Proctor for his accompaniment on piano. Now if you would all like to take a break,
you will find refreshments available at the far end of the room."
She
practically ran from the room.
"This evening could not possibly get any worse," she cringed.
"Now Jeff, What can I do for you?"
"Penny,
I need your help. Thunderbird One has been disabled while flying over the
Hebrides. I have lost contact with Scott.
He has Alan on board as well and I can't raise either of them. I am afraid they might have crashed."
"Parker,
fetch the Rolls."
"Is it
trouble, M'lady?"
"Yes
Parker, I'm afraid it is."
"But
what about Lady Cholmondley-whatsit and 'er soiree?"
"We will
have to take drastic measures, I'm afraid."
"What's
this about a soiree?" asked Jeff
"I have thirty-five
guests and three disgruntled performers to get rid of. But I will try to get there as soon as I
can. Don't worry, Jeff, both your boys
are tough and resourceful."
Penelope opened a cupboard door beneath the stairs and
pressed a red button. "Oh
dear. The things I have to do for
International Rescue. This will ruin my
social standing."
Almost
immediately, a high-pitched shriek emitted from the drawing room. Penelope cast her eyes towards heaven and
steeled herself to re-enter the room.
She was met by a sight that
would not been out of place in an Ibizan nightclub. The cream of Foxleyheath society stood dripping
with foam, which was being sprayed from sprinklers concealed in the ornately
carved ceiling panels. A few guests had
hurriedly departed.
"I do
sincerely apologise," announced Penelope amidst the confusion "There
has been a malfunction in the computer system that controls the fire
precautions. I will, of course, refund all ticket money and compensate you all
for the damage to your clothes."
"Wouldn't hear of it, m'dear," smiled Colonel Metcalfe as he
pressed a cheque for ten thousand pounds into her hands.
Lady Cholmondley-Brown was still shrieking while an
avalanche of foam slid down her ample bosom, like melting snow on the roof of
an Alpine ski chalet.
"Nice
touch, Lady P.," said Ron Marple,
the local wide-boy-turned-multi millionaire. "It's a pity it
couldn't 'ave appened a bit earlier in the evening. Me ears are still
ringing."
And he too
handed her a cheque.
By the time
Parker had driven the Rolls around to the front door, all the guests had
departed and Lady Penelope was holding cheques to the value of thirty thousand
pounds.
Parker gave a
discreet cough. "I think we should
go now, M'lady."
"Of course, Parker I just need to change
into something a little more practical."
Penelope swept upstairs in her midnight blue gown, and
returned five minutes later wearing a pink trouser suit, and a grey, warm full-length
woollen coat. She closed the door on
the sticky mess that littered her drawing room and set off for the highlands.
"What
about your paintings, M'lady?" They'll be ruined."
"They're
reproductions, Parker. The real Canelettos
are in the safe. But Virgil will be
most upset with me. It took him ages to
copy them and they were good enough to fool many people. Oh dear, I suppose I had better call the
cleaners back."
The tyres of
the six-wheeled pink Rolls Royce crunched down the gravel drive towards the
automatic gates. Parker put his foot
down along the tree-lined avenue, which lead up to the Creighton-Ward Manor.
Soon the
fields and hedges of rural England were hurtling past in a blur, as Parker made
for the main north/south motorway. When
he reached the interchange he was saluted by the tollbooth official and waved
across to the red lane. There were ten
lanes in each direction and each was colour coded. The red lane was for the sole use of emergency vehicles and special
services such as the Federal Agents Bureau and Police. With his foot hard down to the floor, Parker
accelerated the car to its maximum 400kph speed. They would be at London airport in five minutes, where a plane
was waiting to whisk them and Fab 1 to Glasgow. Allowing for the sea crossing, they would reach the islands in
less than two hours
Parker began to sing to himself. "Oh you tak the 'igh road and I'll tak
the low road and I'll be in Scotland afore ye."
"Parker,
do you still have any of that cotton wool?"
"Sorry,
M'lady."
Alan opened
his eyes groggily. He was upside down
in the hold of Thunderbird One. He
winced as he moved, his whole body felt bruised, and he was sure that he must
have broken something.
"Scott,"
he called. "Scott are you okay?"
When there
was no reply, Alan felt alarmed. The
last thing he remembered was hearing an explosion, and being hurled across the
cargo bay. He stood up, and reeled as a
wave of nausea and dizziness engulfed him.
He sat down and put his head in his hands. He felt a sticky mass of congealed blood on his forehead. After a while, he tried to stand again, a
little more slowly this time. His legs
felt as if they belonged to someone else.
Shakily, he made his way towards the cockpit. He paused behind the closed door, his heart suddenly
pounding. He began to feel very
sick. He figured that since his brother
had not answered him, he must have been injured. Or perhaps even worse.
Alan was afraid of what he would find.
Fighting to get a grip on himself, he pushed against the door. It swung open. To Alan's relief he found that the cockpit was undamaged. But his relief soon turned to anger, when he
found that Scott was nowhere to be seen.
"Scott,
where the hell are you?" he yelled,
then he whimpered as a stabbing pain shot through his skull. Alan saw that the hatch was open, but all he
could see outside was pitch darkness, and a wall of thick fog.
"Scott
are you out there?"
He leaned out of Thunderbird One, lost his balance and
felt himself tumble a few feet. "Whoooooaaaaa.
Owowow... OW!"
He felt his
body being pricked all over.
Thunderbird One had come to rest on top of a clump of gorse bushes As he stood up, he heard the sound of material
ripping. He felt cold air rushing
through the loose flap of his torn uniform.
He rubbed the back of his sore and exposed thigh. His boots had saved
his lower legs, and his padded jacket had protected his upper body from the
needle sharp thorns. But his face was
badly scratched and beginning to smart.
Alan's discomfort was outweighed by the sense of urgency in finding
Scott, before he succumbed to hypothermia.
The fog was
beginning to freeze now. Alan could see
his breath in front of him as he exhaled.
He thought that Scott might have sustained head injuries in the crash,
and was probably wandering around in a daze. If Scott was injured, he would be
vulnerable. Alan didn't feel too good
himself. His ears were still ringing
from the explosion, and his head was throbbing. His sight was hampered by darkness, murky weather, and the double
vision he suffered when he moved his head from side to side. He cursed himself for forgetting to grab a
torch. He didn't relish the thought of climbing back over those bushes to fetch
one; besides he wouldn't be able to assess the damage to Thunderbird One until
morning.
He called
Scott's name several times but was answered only by eerie silence penetrated by
the calls of passing seagulls. He
walked a short distance from Thunderbird One.
When he looked back, it had been completely engulfed by the fog. Alan realised that it would be very easy for
him to get lost. He took out a pocket
compass and headed north. He decided to
walk in a straight line counting his paces as he went. He could see no more than a few feet ahead
of him. The ground beneath him was hard
and uneven. He tripped over a protruding
granite rock and fell spread-eagled on the ground. He picked himself up, but had only gone a few yards when he
stumbled again. His legs felt wobbly.
Icy drizzle stung his lacerated face.
Alan
stumbled around blindly, calling Scott's name for nearly half an hour, until he
felt his feet sink into one of the many soft bogs that lurked on the island to
trap the unwary traveller. He could feel the water pouring over the tops of his
boots and soaking into his socks. His
toes went numb. The more he struggled
to free himself, the harder the mud pulled him down. He managed to extricate
his right leg and step onto solid ground, but his left leg was still stuck
fast. He leaned over and grasped a
clump of coarse grass. As he pulled, he
felt his left leg slide out of his boot which disappeared into the oozing,
sucking mud. He thanked God that his left foot was half a shoe size smaller
than his right. He toppled sideways,
and swore out loud when he wricked his
ankle. He lay with tears in his eyes, and punched the ground in rage and
frustration. He was soaked to the skin
and shivering violently. His numbed
brain started to kick in with an instinct of self-preservation. Alan realised that he was in danger of
suffering hypothermia himself, and reluctantly limped back to Thunderbird
One. As he was gingerly making his way
back across the gorse bushes, his hand felt a piece of cloth that seemed to be
caught on the thorns. He pulled and
found himself holding a blue sash with the insignia of International Rescue!
