QUARANTINE
by TB's LMC
RATED FRT |
|
A remote tropical island. A
call for help. But when International Rescue returns to their
secret base, they bring much more than Thunderbirds back with
them. Now the Tracy family faces an enemy more deadly and
unstoppable than they have ever encountered.
CHAPTER ONE
Umbabwe
knew there would be trouble this night. As he tended his
family's fire, he could hear the elders whispering in the next
hut as they passed the gontin pipe around their circle. They
had heard the screams only moments before. Screams of agony
and terror. The direction from which they came made Umbabwe
certain it was Hoogadin's family who was suffering.
Now, the
sounds of fear drew closer to his home. His mother called to
him from the pigskin hide flap covering the door of their hut.
But Umbabwe did not wish to go inside. He wished to eavesdrop
on the elders. His mother was insistent, however, so he
obediently went to tend to his family's needs. To prepare for
the unexpected.
As he
stopped in the doorway, he chanced one more look at the
afternoon sky. He could hear them approaching, some kind of
animals on a rampage. His mother called them demons. His
father called them evil. The black, curly hair on Umbabwe's
dark-skinned neck stood on end. Whatever was coming, he knew
it was not good.
Umbabwe
was afraid.
"It's been
so quiet lately," John said to the emptiness surrounding him
on Thunderbird 5. "I wish something would happen."
As if on
cue, the red light in the middle of the Control Panel flashed
slowly at first, then picked up more speed until finally it
just stayed on.
Help!
Cheetooh! Cheetooh! Wild dogs kill family! Help!
"Finally,"
John breathed as he picked up his microphone. "This is
International Rescue receiving you. Can you tell me more about
what's happened?
"That's
right, Father," John said from his portrait screen on the
wall. "Seems like a pack of wild dogs has gone crazy, started
killing anyone they can get their jaws around."
"Hm," Jeff
Tracy said, leaning forward in his chair. "Has World Animal
Control been advised of the situation?"
"Yes, I
contacted them, but two of the people killed on the island
were from WAC. They're not having much luck. Even
tranquilizers aren't stopping those dogs."
"What's
the population of this island?"
"It's a
small place barely three times the size of Tracy Island called
Cumbaquay. It's rather primitive, with only about two hundred
permanent residents. Fifteen have been killed so far, plus the
two WAC officers. Some kid with an ancient HAM radio placed
the call."
"Right.
John, call that boy back and tell him International Rescue are
on their way."
"F.A.B."
Jeff
turned to a panel near his desk. On this panel were ten
different switches, each leading to a different part of Tracy
Island. He pressed the switch marked 'Game Room.'
"Boys, get
up here right away."
"Nice
shot, Virgil!" Gordon applauded as Virgil's thirteenth shot in
a row hit the target dead on.
"Ah, it's
just luck," Alan teased as Scott aimed his rifle at the next
target.
"Luck has
nothing to do with it," Virgil retorted, frowning.
They
watched as Scott fired, hitting his target dead center as
well. "Nope. It's years of practice."
"Years and
years of practice," Alan said from across the room.
"Do I
sense a Methuselah comment around the corner?" Scott asked
menacingly, laying down his rifle and starting toward Alan.
Alan
stumbled backwards, hands up defensively, shaking his head.
"No, not at all, Scott, not at all. I'm innocent."
"Yeah, and
I'm the Queen of England," Gordon piped up, laughing.
Virgil
bowed graciously, flipping his hand around and around in front
of himself. "Your Grace," he said, trying not to laugh.
Buzzzz-buzzzz Boys, get up here right away.
"Uh-oh,
sounds like we have work to do!" Alan crowed, racing out of
the room before Scott could reach him.
The eldest
Tracy son frowned slightly. "You know, sometimes I think that
kid gets a little too happy about his work."
"Naw, he's
just glad he had a reason to duck out," Virgil replied as the
remaining three brothers headed for the door. "Wonder what's
up this time."
"Ah, there
you are," Jeff said, standing in front of his desk.
"What's
up, Father?" Scott asked.
"Scott, I
need you to leave in Thunderbird 1 right away. Contact John
once you're airborne, he'll give you the destination and
details."
"F.A.B."
Scott
walked quickly to the wall, placed his back against it and
gripped two light fixtures, one on either side of and slightly
above his head. The wall flipped around and he found himself
on a moving gantry leading to Thunderbird 1, International
Rescue's fastest vehicle.
"Virgil, I
want you to follow Scott in Thunderbird 2. You'll need Pod 1.
I've had Brains load it with all the medical equipment we have
and his new tranquilizer formula. I want both Gordon and Alan
along on this one. You may need all the hands you can get.
John will explain on the way."
"F.A.B.!"
the three replied.
Virgil
headed for a tall painting of the rocket ship his father had
used on his first and only mission to the Moon many years
before. As soon as he was stationary, the picture flipped
backwards and Virgil slid onto a padded slide that ferried him
down a long chute into the pilot seat of Thunderbird 2,
International Rescue's freighter craft.
Alan and
Gordon headed for the passenger elevator that would take them
into the back of Thunderbird 2's cockpit. They talked quietly
as they rode, wondering what the scoop was on this particular
rescue.
"Thunderbird 1 to Base. I've received the details from John.
What's the action on this one, Father?"
"Well, WAC
is sending out another team to help corral the dogs. Since
their tranquilizers have proven ineffective, I'm hoping
Brains' new concoction will do the trick. He's improved it
since the alligator incident four years ago. I want Virgil to
get the wounded off that island while Gordon and Alan help you
keep the wild dogs at bay 'til WAC arrives."
"F.A.B.
I'll contact Thunderbird 2. Scott out."
Jeff
leaned back in his chair and sighed. This mission sounded
simple enough, and he fully expected his sons to return none
the worse for wear.
"Jeff? Oh,
there you are, Jeff."
"Hi,
Mother."
"Did I
just hear the boys take off on another mission?"
"Yes, a
remote island about a hundred miles from here. A pack of wild
dogs has gone crazy and started attacking people."
"Oh, dear,
that sounds dangerous."
"It
shouldn't be too bad. Less dangerous than a burning building,
I'm sure."
"I don't
know how you can be so blasé about these missions, Jeff."
"Almost
five years of them, Mother. I guess it just gets to be old
hat."
Grandma
frowned, then her face softened again. "I came in here to let
you know that Tin-Tin, Kyrano and I are going to the mainland
for groceries and some other shopping. We should be back in a
few hours."
"All
right, Mother. Have fun."
"I will,
Jeff, I will. Kyrano's left some coffee on for you in the
kitchen."
"Now that
sounds like a good idea," Jeff replied, rising from his seat.
He could use some coffee. As easy as this rescue sounded, as
sure as he was they would succeed with no problems, when his
sons were out there facing any kind of danger, no matter how
minimal, he never could keep from worrying, a fact he tried
valiantly to keep from everyone else. 'Worry: The Curse of All
Parents,' his mother had once called it. How true.
