PROLOGUE TO TRIANGLE
This story brings in characters from Gerry
Anderson's Stingray. I am not terribly
familiar with the background to Stingray. The only information I was able to
find (Stingrayonline) was
that Captain Tempest was supposed to have taken over the command of Stingray in
2068. As the Thunderbirds series was
set either in 2026 or 2046 (depending on your point of view) this would
completely louse up my story!
So here, for the purposes of my story. Captain Tempest is twenty years older than Gordon Tracy. Marineville exists, not as a futuristic village but a collection of subterranean research stations. The Ocean floor and it's trenches are the subject of investigation but as yet, no traces of Ocean dwelling intelligent life forms have been found. The links between Troy Tempest, Marina, and an explanation of ‘Titan’ and ‘Agent X' will be revealed in the coming chapters.
Stingray and Thunderbirds were created by Gerry Anderson and are licensed by Carlton International Media Ltd. This story is intended for education and entertainment purposes.
Chapter 1 - The Aftermath
Gordon Tracy stood up to his knees in fetid
water, surrounded by mud and rubble, in what used to be a quiet Mexican village
at the bottom of a hillside. Only now the hill was gone - washed away in a
torrent of water, which had cascaded down onto the hapless residents of Monte
Christos. Two solid weeks of rain had caused this massive landslide.
Fortunately the town had a small population, and there had been enough warning
for many of its residents to reach safety. There had been inevitable
fatalities, of course. It would have been nothing short of a miracle for everyone
to have escaped unharmed. International
Rescue Operatives, Scott, Virgil, Alan and Gordon Tracy had the grim task of
pulling bodies, as well as casualties from the quagmire.
Gordon peered through the gloom to see a
slime covered creature slipping and sliding his way toward him. It was Virgil,
his brother, covered from head to toe in mud.
"You gave me quite a turn there. I
thought you were the creature from the black lagoon!"
"You should take a look at yourself,
brother!" was his retort. "You don't look so hot either!"
Virgil, dirty and exhausted,
tried
to wipe the grit from his red rimmed eyes. "Whoa, this is some job. Do you
know who we could do with right now?"
"Who?"
"Seamus O' Rourke."
"Who?" repeated Gordon.
"Our Irish agent and County Derry bog
snorkelling champion!"
"Oh, the guy with the farm. I remember
now. Scott used his place as a base when we were tracking the Fireflash."
"Scott told me about his hobby. I
remember we all thought it was kind of amusing at the time. I couldn't imagine
why anyone would want to dive into a dirty peat bog for fun. Sure wish we had
him here today. You never know what talents are going to come in useful."
"Did you find any more
casualties?"
Virgil's face looked grim. "No. I'm
pretty sure all of the people have now been accounted for. Some of the dead are still waiting for
positive identification. But their relatives could be among the dead or
injured, so it could take a few days. Scott's pretty sure that we are unlikely
to find anymore survivors in there.
All that remains is the clean up operation. I reckon the local
authorities can handle things now. They
are trying to save the facade of the old Town Hall. Scott is holding the front
of it up with the Domo, while the building workers make it safe. Alan is in the
excavator trying to shift some of the mud. Scott told the Mexican authorities
we would loan them the excavator and earth mover for a few days. Their
equipment is rather outdated. It would take them twice as long to do the
job."
"Did he okay that with Dad?"
"Of course." Virgil's watch started to bleep. It was
Alan. "Go ahead, Alan," he instructed.
"I've done as much as I can here and
I'm heading back to Thunderbird Two to clean up. Scott reckons it’ll take
another half hour to make the building safe and then we can think about moving
out. The military have got things under control now. I don't think there will
be any further landslides."
"I wonder what could have caused that
much rain to fall. They had the
equivalent of a whole year’s rainfall in just two weeks!"
"I dunno.
The weather experts are baffled. Freak of nature, I suppose. Anyway see you
later, Virgil."
"F.A.B."
Virgil and Gordon also made their way back to Thunderbird Two. Gordon paused
outside the huge green transporter and stripped off his muddy protective suit.
Wrinkling his nose, he sealed it in a black plastic bag. Clad only in his
underwear, he made his way down to the lower deck of Thunderbird Two for a
welcome shower.
"Don't use
all the hot water," warned Virgil.
Gordon let the steaming water cascade down
his back. He flexed his aching muscles, and then vigorously lathered his red
hair. The shampoo smelled of chamomile.
He inhaled deeply hoping this fresh smell would cleanse his nostrils of the
smell of death. .He closed his eyes and let the water pour down his face. He tried to blot out the images he had seen
that day. They were not the first dead people he had seen, nor would they be
the last. They were ordinary men, women
and -worst of all - children. He knew
that the sight of a mother's body, still protectively shielding her smothered
child, would haunt him for the rest of his life. He tried to blank it out of his mind. He was beyond crying. He
had a job to do and could not afford to be emotional about it. People looked up
to International Rescue. They wanted to see order, control and results, not
weeping and wailing. That would come
later, when the job was done. All of them had learned to by-pass their human
emotions while dealing with disasters such as these. If they ever cried it
would be in private. After the reports were filed, the most harrowing rescues
were never discussed between the family.
But, some of them would never be forgotten.
Gordon roughly towel-dried his hair and
changed in to casual clothes. He was now off duty. Virgil was to drop him off at Key Largo, to stay with a friend
and ex- colleague from the World Aquanaut Security Patrol.
"Are you okay?" asked Virgil, as
Gordon slumped exhaustedly on to one of the bunks.
"Tired, aching, trying to get the
stench of raw sewage out of my nostrils."
"Well you
rest for a while. I'm going to help
Alan secure the equipment back into the pod. Scott's on his way back too, then
we're out of here."
Gordon closed his eyes. He was looking
forward to a week’s rest and recuperation. Most of all, he was looking forward
to diving in one of his favourite haunts, with an old friend he did not get to
see enough of. Noah Brady was so laid
back he was practically horizontal! He
shared Gordon's wacky sense of humour. Noah would be just the person to lift
his jaded spirits. He had been Gordon's diving partner when they both served in
the W.A.S.P. Gordon hoped a week of sun, sea and male bonding would exorcise
the depressing scenes he had witnessed during the last two days.
"Lazy bones, sleeping on the job
again."
Gordon opened a
moist
blood-shot
eye.
That irritating voice could only belong to his younger brother Alan. He chose
to ignore him.
"I'm bushed!" complained Alan as
he flopped on to the bunk beside him. Still Gordon did not acknowledge him.
"Are you really asleep?" asked
Alan giving him a prod.
"No."
"You okay?"
"Yes." Alan could see that Gordon
wasn't okay. He was biting his lip so hard it was almost bleeding.
"Was it bad?"
Gordon nodded
and swallowed hard.
"Sorry I wasn't there to help."
"It's not your fault. We can't be
everywhere at once. We did the best we could."
"What was the final death toll?"
asked Alan tentatively.
"Fifty two at last count," replied
Gordon flatly
"Considering the scale of the disaster,
that's not too bad. It could have been a lot worse. It's lucky the landslide
missed the village school. That doesn't bear thinking about. This sort of thing
is always harrowing when kids are involved. It stays with you."
Gordon blew his
nose loudly.
"That bad huh?" Alan gave Gordon a
sympathetic pat on the arm. "Do you want to talk about it?"
Gordon gulped.
"You know how sometimes it's the little things that get you going. You pull out bodies of people you never
knew. You keep going ... another one ... then another. You bag them up, number
them and then you come across a child's doll. or a little shoe..." he
paused to wipe his nose again, " and you find yourself crying like a
baby."
"It's happened to all of us at some
point."
Gordon continued, "I went in to this
house. The roof had caved in. There was mud everywhere. I pulled some of the
rubble away and underneath was a young woman, about Tin Tin's age. When I reached
her it was obvious her neck was broken. I couldn't have done anything for her.
She was sitting in a chair hunched over something. When I moved her, I saw she
had been trying to protect her baby. It must have been only a few days old. It was a beautiful little girl ..."
Gordon turned away to wipe his eyes with the back of his hand. He quickly
regained his composure and blew his nose again. Alan did not know what to say.
"I dunno, Gordon. Grandma says things
happen for a reason."
"Why? It's so dammed unfair. A little
life snuffed out just like that." Gordon clicked his fingers.
"Why?"
"You did your best. That’s all we can
do. Some we will win and some we will lose."
Gordon shrugged
and sat up abruptly. "Yeah. You're right." He swung his legs over the
side of the bunk and strode to the galley to get a cold drink, to wash the grit
from his throat. As he was pouring water into a glass he could hear Scott
relaying a report to their father.
" ...and that's about all we can do for
now. The authorities have one hell of a clean up operation ahead of them. They
are very grateful for the loan of our equipment. I just hope we don't need it
for the next few days."
"Good work boys. Get back to
base."
Alan was banging on the door of the shower,
asking Virgil how much longer he was going to be. Virgil came out dressed in a towelling robe with his thick
chestnut hair standing up in spikes.
"Is everything secured in the pod,
Scott?"
"Yes. There was only the firefly. I
decided to let them borrow the domo as well. I still wasn't happy with that
building. It will take them another few days to make it completely safe."
"That's quite a lot of expensive
equipment we've left there. Supposing some of it disappears?"
"I doubt it Virgil. I know these people
are poor, but they are honest. Their stuff is antiquated. Ours will do the job
in no time. It was the least we could do for them."
"Sorry, Scott. You're right of
course."
"Aargh, it's freezing cold!"
shouted Alan. He leapt from the shower cubicle and pulled on his clothes.
"You've used all the hot water."
"You're getting soft, Alan,"
scoffed Virgil.
Scott smiled.
"Well I'm going to hit the road now. Are you coming with me, Alan, or
taking the scenic route with Virgil?"
"Well since he's seen fit to use all
the hot water, I'm coming home with you. I want to get back as soon as I can. I
can't wait to get in to a nice hot tub and have a good long soak."
"And get Tin Tin to scrub your
back," teased Virgil.
"Well a guy can dream," replied
Alan.
"See you back home,” called Scott.
"Enjoy your vacation, Gordon. Dad says that's an order."
Gordon smiled
weakly. "Bye, Scott."
Alan eased himself in to the cramped
passenger seat. In the confines of Thunderbird One’s cabin, both he and Scott
were aware of how badly they smelled. A mixture of sweat and stagnant water.
"That was a tough one," remarked
Alan.
"Yeah. I think Virgil and Gordon got
the rough end of that one. The northern end of the village where they were was
hit the worst. I expected the death toll to be much higher than it was. I
suppose that's something to be thankful for."
"Gordon had a pretty bad time,” said Alan. “Found a mother and baby. He's pretty choked up about it."
Scott sighed.
"I'm glad Dad let him have a few days off. He's not been his usual jovial self. Sometimes it can be
claustrophobic living as we do, on an island.
I know we all get on each others’ nerves from time to time. That's only
natural. We're brothers! But living
together all the time and working together, sometimes it can get you down. You
need your own space."
"Well at least John and I get
that," joked Alan, who with his elder brother took turns to man
International Rescue's communication satellite- Thunderbird Five.
Scott strapped himself into his seat as the
silver/blue rocket ship fired up for vertical take off. Flying at five times
the speed of sound, they would soon be in the luxurious surroundings of their
Pacific Island home.
Chapter
2 - The Disappearing Act.
Virgil flew back over the disaster
area. It looked worse from the air.
Half of the village had been engulfed by sludge. There was still a lot of work
to be done clearing it all up, and by people who were feeling just as exhausted
as he was. He felt guilty for being able to just fly away and leave the
inhabitants to it. The village was in turmoil. It would take months to rebuild.
The heart had been ripped out of it. Life would never be the same. Still his
job was to save lives, not repair property, and that had been done. Lives had
been lost, but many more had been saved, thanks to the prompt action of
International Rescue.
"Shouldn't take us too long to reach
Florida. It's just a hop across the bay," he told Gordon.
"Where are you going to land? I don't think Noah's back yard is going to
be big enough for Thunderbird Two." Gordon was starting to feel a bit
brighter.
"There's a strip of wasteland nearby, I
can put down on that. I know I'm bound to attract a bit of attention, but the
whole world knows we've been out to Monte Christos."
"I can walk the few miles to Noah's
place. A walk will do me good. Give me chance to clear my head."
"Okay. But watch out for the
alligators!"
Gordon smiled and reached up to retrieve his
suitcase from the luggage rack. Virgil was already flying low across the Bay of
Mexico. He could see the Florida Keys below him, connected by a series of long
bridges. Strung out like a necklace of
jewels. What a contrast to the scenes he just left! Large opulent, waterfront houses stood amidst green tropical gardens. With expensive cars in the driveways and
luxury yachts moored by private jetties.
Gordon spotted Noah's house. "That's
his. I recognise his boat. Set me down somewhere near that scrubland. I'll say
I hitched a lift from the airstrip. I know he wanted to come and pick me up, so
I'll have to tell a few white lies."
Virgil landed briefly; just long enough for
Gordon to sneak out un-noticed. Then he waved him a cheery farewell and became
airborne again. He put in a call to Scott who was already well on his way home.
"Leaving for home now. I'm just hovering above Gordon now, making
sure he doesn't stumble into an alligator swamp or something."
"How is he? He seemed quite down when we left."
"Better now," replied Virgil.
"Oh, I can see him; he's just found the main road. Guess I can leave him
now. He wanted to walk. I think he
wanted some time on his own to get his head together."
"Yeah. It doesn't get any easier though
does it?"
"No," agreed Virgil.
"See you back at base."
Leaving the Florida Keys Virgil flew in an
easterly direction. He scanned the horizon in front of him. The weather was
looking a little misty. Surely there was not going to be anymore rain on the
way! Virgil groaned, that was the last
thing the poor people of Monte Christos needed. Their part of the world seemed
to go from one extreme to another.
Months of having no rainfall at all, resulting in parched soil and poor crop yields, to having too
much for the ground to cope with.
Virgil cast an eye over his instrument
panel. "That's odd." he muttered to himself . Then he gave his navigational compass a
sharp tap. "Hmm. Strange!" he made a mental note to report this minor
defect to Brains when he got home. Although it was not a serious problem Virgil
decided it needed to be checked out. He put in a quick call to John on board
International Rescue's communication
satellite Thunderbird Five. John was able to confirm what Virgil had suspected.
Instead of pointing to magnetic North, Thunderbird Two's compass was pointing
to true North."
"Not to worry, Virgil," assured
John, "There could be any number or reasons. The atmospheric conditions
over that part of the Ocean are notorious for whipping up the odd electric
storm now and then. My instruments are picking up a surge of charged
atmospheric particles. Like static."
"Must be why the hairs on the back of
my neck are tingling then," replied Virgil.
"Might be a bit of a storm building
over the bay, but don't worry, you'll be out of it soon."
"Oh, I'm not worried. Not for me anyway. If there is a storm building there could be more problems in
Monte Christos. That's what I am really
worried about. It was pretty grim back
there."
"Can't see any signs of anything
serious from here. The atmospheric pressure has risen to the south of
Bermuda. It might whip up a bit of a
squall, but it would probably blow itself out before it reached Mexico
bay."
"Well, that's something I
suppose."
"You could get a bit of sea mist
stirring up."
"Yes,
I've just hit that right now. It's all around me. Darn it. I should be over
Cuba right now. The compass needle tells me I'm flying east and now the
satellite navigational computer tells me I'm flying east too. I reckon it's
more like north-east."
"Yes, Virgil. I'm tracking you now you.
I've got you just south of Bermuda."
"Bermuda? How the hell..." he broke off suddenly as he noticed the
compass needle twirling wildly. "What the hell is going on?"
"What is it Virgil?" John became
concerned.
"The compass is going haywire. Must be
one hell of a magnetic surge. What the heck is in this area? Are there any Top
secret Government installations we don't know about?"
"I'm picking up something too. It's
interfering with my tracking beam."
"Hell!
Now this mist is closing in. I'm going to be flying blind for a while.
Can you stick around I might need you."
"Sure, Virgil."
Virgil was feeling disorientated. His
visibility was down to a few yards. Swirling
milky, white mist made the sea appear to be steaming.