Jeff Tracy,
was sitting, as usual, at his desk. He
was dishevelled and ashen-faced. Tin
Tin had just brought him another cup of coffee
When Alan's portrait started to flash, she gave a gasp and almost
dropped the cup in Jeff's lap. Jeff
switched on the microphone, and the picture changed to reveal Alan's lacerated
face, lit by the dim emergency lighting in the cockpit of Thunderbird One.
"Thank
God, Alan. We were worried sick. Where's Scott?" asked Jeff,
Tin Tin rushed towards the screen and ran her fingers
over the scratches and bruises on the image of Alan's face. Tears sprang to her eyes. "Oh Alan. I was so worried about you."
"I'm
okay, Tin Tin. It's Scott I'm worried
about."
"What
happened? We couldn't contact you. What's happened to Scott? Is he hurt?"
"I don't
know, Dad. He's disappeared. There was some sort of explosion and I was
knocked out. When I came to, Scott was
gone."
"But
that's completely out of character. He
would never have left you unconscious like that."
"I think
someone has taken him. I found his sash
hooked up on the gorse bushes. There's
no sign of him. There's no sign of
anyone. It's eerie, no lights, no
houses... It's just like being in a black hole." Alan's voice began to
falter.
"Steady,
Alan. Just sit tight. John managed to get a fix on you, and
Parker and Penelope will be able to get to you sooner than Virgil. I'm sending him and Brains to assess the
damage to Thunderbird One."
"I need
to keep looking for Scott, Dad. He'll
freeze out there."
"No,
Alan, you're in no condition to go anywhere.
We'll find Scott, don't you worry.
His military background has trained him to survive in situations like
this. Now try to relax. You look pretty shaken up. Are you sure you're alright?"
"Yeah. Just sore. I'll grab a couple of painkillers from the
first aid box."
"You're
to rest, Alan. That's an order. You could have concussion. Stay put until Penelope and Parker get
there, and be on your guard."
"Take
care of yourself, Alan," called Tin Tin.
"Yeah. I'll see you
soon."
With Fab 1
secured tightly in the hold of the private jet, Lady Penelope knew that she
would just have time for another cup of tea before they landed in Scotland.
"It's a
murky misty night," observed the pilot, as they neared Prestwick airport
"The
famous Scotch mist," quipped Penelope. "It has ruined many of Major
Fanshawe's grouse shooting parties."
"How are
you intending to travel to the Western Islands, Lady Penelope? You are unlikely to get a ferry in this
weather. And there is no runway for a plane.
A helicopter would be tricky to land in this mist."
"Oh, we
have ways and means," replied Penelope replacing a fine bone china cup
back on its saucer. "Thank you for your swift journey. Come Parker, there's no time to loose."
Parker
trundled Fab 1 down a ramp and steered towards the coast. Some of the roads
were a little narrower than he was used to, but his driving skills could not be
matched. As he cornered at break-neck
speed, Lady Penelope did not have so much as a hair out of place. Presently,
the road stopped at a jetty. Penelope
peered out into a grey nothingness.
"Preparing to launch, M'lady," announced Parker. " And
switching to radar."
"Very
good, Parker."
Parker revved up the engine and drove straight into the
sea. Fab 1 bobbed up and down on the
waves until he retracted the wheels and lowered the hydrofoils. Soon they were
speeding away into the night.
Scott
regained consciousness in a dank, musty smelling room, dimly lit by a hurricane
lamp placed on an upturned oil drum.
Its anaemic light illuminated fungus growing on the damp ceiling. He tried to focus his eyes. He was lying on a cold, hard floor, and when
he tried to get up, he felt as if his spine had been removed and replaced by a
rod. He raised his head and a sharp
stabbing pain shot through the back of his neck. He remembered struggling to land Thunderbird One, but he didn't
know how long he had been unconscious.
As his eyes peered into the shadows, trying to make sense of his surroundings,
he realised that he was not alone. In a
gloomy corner, a man sat silently observing him.
"How did
I get here?" asked Scott hoarsely
"You
passed out. I brought you here," replied
the man in a thick foreign accent.
That voice seemed familiar to Scott. "You..." He shouted springing to
his feet. "You drugged me... Why you..."
Scott made a
move to try to tackle his captor, but stopped abruptly in his tracks, as the
man began to peel off his face.
Underneath a latex mask, this man had a dark swarthy complexion, and
when he took off his wig and stepped into the light, it shone on a smooth
hairless head. He laughed at the
startled expression on Scott's face.
"Now do
you recognise me?"
"The
Hood," growled Scott.
The man's eyes started to burn with an evil
intensity "Not so brave now
without your marvellous machines and gadgets. Your friends may be on their way
to find you but I will be waiting for them. "
Scott's hand reached for his pistol.
"Looking
for this?" taunted the Hood waving the gun at him. Scott tried to lash
out, and made the mistake of looking into the Hood's jet black eyes. He could feel them burning into him, and he
found that he was unable to look away.
The Hood pointed the pistol at Scott's head and motioned him towards an
opening in the floor. He instructed Scott to climb down the ladder to the
ground floor. Scott was strangely compliant.
When he was halfway down the ladder, he snapped to his senses again and
made a grab at the Hood's leg, to try to dislodge him. The Hood anticipated his move and aimed a
kick at Scott's head. Scott half
tumbled and half slid the rest of the way down the ladder. He landed heavily and winced.
"You won't get away with this," he snarled.
The Hood
laughed, "There is no-one to help you now. It's just the two of us, and
what better way to spend a murky Scottish evening that with a cosy fireside
chat."
Scott averted his eyes. The Hood continued,
"But of course you will have to imagine the fireside, I'm afraid we
are forty feet below ground, and the walls here are eight feet thick. None of your friend's little tracking
devices will be able to find you down here."
"Go to
hell," spat Scott.
"Now you
are abusing my hospitality. I offer you
shelter in my humble surroundings and this is how you repay me," mocked
the Hood.
Scott tried to tackle him again and found his eyes
locked in the Hood's hypnotic, unblinking stare. "If you don't like your surroundings, you can be else
where. Just look into my eyes and
imagine, for instance, that you are on a warm tropical island... shall we say
somewhere in the Pacific..."
Scott was alarmed to feel himself back on his island
home. He began to relax; he even started to feel warmer. The pain in his body was easing.
"No, I'm
not playing your little games." He
began to count aloud to try to focus his mind.
"One, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten…”
"…Eleven,
twelve, thirteen,” mocked the Hood.
Scott winced as the pain returned to his back.
"You
look in discomfort, are you suffering pain?"
Scott carried on counting
"Are you
sure that you're not in pain?"
The Hood laughed as Scott winced again "You seem in quite a lot of pain...
terrible pain... in fact, unbearable pain..."
Scott began to writhe and cry out, "Twenty-two... twenty-three... aaaaaaahhh." Scott was afraid that he was loosing the
battle "Twenty-five... twenty-six... twenty-seven..."
"Now I
can make that pain go away, but you will have to do something for me in
return."
"GO...TO...HELL...."
repeated Scott through gritted teeth, and then cried out as another wave of
pain racked his body.
"You
will succumb in the end. They all do. It can either be sooner or later. but I
warn you, later would be the more painful of your options"
"No... I
... won't.... twenty-eight ... twenty..."
Scott could
feel his conscious mind slipping away from him. The pain was becoming harder to bear. He opened his mouth to
count, but he couldn't remember what number came after twenty-nine. He reached into the pocket of his uniform
and took hold of a small capsule. He
popped it into his mouth and bit hard.