"I wonder
what could make a pack of dogs go crazy like that," Alan
mused.
Gordon
shook his head. "Don't know. Especially since they've been
peacefully coexisting with the inhabitants of the island for
years."
"John said
that kid Umbabwe sounded pretty shook up," Alan said, a frown
creasing his forehead.
"You would
be too if you watched a bunch of wild animals kill your entire
family," Virgil stated grimly.
His
brothers nodded in silence as Thunderbird 2 continued on her
way.
"Stoy flah
may koo Cheetooh," Umbabwe whispered, stroking his dead
mother's long, braided hair. "I have called the Saviors.
Chinsacwa. They will come. Mee cheet Chawba. They will save
you, Mother. Mee cheet. They will save you."
He knew
full well that his mother was dead. International Rescue could
not bring her back, as she'd been torn nearly limb-from-limb,
as had his father, his grandfather, the other four elders and
his two sisters. Silent tears rolled down the fourteen-year-old's
cheeks as more screams of terror came floating across the
breeze.
"Hindaqua,
tay shon...my friend," he cried. "Mee swen qo...not you, too."
"I can see
the island now, Father. It looks pretty peaceful from up
here," Scott reported from his vid picture on the wall.
"I just
heard from John again. Umbabwe, the young man who first called
for help, has transmitted again saying the pack of dogs has
attacked his friend's home about a mile up the beach from his
present coordinates."
"Oh, man,
they just won't stop. I'll be landing at Danger Zone in one
minute."
"F.A.B."
Umbabwe
heard a strange sound, one he had never heard before, a
high-pitched whine. He scanned the skies, wondering if the
Cheetooh, or Saviors, as the residents of Cumbaquay called
them, were already arriving. Then he saw it...something that
made him momentarily forget the horrible scene of death
surrounding him. He stood and walked to the edge of the beach,
shielding his eyes from the sun's glare with his hand.
A machine
appeared on the horizon and within a minute was directly above
him. He stood awestruck and watched as fire shot out from the
machine's belly, making a large, frightening sound. The
machine lowered itself until it rested on legs in the sand.
Umbabwe saw a piece of the machine open and flip down, forming
stairs. Then two blue-clad legs appeared. As soon as the body
above the legs came into view, Umbabwe knew the Saviors had
arrived.
"Cheetooh,
Cheetooh!" he hollered, running toward the stranger. He
skidded to a halt directly in front of him. Umbabwe had never
before seen a white-skinned person, and was even more
perplexed by the fact that the man's hair, instead of being
jet black like his own, was of a brown color similar to
Umbabwe's skin. He stared hard at the man, more than a little
frightened, but grateful for the stranger's presence.
Umbabwe
had heard of the Cheetooh from Hindaqua's cousin, the only
indigenous resident of Cumbaquay to leave the island in the
last forty years. The cousin had spoken of an amazing rescue
performed by the Cheetooh during his time in the United
States, a rescue in which they had saved a family of three
trapped in the subterranean garage of a new building with over
three hundred floors. He had told them that all one had to do
was call for help, and Cheetooh would come save you.
"Mee shay
Tonaqua," Umbabwe breathed, eyes large as saucers.
"I'm
sorry, I don't understand you," Scott said, frowning at the
young man in front of him. "Are you Umbabwe?"
The boy
nodded. So, the Cheetooh spoke the language Hindaqua's cousin
had taught several of them. The language of the White Gods. "I
say you White God," he repeated in English.
"No, I'm
not a god. My name is Scott. I'm from International Rescue."
"Cheetooh,"
Umbabwe nodded emphatically.
"Right.
Cheetooh," Scott smiled. "Are you alone here? Where are the
dogs?"
"Family
dead," Umbabwe replied, head bowed. "Hindaqua family
dead...there." He pointed up the beach to a point Scott could
not see. "Dogs there."
"Okay.
Now, listen, another of my ships is on its way. We're going to
do everything we can to keep these dogs from hurting more
people. I need to get airborne so I can find the dogs. Do you
understand?"
Umbabwe
nodded. He'd picked up most of what the White God had said,
but didn't understand that he'd be leaving in his ship again
until Scott began ascending the stairs to Thunderbird 1.
"No!
Tonaqua, no! Showpa cheet! Save me!"
Scott
turned and frowned. The boy was all alone with his family
dead. And who knew where those dogs were now? They could be
doubling back. If Scott left Umbabwe on the beach alone, he
could very well return to find the boy had faced the same fate
as his family and friends.
"Okay,
Umbabwe. You come with me, but you must not touch anything and
you must remain totally silent. Understand?"
He nodded
and followed Scott into Thunderbird 1. Scott soon had the
young man strapped into a seat at the bottom of the cockpit
while he climbed into the pilot's chair suspended in the
middle of it. Umbabwe stared all around him in awe. He was not
used to such technology. The closest thing he'd ever seen to
this was the ragged HAM radio he'd found on the beach and,
slowly but surely, finally gotten to work. But this...this was
breathtaking. He listened as the White God spoke, to whom he
did not know.
"This is
Thunderbird 1 to Thunderbird 2 and Base. I've located Umbabwe.
He pointed me in the direction of the dogs' last known
location. I'm taking Thunderbird 1 up now to see if I can spot
them."
"F.A.B,"
Virgil replied. "ETA to Danger Zone now three minutes."
"Okay.
Hopefully I can give you new coordinates to land before then."
"Scott?
Where's the boy?" came Jeff's voice.
"Um, he's
strapped in here in the cockpit, Father. I didn't want to
leave him at the mercy of the pack in case they doubled back."
Scott was worried. He knew damn well how dangerous it was to
have a stranger in the cockpit with him, but he'd had to make
a snap decision, one his gut told him had been the right one.
But what would Jeff think?
Virgil,
Alan, Gordon and Scott held their breaths waiting for their
father's reaction.
"Good job,
Scott."
Scott
smiled. "Thunderbird 1 out."
Opening
his side view ports, Scott flew his bird low, trying to find
the place Umbabwe had pointed to. It didn't take him
long...roughly a mile from where he'd picked his charge up off
the beach he found a hut surrounded by something that looked
like the carnage from one of those old horror flicks they used
to show back when he was a kid. He gulped, and then looked
further inland.
Umbabwe
bit his lip. He, too, witnessed what had become of his friend
Hindaqua and his family and wanted to cry. But in the
tradition of the Cumbaquayan, Umbabwe did not shed a single
tear. He was the last of his family now. He had to be strong.
He had to be a man.
"Thunderbird 1 to Thunderbird 2. I think I see them."
"Where,
Scott?"
"It's
dense, overgrown...there's no way you could land here. I can't
even land here. This is gonna be tough. Put her down at IR 3,
reference G. And please tell me you brought the Muncher."
Scott
listened as his brother radioed their father.
"Thunderbird 2 to Base."
"Come in,
Virgil."