"Are you out of it yet?" asked
John tersely
"No. As Parker would say ' It's a real
pea souper' ... Oh my God!"
"What is it?"
"It's incredible ... Oh, my God!"
Virgil's voice was filled with panic
"What?
What is it?" Now John was
alarmed. His knuckles were white as he gripped his microphone. "Virgil!"
"AAAAaaaaaargh!"
John trembled as he heard Virgil's cry
accompanied by a swishing, sucking noise. Then it all went quiet. The only
thing John could hear was his own pounding heartbeat.
"Virgil? .... Come in,
Virgil." John could hear something
which sounded to him like waves rushing over a rocky shore. The sort of sound
you would hear on a relaxation tape. John felt anything but relaxed. He wanted
desperately to hear his brother's voice, but when the rushing sounds subsided
all that remained was eerie silence. John's face turned pale as he scanned the
map in front of him. Thunderbird Two had vanished in to thin air!
Chapter
3 - The Devil's Triangle
Safely home on Tracy Island, Scott returned
Thunderbird One to its silo hidden beneath the family swimming pool. He took up position on the moving gantry
which would take him directly to the Operations Room of International Rescue.
He stepped off the gantry, stood with his back to the wall and located two fake
lamp brackets positioned either side of a special panel. When he pulled the
brackets down, this section of the wall swivelled round to deposit him in the
family living room. He entered the room
and saw his father in earnest conversation with John, via the video link.
John's face looked grim. Immediately
Scott realised that something was wrong.
"More trouble?" he asked.
"Don't tell me I've got to head back to Monte Christos again!"
"No. It's not that." Jeff shuffled
some papers on his desk. " Is Alan with you?" he asked.
"He came up via the passenger lift. I
expect he's soaking in a hot tub right now. We're both filthy."
"I need him up here and Brains
too." he pressed a red emergency button on the top of his desk to summon
his team.
"What is it, Father?"
"Sit down, Scott." instructed
Jeff.
Scott gripped
the back of Jeff's chair. "John, what's happened?"
"Sit down, Scott. " John's voice
was shaking. Scott thought he looked dreadful.
"Something's happened to Gordon hasn't
it? Has he been in an accident?"
"No. No, Gordon's fine."
"Well, what is it?"
"Son, I asked you to sit down."
urged Jeff gently. He knew how close Virgil and Scott were.
Alan came rushing in wearing his tracksuit
top back to front, his blond hair still had shampoo suds in. Brains followed
behind him, a large frown creasing his high forehead. Kyrano, Jeff's assistant,
and his daughter Tin Tin heard the alarm. They too, were regarded as family and
included in all family matters. Only Grandma was absent. She was spending some
time in London with Lady Penelope. Jeff was grateful for this. She should not
have to learn of the fate of her grandson like this.
"Thunderbird Two has gone
missing," announced Jeff solemnly. Tin Tin gave an audible gasp followed by
a short cry. Her father put his arms around her.
"Are you sure?" asked Alan.
Scott clutched
the arms of his chair. He was stunned, "How? Where?" was all he could
manage to say.
"John lost contact with Virgil fifteen
minutes ago. We are still trying to get
through to him, but so far we have had no answer."
"Perhaps it could be a fault in the
transmitter. Check your dishes, John.
Alan and I will check the aerial."
"Scott, I've done that. It's fine,”
said John sadly.
"Where was he when you heard from him
last?"
"John recorded his last conversation
with Virgil," announced Jeff "You can listen to it, but you will find
it distressing."
"Go ahead. Play it," snapped
Scott.
Scott
heard his brother's bemused voice over the humming engines of Thunderbird Two.
"I should be over Cuba right now... The rest of the family listened in silence
as Virgil relayed details of the thick fog that engulfed him. "... as Parker would say It's a real
pea - souper ... Oh my God ! Jeff visibly
stiffened. Tin Tin bit her nails. Then
they heard John's anguished cry." What? What is it? ...Virgil!"
"AAAAaaaaaargh!"
"Virgil? ....
Where are you Virgil?" John sounded like a frightened child,
calling out in the darkness after a distressing nightmare. Scott had not heard him sound like that
since he was a five.
Alan's face turned deathly white . He got up
and walked shakily to the French window. He ran across the decking and leaned
heavily on the balcony overlooking the sea. Then he rested his head on the
crook of his arm. Tin Tin ran to his side. Kyrano took him a glass of water.
Jeff gave his youngest son a sympathetic
look. He knew there was nothing he could do to lessen the pain. "He'll be
okay, just give him a few minutes."
Scott too felt
as if he had been kicked in the stomach. He buried his face in the palms of his
hands. For a moment there was only a stunned silence. Then Brains spoke up.
"I-I kn -know it's distressing for
everyone , but c-can I hear the tape again? Not all of it just the last bit.
I'm puzzled by that sound" John
replayed Virgil's scream. Scott winced. "There that's the bit. That
swishing noise. Can you get that any louder ?
And can you slow it down?"
The slow, drawn
out sound of Virgil’s scream made Scott feel sick. He hastily gulped down a
glass of water.
Brains was
frowning intently. "Hmm."
"Well?" asked Jeff urgently.
"Can you make anything of it?"
"It s-sounds to me like s-some kind of vortex."
"Something
like a tornado?"
"I-I'm not sure. I could hear water s-sounds. F-first a
sucking noise. P-play it again John...there...that noise ... n-now, l-listen
again.. w-we have a swishing noise in the background. C-can you hear it?"
"Yes I hear it. Like water being sucked
down a plughole," said Scott.
"Th-then here we have the sound of
water rushing over something,” continued Brains.
"So did Virgil crash into the
sea?"
"No, Scott. I don't think he did,"
cut in John, "he didn't seem to be losing height. He sounded as if he was
still in control. Whatever happened took him entirely by surprise. It was quick
too. One minute he was there, the next he was gone."
"I-it could be that
Th-Thunderbird Two was sucked down in to s-sea. If V-Virgil had crashed, John would have heard it hit the water. It
would have m-made a pretty bigsplash."
"But how
could it have been sucked down? And by what?" Scott paced up and down
restlessly.
"I don't know. What was his position
when he made that call John? Can you show us a map?"
"Sure Brains." John relayed a map
of the area he had enlarged, showing a section where the cold Atlantic Ocean
met a warm Caribbean Sea. John drew a
line from Bermuda to the Florida Keys and across to the island of Puerto Rico. "Virgil went missing somewhere around her" he
explained. He then extended the line
from Puerto Rico back up to Bermuda.
Jeff was looking at the shape of a triangle.
Kyrano dropped the glass he was holding. It
fell to the floor and shattered in to pieces. "The Devil's triangle!"
he gasped.
Brains looked
annoyed. "Pure superstition," he said crossly.
"This area- The Bermuda Triangle - it
is a bad place," argued Kyrano. "Many ships and planes have
disappeared, never to be seen again. It
is the devil's work."
"The Bermuda tr-triangle does not exist anymore than the L-Loch Ness Monster
does!" snapped Brains. "Th-there is a scientific explanation. A-as
John detected from the er satellite. Th-this is an area where the er cold
Atlantic meets the warm Caribbean. Highly charged p-particles are present in
the atmosphere, a-and as Virgil um
found out they can cause a sh-ship's or plane's navigational system to give um
incorrect readings. It is also an area
prone to sudden v-violent storms. In the er fifties and um sixties, m-many
ships and planes were reported lost in that area. A c-combination of bad weather and disorientation would be the
most likely cause of a ship or plane coming to grief. They were p-probably never um
found because they were not actually in the area they were thought to
have been. In the nineteen fifties and sixties they relied purely on compass
navigation. If the pilot had hit bad weather he would have relied solely on his
instruments to guide him. Again, Virgil mentioned the fog, another freak
weather condition. Before the advent of
computers and satellite navigation systems, a pilot would have read his
instruments and thought he was in a particular area. H-he would have probably
relayed his assumed position over the radio. When he failed to reach his
destination, It would be assumed that
he had crashed in to the sea. A search would have been mounted to recover the
wreckage. The rescuers would have concentrated on the area the pilot was
thought to have been in when he went down. But in reality he would have been
much further away."
"So you think Thunderbird Two could be
at the bottom of the sea?" asked Scott.
"The only answer to that I'm afraid is
yes,." replied Brains soberly.
Alan walked in silently and sat down on his
chair. He stared miserably at the floor. Tin Tin clasped his hand.
"Do you want to go and lie down for a
while, Alan?" asked Jeff gently.
"No. I want to get out there. I want to
get out there and start searching for him."
"There's still a chance he could be
alive," said Scott. " Thunderbird Two is fully sealed. Heck, Virgil
puts it in to the sea every time he picks up Thunderbird Four in the pod."
"Yeah," agreed Alan, "All we
need to do is get Thunderbird Four out there and start looking."
Jeff frowned, "You forget, Alan.
Thunderbird Four is slow. It was not designed for long distance travel. We need
Thunderbird Two to transport it."
"We've got to figure out a way to get
Thunderbird Four out there as soon as possible," voiced Scott.
"Maybe the Navy could help again,"
suggested Alan, "They did last time, when we had to get to New York to
rescue that reporter."
"Well, they owed us one," replied
Jeff gruffly, remembering the time when the US Sentinel mistakenly opened fire
on Thunderbird
Two.”
"We can't sit around waiting for them
to wade through all their red tape," exploded Scott. "You know what the military are like!
Forms in triplicate for a pencil sharpener! There's got to be another
way."
"I can pilot Thunderbird Four,"
volunteered Alan.
Scott had a better solution. "The main
problem with Thunderbird Four is that it cannot hold enough fuel and is too
slow for long journeys. Maybe if I could fix a magnetic line on Thunderbird
Four, you I could tow you part of the
way in Thunderbird One. There's still a chance, Dad, Alan's right. We've got to
get out there." Scott was now fired up with adrenaline and itching to get
behind the controls of Thunderbird One. "It could work."
"You would have to go slow though,
Scott. I wouldn't want to be thrown all around the place. I won't be much use if
I'm suffering from chronic sea sickness."
Jeff started to look hopeful. "Virgil
would have twenty hours of air supply on board Thunderbird Two. We must be
positive and assume that Virgil has had to ditch in to the sea. We must pray
that he was uninjured and that Thunderbird Two sustained no serious damage.
Thunderbird Two's structure has been built to withstand several tons of water
pressure. I don't know why we haven't had a signal from his wristwatch
communicator. He may be unconscious.
We're going to find him. I just only hope we'll be in time. Go to it,"
decided Jeff.
Scott and Alan
didn't need to be told twice. They were already at their stations.
Chapter
4 - Finding Virgil
Jeff Tracy knew he was clutching at straws.
It would take at least twenty hours for Scott to tow Thunderbird Four to the
search area. He had to remain
optimistic for the sake of his
sons. He knew Scott and Alan would go
crazy just sitting around waiting for news.
His heart went out to John.
Although John was used to having to sit and wait for news, he was
thousands of miles away from the comforting touch of another human being. Jeff
wanted to fetch him back home, but John would not leave his post. He clung to the faint hope that Virgil might
get in touch. It was the only thing
that was keeping him going.
After the conversation with his father, John
radioed the Florida based search and rescue team to report Virgil missing. They
had been working in tandem with International Rescue. Three of their
helicopters and most of their
operatives were still tied up with the Monte Christos disaster. They had only
one helicopter on standby, and the best
they could offer to conduct a search, was the service of their rescue hydrofoil
equipped with a four man diving team. John
sighed. That was not going to be enough, but he realised the needs of many
would outweigh the needs of the few. John had to be grateful for any offer of
help no matter how small. He pounded
his fist on the wall in frustration. Without Thunderbird Two International
Rescue was severely hampered. Thunderbird Four was miles away from where it was
so badly needed. John desperately
needed to get hold of someone in the vicinity who could supply a submarine. He
did not get much joy from the Navy whose subs were on 'secret manoeuvres'. He
decided to try the World Aquanaut Security Patrol. He prayed that their nuclear
powered Swordfish would be available to help. The W.A.S.P. sympathetically
informed him that the Swordfish was undergoing maintenance checks, and would
out of service for the next few days. It's sister craft the Marlin was tracking
in the Antarctic Ocean.
Meanwhile Jeff put in a call to an
ex-colleague in NASA to see if they had seen or heard of any unexplained
disturbances in the area. Jeff had heard many fanciful notions concerning the
Bermuda Triangle. The area had a high
degree of electromagnetic energy. There
had been numerous reports of UFO sightings.
Even wild theories that the area was a time portal to a parallel
universe or a wormhole to another galaxy.
Jeff didn't know what to believe anymore. He kept a calm and steady
voice while he thanked his friend for his sympathy and offers of help. Next came the unenviable task of letting the
rest of the family know. He almost
broke down while speaking to his mother.
He was glad Penelope was on hand to offer comfort and a good old English
cup of tea. Now he sat with a glass of
whiskey in his hand trying to summon the strength to call Gordon.
Unaware of the drama. Gordon Tracy was being
welcomed by Noah Brady and his wife
Cheryl.
"You should have called us
Gordon." scolded Cheryl. "We would have picked you up from the
airstrip."
"You look as if you've been
boiled!" laughed Noah. Gordon's face was red from sunburn. His hair was
flattened with perspiration, and his shirt was clinging to his back. It had
only been a three mile walk but in the ninety degree heat he was dripping and
drained.
"Man it's hot! And I'm covered with
flies!” Gordon swatted a black bug busily feasting on sweat at the nape of his
neck.
"There's only one place for you
then!"
"The pool Daddy." squealed Noah's
six year old son Jake. "Throw Uncle Gordon in the pool!"
"Oh no." cried Gordon in true
pantomime style. "Not the pool! Please don't throw me in the pool!"
"He's got all his clothes on and his
watch too." noticed Cheryl.
"Do you want to see Uncle Gordon go in
the pool?" asked Noah theatrically.
"YEEEES!" roared Jake.
Gordon slipped
off his wristwatch and put it on a table next to Noah's. It was practically
identical.
"So you've got one of those new
fangled watch phones too,"
observed Noah. Gordon's wristwatch communicator looked like any other
mobile phone. Technology had made them small enough to fit into the face of a
wrist watch . "How do you get on
with it? I'm all fingers and
thumbs. Damned Japanese
technology. Granted they can make
things smaller, but then they have smaller hands. I've got palms the size of meat plates and fingers like
sausages. I keep getting the numbers
wrong."
"Are you going to throw him in
Daddy?" urged Jake who didn't wish to miss the fun. Gordon didn't
mind. Being hurled fully clothed into
the cooling waters of the pool would be the nearest thing to heaven right now.
Noah, a well
built man, hoisted Gordon over his shoulder and unceremoniously dumped him in.
He hit the water with a loud splash. Jake shrieked with laughter as Gordon
grabbed Noah's leg and pulled him in as well. With all of the gleeful shouting
and splashing. No-one heard one of the wristwatches bleep.
Gordon raced across the pool with Jake.
"Beat you. Uncle Gordon."
"I must be getting out of
condition," panted Gordon.
"Have a beer," called Noah,
pouring himself a drink and one for Gordon. When he set Gordon's glass down on
a nearby table, he heard a watch emitting a loud bleep. Noah picked it up,
strapped it to his wrist and put his finger to his ear.
"Okay ...I'll be there in five
minutes." Noah hastily pulled on his trousers. "Duty calls," he
shouted to Gordon.
Gordon hauled
himself out of the pool.
"Sorry," apologised Noah.
"I'm afraid I'll have to cry off our evening dive. I'm on call tonight.
I've got to go."
"What's the problem?" Gordon
lifted the cool glass of beer to his lips and drank thirstily.
"Dad rescues people," piped up
Jake, "He pilots the rescue hydrofoil. We saw International Rescue
today. They flew over our house in a
Thunderbird Two."
Gordon
playfully ruffled Jake's hair.
"Did they really? What a shame I missed them."
"I'm going to help International
Rescue," announced Noah proudly.
"Really Dad. Are you going to help them
rescue someone?"
"I hope so, Son." Noah took Gordon aside, out of Jake's
earshot. "I don't want to upset Jake, but it's International Rescue who
need rescuing. You know that craft he got so excited about..."