He gagged as a foul tasting liquid trickled down his throat.
The Hood
sprinted over to Scott and grabbed him by the shoulders. "No. You can't do this. What have you taken?"
Scott attempted a self-satisfied smile. The Hood
struck him on the side of his face.
Scott could taste blood in his mouth.
"What have you taken? Was
it a suicide pill?"
Scott's eyes glazed over and he swayed slightly.
The Hood began to shake him violently. Although he hated the pilot of Thunderbird
One, he desperately needed him. He had
come so close to possessing him. What
was so important about that organisation, that a man would be prepared to
sacrifice his life to protect its secrecy?
International Rescue did not seek power or riches. They risked their lives for the good of
mankind. The Hood could not understand
why. He cursed out loud and delivered
Scott a departing blow to the ribcage.
Then he flung him onto the ground like a sack of potatoes.
"Die
then, you fool."
As they
neared the coastline, Parker cut the engines to Fab 1, retracted the hydrofoils
and the Rolls glided stealthily into a small bay. When he felt
solid ground beneath him, he flicked a switch and lowered the wheels, turning
Fab 1 back into a car again. He felt
its wheels take a grip on the smooth sand.
"Will we
need the caterpillar tracks?" asked Penelope.
"I'm not
sure. I'll see 'ow she grips, M'lady."
"It
looks quite steep. I can't see any sign of
the road."
"They
don't 'ave no proper roads 'ere. I
should 'old on to your 'at, M'lady It
will be quite a bumpy ride."
Fab 1 started
to climb steadily over rough sand dunes.
Penelope had to hold onto the door handle to avoid bouncing all over the
back seat.
"H'im
sorry, M'lady. It must be uncomfortable
for you."
"It
can't be helped. Now tell me which way
does our navigational computer tell us to go?"
"Well I
'ave downloaded Mr John's co-ordinates, and the computer is suggesting that
Thunderbird one lies about a couple of miles due north east. Shall I go there first or do you want me to
'ave a scout around and see if I can pick up any signs of Mr Scott?"
"Alan
will be alright where he is for a while.
But Scott may have been concussed, he could be wandering about in this
fog."
"Well,
it's pitch dark out there. Not a light
to be seen. If he is wandering about
out there, I wouldn’t see him until I ran over him."
"Oh dear
poor Scott. I do hope he's okay. Yes
Parker, you've got a point, there's very little visibility. Switch on the sensors. They can detect body heat up to the range of
ten metres."
"Blimey,
it's a real pea-souper of a
night," muttered Parker.
After they
had been searching for about an hour,
Parker muttered again
"What's
that you say, Parker?"
"I said,
' blimey what's that?' M'lady."
"Have
you found something?"
"There's
some sort of solid wall beneath us. The
sensors can't penetrate it."
"They
must be the remains of the old war time bunkers. They were built when there was the danger of nuclear war with the
Middle East. Fortunately they were not
needed, but I believe they have been used for storing hazardous
materials."
"Nuclear
waste?" asked Parker in alarm.
"Oh,
there's no need to worry. It was safely
disposed of, ages ago. The islands have
a clean bill of health and when the land has recovered enough to sustain animal
life, then they will be inhabited again."
"I think
we've covered most of the island with the sensors. There's still no sign of Mr
Scott."
"I fear
he may be held captive in one of these bunkers."
"Do you
want me to go in and 'ave a look?"
"No.
That's just what we do not do. If Scott
is being held in there, we don't know
how many people we are dealing with. We
can only hope that he is being treated well.
At least, he is not freezing to death on the moor. Lets go and see how Alan is."
Alan had
changed out of his wet uniform into casual clothes. He was wearing two thick
jumpers and an overcoat but could still not get warm. He sat hunched up in a
blanket with his head in his hands, in front of the console on board
Thunderbird One. He looked in a foul
mood. He did not even smile when Parker
and Penelope arrived.
"You
don't look particularly pleased to see us Alan," noted Penelope.
"I
thought you would be here over an hour ago," replied Alan sulkily.
"Well,
we conducted a thorough search of the island first, to see if there was any
sign of Scott."
Alan looked hopeful "Did you find him?"
"No, I'm
afraid not. I am sure that wherever he
is, he is being held against his will."
"I could
have been out there looking," complained Alan. "For the last three hours, I've been sitting here helpless,
while Scott was probably in danger. I
could have done something if Dad had let me."
"Alan,
your father was right. We don't not
know how many men are holding Scott or where he might be. He could have even been taken off this
island. But I doubt very much if anyone
would be foolish enough to venture out in this weather."
"Well we
did," chimed in Parker.
"Ah, but
thanks to Brains, we have a few technological advantages."
"But I
felt so useless just waiting here. I
was wasting valuable time."
"Your
father was worried about you. You sustained a head injury and possibly
concussion. What use would you have
been to Scott if you had collapsed.
Your father would then have two sons to worry about. Look at you, you haven't even cleaned the
cuts on your face."
Alan grunted. Penelope put his petulance down to
anxiety and discomfort. She opened the
first aid box and began to dab antiseptic on his swollen face.
"I don't
know why my father still treats me like a child.... OW ! OW! ... That hurts... That stings... Stop it...
What is that stuff you're putting on me?"
"Don't
make such a fuss, it's just antiseptic."
"WELL IT
STINGS."
The Hood
aimed a kick at Scott's crumpled form as he lay motionless on the floor. He hadn't moved since the Hood had flung him
down. The pilot of Thunderbird One must
be dead. The Hood, although not a man
given to many emotions, was angry at being thwarted. He came so close to possessing Scott's mind and drawing out all
the valuable information it stored. The
crippled Thunderbird craft was out there for the taking, but useless without a
pilot to fly it. It would be no use for his cargo of chemicals.
The Hood cursed to himself He thought about kicking Scott again just for the hell of it, but
decided that kicking a lifeless man was
a waste of energy. He liked to see his victims suffer as he
inflicted pain. He was excited by their
fear. He wanted to possess the very
soul, without that the body was useless.
The Hood
began to hatch plans to trap Thunderbird Two.
The best he could hope for, would be that International Rescue would
send the other craft to recover Thunderbird One. It was now two o’clock in the morning, and even the Hood had to
sleep like other mortals. He
extinguished the hurricane lamp and climbed into his sleeping bag. A few minutes later he fell asleep.
Scott opened
his eyes. He had been holding his
breath, praying that the Hood would not check his pulse or fire a shot into him
just to make sure that he was dead. His
recollections were hazy and confused, but one thing he knew for sure, was that
he would be in grave danger if he stayed where he was. Scott knew that this man wanted to harm him for some reason or other.
He was still sore from the beating he had been given. He could hear a low
rumbling noise coming from the corner or the room. It was the rhythmic snoring of the Hood in a deep sleep. Now was his chance to escape.
Scott tiptoed
across the room until he reached the ladder.
He stepped onto the bottom rung; it squeaked, and the Hood stirred. Scott missed out three rungs and climbed to the fifth. That one
squeaked as well. He froze as the Hood
snorted, and then rolled over. When Scott cautiously reached the top of the
ladder, he tiptoed across the floor. He
could see steps leading to the escape hatch.
It was a heavy metal door with an airtight seal. He knew that operating the rusty driving
wheel style handle was going to be noisy and cumbersome. The Hood was still sleeping soundly down
below. Scott decided that he was going
to have to create something to use as a distraction, in case the Hood awoke
before he was able to escape. Scott could feel that his back was injured, and
felt sure he would not be able to run very fast. He glanced around him and noticed the barrels of oil stored in a
corner. In spite of his pain, he managed to manhandle a couple them. Rolling them across the floor as quietly as
he could, he placed them at the top of the ladder ready to hurl down onto the
Hood. Then he noticed that one of the barrels had corroded and a pool of oil
had seeped onto the floor. He angled
the damaged barrel so that it oozed its greasy contents steadily down the
escape ladder. He also decided to put
the oil to good use and used it to lubricate the door handle. It worked a treat, and the wheel turned
smoothly. With a final crank, the hatch opened and Scott made his escape.