"What else
did Brains put in Pod 1 besides the medical equipment?"
Brains
himself answered the question. "Uh, I, uh, I put in Med 1 and,
uh, the Tranquer."
"No
Muncher?"
"O-Oh
yeah, that t-too."
Virgil
smiled. "Brains, remind me to buy you a drink when we get
back."
"F.A.B.!"
"You get
that, Scott?"
"Yeah, I
got it. I'll buy him one, too. I'm heading back out to land
near the coordinates I gave you. We'll assemble in two
minutes."
"F.A.B."
Scott
glanced down at Umbabwe and frowned. The portion of the boy's
body not concealed by the small cotton cloth wound around his
waist was covered in a thin sheen of sweat. "You okay, Umbabwe?"
He looked
up at Tonaqua. Why was it so hot? Nodding dumbly, Umbabwe
returned his gaze to the window as he wiped the back of his
hand across his forehead. Tonaqua must come from a white-hot
place, he reasoned. That was the only explanation for why his
machine was burning like a fire.
Thunderbird 1 landed gracefully about twenty feet back from
the ocean just as Thunderbird 2 fired retros right next to her
sister ship. Within the space of a minute, all four brothers
and Umbabwe had gathered in the small space between the two
ships. Umbabwe was lost in the unbelievable size of this
larger machine. He had never seen anything as big as that
before. It was the color of the leaves on the trees, whereas
Tonaqua's machine was the color that lined the clouds floating
high in the sky.
Umbabwe
watched as the other Cheetoohs descended from their machine.
He was surprised to see that they were all Tonaqua just like
the one who called himself Scott. But even though they were
white of skin, they were all very differing shades. Umbabwe
didn't know the White Gods could be different colors of white.
He also
stared in awe at their hair. The larger man had hair the color
of the bark on the Wamba tree. The one following him down the
steps had hair the colors of the sunset on his beloved island.
And the final one looked like his entire head was ablaze with
the glory of Shoonay, the Sun Goddess. Surely Shoonay herself
must bless this one.
As they
gathered into a small group, he also noticed their eyes were
of differing shades. Was there really so much variety in the
world of the White God, he wondered? Scott had eyes that
mirrored the color of the sky just as Shoonay descends for the
day. Wamba had eyes the color of the moss on the Wamba tree.
Umbabwe found that fitting. The gods of the Earth must favor
him. The sunset-haired man had eyes a color Umbabwe had never
before seen, a color that almost mirrored his hair. And the
one blessed by Shoonay...the teen's eyes widened when he
looked into eyes the color of the sea. Surely this must be the
leader of White Gods, for he was blessed by both Shoonay and
the Sea God Bahnay.
The four
pilots were startled when Umbabwe suddenly genuflected at
Alan's feet, face touching the ground, knees tucked tightly
beneath him.
"What's he
doing?" Alan asked.
Umbabwe
looked up. "Shoonay Bahnay mee spanga."
"Huh?"
Alan said, scrunching up his face.
Scott
placed a hand on the boy's shoulder. "Umbabwe, we don't
understand what you're saying."
Umbabwe
looked up, but had eyes for no one but Alan. "Tonaqua, White
God, blessed by Goddess Shoonay. Blessed by God Bahnay."
Seeing their looks of utter confusion, he added, "Hair of sun,
eyes of water," before returning to his position of reverence.
Gordon
chuckled. "Seems he thinks you're blessed by the gods or
something."
"Very
funny, guys," Alan frowned as his brothers tried to keep from
laughing.
"Umbabwe,
stand up. Believe me, Alan's no god. None of us are. We're
just here to help."
Finally,
with gentle urging from Scott's hands, Umbabwe came to his
feet, still unable to stop staring at Alan. For his part, Alan
shifted his weight from one foot to the other, uncomfortable
under such scrutiny.
"So what's
the action, Scott?" Virgil asked.
"Well, it
looks like the only way we'll get into that jungle is with the
Muncher, so Virgil, you get that going."
"F.A.B."
"Gordon,
you get the medical gear loaded onto Med 1 and follow as
Virgil cuts a path for you into the jungle. I'll meet you in
Pod 1 and give you a hand."
"F.A.B."
"What
about me, Scott?"
"I want
you in the Tranquer, Alan. If you can get a clear shot at
those dogs, you need to knock them out before they kill any
more people."
"F.A.B,"
Alan replied, glad to be escaping his new admirer.
"Umbabwe,
listen to me," Scott said gently as he placed his hands on the
boy's shoulders. "We'll need your help to navigate. Can you
show us how to get to where we saw the dogs when we were in
the air?"
He nodded,
stealing glances back toward where Alan had disappeared into a
giant cavern, which emerged beneath the great ship the color
of leaves. He was a bit confused. If the Blessed One were so
blessed by the gods, why did this one called Scott seem to be
telling everyone what to do?
"Good.
Okay, let's go, we have to help Gordon load Med 1."
Not having
a clue what Scott was referring to, Umbabwe followed silently,
wondering once again why he felt so awfully hot. Since they
were no longer in the machine belonging to Scott, he could not
blame it on the White Gods themselves. Perhaps Shoonay was
angry with them for allowing the evil animals to destroy the
lives beneath Her. Perhaps Her revenge was to make Herself
burn more brightly. But Shoonay did not seem to affect the
White Gods. Then again, Umbabwe reasoned, they were gods, just
as Shoonay. Her powers would have little effect upon ones such
as them.
Virgil was
the first out of Pod 1. The Muncher, something Brains had
finished only about 6 months ago, had not yet been needed on a
rescue, so this was her maiden voyage. She was about the same
size as the Excavator, but had a large opening in the front
that could only be described as a mouth. She was painted a
dark forest green with the name MUNCHER in capital letters on
both sides. The purpose of this machine was to "munch" through
dense vegetation, enabling International Rescue to reach
formerly inaccessible Danger Zones. It would then spit out
what it had eaten in the form of mulch through an exhaust in
the tail section that was only about half the width of the
machine itself. Virgil put the monster in gear and began
forging the trail for his brothers.
Alan
emerged next with the Tranquer, a small machine no bigger than
the Booster Mortar. This machine was painted midnight blue and
had the word TRANQUER in block letters on each side. Much like
the Booster Mortar, it had a single barrel in the front, but
this one was only about as wide as the old-time shotguns
they'd used back when Jeff Tracy was young. Between the barrel
and the cab where Alan was seated behind the controls, there
was a tank of Brains' new tranquilizing agent, which he, in
his dryly-humorous way, had called KED...or...Knock 'Em Dead.
The liquid
was sucked into the barrel, where an empty dart waited. Once
full, a green light on the Control Panel would flash, telling
the pilot it was loaded and ready to be fired. The engineer
claimed his latest invention could knock an elephant out upon
impact. Given that WAC's tranquilizers had been ineffective in
stopping the pack of wild dogs, everyone hoped Brains' claims
were true. Alan put the little tractor in gear and began
following Virgil as he blazed the way.