"What about it?" asked Gordon in
alarm.
"I've just had a report that it's
missing. It may have come down in the sea. My team are mounting a search for
the pilot."
"Uncle Gordon," cried Jake,
"Look out, you're spilling your drink all over the sun bed!"
"Jeez Gordon, I'm so sorry you had to find out like that. I just don't know what to say." Noah and Gordon were breathless, having just
raced full speed to the jetty where the rescue hydrofoil was stationed.
"How fast will this thing go?"
asked Gordon earnestly.
"I didn't know your brother was a
pilot for International Rescue."
"It's top secret. I would appreciate it
if you didn't mention it to anyone else. Not even Cheryl. Virgil dropped me off
a few miles down the road. He had been called to Monte Christos. He's not
supposed to take passengers. He would be in trouble if they found out I hitched
a ride."
"My lips are sealed, but that's the
least of his problems right now. We need to find that bird before his air supply
runs out."
"It should be good for at least another
twenty four hours. Thunderbird Two is water tight and strong enough to
withstand heavy water pressure. That's what I remember him telling me."
Noah started up the hydrofoil. "How do
you feel about travelling on this thing again. They've greatly improved the
safety features since...."
"Yeah no problem just go,"
interrupted Gordon.
"They changed the design after the
accident with the prototype. What happened to you couldn't happen again. This
craft is model is far more stable than the old one, and it's just as
fast."
"I wish we had Thunderbird Four,"
said Gordon in frustration.
"Have you seen Thunderbird Four? I've only seen it in action once. That was
from a distance and through high powered binoculars. It looks neat. Bit on the
small side though, not as sleek as the old Stingray. That was a classic."
Gordon looked
affronted. "It's as big as it needs to be. It's tough and it's fast."
"I don't really know anything about
it. International Rescue are pretty touchy about publicity. Now they need our
help. It's ironic, they have all that expensive equipment and now they have
lost their only means of transporting it all. What's that Thunderbird plane
worth.? A few billion I would guess."
"Virgil only flies it," replied
Gordon. "He didn't buy it."
"Sorry, I'm not trying to pry. I'm sure your brother has been sworn to
secrecy. I can't help being curious
about them. I would love to be part of
their organisation."
Noah and Gordon were joined by the other
three divers, who were already in their wetsuits.
"Do you have a suit I can borrow?"
asked Gordon.
"I have a spare suit, but I'm not sure
whether you should go down," replied Noah.
"You'll make an odd number,"
explained a colleague. "We go down in pairs."
"Yes, yes I know the procedure,"
snapped Gordon. " I'm a diver myself. I want to help."
Noah pulled
Gordon aside. "Gordon. I really don't think it's a good idea. You're
obviously emotionally involved. You won't be thinking rationally."
Gordon angrily
pulled away. "I've got to do something!. I can't just sit around and wait!"
"Gordon I'm asking you as a
friend. Man the hydrofoil for us, you
have the experience. Man the radio. We
need someone to do that. It will release an extra man to dive."
Gordon
apologised for his outburst. Noah made good sense. "Gordon, I want you to co-ordinate activities with
International Rescue. Use the radio link on the hydrofoil . If we find their
man you'll be the first to know. It's better this way."
Gordon agreed,
he desperately wanted to be in touch with his family. He watched as two of the divers flipped backwards in to the
water. Gordon picked up the radio mike and called,
"International Rescue... this is....
this is Gordon Tracy. I'm with the Key
rescue unit. We are nearing Bermuda.
Can you give us the last known position of Thunderbird Two?"
"Receiving you, Mr Tracy." John
tried to keep a neutral tone to his voice as he relayed the co-ordnance.
"Thank you, International Rescue. Keep
this channel open we will let you know if we find anything." Noah moved
the hydrofoil a few miles east and then cut the engines. Leaving Gordon at the
helm, he and the other diver waved to a helicopter circling overhead and then
jumped in to the sea.
"They've gone in, John," whispered
Gordon.
John gave way
to his feelings. "Thank goodness. Dad's been going frantic trying to
contact you. Why didn't you have your communicator on?"
"We were horsing around in the pool.
How is Dad? How are Alan and Scott
taking this?"
"As well as can be expected. Scott and
Alan are being positive."
"If only I had Thunderbird Four!"
cried Gordon.
"We're working on that." replied
John, "Alan is piloting her. To save on fuel Scott has attached magnetic
grabs to the front of Thunderbird Four to tow her along."
Gordon shook his head, "That will still
take too long! We need a sub now."
"I know, Gordon, I know. Believe me
I've tried everything I can think of. I even asked the Navy and the W.A.S.P.
They can't help. It's down to us as usual."
"What happened, John?" asked
Gordon desperately. "There were no mechanical problems that I was aware
of. When he left the weather was perfectly clear. I just don't get it. What
went wrong?"
"The curse of the Bermuda
Triangle."
"You don't seriously believe that stuff
do you. This is two thousand and forty six, not nineteen sixty six."
"It happened to Virgil. He reported the
compass acting strangely. He was off course. As I was speaking to him he ran
into a thick sea mist. Then suddenly he was gone. I swear it Gordon, it was in
a matter of seconds. I was tracking him all the time."
"Did you lose sight of him at
all."
"I had a bit of interference but that
was over in seconds. I heard Virgil cry out and then Thunderbird Two was
gone."
"No. This is the stuff of science
fiction. There must be a rational explanation. What does Brains say?"
"That
there must be a rational scientific explanation. He did mention the possibility
of a freak tidal wave."
"It would have to be one hell of a
tidal wave to be able to knock Thunderbird Two out of the sky. It would need to
be the size of a five storey bock of flats."
"Not so long ago that would have been
considered the stuff of science fiction. Now scientists have back tracked on
that one. Where you get two opposing air currents merging, it could indeed
cause a tidal wave. Brains has been boning up on them. He has found eye witness
reports of waves over a hundred feet high."
Gordon sighed.
"That would dash Thunderbird Two to pieces!"
"I'll patch you through to Scott. He
can give you an update on his position."
Scott's
authoritative voice came over the radio. "Gordon! We're on our way, but
it's going to take a while yet. It's calm here and we've made good time. It's
tough for Thunderbird One to fly slowly. She wasn't designed for it. Alan keeps
complaining that I'm bumping him around. He's afraid Thunderbird Four will flip
over."
"I know you're doing your best Scott. I
just feel so helpless!"
Two hours later Noah came up for a break. He
had nothing to report. No signs of any
wreckage, which was good news to Gordon.
"So it probably wasn't a tidal wave
then?"
"It's unlikely. A tidal wave would have
smashed the craft to pieces. There would have been wreckage scattered all
over."
"What could it be? Do you believe all
that stuff about The Bermuda Triangle? You were with the W.A.S.P. longer than
me. They made an in depth study of the area. Did they dismiss it as science
fiction."
"It was a long time ago. About ten
years. I was eighteen, and a raw recruit from naval college. I spent some time
at Marineville under the guidance of Captain Troy Tempest. He captained the
Stingray prototype. Man that was some craft!
Did you ever get to go out in it?"
Gordon shook
his head. "No I didn't get to meet Captain Tempest. I heard a bit about him. Had some kind of breakdown I believe."
"I don't know the full story myself.
But I know it was during the Bermuda Triangle program. The files on that one
are still open. They never did find Stingray."
"So the stories could be true! Did Stingray suddenly disappear like all the
other craft?"
Noah pursed his
lips. "It's doubtful. It was more likely a simple case of human
error."
"What? On the part of Captain
Tempest?"
"Captain Tempest drove himself very
hard. He worked hard and he played hard too. He was a workaholic and something of a womaniser. I found him a bit
on the arrogant side. He thought he was some kind or super hero. He took risks
too. He once ran out of air at the bottom of a sea trench, maybe that's what
started his problems."
"What happened? Did he start drinking
or something?"
"No. I think he had some mental
problems. He suffered hallucinations
and paranoia. Only no-one realised at
the time except for his co-navigator and hydrophones operator."
"Why didn't this guy report him?"
"I don't know. Misguided loyalty
perhaps."
"You said Stingray disappeared? Do you know what happened? How did Captain Tempest survive? Was anyone
else on board?
"Whew!
I need to draw breath. One
question at a time! I don't really know
what happened or why they survived."
"Do you know where Captain Tempest is
now? Is he still with the W.A.S.P.?
"No. He retired. I believe he married
the Commander's daughter."
"Atlanta Shore?"
"Yes, her father died recently. He had
a house on the Bahamas."
"I'm sorry to hear that. I met
Commander Shore while I was hospitalised. He came to give me moral
support."
"He was a good guy at heart. His bark
was a lot worse than his bite. He had us raw recruits jumping around in
circles. We were terrified of him. Atlanta was the apple of his eye. I suppose
that was because she was his only child."
"I remember Atlanta. Pretty girl. Flame
red hair and a temper to match."
"She took after her Dad. She was the
only one with the temperament to tame Tempest. No pun intended, but I bet it
was a stormy relationship."
"Do you know where I can find Captain
Tempest?"
"Not really. Even if I knew where he
was, he probably wouldn't be much help.
He might not even remember what happened."
"What about this other guy? The
hydrophones operator."
"No idea where he went. He left soon
after Troy. I can't even remember his real name. Everyone called him
'Phones'"
"So that's it then."
"I have an idea. It's a long shot but
it might work."
"What's that?"
"Commander Shore died two months
ago. He would have left his estate to
Atlanta. If we can find his address or even better his phone number, maybe we
can find Atlanta. Perhaps she would be willing to talk to you."
Gordon was
enthusiastic. He wanted to go there right now, but Noah insisted on a thorough
search of the Ocean floor. He radioed to the other divers who had also found
nothing.
By nightfall the search was called off.
Chapter
5 - At Home with the Tempests
Gordon had not been able to sleep properly
all night. He dozed fitfully and
dreamed he was back on Tracy Island. He awoke in the middle of the night and
thought he could hear Virgil playing the piano. Virgil's favourite tune had
invaded his head. Stress and lack of
sleep played a strange havoc with his mind.
He walked to his window, a gentle breeze flapped the curtains. Gordon
gazed out on to the calm Ocean. Dawn was breaking. He made an anguished plea,
"Virgil. Where are you?"
Gordon left his room and made his way to the
kitchen to make himself a coffee. He tiptoed past Noah and Cheryl's bedroom. He
didn't want to be a nuisance and wake them up too early. He could hear a gentle
snoring coming from Jake's room. In front of him he saw a light shining
underneath the door of Noah's study. He heard the sound of voices. Without
wanting to be seen to be eavesdropping, he waited outside the door.
"...Yes. Thank you for that I'll tell him when he wakes."
Gordon thrust
open the door, "Has there been any more news?"
"No. Not about Virgil. I've just been
speaking to Atlanta Shore - sorry Tempest. I
was awake early this morning, something was playing on my mind. I came
across an advert in one of my diving magazines. It was from a company wanting
to organise a dive to try to discover the ' Lost City of Atlantis’. I
remembered the company was called Tempest. I managed to find the article and I
called the contact number to say we were interested. Atlanta answered, I then
explained the real reason I was calling. I told her you wanted to come and see
Troy. Atlanta remembers you. Seems she had rather soft spot for you, Gordon. I
told her about Virgil. I hope you don't mind."
"Mind? That's the best news I've heard
so far."
"Don't get your hopes up too high. Troy
likes to spin a yarn or two. He finds it hard to distinguish fact from fiction
these days."
"I've got to see him. I believe Virgil
is still alive .He must be."
Noah handed
Gordon a bunch of keys. "Take the speedboat. It's fast. Good luck, I hope it helps to shed some
light on your brother’s disappearance."
After communicating with Gordon, Scott
radioed through to Alan in Thunderbird Four. "How are you doing. If you're
tired we can stop."
"No I'm fine," lied Alan. In truth
he felt very tired and slightly seasick.
"Are you hungry?"
"No way. Just don't get me thinking about food. I've been bouncing up and
down on those waves all night long."
"Sorry, Alan, I know it's been a rough
ride, but we'll soon be there."
"Do you want to stop for a while? If I'm tired you must be dead beat yourself.
You should have a rest. Don't go falling asleep at the controls."
"I took an amphetamine. We used to use
them in the air force, to keep us awake and alert when we were on a mission.
I've just had a call from Gordon. He says he is on his way to the Bahamas to
visit the chap who used to Captain Stingray for the W.A.S.P."
"Can he help us?"
"Gordon thinks so. The trouble is, this
guy has had mental health problems. He gets a little muddled. He seems to
believe in an underwater city. He swears blind that he's been there before. I
don't know what to think. Gordon may be clutching at straws here."
"Does Gordon trust this guy?"
"He doesn't really know him, Alan. He
just says he has a hunch that this Troy Tempest chap may know something."
"Well I hope he's right. I hope he's
not going off on a wild goose chase with some nut who thinks he was an angel
fish in a previous life!"
Gordon walked the few short steps from the
jetty, where he had moored the speed boat.
He caught a glimpse of a sprawling, lime-washed bungalow through
flourishing tropical vegetation. 'Impressive' was the word which sprang to his
mind. This was obviously a residence
befitting a man who had been a high ranking officer in the World Aquanaut
Security Patrol. Gordon felt a little apprehensive as he walked up to the front
entrance. Although he was expected by
the occupants of 'Shorewaters', which
was the name swinging from a wrought iron sign attached to a mailbox, he still
felt as if he was intruding. He was
going to open some old wounds.
Gordon
walked along the driveway, paused to watch a trio of hummingbirds feast on a
deep red hibiscus flowers and then rapped on the polished front door . He stood
with his eyes downcast, as he heard footsteps approaching.. An attractive woman
in her late forties opened the door.
She beamed a welcoming a smile. Her hair was still the same flame red,
her skin untouched by the tropical sun was still pale and softly freckled, but
there were lines around her eyes and deep frowns etched on her forehead. Life had not always been easy for Atlanta
Tempest and she looked every one of her forty
years.
"Gordon Tracy!" She held out her arms. Her red polished
nails lightly brushed Gordon's shoulders.
"Th- thank you for agreeing to see me.
I-is it okay with Troy?" Gordon was nervous. He was stammering, and sounding just like Brains.
"My dear boy." Atlanta embraced
him in the folds of her floaty blue caftan. "He will be delighted to see
you. He doesn't get many visitors these days."
"I'm sorry. I know I haven't been in
touch for the last two years, and I was sorry to hear about your father. He was
kind to me after my accident."
Atlanta's hazel
eyes clouded with tears at the mention of her father.
"I-I'm sorry," stammered Gordon
again. "I should not have come."
"Nonsense." Atlanta masked her emotions with a cheery
smile. "It's good to see you again. And it's good to see you walking so
well. Two years ago I would never have
thought it possible."
"Neither would I," agreed Gordon.
"You're looking well."
"Yes I am. Thank you."
The conversation ground embarrassingly to a
halt with both parties grinning at each other, not really knowing what to say.
"Troy's in the garden," said
Atlanta. "Come with me." Gordon followed her into an opulent hallway.
He stopped to stare at a magnificent
painting which almost covered the whole of
one of the walls. It depicted a
sleek blue, yellow and silver submarine diving in a sea of tropical fish and
corals.
Gordon
recognised it immediately. "Stingray!"
Atlanta gazed
wistfully. "Troy painted this last year. It was one of the things closest
to his heart."
"Wow, he's good. My brother was an
artist too ."It was a silly slip of the tongue, but Gordon was furious at
himself. "My brother is an artist," he corrected.
"You have four brothers don't you? Which of them is the artist?"
"Virgil."
"Ah. The one who is missing."
"Yes. That's the reason why I am here.
He went missing over the sea just off the coast of Bermuda."
Atlanta looked
solemn. "I can't promise that Troy will be able to help you. Some days are
better than others," then she added." He talks about her."
Atlanta stopped in front of a portrait of a beautiful young woman, unlike any
other Gordon had ever seen. "He painted this too."
"Marina?" Gordon had heard all
about the mysterious Marina from Noah.
Atlanta nodded.