He shivered
as the freezing fog enveloped his body like a shroud. He could feel his aching back starting to lock up. His first instinct was to get as far away as
he could, but he could see nothing. The
night was pitch black and the fog was like a wall in front of him. His mind may have been confused, but his
reasoning was as sharp as ever. He
closed the hatch behind him and then searched for the heaviest rocks he could
possibly move. He grunted and groaned as he dragged them into place on top of
the escape hatch, building them up to resemble a 'cairn' like the old Celtic
burial ground markers. Satisfied that
this would thwart his enemy from following him, Scott began to search for
shelter from the icy cold.
Scott stirred
in his sleep. He was aware of someone
nudging him. He gritted his teeth in
anticipation of another beating, and wrapped his arms protectively over his
chest. Then he felt something wet touch
his face. A large pink tongue was
licking his hair
"Wooooaaaaaaaar." He
opened his eyes and sat bolt upright.
"Mmwaaaaah." The long-horned,
highland cow, was just as startled to see Scott rise from its breakfast. It snorted, and backed away to join the rest
of the herd, who formed a circle around the hay bales where Scott had taken shelter
for the night. They fixed him with
bovine stares.
Scott stood
up and grimaced, as sharp stabbing pains shot through his spine. His legs felt like they had turned to
jelly. He brushed hay from his face and
hair. When he exhaled, he could see his breath freezing in the chilly air. The dawn was just breaking, and Scott was
able to see some of the surrounding countryside through a thin veil of
mist. The farm buildings looked
derelict and deserted, the animals somewhat neglected. There were no landmarks to act as
bearings. He had no idea where he had come from, or for how long he
had stumbled around in the darkness. He
felt sore, cold and hungry. He knew it
was important to keep moving. His
military training had finely honed his survival instincts. The only thing he
remembered was being attacked by a man who wanted information from him. He knew he was in enemy territory and needed
to keep his wits about him.
Virgil and
Brains had arrived on the island during the night, but they waited until
daybreak, to carry out an assessment of the damage sustained by Thunderbird
One. On board Thunderbird Two, Penelope
cooked breakfast, Parker was already tucking in, but Brains declined, and
donned his hat, coat and gloves. He was
keen to go outside and get started.
Virgil was tempted by the smell of sizzling bacon. He promised to join Brains after he had
eaten his bacon sandwich. Alan was
still soundly sleeping in a bunk in the medical bay. Virgil wanted to wake him, but Penelope requested that the young
man Alan should be allowed a lie-in.
Virgil
climbed down from Thunderbird Two and walked over to Brains who was inspecting
the tail section "What's the damage?"
"I-it
d-doesn't er look t-too bad. I-it's l-lucky those bushes were so dense."
"I don't
think Alan would agree with you there."
"Sh-shall we make a start on the er repairs?"
"Not
just yet. Our priority is to find
Scott. He must be around here
somewhere. It's not a big island."
"Sh-shall we t-take Thunderbird Two?"
"It will
be tricky flying low. There are still
patches of this mist around, and if Scott is still being held we don't want to
alert his captor to our presence We'll
go on foot. Penelope can stay here,
while we take Alan and Parker, and make a detailed search."
"Th-that
is assuming S-Scott is still on the island," replied Brains.
They had now
been joined by Penelope who was towel drying her wet hair after taking a
shower. "Well, I didn't hear
anything during the night," she added "I was too uncomfortable to
sleep properly, and I'm sure if a plane or helicopter had taken off, I would
have heard it."
"He
c-could have been t-taken by er sea."
Virgil
interrupted, "Well, lets not waste
time deliberating. Let's wake Alan up and begin the search."
"I is
A-Alan going to be fit enough to help?"
"He's
not concussed. He's pretty thick-skulled...
He's just sore and grumpy."
"I heard
that!" snapped Alan, pulling on his coat. "I'm right with you. Let's go."
"Good.
We'll fan out, and Keep in touch at all times," ordered Virgil.
Virgil had
been searching the moor land for two hours.
He came across a few deserted settlements and a dilapidated hay barn,
but still no sign of Scott. The cold
was beginning to eat into his bones. He blew in to his hands and rubbed them
together. He stopped and raised his left arm to speak into his wristwatch communicator.
"Any
sign of him, Alan?"
"No."
"How
about you, Parker?"
"No
nuffink, Sir."
"How
about you, Brains, any luck?"
"N-no,
V-Virgil. N-no sign of him"
Virgil sighed "Thanks Brains... Hey Brains....
wait a minute, I think I can see something...
Yes, there's someone over by those bushes."
"B-be
careful, Virgil."
But Virgil was already bounding across. "Scott! Is that you, Scott?"
Scott stopped
in his tracks at the sound of another voice.... an American voice, but his hand
still went instinctively for his gun.
When he realised that it was not there, he steeled himself for hand to
hand combat. The man approaching him
didn't look hostile; on the contrary he looked delighted to see him. But Scott was suspicious. "Don't come any closer," he
growled.
"Scott,
thank goodness. What happened? Are you alright?"
Scott looked at him without recognition. His face was
dirty and smeared with blood. His chin
was covered in rough stubble.
"Are you
alright, Scott?" repeated Virgil, as he advanced towards him.
"Stay
back," warned Scott.
"Scott, it's
me ... Virgil."
"Virgil?"
"Look, let’s
get you back to Thunderbird One before you freeze to death." Virgil attempted to take Scott by the
arm. Quick as a flash Scott twisted
Virgil's arm up behind his back, and threw him face down on the ground. Virgil spat out a mouthful of mud.
"Arh,
Scott! You're hurting me! What the hell has gotten into you?"
Scott then noticed that this man was wearing the same
uniform as he was. He loosened his
grip. Virgil sat up and rubbed his
shoulder. "What did you do that for?"
"Are you
part of my unit?" asked Scott.
"What
are you talking about?
Scott's eyes flashed angrily again "Who are
you?"
Virgil made an
attempt to try to placate him.
"Scott, you know who I am, I'm your brother!" Scott looked blank. "Scott, you
crashed You're injured, let me help you."
Scott suddenly became animated and began firing
questions like a machine gun. "What's your name? What's your number?
Which unit are you with?"
"I'm
Virgil Tracy. I don't have a number,
and we are both with International Rescue."
"International Rescue?" echoed Scott.
"Don't
you remember anything, Scott?"
Virgil was now quite worried. He was sure that Scott must have taken a hefty
knock on the head.
"What
did you call me?" asked Scott.
"Scott."
"What country
are we in?"
"Scotland."
Virgil caught
the dubious look on Scott's face, and for a moment he thought that his brother
was going to try to deck him again.
"We are
on an uninhabited island in the Western
Isles. They are off the coast of
Scotland. You crash-landed. Do you remember?"
Scott remembered nothing, but there was something
about this bewildered young man that made Scott warm to him. He suddenly decided to trust Virgil. He put a hand on Virgil's shoulder and said
solemnly, "We're behind enemy
lines. I was captured and knocked about
a bit but I managed to escape. Where
are the others?"
Virgil decided to play along with Scott's delusion
"They're safe. I'll take you to
them, Scott." And with that Virgil gently took his arm and led him away.
While they
were making their way back to the Thunderbird craft, Virgil realised that Scott had absolutely no recollection of
International Rescue, or his family.
His moods swung from profound confusion to quick agitation. Virgil had tried to contact the others, and
warn them of Scott's condition, but he was afraid of arousing his brother's suspicion. He left his communicator open, hoping that
the others would pick up snippets of their somewhat bizarre conversation.