Back in
Pod 1, Scott and Gordon rushed to load as much medical
equipment onto Med 1 as they could. This was another new
vehicle designed and constructed by Brains and Tin-Tin to aid
the brothers in providing on-the-spot triage to victims. It
stood as high as the Mole and was just as wide. To keep
Umbabwe's mind off what was happening around him, Scott
engaged him in conversation as he and Gordon finished loading
Med 1.
"Umbabwe,
how did you escape the dogs?" he asked.
The boy
shook his head. He did not understand the word 'escape.'
"The dogs,
when they attacked your family, how did you survive?"
"On top
home," Umbabwe replied. He was now almost dripping in sweat
and breathing rather rapidly.
"Say, is
he sick or something?" Gordon asked, frowning. "He doesn't
look so good."
"I know,"
Scott replied, eyeing the young man warily. "I'm not sure
what's wrong with him, maybe he's in shock or something.
Listen, I'll drive Med 1, why don't you keep Umbabwe in the
back and see if you can get him to cool down."
"F.A.B.
Umbabwe, come with me," Gordon said, motioning for the boy to
follow him into the back of the vehicle.
Shaking
his head as though trying to clear his mind, Umbabwe followed
the Sunset One into the large white truck. He had seen two
lines of red criss-crossed on each side and formations in
block letters that he did not understand...they looked like
MED 1, but Umbabwe could not read. He offered no resistance as
Gordon, anticipating a bumpy ride, strapped him onto a cot. As
Scott pulled Med 1 out of the Pod, Gordon took Umbabwe's
temperature.
"Gordon to
Scott."
"What's
up?"
"He's
burning up. His temperature's at a hundred and two."
"Well,
then he's in the right place. Apply the ice packs, give him a
hypo spray of ASA, and see if you can't bring it down."
"F.A.B."
Virgil
found the way fairly easygoing, only having to change course
once or twice to avert trees too large for the Muncher's jaws.
He just hoped he was going the right way, considering Umbabwe
was too feverish to point them in any particular direction.
Gazing at the vid screen that occupied the space normally held
by actual cockpit windows, Virgil panned left and right
constantly, trying to find any sign of the wild dog pack.
Within ten minutes, he and the Muncher had broken through the
jungle into a clearing.
"My God!"
he exclaimed, slamming on the brakes.
"What?"
Alan practically screeched over the intercom. "What happened?"
"There's...there are...bodies. Everywhere. It's..." Virgil
closed his eyes and looked away. He'd never seen a massacre
like this. Ever. The clearing was littered with bodies and
body parts. There was blood all over the place, covering the
four huts that dotted the center, staining the ground red...it
was just everywhere. Worst of all, he could easily make out
limbs and extremities that had been viciously separated from
their owners. Squeezing his eyes shut even tighter, he
swallowed hard, took a large gulp of air and reopened them.
"This is
the Muncher to Med 1 and Tranquer."
"Virgil,
what's going on?" Scott asked.
"I don't
think we'll find any survivors here."
Scott
frowned. He'd never heard his brother's voice so flat. So
emotionless. He knew whatever Virgil was seeing must be
horrific. He was employing his best defense mechanism:
complete emotional detachment from the situation.
"Can you
tell where the dogs might be?"
Virgil
scanned the perimeter of the clearing, now completely ignoring
the carcasses. "No, I...wait. Wait. Yes, there. At eleven
o'clock I see signs of the undergrowth having been disturbed."
"Right.
Then off we go."
"Scott..."
Virgil's voice sounded strangled.
But his
big brother knew exactly what the problem was. "Hang on. Alan,
Gordon, meet up in front of the Muncher."
Within
fifteen minutes, the four boys had finished the grim task of
moving bodies and body pieces out of the Muncher's way.
Virgil's face was as stone, belying nothing of what he might
be feeling. Scott was more or less stone-faced himself. Gordon
looked like he was going to hurl, and Alan blinked about a
thousand times per minute trying to keep the teardrops from
escaping his eyes. In the end, they all re-boarded their
vehicles and continued on their way.
"Scott to
Gordon. How's Umbabwe doing?"
"Not good,
Scott. I can't get his temperature down. I even gave him
another ten cc's of ASA, and he's melted almost every ice pack
we have. His temperature's risen a degree."
"We need
to get him to a hospital, and fast. But we need to corral
these dogs so they don't kill more of his people." These were
the times Scott hated the most on rescues. They were no-win
situations. If someone left now to take Umbabwe off-island to
a hospital, it might mean the remaining three would not be
able to effectively contain the wild dogs until WAC arrived,
which meant more people would be killed. If they kept going
after the dogs, Umbabwe might die.
Gordon
understood the predicament. "The needs of the many, Scott."
"Yeah, I
know. Outweigh the needs of the few," Scott finished. It was a
quote from a Star Trek movie he and Gordon had seen at least
fifty times, if not more. They were both closet Trekkers, and
old-time Science Fiction movies like the Trek ones were fond
favorites whenever they got to the mainland together. Scott
sighed. "On we go. Do your best, Gordon."
"F.A.B,"
he replied quietly.
Twenty
minutes passed before Virgil finally saw something moving in
the brush ahead of him. "Muncher to Tranquer and Med 1!"
"What is
it, Virg?" Alan asked.
"I just
saw something move ahead! It was small and low to the ground.
The cover is too thick for me to be sure, but it may have been
one of those wild dogs."
"Keep
going, Virgil. Alan can't get the Tranquer up there without a
clear path," Scott said.
"F.A.B."
"This is
World Animal Control Team 2 calling International Rescue."
Scott
pressed a button on his Control Panel. "This is International
Rescue. Go ahead, Team 2."
"This is
Byron Anderson, WAC Team 2 Lead. We've just landed near your
vehicles on the beach and assume you're the ones who've cut
into the jungle. Have you found the pack of dogs yet?"
"No, Mr.
Anderson, not for sure. My buddy thinks he may have spotted
them. We're doing our best to cut through the undergrowth in
an attempt to catch up to them."
"Fine.
We're going to head down the trail you've made in our
Containment Vehicle. How far in are you?"
Scott
checked his readings. "We've gone four.point.six miles."
"Roger
that. We'll use best speed to catch up."
"Thank
you. Will keep you informed of any new developments."
"Much
appreciated. Over and out."
Another
five minutes passed before the pilots all heard a
blood-curdling scream. In the back of Med 1 with Umbabwe,
Gordon hopped to his feet; stopping the work he was doing
trying to keep the increasingly frenzied young man from
breaking free of his restraints. "What in blazes was that?"
Virgil
skidded to a halt. "I've come upon a clearing. The dogs,
they're here! They're attacking!"
"Move off,
Virg, let Alan get in there!"
"F.A.B!"
Virgil
turned the wheel all the way to the left and hit the gas,
forcing the Muncher into another area of the jungle. This left
the way mostly clear for Alan to move the Tranquer into
position. He pushed through the last two feet of vegetation as
fast as he could before popping out into the clearing. His
eyes widened as he watched the vicious attacks.