The picture was surreal. It showed an impossibly beautiful girl with huge, sad,
limpid green eyes. She looked almost like a caricature with her translucent
skin and silver/ green hair.
"Is that the woman he claims to have
seen?" asked Gordon.
"Yes. But he saw others too. He saw a
sort of Neptune character if you can call him that. Troy refers to him as
Titan. He believes Marina was his slave"
"I'm sorry all this must be hard for
you."
"Not really. It's a sort of normality.
You get used to it. We are part of an eternal triangle. Me, Troy and Marina. He
misses her. At first he refused to take his medication because he still wanted
to believe in her. " She smiled wryly and then continued, "Don't
misunderstand me, Gordon. How can I be
jealous of someone who is a figment of his imagination? Troy is still intelligent and lucid, and
even with his schizophrenia, I still love him as much as I did back in those
days when he was a dashing Captain and I was a spoilt daddy's girl."
"Oh you were not a spoilt daddy's girl.
No-one thought of you in that way. You reached the rank of lieutenant. That's
something to be proud of."
"We had some good times, until Troy's
paranoia began to affect his job. He started to see this 'Titan's' spies everywhere. He hid it very well at first,
not even 'Phones' realised how sick he was becoming. Then he used to see Marina
everywhere. Even in Stingray when he was out on patrol. She was as real to him
as you or I. He became obsessed with
her. He started to have conversations
with her, but he said that she could not speak. Odd isn't it? You always
assume that people with his sort of illness
would hear voices."
Gordon really did not know what to say. He had been inspired by Captain Tempest and
was saddened to hear of his mental decline. Atlanta led him through a light
airy living room which opened up on to a balcony overlooking the sea. Captain
Tempest sat with his back to them scanning the Ocean with his binoculars.
"We have a visitor, Darling,"
cooed Atlanta, laying a manicured hand lovingly on his shoulder. "Young
Gordon Tracy. Remember, I told you I
had a phone call from Noah Brady early this morning?"
Captain Tempest
turned and peered at Gordon through narrowed eyes. Gordon was afraid he might
have forgotten him. He had not really had that much to do with Captain Tempest
during his time with the W.A.S.P.
When Gordon joined at the age of eighteen,
Captain Tempest had already relinquished his command. A few months later, he accepted early retirement on health
grounds. Atlanta stayed on for another
two years to assist her father. She and Captain Tempest were engaged, and when
they married Atlanta gave up her career to care for him. They moved in to Commander Shore's home
which they had now inherited.
"Gordon Tracy?" Captain Tempest
looked bemused." Are you the same young man who won the Olympic gold...
The young man who was injured in the hydrofoil accident."
Gordon extended
his hand. "Good morning, sir. Thank you for taking the time to see
me."
A look of
recognition suddenly crossed Captain Tempest's face. He gave a broad grin.
"Well you're a sight for sore eyes. They said you would never walk
again."
"Well, they were wrong."
"You are one lucky kid. Commander Shore
told me all about you. I didn't really know you, back then, but we were all
rooting for you." He pulled up a chair and motioned Gordon to sit down.
Gordon was surprised to see how well he looked. He still had his handsome
looks. His dark hair was greying slightly at the temples, which gave him a
distinguished air. Gordon supposed he was around ten years younger than his own
father.
"Honey, would you get young Gordon
here a drink? What would you like? Gin
and tonic? Some good Caribbean rum?"
"Oh, just some iced lemon thanks."
"Can I get anything for you Troy? It's
almost time for you to take your tablet."
"I'll have the same. " Atlanta
smiled sweetly at him and returned to the kitchen.
"Not a drinker yourself then,
Gordon.?" noted the Captain.
"No, I'm driving my speedboat back to
the keys. I need a clear head."
"Too right, you don't want to go seeing
strange sea monsters. The local firewater is lethal or so I'm told. Can't touch
it myself. I've got enough problems!" Captain Tempest laughed aloud and
Gordon didn't know whether he was expected to laugh as well. Captain Tempest
sensed his unease and changed the subject.
"What are you doing these days? I hear
you left the service too."
"I'm working for my father."
"The Tracy Corporation? Your dad's
quite a big shot now isn't he?"
"Yeah.
I suppose so."
"So. What brings you to this part of
the world.? You've got to be here for the diving. Don't tell me you've given
that up for a desk job!"
"No way."
"Have you done the blue hole
yet?" That's always a
favourite. I took a group down a few
weeks ago. It always gives me a
buzz."
"Do you still dive?"
"Yeah sure I do."
"Not on your own though."
Captain Tempest
laughed again, "You're never alone with schizophrenia."
"I'm sorry," mumbled Gordon.
"I didn't mean ..."
"Don't worry. I've learned to live with
it now. I have learned how to relax. I
have Atlanta. I have the sea, and if I had a mind to flush my pills down the
toilet, I could have Marina. What more could any man ask for?"
Again Gordon
smiled nervously. He didn't know how to take the Captain. Gordon did not expect
him to be so blasé about his illness.
"I want to ask you for a favour."
Gordon thought it best to get to the point. "I'm not here on holiday. I am
looking for my brother. His craft went missing in this area. His last known
position was reported to be somewhere in the region of Bermuda. The strange
thing is, he reported his position as being over the Puerto Rico. He had state
of the art technology aboard. The latest flight instruments - everything.
There’s no way he could make such a mistake. He's an experienced pilot, and yet
he's just disappeared in to thin air."
"The Bermuda triangle strikes
again."
"But that's a legend. Everyone knows
that. It's been explained."
Captain Tempest
shrugged. “Many things are unexplained. Who can explain what is real or
unreal?"
"You know what I am going to ask
you?" said Gordon.
"I kind of figured that's what you were
leading up to."
"If you don't want to talk about it, I
will understand. But I think it might help me find my brother."
"You think he is still alive
then?"
"We Tracys don't give up so
easily."
"I hope you're right. The incident you are about to ask me
to remember, some days I don't know what I believe myself . It happened some
ten years ago. Phones and I were patrolling the area to the East of the
keys. We had received reports of
strange disturbances in the area. We were investigating the disappearance of a
freighter. The Bermuda
Triangle phenomenon! I suppose, looking back, I was receptive to the idea of an
underwater kingdom. I had also read reports about the lost city
of Atlantis. It was fantastic stuff. I
was hooked. The adventurer in me wanted
to find that city. I wanted
there to be a race of sea dwelling people, and that was the start of it
all." He paused to take a drink
from Atlanta's outstretched hand. He
reached in his pocket for a bottle of pills, unscrewed the cap and swallowed a
couple. Atlanta looked on approvingly. He then continued.
"We had some sort of malfunction on our
instrument panel. Then communications failure and suddenly, just as we were
struggling to fix the panel, we were whirled round and round. Like being in the
spin cycle of a washing machine. When the spinning stopped, we found ourselves
at the bottom of a deep trench. It was very dark, when we switched on the arc
lights all we could see was a wall of rock. Our life support systems had been
damaged and we were on emergency power. Our radio was down and our air was
running out. So you see, I still don't know if what I saw was real or not.
Perhaps Phones would have been the best person to ask."
"He has left the service too. No-one
knows where he went."
"He never kept in touch," said the
Captain sadly. "Not many of them did."
"Go on tell me anyway," prompted
Gordon.
"We both eventually passed out through lack of oxygen. By all
rights we should have died. But we didn't. Phones was unconscious for most of
the time and remembered nothing. I remember finding myself in a tunnel. I was
being transported through that tunnel and I found myself in a room. A bit like
a hospital room. The light was bright and it hurt my eyes. That's where I saw
him.. This strange man. I could have been completely off my head at that point.
I remember something odd about his skin. It was kind of scaly, a bit like some
reptilian mask. I saw a lot of strange things after that. I was probably
hallucinating through lack of oxygen. Maybe that was the trigger the illness
needed to take me over completely. But what I can't explain is how we both
survived. Someone removed us both from our craft while we were
unconscious. Someone took us to some sort of underground hospital and somehow
we ended up on the deserted island where we were found by our rescue team.
But who or how? I can't explain."
"And what about Stingray?"
"Lost. We never found it. They
commissioned another sub. Bigger and better. But I have always wondered what
happened to Stingray. I suppose its quietly rusting in some black void. It
would cost too much to salvage it, besides it would probably be beyond repair
by now."
"If I was able to get a submarine,
could you show me the spot where you went into the trench."
"I don't know. Anyway, where are you going to get a
submarine capable of withstanding that sort of deep water pressure?"
"It's top secret."
"Don't tell me your dad makes
them."
"Sort of. My dad's company supplies the
materials."
"I'm not sure. Have you spoken to
Atlanta about this? I don't think she would be too happy."
"Please, try to persuade her. I want to
try to find my brother. If there really is some kind of underwater laboratory, maybe he'll be there."
"It's a long shot. Just you and me and
a great wide Ocean."
"No. Not just us. I have back up. I can't tell you about it
unless you agree. What do you say? You were the best at your job. No, you are
the best. You know this part of the Ocean and what's more you know its
trenches."
"Okay, I'll speak to Atlanta. You've
got me hooked."
Chapter
6 - Into The Deep
"Thanks, Scott. I can make it by myself
now." Alan sounded determined, but weary.
Scott detached
the magnetic grabs from the front of Thunderbird Four and slowly reeled them
in. "Gordon is still in the Bahamas with Captain Tempest. He wants you to
meet him there. Tempest's house is the large one on the waterfront. When you
get within a mile of the coast, give Gordon a call and he will guide you
in."
"What are you going to do Scott?” asked
Alan.
"Park Thunderbird One, book in to a
hotel and sleep!"
"So you're not joining us then?"
"Not much point really. I'll keep an
eye on things from the air."
Scott flew on ahead, leaving a vapour trail
of white smoke across the blue sky. Alan, tired of bobbing up and down on the
surface, decided he would feel more comfortable submerged. Thunderbird Four
smoothly cut its way through the waves. Alan dived down to seventy feet. The
Ocean floor was still, calm and most important - stable. Alan's eyeballs still felt as if they were jumping up and
down. But gradually, as they focused on the constant seascape in front of him,
his stomach began to settle and he became aware of how hungry he was
. Gordon was tucking in to a mid-morning
breakfast with the Tempests. Troy had just chosen this moment to inform his
wife of his intention to help Gordon mount a search for the mysterious vortex
that had claimed Stingray. Atlanta's lips grew noticeably thinner.
"Do you think that's a good idea,
Troy?" her tone indicated her displeasure.
"I know this area better than anyone.
At this moment International Rescue are on their way here with Thunderbird
Four. They want my help."
"Darling, I know you want to help, but
what if you become ill again?"
"I've got the damn pills," snapped
Troy. "And I'm not an invalid. Even though you enjoy treating me like
one!” He slammed his coffee cup down on
the table top and stalked out of the room. Atlanta glared at Gordon as if she
wished she had never set eyes on him.
He felt guilty and embarrassed.
" Look, I'm sorry. I didn't mean to cause any
trouble."
"I know you didn't. It's just that my
husband isn't the man he used to be. He forgets that. He can be very
stubborn. All this fanciful talk about
lost cities and mysterious whirlpools just fires him up. I don't want him to go
back to that world. Do you understand?"
"I'm sorry. I'll tell him it's all off.
I'll go on my own if necessary. "
Atlanta reached across the table and patted
Gordon's hand. "Gordon, I sympathise with you, I really do. I know what
its like to lose someone you love. Troy and Phones were missing for nearly four
weeks. I went through agony. I didn't know whether he was dead or alive. I
wouldn't wish that feeling on anyone."
"Well let him help us, Atlanta? I'm
going through that agony right now. So are the rest of my family. I believe
Troy can help us. I believe he is capable of doing his job. If you wrap him up
in cotton wool, he will grow to resent you."
Atlanta dabbed
her eyes with her handkerchief. "Oh dear, I don't know what to do. I just
want him safe. I want us to grow old together."
Gordon put his
arm around her shoulders. "Please Atlanta ... for me?"
Atlanta was
unable to resist the pleading look in his honey-brown eyes. "You'll look
after him?"
"I promise."
"You'll make sure he takes his
medication on time?"
"Of course."
"Okay, just give me a minute. I'll go
and find him."
Gordon heard his watch bleep, as Atlanta
left the room. It was Alan. "He'll do it., Alan," said Gordon
triumphantly. "Troy Tempest has agreed to help us."
"I hope that's good news. I'm nearing
the shore. I think I can see the house. Does it have a red speedboat moored
alongside?"
"Yes, that's Noah's. He let me borrow
it. Can you get it back to him after we've set off?"
"But I'm going with you, aren't
I?"
"No room, Alan. Thunderbird Four is
cramped enough. Two is more than company. Three will definitely be a
crowd."
"That's not fair. I want to go! He's my brother too!"
"You must be exhausted, Alan. Both you
and Scott need to rest. I'll take over now. Troy Tempest will be in control."
"Well, I just hope the two of you know
what you are doing."
"We don't, Alan."
Gordon raced to the jetty to greet
Alan. He was relieved to see his bright
yellow submersible bobbing up and down on the waves. Gordon leaned over the jetty and stretched out
his hand to help Alan from the cockpit of Thunderbird Four. Alan was bent
double. He groaned as he tried to
straighten his aching back. His legs felt like jelly. Although he was on dry
land, he still felt as if he was bobbing up and down on the sea.
"I never want to have to do that
again!"
Gordon smiled. "Thanks, Al. Come on,
I'll help you up to the house. I've told Atlanta that you are from International Rescue and that
they are prepared to lend us Thunderbird Four, but she doesn't know that we are
related."
"Do you think she will let me freshen up. I've been cooped up in there all night. I need a good long soak in a hot tub to get
my joints moving again."
"I'm sure Atlanta will let you freshen up, and I bet she'll
be happy to cook you a breakfast. She likes having someone to fuss over."
Minutes later, Alan was
gratefully soaking his aching body in a deep hot tub. He momentarily closed his
eyes. The next thing he felt, was his head slipping beneath the water.
He snorted and spluttered and sat upright. He was absolutely exhausted. He
got out of the bath, dried and put on his
clothes. Then he dragged his wobbly
legs across the landing. He was drawn to a large picture window in the master
bedroom. The view of the bay was magnificent. The sun shone invitingly on
glittering white sand and turquoise sea.
Taking in this panorama, Alan sat on the edge of the bed and towel dried
his fluffy blond hair.
Troy was eager to get started. "I still have some of my old navigation
charts. I kept everything. Atlanta
doesn't know it, but I still have all Stingray's logs under the bed. I couldn't
bear throw anything away."
"They could be useful. Would it take
you long to find them?"
"No, I'll go get them now."
Troy marched in to his bedroom, and to his
surprise he saw a figure stretched out on his bed. He calmly closed the bedroom
door and called to Gordon. When Gordon appeared, Troy opened the door and
pointed to Alan who was sleeping like a baby.
"Tell me. What can you see? Do you see
anyone sleeping on my bed?"
Gordon smiled.
"Goldilocks."
"Do you see any bears?"
"No. Just Goldilocks."
"Me neither. Thank goodness for that. I
thought my hallucinations were starting again. By the way, who is he and what
is he doing on my bed?"
Gordon
laughed." That's the guy from International Rescue who brought us the sub.
He's whacked. He'll probably be like
that for another eight hours. I hope Atlanta doesn't mind."
"No. At least it will give her someone
else to cluck over like a mother hen."
Troy hunched up his shoulders in the
cockpit of Thunderbird Four. "It's a bit cramped," he complained.
"Well, it may be small, but it can get
to places you wouldn't have been able to take Stingray." Gordon felt the
need to defend his beloved craft.
"Stingray was sleek and fast. There was
nothing like it, Gordon. It was like driving a classic car."
"I'll have to take your word for
that."
"It's a pity you didn't get chance to
go in her during your W.A.S.P. days." Troy proceeded to go in to raptures
about the craft. Gordon had to bite his tongue. Once Troy had got on to his
favourite subject there was no holding him. Half an hour in to their voyage
Gordon knew every single one of Stingray's specifications. He was beginning to
understand how Lee Sheridan might have got his nickname 'Phones' . Troy had
hardly drawn breath! Gordon wished that he could blot him out with a pair of
headphones too. Another of Troy's pet subjects
was the Lost City of Atlantis
"It exists I'm sure."