When they
reached Thunderbirds One and Two, Alan saw them coming and ran up to greet
them. "Gee Scott, It's good to see
you, but I don't know what kind of trip you're on. Have you been at the magic mushrooms?"
Scott stiffened. "Who's he?"
"Our
youngest brother Alan, I'm afraid."
Scott looked blank, and then he noticed the
Thunderbird craft. He looked as if he
was seeing them for the first time in his life. His expression registered awe and amazement. Then he began to look fearful.
"Who are
you? Where are you from?" He started to struggle, lashing out at both
Alan and Virgil.
"Brains,
we've got trouble!" yelled Alan.
Brains dashed over to Alan and Virgil who were
struggling to restrain Scott. He took a
hypodermic syringe and injected Scott in the forearm. Scott stopped fighting and sank to his knees. Lady Penelope ran to his side and took hold
of his hand. Scott stopped struggling,
but his eyes were darting backwards and forwards in panic, as he scanned the
now unfamiliar faces in front of him.
"You're
among friends Scott," Penelope purred "You're going to be okay."
Virgil and
Alan helped Scott into Thunderbird Two, and laid him down on one of the bunks
in the medical bay. Scott was now passive, but his eyes were full of fear and
bewilderment. His brothers hated to see
him looking so vulnerable. Penelope
started to gently bathe his face with warm water.
"What
happened to him, Virg?" asked Alan "He looked at us as if we had just
touched down from Venus in a couple of flying saucers."
Brains took a small torch and shone it into Scott’s
eyes. Both of his pupils reacted.
"Ah
th-there's no sign of any er head injury, but he l-l looks as if he has taken a
beating." Scott's eyelids flickered, Brains' medication had now began to
take effect. Scott mumbled incoherently,
as he drifted off to sleep. Brains
called to Virgil "Help me get his
uniform off s-so I can er examine him."
Brains gently
rolled Scott on to his side, and Virgil began to unfasten his uniform. He grimaced at the sight of his brother's
injuries. The area around Scott's spine was badly bruised and his chest was
tender and swollen.
"S-some
of his injuries c-could have been caused by the er crash, b-but these bruises
around the er chest and ribs are fr-fresh.
S-someone has um also delivered
a hefty punch to his f-face and er split his lip."
Virgil looked
pained. "Who could have done this
to him?... and why?"
"I-I
think Alan's initial suspicion about the er authenticity of the er rescue call
h-has proven correct. I believe the
craft was lured here, a-and it doesn't take two guesses to figure out by
whom."
"The
Hood!" shouted Alan. "He must
have booby-trapped the wreckage of that old fighter plane."
"I-It
would s-seem so, Alan. He has been er determined to pay International Rescue
back for the a-attack on his hideout, and the d-destruction of his opium
crop."
"Do you
think Scott has been hypnotised? Would
that account for his loss of memory?"
"Perhaps, b-but I believe he er m-may have taken an amnesia
c-capsule."
"What's
an amnesia capsule?" asked Virgil.
"I-it's
er something I er developed a few months ago," explained Brains.
"S-Scott had volunteered to test it for me, sh-should an occasion present
itself."
"I don't
get it," said Virgil. "Did Father know about this?"
"Y-yes He
er consented to the test."
Virgil looked
perplexed. "Why didn't he tell the
rest of us?"
"R-remember when the Hood
er captured Tin Tin and Kyrano?"
"Yes,"
snapped Alan "Scott and I got them out."
"W-well
Kyrano c-came to me, and told me that he was frightened of the Hood's hypnotic
er power. He er confessed that he had
come very close to revealing our s-secrets. H-he felt guilty and ashamed."
"None of
us would blame him. I know Father wouldn't.
The Hood has mentally tortured him, and he was threatening Tin Tin,"
said Virgil in defence.
Brains
continued, "H-he f-felt ashamed
that he could not be as strong as Tin Tin was.
He um said that sh-she had been prepared to face death, rather than
divulge any of your secrets."
"Did
this awful man threaten to torture Tin Tin?" asked Penelope
"K-Kyrano told me the Hood had hypnotised Tin Tin, and that he was
going to keep her as his er.... I'm sorry A-Alan, I know this is going to
be um difficult. H-he wanted her ..."
"Yeah I
get the picture," growled Alan. He
then uttered an obscenity and punched the wall.
"I hope
that made you feel better, Alan," said Penelope.
Alan calmed
down and apologised for his outburst.
"W-well
to cut a long story short," continued Brains, "Kyrano er wanted me to
work on a s-serum that would um erase the memory. So that if he were to be er captured again, he would not be able
to divulge any s-secrets, because there would be none left in his memory. He h-helped me to blend the correct plant
extracts and er together we made a few capsules. He and Tin Tin each have one and so did Scott. T-they were only meant to be used as a
l-last possible resort rather like a suicide pill in the last world war."
"A
suicide pill!" cried Alan in alarm.
"Oh-oh
d-don't worry, Alan. Th-the serum will
not harm Scott."
"But
when is he going to get his memory back?" asked Virgil.
"Oh
he-he won't...." Virgil and Alan
gasped. "N-not until I give him
the um antidote. Which I have right
here." Brains proceeded to inject
Scott's forearm with a yellow liquid.
"Are you
sure this will work, Brains?" asked Virgil.
"No,"
replied Brains. "Th-this is the
first time it has been tested. Th-there is no telling how long it will take to
er work."
"When
can we expect him to get back to normal?"
"It
could be a couple of d-days or a couple of weeks or er maybe months."
"Months!" Virgil exploded. "What are we going to do with
him? When this sedative starts to wear
off, he may try to attack us again. The
poor guy doesn't know who he is or where he is. He's confused and paranoid."
"Why
does it take so long for this stuff to work?" voiced Alan.
"B-because each er individual is different. T-take S-Scott for
instance, He has twenty six years of memories stored in his brain. Some are good, some bad and some
traumatic. He saw active service in the
East Asian conflict. He's like a
computer that has crashed. H-his
neurons will have to regenerate, remake their connections. I-it would be dangerous for Scott to regain
those memories all at once. I-it would
be too much for the er brain to handle.
It c-could cause um long term psychological damage."
"You
mean it could send him mad?" cried Virgil in alarm.
"Y-You
saw his reaction when he saw Thunderbirds One and Two. He did not recognise his own craft. You were right, Alan. To him, they were
'alien' craft. He didn't trust us. We have to let him rest and recover his
memory in his own good time. No matter
how long it takes."
"I'll
have to tell Dad, We'll have to get Scott to a hospital." Virgil was
already on the radio. He was angry with
his father for not telling him about the amnesia drug. Jeff was tremendously relieved to hear that
Scott was safe, but to Virgil's amazement,
he did not want Scott admitted to a hospital. In his present state, Scott could be considered a security risk.
"It
would be better if Parker and I took him back to Foxleyheath," volunteered
Penelope. "We can look after him."
"How
will you handle him if he gets violent again?" asked Virgil.
"Oh, he
won't. Scott would never hit a
lady."
While Parker
loaded Fab 1 into the pod, Virgil and Brains made sure that Scott would be
comfortable on the journey. They checked his spine for any signs of serious
injury, and then they changed him into clean, warm civilian clothing. Brains placed a surgical collar around his
neck to help ease his whiplash injury. Then he strapped Scott securely into his
bed, and clipped a monitor to one of his fingers. Satisfied that Scott's heartbeat and pulse were regular, and that
his breathing was unhindered, Brains walked
back to the cabin of Thunderbird Two.
Penelope and Parker, took their places in the passenger seats and
strapped themselves in, ready for take off. Brains and Alan jumped down from
the cabin, and made their way over to Thunderbird One to begin repair work.
Virgil took
his place at the controls of Thunderbird Two, and depressed a black
button. Slowly Thunderbird Two
descended on the pod, retracting its stilt like legs. With the pod safely secured, Virgil fired up the booster
rockets.