There were
five dogs in total. They had obviously banded together as a
pack after being abandoned. All were sickly skinny, looking
like they hadn't eaten in weeks. One was about eighty pounds
with short slate gray fur. He was chasing a mother who was
clinging tightly to her screaming baby.
The second
dog was only about sixty pounds and colored white with large
black spots. She was chasing the big gray dog as a third dog,
roughly the same size and coloring, barged into one of the six
huts in the clearing. The fourth dog, a large
Wolfhound-looking creature, was in the process of ripping a
grown man to shreds, while the final dog, a black short-haired
one, turned to stare the Tranquer down coldly, as if he had no
idea that this small vehicle was about twenty times the size
he was.
Alan knew
he could take the black one out without potentially hitting
one of the running and screaming humans. He loaded the dart
and hit the green button on the panel. His aim was dead on and
the dog went down as soon as the dart pierced its skin. He
then turned his attention to the Wolfhound one who was mauling
a man about twenty yards in front of him. He aimed, lining his
shot up as carefully as he could, and fired. Once more, he was
deadly accurate as the hound yelped and collapsed on top of
his victim.
Alan hit
the two black and white dogs successively before finally
turning to the large gray one. "All right, then, fella. Here,
doggy, doggy." Alan sat back from the scope for a moment. "Now
why do I recall that the last time I tried calling something
big and mean to me, I got a knock on the head for my efforts?"
He sighed and took aim again. Easily taking this last dog
down, he got on the mike. "This is Tranquer calling Muncher
and Med 1. I have neutralized the threat. But there are a
lotta people we need to get to a hospital."
"F.A.B,"
Scott replied. He could hear the Muncher returning to their
position.
In no time
at all, the WAC team arrived on the scene and loaded the
unconscious dogs onto their transport. Thanking International
Rescue profusely, they also helped the boys load those members
of the clearing who were still alive into Med 1. The hound had
succeeded in killing the grown man. There were four other
people who were pretty badly injured, and another three with
minor injuries. Once everything was set, the group headed back
to the beach.
"Right,
Scott, Med 1 is loaded and we have all patients secure for
flight-"
Virgil was
cut off by a deafening scream coming from inside the Pod.
"What
the--?" Scott ran to the Pod, followed by Alan and Virgil.
"Gordon! Gordon, what's going on?" he yelled as he reached Med
1.
White-faced and visibly shaken, Gordon staggered up to his big
brother. "Umbabwe," he whispered, "got loose."
"Virgil,
Alan, spread out. He didn't leave the Pod. He's in here
somewhere. Gordon, did he hurt you?"
He shook
his head.
"Okay,
then go sit down before you fall down."
The three
brothers fanned out center, left and right peering into the
shadows of the Pod interior. Without warning there was a sound
that could only be described as a war cry. It came from
directly above Virgil's head over to the right side of the
Pod. He stopped and looked up just as Umbabwe leapt out of
nowhere right on top of him.
The young
man was dripping in sweat and had a crazed look on his face.
He was screeching words in Cumbaquayan as he landed atop
Virgil, sending both of them sprawling to the floor. Virgil
was too surprised to even yelp.
Alan and
Scott raced over. Scott tried manhandling Umbabwe as he
pummeled Virgil's body and face. Alan was trying to grab
Virgil by his uniform and drag him away. Gordon joined the
effort, all four men yelling as loud as the kid.
Umbabwe
continued screaming as Scott and Gordon succeeded in pulling
him off Virgil. He struggled between them for several minutes,
and then suddenly went limp and quiet. The assault over, Alan
helped Virgil sit up and checked out the various bumps,
bruises and gashes that were showing up on his face.
"Oh, man,
why the face?" Virgil groaned in mock sincerity.
"Don't
worry, pretty boy, I don't think any of them are bad enough to
leave a scar," Alan smiled. His smile faded, however, when
Virgil glared at him.
"What got
into that kid?"
"I don't
know, Virg. It's like he's gone crazy or something," Scott
replied.
Just then,
Umbabwe tore out of his and Gordon's grip and ran out the Pod
entrance. The four boys ran after him and could only watch in
horror as the teen shimmied up a nearby tree, edged out onto a
limb and took a swan dive, hitting the sand with a sickening
crunch.
"My God,"
Virgil breathed.
Alan went
and knelt down next to the boy's lifeless body, needlessly
confirming the lack of a pulse. He shook his head, frowning,
and rejoined his brothers. "What the hell happened?"
"I don't
know," Gordon replied, even though Alan hadn't really been
asking him in particular. "He was strapped down to the cot,
his fever was rising. I kept trying to cool him down but was
also securing the other passengers for the ride. Suddenly he
let out the most god-awful scream I've ever heard and ripped
right through the restraints. He grabbed me by my uniform and
shook me, screaming right into my face. Finally he let me go
and bolted."
"Well, we
can't do anything more for him," Scott said, stunned as the
rest of them. "Let's get the remaining victims out of here."
"F.A.B,"
Virgil replied. "You up to playin' nurse, Gordon?"
"Yup.
Let's go."
Scott
watched them enter the Pod. "Alan, you'd better give Gordon a
hand. I don't think he should be alone down there, just in
case."
"Right,
Scott. We'll see you back at Base."
"F.A.B."
Scott
waited until Thunderbird 2 had taken off before boarding his
own craft. He strapped himself into the pilot's seat and
suddenly realized how hot it was in there. Wiping his arm
across his forehead, he made a mental note to have Brains
check out the refrigeration unit upon return to Base.
CHAPTER TWO
The wall
flipped around and revealed Scott, his uniform and face both
quite dirty.
"Hello,
son."
"Father,"
Scott nodded. "Have Brains check out my refrigeration unit,
would ya? It's so damn hot in that cockpit."
Jeff
nodded, noting that Scott's grimy face was covered with a thin
sheen of sweat. "You all right?"
"Yeah.
Just hot. I'm gonna go take a shower."
"Okay. See
you out here later."
"F.A.B."
An hour
later, as Scott re-emerged into the Lounge, Virgil, Gordon and
Alan were just returning from having dropped the victims off
at a mainland hospital. Jeff noted the three of them didn't
look any better than their elder brother as he sent them off
to get washed up.
Scott
flopped unceremoniously onto the settee in front of Jeff's
desk, surprising his father. In spite of the fact that he was
wearing shorts and a sleeveless t-shirt, Scott still felt like
he was in an oven.
"You did
well on this one, Scott. Especially where that boy was
concerned."
"Oh, yeah,
I did real well," Scott snorted. "Damn kid killed
himself."
"You
couldn't have prevented that. You didn't know it was coming."