"Have you seen it then?" asked
Gordon.
"I wish I could understand just what I
did see."
"How
does this Marina fit in to all this?"
"Oh, she told you about Marina did
she?"
"Yes, and Titan too."
"I accept that 'Titan' was the product
of an oxygen starved brain. But Marina.... well don't laugh at me, Gordon, but
I believe she exists."
"Green hair and all?"
"Yeah, gills and a tail! You're going
to laugh at me, just like the rest. I thought you would be different!"
"Sorry, I didn't mean to offend you. It
just seems hard to get my head around all of this." Gordon took a sharp
intake of breath. He was beginning to wonder if he had made a mistake.
"Where did you see this Marina person or whatever she was?"
"I was drifting in and out of
consciousness. Just as I thought I was finished, someone put a mask on my face
and I found I could breathe again. I opened my eyes and there she was... I know it sounds corny. I remember her eyes, they were aquamarine.
Her skin was white and her hair ...well, it had a kind of green light shining
on it ... or maybe her stylist just messed up her highlights! I don't know!" he sounded so genuinely
frustrated that Gordon almost believed him.
"What about the mysterious man with
scaly skin?"
"Same sort of thing really. I was
drifting in and out. I saw Marina's face and sometimes I saw his. Like he was
bending over me ... observing me."
"Did they say anything to you?"
"I'm not sure. The man asked questions.
I could see his mouth moving . I could hear my own voice answering. But I can't
remember what I said or what he said. Marina was silent. She never spoke a
word."
"Do you suppose she was deaf?"
"No. The man called her name and she
came over to him."
"You say this man and woman were
observing you, did they actually do anything to you? Experiments or anything
like that?"
"I don't know what they did. I would
just see their faces and then I would black out again."
"Sounds like they could have been
drugging you."
"It's been bugging me for years. It's like some kind of mental rape. I have
these flashbacks of Marina inside Stingray.
I am sitting in the cockpit. I
don't know whether it was a dream or whether it really happened."
"So when you returned to Marineville
what happened to you?"
"I was hospitalised and checked over.
I was very weak. I still wasn't really
aware of what was happening to me. Then I started to see her again. She would
be in the room with me. I would see the strange man and all these other
nightmarish characters. They were so real, Gordon, as real as you are. I had
some kind of breakdown. I was convinced Marineville was going to be attacked.
My behaviour was pretty erratic. I guess I was difficult to live with."
Gordon's
forehead was furrowed. He recalled what it felt like to be in a drug induced
haze. Dreams and reality blending into one. He was given high doses of
painkillers following serious injuries sustained in the hydrofoil accident.
They made him hallucinate. He could have so easily believed he was going
mad. "Do you have any regrets
about leaving the W.A.S.P.?"
"I didn't have much choice. The
decision was made for me. Commander Shore did all he could for me, but he was
over-ruled by those above him. Of course I have regrets. I would gladly trade
the last five years of my life for just one whole day in command of Stingray
again."
"Atlanta would have something to say
about that. She just wants to grow old with you by her side."
"I think she was jealous."
"Of Marina?"
"No. Of Stingray. Sure I liked women,
but my mistress was the sea. It was something she couldn't compete with. I know
she was glad when I was retired."
"But you're not, are you? "
"Would you be? I sit in the garden. I
watch the birds, listen to the radio, do a bit of water colour painting. The only thing exciting thing I have in my
life is diving. I think Atlanta would wrap me up in cotton wool, if she
could."
Gordon began to
feel rather sorry for Troy Tempest.
Gordon had seen this man's eyes come back to life when he took the
controls of Thunderbird Four,
and dived beneath
the waves. The more time Gordon spent
in Troy's company, the more he doubted this man was suffering from the mental
illness he had been diagnosed with.
Troy handed the helm over to Gordon, and
went to check his charts. "It's got to be somewhere around here. This is
the last entry in my log book. I remember the rock formation on this part of
the Ocean floor. See those cone shaped rocks? That indicates volcanic activity.
The Earth's crust is probably quite thin here. Look at the temperature gauge;
see how it's gone up? The sea
temperature has risen...”
"Well I hope one of the volcanoes
doesn't pop while we're sitting on top of it. We'll be boiled like a couple of
lobsters."
"No, they have all been dormant for
several years. There is a ring of
volcanic islands just pass this ridge."
Gordon could see a wall of rock in front of
him. "There's a narrow opening up ahead, I'm not sure Thunderbird Four
will be able to squeeze through." Cut in to the rock was a passageway. Troy wanted to know where it
went.
"Shall we give it a try?"
"Why not?" replied Gordon. “This
is getting curiouser and curiouser."
"Well, if you happen to see a white
rabbit, don't let it out of your sight!"
"We're well and truly in now. There’s
nowhere to turn around. So we've got to see it through."
Gordon skilfully manoeuvred Thunderbird Four
through the tunnel. He noticed that the walls looked smooth. “Looks like this
tunnel could be man-made."
Troy began to
get excited. "This could be it! This could be the breakthrough we
need."
"I don't see how this will help us find
Thunderbird Two. There's no way it would fit in this tunnel."
"Neither could Stingray, but it must
lead somewhere."
"What we are doing is risky. Supposing
it just leads to a dead end, reversing all the way back out will be tricky. We
could find ourselves stuck in here."
"Do you want to go back then?"
"I know I shouldn't take the risk....
but hell, I'm just as intrigued as you are." Gordon put in a call to his
father to report his position. He explained what he was doing and waited the go
ahead from his father. Reluctantly, Jeff agreed to allow him to proceed.
"You mean this sub is yours?"
"Yes.
I pilot Thunderbird Four for International Rescue."
"So that's why you didn't come back to
the W.A.S.P."
"Yes, but that information is
classified. Okay?"
"Sure. Your organisation does a great
job. I wouldn't want to put them in jeopardy."
"We have
our enemies. There are people who will stop at nothing to get their hands on
our aircraft."
The tunnel started to widen out. Gordon
could see brighter waters ahead. “I think we're at the end of it
now." The tunnel opened on to an
enclosed lagoon. Gordon remarked on the total lack of any current in the water.
Thunderbird Four hung motionless in eerily still water.
"What do we do now, Gordon? We are
surrounded by rock. The only way looks to be up."
"Up it is then." Gordon had barely
finished his sentence when the water started to swirl and bubble, as if someone
had just switched on a giant Jacuzzi.
"Jeez.
What's that?" yelled Gordon in alarm .He hastily tried to turn
Thunderbird Four around to high-tail out the way he came in. The controls were
unresponsive. "Everything's locked!"
"It's happening again." remarked
Troy who seemed to be surprisingly calm in the circumstances.
"Calling International Rescue .....
We're in trouble John!" Gordon was
frantically shouting into the radio mike. He was answered by a monotonous grating hum. "Nothing! I
can't get through to John anymore. I can't get the controls to respond. We're
stuffed!"
Suddenly Thunderbird Four was in the grip of
a powerful whirlpool. Gordon and Troy were thrown about like a couple of rag
dolls. Gordon was so disorientated he didn't know if he was moving up, down or
sideways. His head was aching and he momentarily blacked out. When he came too, Thunderbird Four was
slowly being sucked upwards in a mysterious vortex.
Chapter
7 - Island of noises
Gordon supposed
he must have passed out again. He could
feel a crushing sensation in his chest. His eyes flickered open. His brain felt
as if it had been in a cocktail shaker. He tried to move, but something was pinning
him down. It was Troy. He looked as if he was unconscious. Gordon wriggled from
beneath the dead weight of his friend's body.
He quickly assessed Troy's condition. The pulse was steady, breathing
regular. He lifted one of Troy's eyelids.
Troy moaned and tried to swat him away.
"Have we stopped spinning yet?" he
slurred.
"Yeah. I think so. Are you okay?"
Troy sat up and
rubbed a goose-egg sized bump on the back of his head. "I'm fine. Can you
see where we are?"
Gordon peered
through the window. "It all looks the same. We could be in some underwater
cavern, but I felt as though we were moving upwards. We could be near the
surface."
"Let me take a look."
"Do you recognise this place?"
"I'm not sure. I think we could be deep
in the bowels of one of those islands we saw."
"But how did we get there?"
"That vortex. We were sucked in by its whirlpool."
"That was some whirlpool. We were lucky
Thunderbird Four wasn't damaged."
"I don't think this was a freak of
nature. You were right, Gordon, I felt as if we were moving upwards too. This
is exactly what happened to me before. I think we should suit up and get out of
here."
"What? And just leave Thunderbird
Four?"
"I think
we were brought here by some unknown force. We may get visitors. I want to get
a good look at them before they see us."
"Do you
believe there could be people down here?
Gordon looked concerned; he didn't really want to leave Thunderbird
Four. He did not entirely trust Troy's judgment. The guy had just received a
nasty knock on the head. "When were you supposed to take your
medication?"
"About two
hours ago."
"Do you
think you should take it now?"
"No."
"But I
promised Atlanta ..."
"You
promised her you would look after me, is that it?"
"Not
exactly ... she was concerned."
"Sorry,
Gordon, but I need a clear head down here. That stuff just fogs my brain. I
guess, if I freak out again, she won't let me out to play on my own. But I'm
just going to have to take the chance."
The two men
changed in
to their diving suits, then put on flippers and special helmets
equipped with two way radios. They strapped double oxygen tanks on to their
backs. Leaving Thunderbird Four hidden underneath an overhanging ledge, they slipped silently through the airlock
and into the sea.
Troy grabbed Gordon by the arm and pulled
him behind a rock, "What? What is it?"
"I heard something." Troy's eyes
were wide as they darted from side to side.
"I didn't.” Gordon raised his head to
peer over the rock.
"Keep down," hissed Troy.
"There's no-one here, Troy. It's just
your imagination playing tricks. This island is full of strange noises. Come on
let's go."
"No ...Wait!" yelled Troy,
grabbing him by his flipper.
Gordon heard a harsh mechanical noise coming
from a rock face behind him. He turned round to see a concealed door sliding
sideways. It looked like an airlock. He
ducked down behind the rock again. As he watched from his hiding place, he saw
two black suited divers swim towards Thunderbird Four. Gordon had secured the
hatch and only he knew the entry code. The divers were curious. They seemed to
be trying to find a way to get inside.
"Okay, you were right," whispered
Gordon to Troy.
"So you see them too?
"What do we do now?"
"I'm not sure," answered Troy,
“Let’s just watch for a while."
"They can't get inside Thunderbird
Four. But now they've found it ,we can't go back to it. We'll just have to wait
for them to go and then follow them."
One of the
divers made wide sweeping movements with a searchlight. It came to rest on the
rock Troy and Gordon were hiding behind.
"It looks like they've spotted
us."
Gordon made a
grab for his stun gun but it was dashed out of his hand as he was grabbed from
behind One of the divers had already
overpowered Troy and ripped off his face mask. Gordon tried to fight off his
assailant to go to Troy's aid. The diver replaced Troy's mask with one of his
own which was attached to a small canister.
Troy breathed steadily and then went limp. Suddenly Gordon's own mask
was torn off. He struggled and gasped
as his lungs began to fill with water. He lashed out at the man who restrained
him. Then he felt another smaller mask being strapped to his face. He gulped
greedily for oxygen. He felt his body floating. He felt weightless as if in
zero gravity. He began to see colours
flashing around him.
Brilliant, vibrant colours.
After a while he began to feel
calm and intoxicated. He stopped struggling; he no longer cared where he was or
what was happening to him. He saw Troy smiling vacantly as he was being led by
the arm like a child.
One of the black suited divers
went back to the rock face entrance and appeared to pull a lever hidden in the
doorway. Gordon was deafened by a grating, droning noise. He saw Thunderbird
Four moving towards the door, on its own.
Gordon tried to muster the will to leap into
action and save his craft, but his attention was distracted by a series of wavy
lines snaking up and down in front of his eyes. He blinked and shook his head
as he was hauled in to the airlock. When the inner airlock opened both he and
Troy were hustled through. They found themselves in a long corridor. Round
porthole windows displayed the ocean and its teeming marine-life like living
pictures in a frame. The other divers had removed their breathing masks but
their faces still remained covered. Gordon began to cough; he tried to pull off
his mask.
"Keep it on," a gruff American
voice ordered.
Gordon
spluttered as a spasm seized his chest, again he tried to tear his mask off.
"Are you gonna hurl?" the gruff
voice asked. Gordon bent over to cough water out of his lungs. He took several
gulps of air while trying to regain his composure. His head started to clear.
He seized his chance. He grabbed his captor's arm, caught him off guard and
threw him to the floor.
"Who are you? What do you want?" asked Gordon.
The fallen man called out to his colleague, who
pulled a pistol from his belt. He took
aim and Gordon fell to the floor. The last thing he saw before he lapsed in to
unconsciousness, was Troy Tempest, propped up against a wall, like a marionette with its strings cut.
His eyes were staring vacantly ahead. His mouth set in an imbecilic grin.
When Gordon eventually came too,
he felt as though he was waking up with a dreadful hangover. However,
he could not remember going to any party. He screwed up his bleary eyes and
peered at the face bending over him.
Someone was slapping his face. It was a gentle tap not intended to harm
him. Gordon moaned and curled himself
up in a foetal position.
"Come on," a distant sounding
voice instructed. "Wake up."
Gordon groaned.
His head was still spinning. "Troy?"
He closed his eyes again. He could still see the wavy lines and colours dancing in front of them.
"Gordon. Come on now. Wake
up." The voice was sharper
now. Someone was trying to drag him to
his feet and get him to stand. Gordon waved him away irritably.
"No ... don't wanna.... wake up. I wanna sleep!"
This person was not going to
give up and allow Gordon to slip back in to oblivion again. Gordon could feel a supporting arm around
his waist, trying to haul him to his feet.
"Stand up, Gordon! Walk!" the voice ordered. Gordon's legs
quivered like jelly. He seemed to have
forgotten how to put one foot in front of the other. "Come on walk.... Keep going!"
Gordon moaned
and tried to lie down on the floor.
"Get up. Come on Gordon you've got to get up!"
"Look Virgil, will you just
go away and leave me alone! ... Virgil?"
Gordon sat bolt
upright. He rubbed his eyes and shook his head. “Am I still dreaming or is that
really you Virgil?"
He tried to
focus his eyes. He could see the outline of a face with concerned brown eyes
and familiar chestnut hair.
"Virgil, thank God. We thought we had lost you!" Gordon tried
to stand but he was still feeling woozy.
"Try to keep walking, Gordon. You've
been tranquillised. You've got to try and get the drug out of your
system."
Gordon shook his head and tried to unscramble his
brain. He scanned his unfamiliar
surroundings. Someone was missing. "Where's Troy?"
"Who's Troy?" replied Virgil.
"He came with me to try to find you. He
used to be an aquanaut with the W.A.S.P. Where are we Virgil? What is this
place?"
"I was hoping you could tell me."
"This is crazy. How did you get here?
Dad's worried sick. No-one knows if you're dead or alive. Did they take your
communicator? "
"No, but it doesn't work. Something's
jamming the frequency. I hear this high pitched whine from time to time. It
seems to come from above us."
"I suppose they have Thunderbird
Two."
"Yes." answered Virgil sourly,
"I think it was a trap. Not long after I had dropped you off, my
instruments started going haywire. I had hit a bank of fog. John was tracking
me from Thunderbird Five. I could hardly see where I was going. The mist was so
thick. Then
I saw this water spout . The biggest I've ever seen. About as
tall as Thunderbird Three! I remember being sucked in to it. Then I guess I must have
passed out, because when I woke up I was in here."
Gordon took
stock of his surroundings. An eight-by-six cell, with bunk-beds, a washbasin,
and a bucket in the corner. There was not even a window; the only light was in
the form of a harsh fluorescent strip. "Not exactly the welcoming type,
are they?"
"I wonder where they took your friend?”
"They captured us both at the same
time," stated Gordon. "I would have thought they would have
imprisoned us together, or put us in solitary. Why put me in with you? Unless
..." Gordon began to feel around the door frame.