"Don't
take too long, Virgil. We need another
pair of hands here," called Alan as Thunderbird Two lifted off the ground
and headed out to sea.
The interior
of Thunderbird One was bitterly cold.
Alan blew into his hands and stamped his feet Brains removed the cover of the console and pulled out a tangle
of wires, like spaghetti from a saucepan.
He began to mutter to himself, as was his habit when he was engrossed in
a job.
"Ah
ha! Y-yes, I see what's wrong. F-fetch me a screwdriver, Alan. Oh and a
torch would be handy too. Oh and Alan, c-could you um disentangle the blue w-
wires from the orange ones?"
"Sure,
Brains. Would you like me to pedal a
unicycle as well?” But as usual, Alan's
sarcasm was lost on Brains.
After an
hour, they had managed to remove a section of melted, damaged cables and Brains
was preparing to repair one of the circuits.
"How
long will it take to fix all this?" asked Alan
"We've
got a good day's work ahead of us."
"Oh
great! I've had my fill of this
place. How do the people in this part
of the world put up with this damp, cold weather? It goes right through you.
Hurry up and get the heating back on."
"M-many hands m-make light work, Alan."
Alan pouted,
and complained as the screwdriver slipped from his numbed fingers. One of the
draw-backs of life on a balmy tropical islands, was that Alan felt the cold.
Especially the damp cloying kind that these Islands were prone to. "I'm trying Brains, but my hands are
numb. It's just too cold." Brains
chose to ignore his complaints.
An hour and
a half later, they heard the familiar whine of Thunderbird Two's engines.
Brains briefly glanced up from his work "Well, at least V- Virgil is
back."
"Good, I
hope he has brought some more food with him, I'm starving." Alan waved as Thunderbird Two landed beside
them. He saw Virgil alight from the
cockpit and then nervously look around him
"Do you
suppose the man who took Scott is out there watching us?" asked Alan.
"I-it's
something I'd er rather not think about," replied Brains, tinkering with
his screwdriver. Virgil entered and
voiced the same concerns as Alan.
"Oh, hi
Virgil. How was Scott when you left him
?" inquired Alan
"He woke
up when we reached Lady Penelope's.
He's still mildly sedated, but he's a lot calmer now. He wasn't very happy about that collar
around his neck. He was able to talk to
me for a while. He told me that all he
could remember was being held in a darkened room. He said that it smelled as if it was underground. He mumbled something about protective suits
and drums of chemicals."
"What
about the man who attacked him? Did he say whether it was the Hood?"
"He told
me that he remembered a man slapping his face and then punching him in the
ribs. The man hurled him to the
floor. He said that this man seemed to
think he was dead, so he pretended to be."
"Did he
get a good look at his face?"
"He said
it was dark but he remembered the man's eyes. Intensive staring eyes and a
shiny bald head. So there's no doubt
about it, the Hood is here on this island."
"Should
we call Father? Maybe we can finish him off for good this time."
"You
forget, Alan: we are a rescue organisation, not an International crime fighting
outfit. We do not have the authority to
'finish him off', as you put it. I
believe it is more commonly known as murder.
We are supposed to save lives, even criminal lives."
"Scum
like that doesn't deserve to live," spat Alan.
"Father
disagrees. I spoke to him while I was
at Penelope's and he has placed the matter in the hands of the Federal Agents
Bureau. They have already arrested a
high ranking Government Official on suspicion of supplying chemicals to a known
terrorist. That terrorist has been
identified as the Hood. I have been
told that the army plans to storm this island to arrest him and destroy the
chemical hoard."
"Huh! I wish I could get my hands on him."
"What
would you do, Alan? You saw what
happened to Scott. You would be a fool
to go chasing after him. You don't know
what you are up against. Kyrano says
that he is the most evil man in the world.
He believes that he is in league with the devil."
"A-as a
scientist I do not er hold with um superstition," put in Brains. "But
y-you will be pleased to know that I have um fixed the er circuit that
activates the defence shield. I If the
H-Hood tries to er steal any of our machines, he will er have a bit of a
sh-shock coming to him."
I won't feel
safe until he's behind bars. In fact I won't even feel safe then," said
Virgil. "He's managed to escape from some pretty inaccessible places. He's
quite a slippery character!"
The Hood
awoke refreshed after a solid seven hour sleep. He had only one priority - to
set a trap for Thunderbird Two. For
this he would require the dead pilot's body. He would place it where his
colleague would find it and then detonate a canister containing paralysing
nerve gas. He was going to ensure that this pilot, would not be able to take a
suicide capsule before he was properly brainwashed.
There was no
light underground so the Hood switched on his torch. As he struggled out of his sleeping bag, his hands touched a
slippery substance. He stood up, but
his legs immediately slipped from underneath him, and he landed on his fat
backside He muttered a string of guttural
curses. When he managed to light the
hurricane lamp, he saw that the floor was covered in a pool of oil. But even worse, the Thunderbird pilot had
gone. The Hood bellowed with rage.
"Curse
you International Rescue! A million
curses upon you!"
He ran
towards the ladder, slipped over and cursed again. The ladder was thirty feet
high. The Hood started to climb the rungs, but promptly slid down them
again. It was then, that he noticed the
corroded oil drum, strategically placed so that it's contents would lubricate
his only means of escape. He cursed the
pilot of Thunderbird One, and wished he had beaten him to a pulp when he had
the chance.
Seven hours
later Brains, Alan and Virgil were finishing off the repairs.
"There. W-we're just about
done," said Brains "We have all our circuits back on."
"What
about external damage?" asked Alan.
"Nothing
too serious, thank Goodness. Scott
chose a good position to put her down.
Those um dense bushes acted as a c-c-cushion absorbing the er
impact. One of the tail fins has
sheared off and the other is a bit bent, but it should not affect the way she
er handles."
"Hey,
will you look at this?" called Virgil.
Glancing up at the sky he could see ten large military helicopters
descending on the island. When they
landed, soldiers in bullet-proof combat gear ran forward with guns at the
ready. They were followed by an army
decontamination unit.
"Let's
hope they catch the ..." began Alan
"I think
it's time for us to go," interrupted Virgil. "Brains you go with Alan
in Thunderbird One in case he has any trouble handling her."
"What do
you mean ' any trouble handling her'? I'm as good a pilot as Scott is,"
retorted Alan.
"And
you're about as prickly as that gorse bush," called Virgil, climbing into
Thunderbird Two.
"Race
you home!" yelled Alan.
Parker
carried a tray of uneaten food back to the kitchen. All the time he had known Scott Tracy, he had never known him to
refuse a meal. 'Hollow legs' his
brothers called him.
"H'it's
not your cooking, Lil," Parker explained to the cook "'E's just not
been 'imself since 'is accident."
"I
thought 'e was looking a bit better."
"Physically, yes. But 'er
Ladyship is worried. It has been nearly two weeks now and 'e still hasn't got
'is memory back."
"What
about all them expensive doctors 'er Ladyship called in? Can't they do anything?"
"No.
H'apparently not. They say that his
memory will either come back in its own good time or maybe not at all."
"Poor soul,
it must be dreadful not knowing your family, or who you are. I know there are some things I would rather
forget about me late 'usband. But then
we 'ad good times as well as bad times.
I suppose the poor man can't even remember what 'is favourite food
is. If 'e’s going to be staying for a
long time, I'd better find out what these Americans like to eat."
Scott had
spent the first few days resting in his room, while he recovered from his
injuries. His feelings of confusion and
paranoia subsided, when he realised that no harm was going to come to him in
the peace and tranquillity of a rural English village. His fears only returned at night, when he
re-lived long buried emotions, during flashbacks of his combat
experiences. His bravery had saved many
of his colleagues lives, when their plane was shot down over enemy territory,
but there was a part of Scott's memory that would never be erased - the faces
of the men Scott had not been able to save.
They would remain etched in his memory for the rest of his life.