"But I
should have known, right, Father?" Scott said hotly,
jumping to his feet. He began pacing in front of the desk as
Jeff watched in confusion. "I'm the first one on the scene,
I'm supposed to be ready for anything! Big Brother
Scott, Mr. Never-Makes-A-Mistake. Well, I did this
time. I lost someone, so go ahead and yell at me, I know it's
what you wanna do."
"I don't
have any desire to yell at you. Losing that boy was not
your fault."
"Yeah,
sure, fine, whatever," Scott mumbled, collapsing onto the
settee again.
"What's
got into you, Scott?"
"What's
got into me?" Scott yelled, jumping to his feet again. "I'll
tell you what's got into me, Dad. I'm sick and tired of
being the one making all the decisions out there. I'm tired of
telling everybody what to do! They're all grown men; they can
make their own decisions! Why do I have to be first? Because
I'm the oldest? To hell with that! I don't want the damned
responsibility anymore! I'm sick to death of this whole
thing!"
Jeff
watched his son's tirade open-mouthed and couldn't even form a
sentence as Scott stalked out of the Lounge. He was still
looking quite in shock when his other three Earth-bound sons
entered the room.
"Father,
what's wrong?" Virgil asked, wiping his forehead with his
hand.
"You-I--uh, I don't...quite know for sure. Your brother just
had a, uh, well, a tantrum, I think."
"A
tantrum? Scott?" Alan asked.
Jeff
nodded. "I think I'd better try and find him. Will you boys
mind the store?"
"Sure,
Father," Gordon replied as the three took up various positions
around the Lounge.
As Jeff
disappeared down the hall, Alan asked the question all three
had been asking themselves. "Scott threw a tantrum?"
"I wonder
why," Gordon said.
"Probably
because he's sick of being in command all the time, just like
I'm sick and tired of being the Second Fiddle ferry boy,"
Virgil retorted from the piano bench. His brothers looked at
him in surprise. "We oughtta switch places. See how he'd like
being stuck in Thunderbird 2 for a change."
"Virgil?"
Gordon asked.
"What?!?"
he snapped.
"Uh, never
mind."
Virgil
began playing a rather loud march on the piano. Alan and
Gordon frowned and headed for the patio.
"What's
with him?" Alan asked.
"Don't
know. Maybe the same thing that's with Scott. Man, it's
evening, but it's so hot out here."
"You're
right," Alan replied, fanning his face with his hand. "Let's
go for a dip in the pool."
"But
Father asked us to keep an eye out for emergencies."
"Aren't
you tired of being told what to do?" Alan asked, frowning.
"Uh...huh?
Well, I-I guess so. But we're the youngest. It comes with the
territory."
"So let's
break the cycle. I say we go for a dip in the pool and let Mr.
Personality keep an ear open for blinks and beeps."
"Okay!"
Gordon agreed.
The two
raced down the staircase, shedding clothes along the way
until, by the time they reached the water, they were both
buck-naked. They did cannonballs into the pool and splashed
and yelled, acting like two ten-year olds instead of two
twenty-somethings.
Jeff found
his oldest boy in his room. He tapped on the door softly
before entering to find Scott standing out on his balcony,
wearing nothing but his boxers.
"Son?" he
said softly.
"Can't you
just leave me be?"
"I'd
rather not. I'd rather find out what's going on."
"I already
told you," Scott spat, unwilling to turn and face his father.
"Are you
telling me you want to quit International Rescue?"
He whirled
on Jeff, eyes dark, and body fairly dripping with sweat. "So
now you think I'm a quitter?" he menaced.
"I never
said that. It's just...you said you were tired of it all, so I
thought..."
"Yeah,
Father, you thought. You always think.
You think you know what's best. You've locked us on this
island, a bunch of grown men. Grown men with needs! Did
you ever stop to think about that? Are we s'posed to be
goddamn monks for the rest of our lives just to save a bunch
of ingrates who couldn't care less?"
Jeff was
speechless as he sank down onto his son's bed. Is this how
Scott really felt? Is this how they all felt?
"But you
went into this willingly, Scott. You knew what life would be
like. You all knew."
"You're
right. We did know. But did you honestly think any of us would
say no to you? To our father? To the great astronaut and
billionaire Jeff Tracy? Please, you already had Brains
building the damn machines; you already had most of this hunk
of rock carved out before you even asked us. What were we
gonna do? We had no choice."
Becoming
angry, Jeff rose to his feet to face his son eye-to-eye.
"Don't tell me you didn't have a choice. I must have asked all
of you twenty times if this is what you really wanted. Every
single one of you assured me it was. You could have backed out
any time before we started operating."
"Sure. And
be the quitter. Just like now. Right?"
Scott's
newly flippant attitude confused Jeff even more. He decided
the conversation couldn't possibly go anywhere in his son's
present state of mind, so figured he'd let him cool off before
attempting to continue. "I don't think you're a quitter. I
think you're a hero," he said quietly as he exited the room.
Turning
back to face the ocean's breeze, which wasn't all that cooling
at the moment, Scott snorted, "Hero, my ass."
Jeff
returned to the Lounge to find his middle son engaged in the
loudest rendition of the Thunderbird march he'd ever borne
witness to. It was so loud it actually hurt his ears.
"Virgil!"
"WHAT?"
The angry
face turned upon him startled Jeff, to say the least.
Thankfully, Virgil had stopped playing, but why did he look so
livid?
"I was
just wondering why you were playing the piano so loudly."
"Sorry,
was I bothering you?" The question was not asked with actual
concern or regret.
"Well, it
was a bit loud."
"So
sorry to be bothering you, Sir," Virgil ground out
as he rose from his seat.
"Virgil,
what's wrong? What's going on?"
"What's
going on? I'll tell you what's going on!"
By now,
Jeff was ready to commit himself to an asylum. First Scott,
and now Virgil? What in blazes was happening? He just nodded
for Virgil to continue, wondering if this conversation would
prove as fruitless as his last.
"I'm tired
of playing second banana to the Great and Powerful Scott,"
Virgil began, pacing across the Lounge to the patio doors and
back as he spoke. His voice dripped with hatred, a sound his
father had never before heard from him. "He always goes first,
he's always telling us what to do. He's not so great. I don't
get a chance to make my own decisions unless for some reason
you can't get hold of the Golden Boy."
"Virgil,
that's not true, and you know it."
"You can
deny it all you want, Father, but you stuck me behind a
goddamned freighter. I wasn't good enough to pilot Thunderbird
1. I wasn't smart enough to be made commander of International
Rescue whenever you left the Island. I'm the one who has to do
all the dirty work while your perfect firstborn sits on his
ass at Mobile Control! God forbid one flippin' lock of hair
gets out of place or one tiny scratch mars his James Bond
face."
Jeff found
himself once more with a mouth that hung wide open, unable to
move. Had has sons gone mad? "I depend on you for your level
headedness, your strength and your determination. You are the
backbone of our operations in the field. I thought you
understood that."
"Backbone?