"What are you ...?"
Gordon put his
finger up to his lip. He knelt down on the floor and began to feel around the
skirting board. He yanked out a tiny device no bigger than a pea and crushed it
underfoot.
"They are listening to us." he
said. "I suspect whoever is in charge here knows that we are part of
International Rescue!"
"Now they have Thunderbird Four as well
as Thunderbird Two!" cried Virgil in alarm.
"We've got to find Troy. Now let’s take
a closer look at this door. I'm going to find a way out." To Gordon's surprise the door slid open and
narrowly missed crushing the tops of his fingers.
A man, dressed from head to toe in black,
stood inches away from him. "Ah,
gentlemen. I see it's time for me to introduce myself." His voice betrayed
a heavy Eastern European accent.
Gordon's face could not conceal his shock
when he looked at the man responsible for his imprisonment. This man's face was covered by a silver mask
moulded to his features. Red rimmed eyes and a lipless mouth were visible through
its slits. The skin on his wrists and
neck was scaly and reptilian. He wore thin black silk gloves on his hands. His
hair was sparse, grey and unruly.
"My appearance shocks you," the
stranger noticed. "I have not always looked like this."
"Who are you?" asked Virgil. His
question seemed to cause annoyance.
"I am Dr Igor Balanic," the man
announced grandly. He paused
dramatically, as if he had expected instant recognition from his prisoners. He
did not get the response he was hoping for.
"Balanic? " muttered Virgil trying
to remember where he had heard the name before.
Balanic was a man clearly obsessed with his
own importance. "I am a Scientist and Inventor. You, gentlemen, will be
privileged to help me in my research. You will come with me now."
"Where?"
asked Gordon defiantly.
"You will
find out soon enough."
Two guards,
with pistols drawn, demonstrated that this was an order rather than a
choice.
Chapter
8 - The Tempest Machine
Virgil and Gordon were taken to a large
purpose-built laboratory. In its centre stood a cumbersome machine pointing
toward a dome in the ceiling.
"Looks like a giant garden
sprinkler," remarked Virgil.
"This is my invention," announced
Dr Balanic proudly. “I call it the Tempest machine!"
Gordon was
about to ask what it did, but the obvious answer sprang to his mind. "It
creates storms!"
"It does indeed, and very spectacular
ones too. Giant whirlpools, tidal waves a hundred feet high. I have only to aim
it at the sky and release a shower of chemicals. When they hit the air and
water the reaction is spectacular."
"WHY YOU! Do you have any idea what your 'invention' has done to the people
of Monte Christos?"
"I had to test it on something,"
replied Balanic casually. "They just happened to be in the way."
"Fifty-two people are dead!"
Gordon swore at him and aimed a punch. He was hit across the face with the butt
of a pistol by one of the guards. He could feel blood trickling from his lip.
"What do you intend to do with this
machine?" Virgil asked, realising it was better to keep his cool. Gordon
had just received a knee in his stomach for his outburst and was doubled up in
agony.
"I intend to use it to block out the
sun," answered Balanic. "Sunlight causes me intense pain. The outside
world is denied to me because of the severe chemical burns I received in an
explosion. I want to regain my liberty. I have been imprisoned on this island
for eleven years. The only way I can travel is beneath the sea. With this device I can control the weather,
and with that I can control the world. I can cause enough rainfall to destroy
any city in the world. I can live in the outside world again, but on my own
terms."
Gordon decided
to risk another beating. "What have you done with Troy Tempest?"
"Ah, the dashing Stingray captain. I
have made sure that this time he will not escape. He is far too useful. Just as
you two gentlemen are."
"You won't get away with this!"
snarled Gordon.
"We shall see," replied Balanic.
Virgil managed
to disguise his disgust and hatred better than Gordon. He wanted to get as much
information about the island as possible.
"What is my purpose in all of this? You
conjured up the storm to bring me here. Why?"
"I require your Thunderbird craft. I
also require a capable pilot."
"I assume you want me to transport this
machine for you."
"That is correct. I have only a limited
range. I can target Florida, Cuba and Mexico, but my real target is Washington
DC. The machine has now been made ready for transportation to the east coast of
America. Your machine is the only one that is capable of doing this."
"Did you steal Stingray too?"
asked Gordon.
"Stingray is now eleven years old. It has served me well, but has become
unreliable. I hope Mr Tempest will be able to fix it for me."
"Can we see Mr Tempest?" asked
Virgil.
"Your friend is well. You do not need
to worry about him. He is being co-operative."
"What do you mean by
co-operative?" asked Gordon, who had niggling seeds of doubt beginning to
take root in his mind.
"He has his tasks. You have yours. That
is all you need to know."
Gordon's mind
was whirling. He thought it unlikely that Troy would be a traitor. If he was
co-operating, Gordon felt sure it would be against his will
"We've got to find him," he mouthed
to Virgil, when Balanic had turned his back.
"We have no choice, but first I need to
see Thunderbird Two." Virgil was speaking to Gordon but Balanic overheard
and gave a twisted smile.
"A man of reason. Unlike your colleague
who prefers to learn the hard way."
Gordon was holding his bruised stomach.
Virgil explained. "My 'Colleague' will do as I say. I outrank him. He is
young and inexperienced." Gordon had a face like thunder but then he
suddenly cottoned on to Virgil's plan.
"I need to see Thunderbird Two. If I am to fly her I need to check that she
has not been damaged by the water."
Even a
megalomaniac like Balanic could concede that this was a reasonable request.
"You will be under surveillance at all times. I warn you gentlemen, it
would be very unwise to try any tricks."
"We're at the bottom of the Ocean. What
the hell can we do?" snapped Gordon.
Again the slow
sinister smile played across Balanic's lipless mouth. He said nothing in reply
and walked on ahead. When he was safely out of earshot Gordon grabbed Virgil by
the arm.
"Have you got something planned?"
he hissed.
"No." replied Virgil. "Like I
said we have no choice. If I want to get my craft back I need to be
co-operative."
"What's with the 'inexperienced' bit?"
"I
need you to play along with that. We are dealing with a vain, self important
man. We must learn his weaknesses and bide our time. We need to leave here with
Thunderbirds Two and Four intact. We need to find Troy Tempest. Keep your
emotions in check Gordon. I know it's hard for you because of what happened at
Monte Christos, but our lives may depend on it. I have been here for longer
than you. See those portholes over there."
"Yeah I can see fish swimming. How are
we going to fly Thunderbird Two underwater?"
"Stop and look at the fish."
"What?"
"Just do as I say. Faint or something
just for a few minutes ... and then watch."
Gordon sagged
against Virgil's body, then crumpled to the floor. Balanic noticed his
prisoners had not caught up with him. He became irritated. "Follow me. I
warn you. No tricks."
"He's hurt. He passed out. Can you give me a few seconds to bring him
round?" A guard moved forward and
started to shake Gordon roughly by the shoulder. Virgil pushed him away
angrily. "If you want our co-operation," he yelled to Balanic,
"call your guards off. They've done enough damage already. This man is a good mechanic. Your goons have
beaten the hell out of him. I need him fit for work."
Balanic
dismissed the guards, while Virgil lay Gordon down on the floor.
"Now look,
can you see the fish? One large blue
one, and there ... a shoal of little yellow ones?
Gordon nodded
as Virgil pretended to slap his face. "See the two striped ones beside a
mottled looking one? If you look
closely at the larger striped fish it has a torn fin. I was taken down this
corridor when I was captured. The same fish swim up and down past those two
windows. This is the third time I have been along this corridor and that fish
with the torn fin is still there."
"I'm beginning to see what you
mean," whispered Gordon.
"That's not all. The noises never
change. The sea makes the same swishing sound. The generators hum that same
monotonous drone. But early this morning I swear I heard a seagull's cry."
Gordon's eyes
snapped open.
"Come on," snapped Balanic. "Get the man on his
feet. We haven't got all day."
Virgil put his
arm around Gordon's waist and hauled him upright.
"So, do you think we could actually be
on the surface?" whispered Gordon.
"Yes, but he wants us to believe we are
still on the ocean floor."
"You mean all of this could be an
illusion?"
"Do you remember the story Grandma told
us when we were kids? The one about the
Wizard of Oz?" Gordon nodded. Virgil continued. "The wizard was a bit
of a fraud. He lived in a splendid
emerald palace and created an image of power, but in reality he was a little
man with a lot of electronic tricks up his sleeve. I think this virtual ocean
here could be one of them. The same fish swimming up and down the same
corridor? I think we're looking at a
film or clever computer animation. Keep your eyes and ears open, Gordon. We'll
have to play this one by ear."
Balanic paused in front of a steel door set
into the rock face. He keyed in a special code. The door opened to reveal an astonishing
sight. Subtle blue lights recessed in stone walls, illuminated an unworldly
chamber. A huge chair, reminiscent of a
throne, dominated centre of the room, scattered about the floor were large
plump cushions. A massive mural spread
the entire length of one of the walls. It depicted a fantasy of mermaids and
sea monsters. The whole scene resembled
an ethereal underwater kingdom. It was all beginning to make sense to Gordon
now.
"This must be where Troy was taken!
This is his 'Atlantis.'"
"So, You have recovered," stated Balanic as he sat down on his
'throne'.
"Is this the Lost City of
Atlantis?" asked Virgil.
"It is my Atlantis. I have
created my own interpretation of it. You will be comfortable here while you are
my guests. You will eat. You need to be fit enough to work."
Balanic rang a bell. A willowy female
entered the room with her head bowed. She had yellow blonde hair, which took on
a greenish hue when the blue light illuminated the crown of her head. Silently she stood awaiting instruction.
"You will feed our guests. Give them
some wine. I am feeling generous." Balanic was clearly a man of changeable
moods. Here he was offering them hospitalities; a few minutes ago he was
threatening them. The Lady herself
looked as though she needed a good meal inside her. She was waiflike. Gordon
thought she was a young girl until she turned around and looked at him with
tired, sad eyes. Her face had the
unhealthy pallor of someone deprived of sunlight. She looked as if she was in her
mid-thirties. Gordon gasped as he
recognised her face. It was Marina!
When she brought Virgil and Gordon their
food, she held on to the tray for a few seconds after Gordon had grasped it.
Almost as if she did not want them to have it.
"Marina," whispered Gordon. Her eyes widened in astonishment. She gave a
slight nod of her head. "The food
is it drugged?"
Marina's eyes darted towards Balanic who was
watching her every move. She dare not nod her head again. She gave a slow
deliberate blink. When she handed Virgil his drink she placed her hand over to
top of the glass. As Virgil reached out to take the glass she crossed her
middle finger over her index finger. Virgil was puzzled. Was this gesture was
supposed to mean something? He was
thirsty; he raised the glass to his lips and took a sip. Marina's eyes
reproached him. As she set his tray of
food down on the table she knocked his arm, spilling the rest of the
drink down the front of his uniform.
"You will fetch the young man another
glass, Marina," ordered Balanic. "That was clumsy of you."
Gordon took advantage of Balanic's distracted attention and tipped his glass of
drink on to the floor. He hastily
kicked one of the floor cushions over the wet patch. Then he pushed the tray away while holding his stomach.
"Thanks...
er... Marina.
That's a pretty name. But
I'm afraid I'm not hungry. Someone kicked me in the stomach!" then he
added, "The drink was good. I needed that." This seemed to satisfy
Balanic who did not press him to eat. Balanic
was watching Virgil who was toying with a piece of fish.
"Do you have a nice juicy steak by any
chance? I'm allergic to shellfish."
Balanic looked
irritated again. "You must appreciate, it is very difficult to rear cattle
underneath the sea. Consequently our menu is a little rigid. However I am told fish is good for the
brain, so I eat it all the time." Marina returned with another drink for
Virgil. This time Balanic took it from her and handed it to Virgil himself.
"Drink."
Virgil realised that this was another invitation
which sounded more like an order. Under Balanic's watchful gaze he drank half a
glass of a sickly sweet liquid. He pulled a face. It made him gag. Balanic was
appeased. He invited Virgil and Gordon to sit down and make themselves
comfortable. Balanic sat opposite the two of them watching silently. Gordon saw
Virgil's head loll on to his chest. Gordon copied him. Virgil sat staring
blankly ahead. Gordon assumed the same position. Balanic seemed satisfied with
their placid demeanour. He dismissed Marina, and called in his guards. "You will bring me Troy Tempest and
the Professor."
Gordon tried not to let his face betray his
consciousness. He wondered who this Professor might be. He glanced sidelong at
Virgil who truly was in a trance-like state.
Troy entered first, wearing the same
brainwashed expression. He did not acknowledge Gordon or Virgil. It was as if
they were invisible. Behind him shuffled an elderly man with a sad, careworn
face and a long white beard.
"Ah Professor. Your task force awaits
you." Balanic walked over to Virgil and placed a hand on his shoulder.
"This is the pilot of Thunderbird Two. He knows all there is to know about
the craft. He has been given
the truth serum.
He will tell us everything we wish to know about Thunderbird Two ... and
International Rescue!"
Balanic then
stood in front of Gordon. The Professor scrutinised him with rheumy, red rimmed
eyes.
"This man is an aquanaut. Now we have
two submarines at our disposal. Stingray and Thunderbird Four."
"Are they ready?" asked the
Professor.
"Troy Tempest is ready, but then again
he had already been modified. He will believe whatever we want him to. The
other two will have to undergo a full programming."
Gordon was
rigid. He dare not let his fear register on his face. So that was it. He and
Virgil were to be brainwashed and used as this man's puppets. He was intrigued
by the Professor who appeared to be co-operating of his own free will. What
hold did Balanic have over him, and where had Gordon seen him before?
Gordon and Virgil were taken by the
mysterious Professor to a cavernous workshop. Virgil's face remained set, but
Gordon registered a look of surprise and relief as he saw the massive green
hulk of Thunderbird Two. It did not look to be too badly damaged. Balanic turned to the Professor. "Put
them to work immediately. I need to get this craft repaired as soon as
possible." The professor
nodded. Balanic began to speak slowly
to Virgil who was still under his influence.
"Your magnificent craft will be useful
to me. I'm sure you know how to repair it. You will work until it is fixed.
Then you will teach me how to fly it."
Virgil
tonelessly answered "Yes."
Gordon wanted
to grab hold of his brother and shake him, but he too was under the watchful
eye of Balanic. There was nothing he could do other than go along with
Balanic's devious plan.
They had been working for nearly two hours
when Gordon saw Virgil shake his head.
He looked as if he was beginning to snap out of his trance-like
state. The two men were busy working
inside Thunderbird Two with their heads bent over the console. Gordon had to
get Virgil's attention without being noticed.
"Virgil," he hissed.
"Virgil! Come on you've got to snap
out of it."
Virgil's eyes
gradually lost their glazed look and began to return to normal. Gordon could see signs of recognition in
them again. "Virgil, look at me, it's Gordon. Your drink was
drugged."
" Wh- what..." began Virgil. He felt as though
he was just waking up from a deep sleep.
Gordon put his finger to his lips and
switched on the damaged air conditioning.
He set it to full power. On the
way to the rescue in Monte Christos, Gordon noticed that one of the vents had
become loose. It was hanging on by a couple of screws. The constant rattling
had annoyed him, but now he was going to use it to his advantage. Hopefully it would drown out the noise of
any conversation.
"Virgil, you've got to pretend that
you're still under the influence of the drug. A camera is watching us all the
while. Troy is still out of it and the Professor is working for Balanic."
A light tap on
his left arm alerted Gordon to the fact that the Professor had just overheard
him. "You are wrong. I am a
prisoner here just like you. So is
Marina. She is my daughter. I am old
and frail; Balanic knows Marina will not leave me. I beg you, if you have a
plan of escape, please take her with you. We have been here for
ten years. Our hopes were raised when we were found by Troy
Tempest. My daughter loves him
dearly. She nursed him when he was
injured. She helped him and his
colleague to escape. I pleaded with her to take her chance and go with him, but
she refused. Even though it broke her heart.
She fell in love with him and I think he fell in love with her."
"So that's why Atlanta won't let him
out of her sight," muttered Gordon.