Shortly
after the accident, Jeff Tracy had flown to England to be with Scott . On
seeing his son, Jeff wanted to put his arms around him, and pull him in to a
bear hug, but Scott stood up and offered his hand as if he was politely welcoming
a stranger. They shook hands and sat
side by side on a sofa in Lady Penelope's Drawing Room. There was an awkward
silence. Jeff handed Scott a box of
video tapes, hoping that they would trigger something in his memory. Scott watched them impassively, reduced to
the role of a curious bystander as precious childhood moments were re-played
before him. He pressed the 'pause'
button on the remote control, to freeze the image of a beautiful woman on the
screen. Then asked his father, "Who is she?"
Jeff swallowed hard and replied, "She was your
mother, Scott."
Scott simply replied, "Oh."
It was more than Jeff could stand. "For Pete's sake Scott! Does none of this mean anything to
you?"
Scott had meekly apologised. "I'm sorry, sir. I
don't know what you want me to say."
Jeff shook his head and walked out of the room.
Lady
Penelope told Jeff that Scott could stay as long as he wanted. He was the perfect house guest. Jeff was faced with a dilemma He wanted to
take Scott back home to Tracy Island, but he also had to run International
Rescue. Scott had been told that he was
a pilot, but he still no recollections of ever belonging to International
Rescue, and had not even asked if Brains and Virgil had been able to repair
Thunderbird One. He had asked where he
lived, but Jeff was afraid to tell him about Tracy Island and International
Rescue, in case he became a threat to security. Scott showed no signs of wanting to return to his home. He no
longer felt part of his family, or their organisation. He existed only in the present, and in his
'present' life all he knew, was that he was living in a magnificent stately
home, with a beautiful blonde lady who cared for him. It was agreed that Scott would stay with Penelope for a little
while longer. Reluctantly, Jeff flew
home.
A month
later, Scott had come to terms with his memory loss, and spent most of his time
trying to get to know his family again.
Gordon, the joker of the family made him laugh. John, the quiet intellectual played chess
with him over the satellite link. Alan
tried his best to engage Scott in friendly banter, but the conversations
between them were awkward, and neither understood why. Virgil was the only one, Scott felt he had
known all of his life. He felt the same
about his Grandmother, and spent hours listening to her recollections about his
childhood. As well as learning that his
mother had died while giving birth to Alan, he was told about his childhood on
a wheat farm in Kansas, and the day he
fell out of a tree and broke his leg. His Grandmother recalled his first day at
school, his first girlfriend and happy family holidays. His father spoke with pride about his
college achievements, and his award for bravery. But to Scott, it all seemed like someone else's life.
Back on
Tracy island, Jeff Tracy called a family meeting to decide who would fill
Scott's position while he was indisposed. It was decided that Alan and John
would alternate piloting Thunderbird One as well as manning the space station. Jeff would assist Alan with rescues in
space, and double crew where required.
Jeff was dismayed at the thought of Scott being edited out of an
organisation he had been so vital to.
"Is
there anything else we can do to help Scott?" he asked Brains.
"I have
er administered an antidote to the serum, b-but it had not been tested. S-Scott was the er first uh guinea pig, so
to speak. H-he knew the risks when he volunteered to test the amnesia drug, but
of course we all hoped that the occasion would never arise."
"If I
may say something," Kyrano stood
up and in a solemn voice began to describe the extent of the Hood's hypnotic
powers drawing from his own experiences.
He concluded by saying that taking the drug had probably saved Scott's
life, and that if the Hood were to ever get hold of International Rescue's
aircraft then he would have the power to hold the world to ransom.
"I must
agree then, that the drug has proven to be a success," said Jeff.
Virgil was not so sure "I believe Scott is alive
because the Hood may have thought that he was taking a suicide pill. One of the few things that Scott remembers,
is this man hitting and shaking him and demanding to know what he had
taken. He than punched Scott to the floor, and assumed that he would
die"
"Well,
at least it bought him time to escape."
"I'm not
so sure it would work a second time. The Hood would be wise to it, and would
probably kill any one of us for the hell of it," replied Virgil.
"I say
we should have finished him off while we had the chance," cut in Alan,
"Now
we've been through all that before, Alan," said Jeff sternly. " We do
not have Government Authority to 'take people out' however evil they are. We
save human life. All human life."
"I doubt
whether anyone would have shed any tears," muttered Alan.
"That's
all I have to say, Alan," countered Jeff "The military police and
secret service dealt with the matter in their own way."
"Yeah,
They let him slip right through their fingers," said Gordon in disgust.
"Well
according to Scott, he was rather an oily character," chimed in Alan,
earning a reproachful look from his father.
Kyrano stood
up again, "This man is my half-brother
He is evil, there is no doubt about that, but he also has my mother's
blood in his veins. She was a good,
kind person. I believe that good can
overcome evil. I do not wish to see him
killed. To murder him would bring us
down to his level."
Alan and
Gordon looked at the floor, shame-faced
A silence fell upon the room. Of
all people, Kyrano was the one who had the most reasons for wanting the Hood
dead. The Hood had killed their mother,
brainwashed Kyrano and falsely claimed his inheritance. Six months ago, Kyrano and Tin Tin had been
captured and taken to the Hood's jungle hideout, where they were mentally and
physically tortured. Alan's feelings
were still raw, but if Kyrano could show compassion and forgiveness, then
surely he could. But try as he might,
he knew that if he were to ever meet the Hood face to face, one of them would
die.
On a crisp
February morning, Lady Penelope saddled up Fabian, her dapple grey
gelding. Scott gently stroked the nose
of a handsome black stallion, before climbing onto the saddle.
"Are you
sure your back is up to this?" inquired Penelope.
"It's
fine," answered Scott, and he dug his heels in to the horse's flank. It galloped across the paddock and out on to
rimy, ploughed fields. Penelope's horse
swiftly cantered after him, and eventually managed to catch him up by the
entrance to Foxley wood.
"I see
you haven't forgotten how to ride," she called.
Scott smiled.
He looked more relaxed than Penelope had seen in days. His old sparkle
was beginning to return. Penelope
suspected that he rather enjoyed playing the role of an English country
gentleman, but she knew the longer he stayed, the less enthusiastic he would be
to return to Tracy island.
On his last
visit, Jeff decided to tell Scott about International Rescue. Scott was surprised
to learn that he had been the pilot of such a powerful machine as Thunderbird
One However this knowledge seemed to make him less inclined to return home.
"Scott,
Your father told me he will be flying over again tomorrow."
"Oh
really?" he remarked and then added, "That will be nice." but
only because he felt required to say something else.
"Can you
remember anything at all about your family?
It's been over a month now.
Brains said that the antidote should have started to work by now."
Scott looked blank "Perhaps I should take another
shot of it. I recall odd snippets of
things, but nothing I can make sense of.
I know my father wants me to come home, but...."
He let his sentence trail off into nothing, unable to
voice his worst fears - that he was afraid of being a failure. His face darkened. He kicked his horse and galloped away. Penelope felt annoyed at herself for pushing him. It was obviously going to take longer than
Brains or Jeff had anticipated.
"Look
Scott, I'm sorry," she said after she had caught up with him again.
"I didn't mean to push you."
"Not
trying to get rid of me, are you?" he grinned.
"You
know you are welcome to stay as long as you like. I am just afraid that the
longer you stay, the further away you will grow from your family. They are the most important part of your
life. I am an only child. My childhood was spent with servants and
nannies, and then boarding school. You have your brothers and your father. I still miss my parents. They were very busy people, and I wish I
could have had more time with them."
Scott looked
downcast "You're right, Penelope.
I've got to face facts. My
memory may never return. I can't hide
here forever."
"You can
start over again. You must have faith
in yourself. You can learn to fly
Thunderbird One again, and once you are up there, you may find that you never
really forgot how to. Just like riding
a horse, it's probably second nature to you."