Strength? Sure, I'm the biggest one of all us Tracys, I'm the
big brute, I can do all the tough stuff and I can pilot the
big lug of a ship that doesn't go a third as fast as Scott's,
but that's okay because I'm only second born."
"Son, the
order in which you boys were born makes no difference to me.
You’re all first."
"Yeah,
right. You put us into these roles. You did, no one
else. You stick Mr. Bright and Wonderful in the anchor because
he's so...bright and wonderful. You've got Water Boy who's
perfect for 4. You've got a kid you forced to go to astronaut
training that you throw up into space to get rid of, and
another one who looks so much like Mom you wanted him
up in space so you wouldn't have to look at him any more than
necessary."
"Virgil
Grissom Tracy, you'd better stop while you're still ahead of
the game. You have your roles based on what you're best at,
nothing more. I talked this over with each of you before the
craft were even built, before assignments were even decided
upon. If you're all so unhappy, why haven't you come to me
before now? Why keep it all inside?"
"Yeah,
you're really one for heart-to-hearts, Dad. Just forget it!"
Virgil stormed out of the Lounge, leaving a shocked and
somewhat angry Jeff Tracy in his wake.
"WHAT THE
HELL IS GOING ON AROUND HERE?!?!?" Jeff yelled to the empty
room.
Gordon and
Alan had tired of splashing in the pool and, as if Jeff needed
any more surprises that night, came waltzing into the Lounge
completely nude, as if it were the most natural thing on
Earth.
"BOYS!" he
bellowed.
"What?"
they asked in unison, frowning.
"Put some
clothes on! Kyrano, Grandma and Tin-Tin will be returning
soon. You can't be standing here like that when they do."
"Oh,"
Gordon snickered, "like Tin-Tin's never seen a naked Tracy
before." Alan punched him in the arm. Hard. "OW!"
"What did
you just say?" Jeff asked, his face turning scarlet.
"Shut up,
Gordon, you jackass!" Alan fumed, fists at the ready.
"Hey,
knock it off, you little hothead!" Gordon retorted.
"Just you
keep your mouth shut about Tin-Tin!"
"Who's
gonna make me, Squirt, you?"
"Don't
call me that!" Alan roared, lunging for his brother.
"Boys! You
stop fighting this instant!"
"I'll call
you whatever I want, you whiny little shit!"
"Screw you
all to hell you little weakling!"
"I am
not a weakling!"
"Yeah,
that's why you can't do heavy rescue, wimp!"
"Boys, get
off each other NOW!" Jeff tried to move in to break them up,
but instead found himself getting kicked and punched. He could
do nothing but back away and pray they didn't kill each other.
"You know
I have a bad back!"
"Yeah,
because you can't even pilot a Hydrofoil right. That's why
your sorry ass got stuck with Thunderbird 4!"
"Yeah,
well the only reason you've got Thunderbird 3 is because Dad
wants to get rid of you for a month at a time!"
"That's
not true!" Alan yelled. Then, just as quickly as the fight
started, it was over. Alan came to his feet and walked up to
his dazed father. "Is it?"
"What?"
"Is what
Gordon said true?"
"Of course
it is, you stupid jerk," Gordon interjected, nursing a large
bruise forming on his stomach.
"Shut up,
mermaid," Alan hissed. "So? Father? Is that true? You sent me
off to be an astronaut so you could get rid of me?"
"No, it's
not true. I sent you to astronaut training because I thought
it would discipline you. And because I wanted you to share in
my love of space."
"Discipline me? Jeezus, Father, I'm not a flippin' kid!"
"You were
back then, son. You were out of control. You nearly destroyed
an entire building."
"I see.
So...let me get this straight...I'm a hotheaded, out of
control little shithead that you're glad to be rid of every
other month on that damned space station."
"That's
not what I said."
"You
didn't have to!"
Alan,
Gordon and Jeff didn't realize Grandma, Kyrano and Tin-Tin had
returned and were walking into the Lounge at this very moment.
"Oh!"
Tin-Tin exclaimed, covering her eyes with her hands and
running out of the room.
"Hey, you
scared your girlfriend without any clothes on!" Gordon
guffawed, earning him an evil glare.
"I'll deal
with you later!" he said to Gordon. Then he turned back
to his father as Grandma and Kyrano scurried back to the
kitchen. "And you...you can take your piece of shit
astronaut job and shove it up your ass! I'm through!"
Alan
turned heel and headed for his bedroom while Gordon laughed
uncontrollably from the couch in the middle of the room.
"He
finally gave it to you!"
"Gordon,
what is going on here? You boys have lost your minds!"
"No, we've
just finally grown balls enough to speak them, Dad." He rose
from the couch, oblivious of the fact he was in his birthday
suit, and looked his father right in the eyes. "Everything
Alan says is true, at least that's how you see me. I
know you do."
"What are
you talking about?"
"I'm the
weakest one of all of us. That's why you gave me Thunderbird
4. It's not as strenuous as the other vehicles. The rescues
are easier because they're in water. My back's screwed up, so
I'm pretty much useless to you as a real member of
International Rescue." Gordon's voice was low and full of
pain, but he put up a brave front. "I know you're ashamed of
me. I'm not as strong as Virgil or as smart as Scott or as
useful as John or as fearless as Alan. I'm the boy you want to
hide under the water, the one who can't hack it out on real
rescues."
Jeff shook
his head. Who was next now? John? "Gordon, please, that
couldn't be further from the truth. I admire you for what you
go through every time Pod 4 is dropped into the water. I know
that has to hurt your back, but you endure without complaint.
You are steadfast and even-keeled. You always make us laugh
and keep even the direst situations from getting to us. You
have a gift, and I respect every facet of the man you are."
When he
spoke, Gordon's voice was barely a whisper. "I don't believe
you."
Jeff
frowned, looking deep into his son's eyes before Gordon turned
on his heel and left. He could do nothing but stare after him
as Gordon walked determinedly away. Sagging into the chair
behind his desk, Jeff put his head in his hands. He was
this close to putting his fist through a wall just as
Kyrano, Grandma and Tin-Tin entered the room.
"Jeff?"
Grandma asked as the three approached his desk. "What's going
on?"
"I don't
know, Mother," he replied quietly. "I just don't know."
"I've
activated the view screens in each of their rooms."
"Thank
you, Tin-Tin. And they're all present and accounted for?"
"Yes, Mr.
Tracy. Would you mind explaining to us what's happened?"
"I can't
figure it out. They were fine when they left for the rescue,
and even afterward when they reported in from their
Thunderbirds. It was after Scott finished showering that he
went into a tirade in the Lounge. When I confronted him in his
room, he just went crazy. Then I came back out here and found
Virgil pounding at the piano. He pretty much blew a gasket the
same way Scott did. And then Alan and Gordon came in dressed
in nothing more than their birthday suits and started
fighting."
"Why would
they act in such a manner, Sir?"
"I wish I
could tell you, Kyrano. Brains, any ideas?"