"Troy Tempest wears a wedding band
now. Marina's heart is broken,"
added the Professor sadly
"How did
Balanic brainwash Troy Tempest?" asked Gordon. "No-one at Marineville believed him when he said he had been
imprisoned beneath the sea. They all thought he was having some kind of a
breakdown."
"Balanic uses a mind altering micro
chip," explained the Professor, “Troy Tempest still has one inserted under
his scalp. It acts as a radio receiver. A drug is administered to relax the
brain making it susceptible to auto suggestion. While the victim is in this
semi trance-like state Balanic plays a tape next to his ear. When Troy Tempest awoke
he believed whatever Balanic wished him to."
"So he's not really mentally ill! All he needs is to have this chip removed
then he'll be the same as he was before. He can go back to his old job!"
"If it has not done any long term
damage. Unfortunately I was the one who was ordered to place it there. Balanic
threatened to torture Marina."
"What did he do to her?" prompted
Gordon. "Why can't she
speak?"
"She has not spoken since our plane
went down. My name is Professor Salvatore Propores, I am a research scientist
from Rio de Janeiro. I was employed by NASA to carry out research on the
weather. Many areas of our planet have been reduced to dust bowls. People there
were facing droughts and starvation, while other countries have too much
rainfall. I invented a device that
could manufacture rain clouds, using a chemical compound. I was on my way to the United States to show
my prototype to Space Agency Officials. They were interested in funding my
research, but before I was able to reach them, my plane crashed on to this
Island. My wife was killed
instantly. Marina was sitting next to
her. When I regained consciousness, I found her cradling her mother's body with
silent tears pouring down her cheeks. She has not been able to utter a word
since that day."
Gordon looked
pained. "We'll get you both out. I just wish I knew how!"
"Do you know how many people there are
on this island?" asked Virgil who had now recovered full use of his
senses.
"Balanic has his henchman."
"That would be the two goons who go
everywhere with him. Is there anyone else?"
"I hear different voices. Many of the
doors are locked, but I hear the noise of machinery, people talking, that sort
of thing. I assume he has other people
working for him, either willingly or unwillingly."
"You assume," stated Virgil.
"But how many have you actually seen?"
"The guards, Troy and you two."
Virgil and
Gordon exchanged anxious glances, they were moved by the Professor’s story, but
they did not know if they could trust him. Balanic's spy camera was watching
them the whole time. It was going to be almost impossible to escape.
"Professor Propores. Tell us what you know about this
island? When your plane went down did
you see anything odd?" Virgil was
firing questions like a machine gun.
"I was sitting behind the pilot when
the plane went down. It was night time; I could see the outline of trees and
bushes. The island looked very small. I lost consciousness before we crashed,
and the next thing I remember is waking up in the wreckage. The pilot and my
wife were dead. Marina and I suffered minor injuries. Balanic rescued us from the wreckage. He led us to his home.
Although. I thought it a bit odd that a man who had chosen to live on a
beautiful tropical island, would build a home for himself underground. Then I saw Balanic's disfigured face. I was
shocked but Marina did not flinch. I think that is why Balanic was fond of her.
She cried when he told us about his tragic accident. You see at first he seemed
such a kind man."
"There's nothing kind about a man who
has such a disregard for human life as Balanic!" snapped Gordon.
"Balanic was once a handsome man. His
disfigurement has turned him in to the cold hearted person he is today."
"You seem to be making a lot of excuses
for this guy. Why should we trust you?" asked Gordon brusquely.
"Because I bitterly regret what I have
done. I have created a terrible weapon. When Balanic realised who I was, he
refused to let me go. He was fascinated by my prototype. He took my design and
forced me to create a bigger, ten times more powerful version. He promised our
freedom if I co-operated, and I am ashamed to say that I did so
willingly."
"So don't tell me- he didn't keep his
word," mocked Gordon.
The Professor
looked miserably at the floor. "I made a mistake. I and my daughter are
paying the price."
Gordon was still not convinced. "What I
don't understand- is why no-one came to look for your plane. How does Balanic
hide this island? Is he a Magician? Is
it all done with mirrors or something?"
"It is not a natural island. It is
man-made."
"I don't understand. It's made of rock
which goes right down in to the sea bed. I saw it when we were drawn in to the
cavern in Thunderbird Four. It looked solid enough!
"So it's an island that isn't an
island. We don't know if we are at the bottom of the sea or on the surface,”
stated Virgil.
Gordon was
exasperated. "None of this makes any sense, and how do Troy Tempest and
Stingray fit in to all of this?"
"I know only what I was told by
Balanic. Ten years ago the World Aquanaut Security Patrol was sent to
investigate strange disturbances in the area. Troy discovered Balanic's island
and his secret laboratory. Balanic captured Tempest and his partner. He drugged
their food and drink. Balanic wanted Stingray. He ordered me to implant a micro
chip in to Tempest's scalp. Troy Tempest was powerless to resist,
subconsciously he told Balanic everything he needed to know about Stingray. He
even taught him how to pilot the craft. After that Balanic had no use for
Tempest or his colleague. I knew he would kill them both. When I told Marina of
my fears, I realised she had fallen in love with this man Tempest. I knew she
would put her life in danger to save him."
"So Marina rescued Troy and
Phones," said Gordon.
The Professor
nodded.
"But how did she get them to
safety?" asked Gordon.
"Marina is a beautiful woman. Balanic
is a vain man. He assumes that power is as attractive to women as good looks.
He did not see Marina as a threat. Like all tyrants he sees women as second
class citizens. Marina was given a certain amount of freedom. I believe Balanic
became very fond of her. He genuinely
wanted to make her happy. He trusted
her. He knew she would never do anything to risk my life. She managed to
release Tempest and Phones and guide them to the open sea, but Marina would not
leave me, so she returned to face the wrath of Balanic. Until today, I did not know if Tempest and
his colleague managed to swim to safety."
"They were found exhausted on a rocky
outcrop. Neither of them remembered a
thing." answered Gordon.
"I was saddened to see him back here
again. Balanic is a jealous man. He will kill Tempest this time."
"Then we've got to get out of
here. All of us. You included, Professor. We can't let
Balanic get away with this. I think I have a plan," announced Virgil.
"Well are you going to let me in on it
too?" asked Gordon.
"You'll pick it up as we go
along."
Virgil began to carefully dismantle the
housing unit of a miniature video camera, used for surveillance in Thunderbird
Two.
"Now all we need is some duct tape.
Which...thankfully, I never leave home without." The camera was small
enough to fit in the palm of the hand. Virgil hid it up his sleeve and
purposefully walked towards the surveillance camera tracking their every
move. Gordon had no idea what he was
going to do. Virgil stopped and thrust his face full view in to the lens.
"Now when do we get a bathroom break around here?" he demanded. Simultaneously he taped the miniature camera
to the swivelling bracket beneath the larger one. He hoped the guard would not
notice this sleight of hand.
The steel door rumbled aside. “You got five
minutes," snapped one of the guards. "You two get back to work."
Gordon was compliant.
He now knew what Virgil intended to do. To his credit, the Professor said
nothing about the other camera. Gordon decided he had no choice but to trust
him.
When Virgil returned, he ordered Gordon and
the Professor to work in silence for the next thirty minutes. He then walked up
to face the camera again.
"Hey, we have a problem here."
As the spy camera focused on Virgil's face,
he removed the miniature one he had taped beneath it. This he slipped to
Gordon. Gordon knew what he had to do. Hastily
re-winding the tape, he set it to replay in a loop. The recorded scene, showing
the three men working quietly, now had to be positioned in front of the main
surveillance camera.
Virgil's face was still monopolising the
camera lens. "Tell Dr Balanic we have a technical hitch."
"What is the problem?" came the
guard's voice over the intercom.
"Damage to the electronics,"
stated Virgil. "There is rust forming on the contacts. We will have to
clean every connection. It could take hours."
"Then that is your problem. Dr Balanic
expects only results."
Virgil made a
feeble attempt to protest, just enough to buy Gordon some extra time.
"F.A.B."
whispered Gordon as he waggled a small wire protruding from the camera.
"Hey, something's wrong with the
monitor," called one of the guards. Black and white lines appeared to be
racing across the monitor screen. "Oh it’s just cleared."
Luck was on Virgil and Gordon's side. When
the second guard came over to check, he saw the three men working diligently,
satisfied with this, he took out a magazine and started to read.
"We've got to take our chance and hope
to God this works." hissed Virgil. “Quickly let's get that porthole window
removed."
"But it's sealed to stop the water
coming in. We'll drown." cried the Professor in alarm.
"You're gonna have to trust me again. I
have a hunch, and I think I am right," Virgil and Gordon were using all
their strength to pries the toughened Perspex from the window.
"Quick get the laser cutter from
Thunderbird Two," ordered Virgil. Gordon had pre-empted this request and
was already on his way back with it. The laser cutter made short work of the
window. Virgil gave it a kick. The
Professor stared open-mouthed. The fish were still swimming up and down, but
there were no gallons of water cascading in to the room. Virgil gave the Perspex window a kick. It
tore through a screen of silver material.
"You were right Virgil. It is a
trick!" voiced Gordon.
"Now, I see what you are doing, " said
the Professor. "You are using Balanic’s own tricks against him."
"As you can see, we are not under the
sea. This film projection is a clever trick to make us believe we are. Now
assuming we are on the surface there must be a way out."
Virgil squeezed his frame in to the gap
between the window and screen. Gordon followed. Above them was an air vent. Gordon stood on Virgil's shoulders
and prized the cover off. He then hoisted himself inside. He held out his hand
to assist Virgil. When they were both inside he replaced the cover of the air
vent. They moved slowly crawling on their stomachs. This caused Gordon some
discomfort from his bruises. He started to complain.
"Shh." Virgil paused to listen.
They were over the surveillance room.
Peering through the grating of the air vent. Virgil could see the two
guards sitting in front of the screen. One was reading. The other was eating a
sandwich. Gordon pulled from his pocket, one of the capsules he had taken from
Thunderbird Two. He dropped it through the grating. It landed behind the two
men and smashed, releasing an odourless gas. The two men slumped in their
seats.
"Looks like it worked. Now for
Balanic."
Marina stood with tears streaming down her
cheeks. Balanic was unmoved. "You
are more beautiful when you cry."
He wiped away a glistening tear with a clawed gloved hand. “Even your
teardrops are exquisite - like diamonds.
Why do you waste them on this man Tempest? He does not care for you. He did not come back for you. He is married to another woman."
Marina's large
limpid eyes fell upon Troy who lay helpless on the floor. His eyes were open
and he seemed aware of what was happening around him, but he was powerless to
move.
"Why did you betray me for this
man?" Balanic continued. "Was it his handsome face? Is that all that matters to you? How a man looks? I was once as handsome as Troy Tempest. Do you know what nitric
acid does to the skin?" He tore off his silver mask, revealing a brown
scarred reptilian skin; one of his eyes was sealed shut. The other had no eye
lid. Marina looked away, but Balanic held her chin firmly, and turned her face
to look at his. She flinched.
"Would you still love him if he looked
like me? Would you?" Marina could
not answer, but her defiant eyes screamed 'yes'
Troy groaned and tried to stand up.
"What have you done to my legs?" he slurred, "I...I can't...
move."
Balanic pushed
Marina aside, "I have programmed your brain not to send any messages to
your legs. That is why you cannot feel them. But the rest of your body can
feel. Particularly your face. You will feel the same excruciating pain that I
felt, when the acid burned and ate in to my skin. Take a good look at him
Marina. You will not see his handsome face again."
"Nooooooooo!" Marina visibly jumped, startled by her own
shrill scream.
"Marina! Your voice! I heard you speak!" cried Troy in
amazement. Even Balanic was taken aback, his hand, holding a phial of acid
faltered. Troy rolled over on to his stomach.
A tiny drop of acid fell; it sizzled and smoked as it touched the floor.
Virgil heard the cry from inside the air
vent He tensed. "What was that?" he asked.
"It sounded like a woman's
scream," replied Gordon.
"But Marina is the only woman here and
she can't speak."
"It sounded as if it came from a few
yards in front of us."
"Come on, Gordon. It sounded like
someone was in trouble." Virgil inched his body along the cramped air
ducting. He stopped over the grating. He saw Troy Tempest lying on the floor.
Then he saw Marina, screaming and clawing at Balanic like a cat. He held the
phial at arms length as she lunged at him.
"Don't , Marina. Don't do it!"
pleaded Troy.
She dashed the phial from Balanic's hand.
Its corrosive contents pooled on to the floor. Balanic slapped Marina to the
ground. He then grabbed a handful of her hair and began to drag her towards the
spilled acid. Suddenly a noise above startled him. Virgil had just kicked the
grating away from the ceiling. He dropped down on to Balanic like a spider on
to its prey. The two men rolled over
and over as they fought. Virgil's head was inches away from the acid as Balanic
resisted him with renewed strength. Gordon sprang to his brother's aid.
"It's all over Balanic," spat
Gordon. "Where are the controls to open the doors?"
"Behind you," said Marina. "I
know the code. I have watched Balanic many times while he was working with my
father. I memorised it." Marina
tapped in the secret code while Gordon ran from the room to free the Professor.
When the door slid open, the Professor was
astonished to see Gordon standing there. "Did you see Marina? Is she safe?"
"She's fine. Quickly, - we've got work
to do."
"What about Balanic?"
"He won't bother us."
"Have you taken care of the guards too?"
"Yeah. I think there were just the two
of them. Do you now how to disarm the Tempest machine?"
"It responds to Balanic's voice
pattern."
"Can you re-program it?"
"Possibly,
but it will take time."
Gordon and the Professor ran to the room
where the Tempest machine was housed. They came up against a huge re-enforced
steel door, which seemed impenetrable. Gordon pounded it with frustration.
"Only Balanic can open it," said
the Professor.
"Then we'll just have to go and fetch
him."
Balanic was resigned to his fate. He did not
even try to struggle when Virgil bound his hands together behind his back. Troy
was still trying to stand. Marina had her arms around him.
Gordon burst in to the room. "Virgil!
We need to bring Balanic to the Tempest machine. We have to de-activate it.
It's blocking our communication signal. I can't get through to John."
The Professor
ran to Marina. "I was so worried about you," he exclaimed, taking her
in to his arms.
Marina replied.
"I'm fine now Father."
Tears of joy
poured down the old man's face. "You can speak. It's a miracle!"
"Very touching," said Balanic.
"What a pity there will be no happy ending."
Troy stood up
but his legs gave way and he promptly fell down, as if he had had too much to
drink.
"What do you mean?" asked Virgil.
"I cannot stop the Tempest machine.
Once it has been activated no-one can.
If you care to press the red button you will be able to watch it in
action. It is a marvellous feat of engineering and it has another victim in its
sights. See... look at the big silver fly as it draws nearer to the spider's
web. Do you see it? Do you recognise
it?" Balanic's lipless mouth
cracked in to a hideous grin. His maniacal laugh echoed mockingly through the
room. Virgil felt his blood run cold in
his veins.
With shaking hands, Virgil depressed the
button. The table top in the centre of the room turned over, to reveal a row of
monitor screens and a bank of controls. Virgil gasped as he caught a glimpse of
one of the screens. Flying across the clear blue sky was Thunderbird One.
Seconds later it was engulfed in a thick swirling sea mist. Virgil pounded his
fist on the table in helpless rage.
Scott must now be feeling the same disorientation as he felt just before
Thunderbird Two was sucked down in to the sea.
"We've got to warn him." shouted
Gordon.
"Professor, you’ve got to stop
this!" pleaded Virgil.
"I can't. The Tempest machine will only respond to Balanic's voice."
"If Scott hits the water he will sink
like a stone!" agonized Virgil.
"Believe me if I could destroy this
evil machine I would. If it were not for you brave men and my daughter, I would
willingly destroy the whole island. I
would rather perish than cause the loss of any more innocent lives."
Balanic interrupted
with a maniacal laughter. “You can do nothing to stop me! Not even International Rescue can stop
me! I am invincible!"
With almost superhuman strength springing
from resentment brought on by years of enslavement, Professor Propores lunged at
Balanic, caught him off guard and knocked him to the ground. Balanic's head hit the hard marble floor
with a sickening crack. His one good eye rolled back in to his head, until only
the white was visible.