"Yeah,
well, there's a difference between falling off a horse and falling out of the
sky."
"You can
do it, Scott. You may not have your
memory, but you still have your strength of character. Look at Gordon, he had to learn how to walk
again after the dreadful injuries he sustained in a hydrofoil accident, and he
did it because he had the support and encouragement of a loving family. Don't push them away. You can learn it all again, and you can be
the best again."
Scott felt uplifted, and for a moment, he wanted to
take Penelope in to his arms and kiss her.
She reached across and touched his hand. "Come on, I know the perfect place for lunch."
"Good.
I'm famished," replied Scott.
Side by
side, the horses trotted down the main street of a small picturesque
hamlet. Its pretty, thatched cottages
were covered with a dusting of snow.
"Wow. I
thought places like this only existed on the front of Christmas cards,"
remarked Scott.
"They
are very few and far between," said Penelope sadly "Hamlets like
these are being slowly strangled by motorway development. The locals have fought tooth and nail to
prevent one being built over the fields we have just ridden across. but then
the locals have an indestructible weapon... Lady Marjorie Cholmondley-Brown.
If there was a contest between
her and a bulldozer, my money would be on her."
Scott laughed "Sounds quite a formidable
character."
They stopped
at a quaint old English pub and tied their horses to a fence.
"The pheasant
does a particularly good Sunday roast...
Oh Lord! Speak of the
devil!" Penelope had spotted a
large lady being dragged along by six boisterous Labradors. She looked around
in desperation, but there was nowhere to hide.
Penelope pondered upon her fate - perhaps it was to be death by Labrador Four of the dogs were now upon her, probing
her with their cold, wet noses. It was
all she could do to remain on her feet.
"Down
Badger... Stop that Monty... Oh,
Penelope dear, I'm so glad to see you..."
"Marjorie! " exclaimed Penelope, and kissed the air a few
inches to the right of Lady Cholmondley-Brown's left ear.
"I do hope you have managed to sort out
that problem with your sprinkler system.
All your lovely paintings and carpets. I hope they were not
ruined."
Penelope
looked shamefaced "No. fortunately,
they were saved. I do hope your lovely
frock wasn't spoiled. I do apologise."
"No need
for apologies, my dear. In spite of the mishap, the evening seemed to be a
success. But I do feel that the audience were cheated. I was saving the best of my programme for
the second half. So I have agreed to
repeat my performance at the Foxley Civic hall tonight. There are a couple of other musical acts on
before me, and it promises to be an exciting evening. I recall sending you an invitation a few days ago, but your staff
told me you had gone away. I do hope to
see you there, and you must bring along your handsome young man."
"Oh
but...." Penelope began to protest.
"I
insist," said Lady Cholmondley-Brown. "I'll see you both at
7.30." She disentangled herself
from her dog leads and strode off down the path. Penelope put her head in her hands.
"What
was that all about?" asked Scott,
"We
don't have to go. I'll say that you
were ill. I'll make some excuse."
"Why?"
"Believe
me, Marjorie Cholmondley-Brown's singing is not something I would wish on my
worst enemy."
"But
won't she be offended? She seemed
rather a sweet old lady."
Penelope sighed, "Yes, her heart's in the right
place, and you're right Scott, she will be terribly offended."
"Then we
will go," he decided.
"Oh
dear!" sighed Penelope again, and then she noticed that Scott was giving
her a rather peculiar look.
"Penelope...." he began hesitantly. "Have we...? I mean ... before I lost my memory... Did we
ever have...?"
Penelope linked arms with him as they walked towards
the door "We have always been,
and always will be very good friends."
At 7.15 pm,
Parker drove the pink Rolls Royce up to the civic hall. With a beaming smile on his face, he leapt
out of the driving seat to open the rear car door. Penelope swept out of the car wearing a pink sequined gown
underneath a white fur coat. Scott was
handsomely attired in a hired evening suit.
"Do
h'enjoy your h'evening, M'lady."
Penelope, realising that this was sarcasm responded
with a stony stare. Scott replied
jauntily, "Thank you,
Parker."
"Not at
all, thank you. Sooner you than
me," he added under his breath.
They were
ushered to their seats and handed the programme for the evenings entertainment.
"There
is a God!" exclaimed a man two seats behind them.
Opening the programme Penelope saw a hastily added
amendment. 'Our soprano Lady
Marjorie Cholmondley-Brown regrets that she will be unable to perform tonight
owing to a bout of laryngitis. Her
place will be taken by the talented pianist Miss Alicia Davenport.'
"Well,
it seems we are in for a treat this evening.
Your brother Virgil will be most envious. He is a great fan of hers.
I knew she lived in this locality, but since her career has taken off,
she spends most of her time in Europe. She last played at the Vienna opera
house. What luck to see her here in
Foxley."
The first
musical act featured a trio of elderly ladies playing Mozart. Scott found it pleasantly relaxing. So much
so, that he almost drifted off to sleep, Penelope had to nudge him in the
ribs. But when Alicia Davenport walked
on to the stage wearing a clinging dark blue satin gown, Scott sat up and took
notice. When she took her position at
the grand piano and began to play, Scott felt the back of his neck start to
tingle. She was as beautiful as she was talented. Her ash blond hair tumbled
over her delicate features, as she played her music with a passion. The
audience was rapt. Scott closed his eyes and let the music take him over. There
was something familiar about the soft, gentle song she was playing. It evoked feelings of warmth and
safety. He began to see pictures
forming in his mind.
He could
picture his grandfather harvesting ripe ears of corn under blazing blue
skies. His grandmother baking apple
pies, and his mother Lucy sitting at her piano with Virgil by her side,
teaching him how to play. She taught John as well, but Scott had never really
been interested. Now he regretted that
He remembered his father taking him to his mother's first public
concert. She wore a blue satin dress, and looked so much like the young woman
playing for him now, that a lump formed in his throat. The young Scott felt immensely
proud of his mother, and at the end of the concert, she stood up, looking radiant
even in the fifth month of her pregnancy, and blew him a kiss.
Slowly, the
mist started to clear from his mind, and his memory began to return. The final
piece of music built up to a crescendo, it was like listening to a storm, first
the calm, and then the fury and chaos. Scott remembered the Kansas twisters
that struck with speed and devastation. He could remember sitting underneath a
table with his frightened younger brothers, while his mother sang to them to
calm their fears. Then he remembered the day when his father came home from the
hospital, carrying a screaming red-faced infant, who seemed to be raging at the
unfairness, of having his mother snatched away, before she could even hold
him. Life was never the same after
that. Scott remembered his three year
old brother John, asking God if he could swap the new baby back for his mom, as
they already had baby Gordon and didn't need another one.
When the
music stopped, Scott was overwhelmed by a tide of emotions. He could feel tears pricking his eyes. He got up and walked out. Penelope found him sitting alone on a bench
in the cold night air. She said
nothing, but sat down and put her arms around him. After a while Scott spoke, in a clear decisive voice,
"Thank
you for all you've done for me. I want
to go home now. I must call Dad, I need
to call all of them, especially Alan. I
left him alone and injured after we crash-landed."
"Well,
he's fine now. You've been talking to
him."
"Yeah,
well, it was kind of awkward. Sometimes
I just couldn't figure him out. He can be so reckless at times. Almost as if he had some kind of death
wish. When we were kids, I was always
getting him out of scrapes. I guess I
understand him a little better now.
When I saw service in East Asia, I saw friends of mine killed. I felt
guilty for surviving when they didn't.
Alan has had to live with the fact that he survived and Mom
didn't."
"Your
experiences in life, whether good or bad, shape you as a person."
"Yeah,
that's what Kyrano says. Boy am I looking
forward to tasting his cooking again!
No offence to Lil, but she seems to think that all I can eat are
hamburgers and fried chicken."
Penelope laughed "Welcome back Scott."
The End
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