Virgil could feel no pulse. "He's dead."
Professor
Propores looked surprised. He was
amazed by his own strength.
"He must have died instantly when his
head hit the floor," explained Virgil.
"His skull was probably half eaten away by the acid which destroyed
his face."
"He deserved a more lingering
death. He robbed my daughter and I of
ten years of our lives."
"While we are on the subject of death,
I would like to remind you all that the Tempest Machine is pulling Scott out of
the sky!" shouted Gordon. "There must be a way to stop it! There just has to be!" he pounded the
unresponsive controls in frustration.
Thunderbird One was slowly being drawn in to a swirling vortex.
Suddenly Marina lunged forward and pulled a
lever at the side of the table. The
floor beneath them began to move like slowly descending lift.
"What's happening?" cried Gordon,
a hint of alarm in his voice.
"This island will vanish beneath the
sea and so will the Tempest machine." announced Marina. "Hurry we may
have a chance to escape. Follow me to the airlock. From there, you can swim to
safety.
"But what about Scott?" Virgil
felt unable to tear himself away from the screen.
"We've got to get to Thunderbird
Four," yelled Gordon. "We can only hope to God that Scott makes
it."
"And to Stingray... I can show you the
way," said Troy, then he added "But someone will have to carry
me."
Virgil hoisted him over his shoulder in a
fireman's lift. Gordon followed Marina and her father.
"The water should flood the top rooms
first. The rooms at the bottom are sealed. If we can reach them we have a
chance to swim to safety." said Gordon.
Virgil prayed
the Tempest machine would short circuit before it managed to suck Thunderbird
One down into the sea. Thunderbird Two would be safe to leave. It was tough
enough to stand a battering. Virgil made sure he had secured it tightly to
prevent sea water damage. Hopefully it
could be recovered later.
"Which way now Troy?" asked Virgil when they came to a maze of
corridors.
"This way - Stingray is moored in a pen
next to Thunderbird Four."
"Can you pilot it Troy?" asked
Gordon. “After all it's been ten years now. Also you are incapacitated."
"I'm slowly getting some feeling back
in my legs. If I live to be a hundred I will never forget how to pilot
Stingray! Although I might need some
help getting inside. You can put me down now.
I can feel pins and needles in my legs.
I need to see if they can hold me." Virgil set Troy down and he took a few tottering steps before his
legs started to wobble beneath him.
"Here, let me help you." Marina
took hold of Troy's arm. For a moment
the two of them stood gazing into each others eyes.
"Marina! I still can't get used to hearing your voice. It's a very beautiful voice."
Marina blushed.
"It's been a long time, Troy. I
never stopped thinking about you."
"I thought I had conjured you up in a
dream," whispered Troy as he swept her into his arms.
Virgil looked embarrassed as he took Gordon
aside. "Has he always been like this?
The guy's married isn't he?"
Gordon gave a less than discreet cough.
"I think we need to get our tails out of here pretty darn quick."
With Gordon's help, Troy managed to open the
hatch to access the airlock of Stingray.
The hatch door was stiff and rusting and groaned as if in protest. Troy's
face broke into a wide beam as he rushed over to the controls and sat once
again in the command seat.
"We'll soon have you ship shape again,
old girl," he crooned as he caressed the control panel. Marina took her place at his side while
Professor Propores sat behind them.
"Can you can get it to work?"
asked Gordon tensely.
"Well here goes." Stingrays engines started to splutter, then
they began to stall. "Come on! Come on!" urged Troy. "Don't let me down."
As if on cue,
dials on the control panel illuminated as the engines sprang into life."
"Now go!" ordered Gordon. "Virg and I will follow in Thunderbird
Four."
Gordon scrambled
out of the airlock and ran to Thunderbird Four. Virgil was already inside with
the engines switched on. They watched as Stingray veered shakily towards the
surface.
"I sure hope the engines hold out,"
said Gordon.
"If it was half the craft I was led to
believe it was, I'm sure it will," replied Virgil.
"It's been sitting here rusting for ten
years and it starts practically the first time. I must admit I'd jump at a chance to handle it."
"Well, right now, we've got to find a
way out of here and get to Scott."
"Thunderbird One to base! Come in
base!" Scott, fighting with the
controls of Thunderbird One, yelled urgently into his radio receiver but was
answered only by the crackle of static.
"John! Come in John! Can you hear me?” Again there was only static. “Nothing!" he breathed
desolately. Beads of perspiration stood
on Scott’s forehead as he battled to regain height. From his window he could see the sea churning beneath him. Suddenly a huge swell loomed up in front of
him. His jaw dropped in amazement. He swore loudly. He had never encountered
anything like this before. The gigantic
tidal wave must have been almost as tall as the empire state building. This was
the stuff of myths and mariner's tales.
Slowly it advanced towards him.
An immovable wall of water. Scott cried out in anguish. There was no escape.
"Watch out! Watch out! There's a tidal
wave ahead!" It was Troy who radioed a warning to Thunderbird Four.
"It will sweep Scott right out of the
sky!" cried Virgil. Gordon radioed
back to Stingray who was further ahead.
"We'll have to go under it or we'll be
dashed to pieces. Troy can you see Thunderbird One? Is it in the sea?"
"I can't see it," replied Troy.
"There's too much spray. I'm going
back down. There's a lot of lose debris
being churned up."
In spite of the risks, Gordon made the
decision to try to reach the surface.
"I've just got to find Scott.
He won't stand a chance if that wave hits him."
Gordon took
Thunderbird Four to the surface a few yards in front of the freak tidal wave.
"I can see him," shouted Virgil.
"He's still in the air!"
"We can't do anything," despaired
Gordon. "He's just got to regain control before that wave hits him!"
"Can you see the island?" asked
Virgil. "Is it submerged yet?"
"Nearly. The only thing showing is the
dome that houses the Tempest machine. If the water can short circuit that, then
Scott has a chance."
They watched and waited. Holding their breaths for what seemed an
eternity. The powerful tidal wave
rolled closer to Thunderbird One. At last the sea closed over the dome and the
island disappeared beneath the waves.
Thunderbird Four was rocked by a series of violent explosions. Sparks spewed from the sea like a giant
roman candle. The massive wave halted
in its path and then trembled.
"Look out," called Gordon. Both he and Virgil braced themselves as tons
of water came crashing down upon them.
Thunderbird Four was tossed aside like a piece of driftwood. Virgil was thrown across the cabin. He felt his head smack against hard metal.
For a while he was seeing more stars than John in Thunderbird Five!
"Are you okay Virgil?" asked
Gordon who was battling to keep his craft upright.
"Yeah.
I think so. What about
Scott? Can you try to contact
him?"
"Thunderbird Four calling Thunderbird
One," began Gordon shakily.
"Scott? ... Are you okay Scott? Answer
me Scott!" beseeched Virgil, who was leaning over Gordon's shoulder. There was no answer. Suddenly the radio
crackled in to life raising hopes. But it was only Troy calling to check on
their status.
"We're okay," confirmed Gordon.
“We didn't get away completely unscathed but we are still operational. What about you?"
"Fine," reported Troy. “We dived
underneath it. The island has submerged
and the Tempest machine has been destroyed."
"Give Marina our thanks, " relayed
Gordon.
"Will do. Say! There's a guy above
us in a big silver rocket who's waving his arms at me. Anyone you might know?"
"Scott?" Virgil hardly dared to hope.
"You mean he's safe!" exclaimed
Gordon.
"You bet," came Scott's firm voice,
over the radio.
"Now
we'll have to postpone the family reunion until we get Thunderbird Two back on
terra firma." Then he added with a
slight tremble to his voice. "Thank God you're both safe."
"Yeah, likewise," Virgil breathed
a sigh of relief.
Scott, Virgil and Gordon sat in the shade of
a clump of palm trees in the garden of the Tempest's home. Atlanta looked
rather agitated. "Oh, goodness! In
hospital? I must go to him at
once! He needs his medication! He needs spare clothes. I knew it was a
mistake to let him go with you."
"I think it was his decision
Atlanta," explained Gordon. "And we have a lot to thank him
for."
"Yeah.
Professor Propores, Marina and I could not have managed to escape
without him," stated Virgil.
"Marina?" Atlanta's lips had
tightened. Her face became set. She wrung her hands. "It's started
again hasn't it? He's stopped his medication.
Marina isn't real, Virgil. Troy
imagines her."
"She looked real enough to me,"
answered Virgil.
"No.
She can’t be. Troy is ill, everyone knows that. What about this 'Titan' character? Did you see him too?"
Atlanta
listened incredulously as Virgil told her about Balanic, Marina and
Propores. She then put her head in her
hands and started to cry.
"I didn't want all this to start
again."
"I'm sorry, Atlanta. I know you have
Troy's best interests at heart."
"So he's found Stingray again... and
he’s found her!"
"Gee, I'm sorry, Atlanta. I didn't know it would upset you so
much," said Gordon.
"We can take you to see Troy,"
offered Scott. "He wasn't hurt. He
just needed a check up."
"You see there never was anything
mentally wrong with him,” explained Virgil.
"He was drawn into Balanic's trap while on patrol with ‘Phones’. He
was drugged and fitted with a micro-chip which was used to 'brainwash' him.
Titan and his kingdom were Troy's brain's fuddled recollections of Balanic and
his island. Marina helped Troy and
Phones escape. She is very much flesh and blood, but I expect you already knew
that."
Atlanta tried to stifle a sob. Gordon soothingly patted her shoulder.
"I gave him the tablets for his own good," she sobbed. “They helped
him to relax. He was happy here with
me. He was safe. You didn't see the
effect that incident had on him. He was
so confused when we recovered him. So
was 'Phones', he left the service, we never heard from him again. Troy wanted to keep searching for Stingray,
and for Marina. No-one believed his
story about an undersea kingdom and a beautiful mute girl. He lost his
credibility. He eventually suffered a
breakdown and began to believe that it had all been a figment of his
imagination. I was happy to let him
believe this. It stopped him searching.
We have a nine year old son, Troy Junior, he is away at school at the
moment, but he needs his father to be there for him. My husband's job at the World Aquanaut Security Patrol often
brought him in to dangerous situations.
I was so afraid that we would lose him for good. I couldn't bear that."
"What did you give him?"
interrupted Virgil.
"The doctor who diagnosed schizophrenia
prescribed some drugs. I just obtained
repeat prescriptions for Troy. The
drugs made him calm."
"Did no-one ever question this '
Doctor's' diagnosis?” Virgil seemed to be getting angry. "Was that poor man was just dosed up
with mind- numbing drugs to keep him out of trouble?"
Atlanta started
to cry again.
"Leave it ,Virgil," Gordon spoke
rather tersely to his brother. Although
he could not condone Atlanta's behaviour, he knew of Troy's reputation as a
womaniser.
"Y-you won't tell him will you?"
sniffed Atlanta.
"It not up to any of us to tell him
anything," replied Gordon. "It's really up to you ,Atlanta."
"Oh dear. What can I say? He will
hate me for this. He will leave me for
sure, especially now that Marina is back on the scene!"
"Why do you assume that?" asked
Virgil. "You forget Marina is now ten years older than she was. She is no longer the beautiful siren
depicted in Troy's painting."
Atlanta paused
and delicately dabbed the corners of her eyes with a tissue. “Is Marina no
longer beautiful? Is she fat?"
"A little plump around the waistline
perhaps," replied Virgil. This
information seemed to lift Atlanta's spirits.
"Yeah, I would say a bit fat around the
hips," agreed Gordon "And a few grey hairs too."
"Grey hairs?" Atlanta preened her
own chestnut red hair. Her eyes
betrayed a slight glimmer of triumph. "Is she...?" she began, "I
mean does she look as old as me?"
"Oh, older. Definitely," agreed Virgil and Gordon in unison.
"I must go to him. I will explain
everything. He will forgive me won't
he?"
"Atlanta, can you do me a favour before
we leave?" asked Virgil.
"Yes of course."
"Will you flush all the remaining pills
down the toilet?"
"Yes."
"Right now?"
"Of course." Atlanta left the room
meekly to comply with Virgil's request.
Virgil gave an audible sigh of exasperation.
"Poor Atlanta," muttered Gordon.
"So, do I take it that I am going to be
the one who takes her to visit Troy in hospital?" voiced Scott.
"Yes, seeing as Thunderbird Two is
still marooned on Bermuda. Gordon and I
have to take Thunderbird Four back to its pod this afternoon. The W.A.S.P. are going to meet us. They helped us recover Thunderbird Two. They
are also interested in Balanic's island.
It seems they could put it to good use."
"And Stingray? I bet they were glad to get that back
again."
"Not
particularly, Scott,” answered Gordon.
“It needs a lot of work doing to it.
Plus the fact that it's now ten years out of date, and today’s Aquanauts
have trained on new, improved submarines which are different to Stingray. The
W.A.S.P. commander plans to ask Troy if he would be interested in buying
it at scrap value."
"What did Troy say about that?"
asked Scott.
"Oh, he doesn't know yet," laughed
Gordon. "I am going to tell him myself.
I just can't wait to see his face."
"Or Atlanta's," put in Virgil.
"So, Troy Tempest could be back in
charge of Stingray."
"I'm sure he'll jump at the
chance."
"Gordon, do you suppose he would be
able to get his old job back with W.A.S.P.?
"No, not now. He's past his prime, but
he did tell me about one ambition he has left."
"What was that?"
"He still wants to find the 'Lost city
of Atlantis.' He was saving up to buy a
submarine so he could run 'Tempest Tours'.
'Stingray' could be the answer to his prayers. Just think of what folk
would pay to be part of an expedition on the famous Stingray. I reckon he'll be on to a winner there. In fact I might do the same with Thunderbird
Four when I retire."
Virgil laughed.
"No chance of that, yet."
Scott glanced at his watch and tapped his
fingers impatiently. “What’s keeping Atlanta? I've got to go and pick Alan up
from the mainland."
"That reminds me, I have a call to
make," Gordon raised his left hand and spoke in to his mobile phone which
was strapped beneath his communicator. "Yeah... I'm at your house now...
No, she's out of the room at the moment.
She wants to come to the hospital to see you. Thunderbird One can have
her there in ten minutes." Gordon grimaced and held the phone away from
his ear. It was obvious to both Scott
and Virgil that the person on the other end of the phone had just sworn loudly. "What's the problem?" asked
Gordon. "...You're not at the hospital?
Well, where are you then? ....
What do you mean you don't want to tell me...? Your wife wants to see you...
YOU'RE WHERE? ... SHE'LL HAVE
YOUR HIDE! Do you realise that?"
"I take it Mr Tempest is not too keen
on a visit from Mrs Tempest," interrupted Scott.
"He's not at the hospital... no, it's
not Atlanta. I was talking to Scott...
He was going to bring Atlanta to visit you in hospital, but since you've seen
fit to discharge yourself, she is going to want to bring you back home... Well, you tell her that, because I'm not
going to."
Scott leaned over and grabbed Gordon's arm.
"Listen, buddy," he spoke into Gordon's wristwatch phone. "I'm
bringing your wife to the hospital to see you. Now if you like, I can take the
scenic route that will add a few more minutes on to my journey, but we will be
there at 10.30 and I expect to see you reclining in your hospital bed, looking
sorry for yourself. Now, I can't thank
you enough for the help you've given us, but getting involved in your domestic
strife is beyond the call of International Rescues duties."
"Sorry, Troy you'll just have to get
yourself re-admitted. I'll talk to you
later," with that Gordon signed off and put his head in his hands. “The
Tempests are very appropriately named.
Balanic's machine will be nothing compared to the fallout from Atlanta
if she ever finds out where her husband is right now."
"Would I be right in assuming that
Marina isn't fat or grey haired?" deduced Scott.
"She's a bit of a babe," answered
Virgil.
"Yeah, in spite of her age and all
she's been through. She's okay," agreed Gordon.
They all fell silent as Atlanta swept in to
the room wafting expensive perfume and dressed up to the nines. "Well, shall we go now?"
Scott looked
pained as both Gordon and Virgil grinned at him and waved.
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