"W-Well,
it's, uh, pretty clear th-they aren't themselves. C-Can you
tell me m-more about this island Cumbaquay?"
Jeff
relayed what he knew to the group as they all watched the vid
monitors showing each of the boys in their bedrooms. Suddenly
Tin-Tin screamed. "Scott!"
"Oh, my
God!" Jeff cried, racing to the patio doors. Tin-Tin and
Brains were in hot pursuit while Kyrano held Grandma, trying
his best to soothe her.
They ran
full-boar down the steps and around to the left. When they
arrived at the place below Scott's balcony, they skidded to a
halt, staring at a small ledge about six feet from the edge of
the house where Scott lay motionless. Tin-Tin began to cry.
"I'll get
him," Jeff said as he began climbing the side of the cliff.
"You two get back in there and keep an eye on the boys."
Tin-Tin
led Grandma and her father to Grandma's room. She could sense
neither of them wanted to be alone right now, but she wanted
them to stay hidden until they could figure out what was
happening to the Tracy boys. Tin-Tin was quite frightened.
They had always been sweet and kind, full of love and respect
for each other and everyone around them. How had this changed
so suddenly?
Brains
stayed and watched the vids showing the rooms of Alan, Gordon
and Virgil. The latter looked like he was asleep on the floor
while Gordon sat in his desk chair crying and Alan sat out on
his patio with his arms crossed, a mean look on his face.
Brains flipped through the Rolodex in his mind, trying
desperately to figure out what could be causing their odd
behavior.
"I
wonder..." he mused, sitting down in Jeff's chair and flipping
on the computer console behind the desk.
Jeff
managed to make it up to the ledge with only a few scrapes
here and there on his hands. He found Scott seemingly passed
out. Jeff sat down next to his boy and looked at his peaceful
face, so different from the angry man he'd encountered a mere
hour before. "What's happened to you, my son?" he asked sadly.
Suddenly
Scott's eyes snapped open. Jeff couldn't help himself...he
flinched, wondering what would be next. But contrary to what
he expected, Scott's eyes suddenly filled with tears that
overflowed onto his cheeks as he began to cry. He grabbed his
father's pant legs and pulled himself up until he was grabbing
his shirt and jacket, then finally buried his face in his
chest, sobbing so hard Jeff could feel the wetness soak
through his clothing.
"Scott,
what is it? What's wrong?" he asked, wrapping his arms around
the shaking body in his lap.
But Scott
either couldn't or wouldn't speak, so Jeff just let him
cry, gently rocking him to and fro as he stroked his hair and
back. Just the sound of Scott in such anguish cut him to the
quick. He was confused and frightened...he was hurt and
sad...he just didn't know which feeling to feel first.
Tin-Tin
had returned to the Lounge and was watching the monitors while
Brains headed for his Lab. He had an idea, but needed to do
further research on his supercomputer. Tin-Tin watched the
boys, wondering where Mr. Tracy and Scott were.
Suddenly,
Virgil jumped up off the floor, startling her. He ran to the
door before she could even get out of the chair, and was
standing against the painting of the rocket before her hand
hit the COM link to the Lab. She watched as the picture
flipped backwards, carrying Virgil far beneath toward his
ship.
"Brains!
It's Virgil! He's on his way to Thunderbird 2!"
"What?!?
O-Okay, d-don't worry, uh, Tin-Tin. I'll jam her so she can't
start." Brains turned and punched some commands into his
computer.
The chute
dropped Virgil into the pilot's chair in the cockpit of
Thunderbird 2. The chair folded and clicked into place on its
stand. Virgil reached out his left hand and pulled a lever
towards him. He expected the lights to come on and the
steering unit to start moving toward him.
But
nothing happened.
He flicked
the lever back and forth again and again. Still nothing. "YOU
BASTARD!" he screamed, fists clenched. "YOU LOCKED ME OUTTA MY
OWN SHIP!"
Brains had
opened a COM link to Thunderbird 2. He sighed in relief when
Virgil yelled, knowing at least he wouldn't be able to get the
ship airborne. He decided he'd better lock down the other
Thunderbirds and Pod vehicles as well. One-by-one he sent
lockout commands to all of them until at last, twenty minutes
later, his mission was complete.
"I don't
believe it," he whispered as he returned to his research. "For
the first time in almost five years, International Rescue is
non-operational."
Tin-Tin
couldn't stand it anymore. While Alan had fallen asleep out on
his balcony, Gordon had continued crying uncontrollably for
over thirty minutes. She, too, had begun to cry. She reasoned
that since Alan was asleep, she could steal into Gordon's room
for a moment to see if she could help.
She crept
down the hall and stopped at his door. She could hear him now,
and her heart broke. Softly she entered, closing the door
behind her.
"Gordon?"
she called out.
He stopped
just long enough to lift his head and look at her. "What are
you doing here?" he choked.
"I want to
help."
"The only
way you can help is to stop loving Alan."
"What?!?"
"Never
mind. Just go away," he whispered, rocking back and forth on
the balcony floor.
"No, I
will not go away, Gordon. You're in pain. Why?"
"Because
of you, Tin-Tin."
"Me? What
on Earth do you mean?"
"Why did
you have to love Alan, Tin-Tin? Is it because he's stronger
and heartier than me? Or because he has dashing blonde hair
and blue eyes and I don't?"
Realization dawning, Tin-Tin covered her mouth with her hand.
"Oh, my," she breathed.
Gordon
sniffled and came to his feet, turning his back to her and
leaning his elbows on the balcony railing. "I can't believe
you've never noticed," he said quietly.
"Gordon,
I-I'm sorry, I had no idea."
"No
kidding. Anyway, it doesn't matter. You and Alan are an item.
I just have to deal with it. Every day of every year. Deal
with seeing you go gaga over him every time he returns from a
rescue. Deal with you and he sitting together in the same
chair even when there are five empty ones around. I just have
to deal."
Tin-Tin
approached him carefully. She'd truly had no idea that,
"You're in love with me."
"Brilliant
deduction, Sherlock," he said, smiling wryly.
"I-I don't
know what to say."
"Don't say
anything. There isn't anything to say. Just leave me
alone."
"I don't
want to."
"I don't
care what you want! You've made your decision!" he yelled, his
eyes darkening. "Just go! Go to your lover!"
Tin-Tin
backed away, tears welling up in her eyes. "I'm so sorry," she
said before running out of the room.
Gordon
looked over the balcony and wondered how far down it actually
was to the ground below.
Scott's
tears had finally subsided and his body heaved with leftover
dry sobs.
"Talk to
me, son," he pleaded, his voice barely audible.
"I...I
miss Mom!" Scott wailed, clinging to his father like a lost
child.
"I miss
her, too, Scott."
"It's so
unfair! Why did she have to die? Why???"
"I don't
know. I don't know. But that's why we do what we do. In memory
of your mother. We save others' lives so they don't have to
feel this pain."
Suddenly
the angry Scott was back. He jumped to his feet, nearly
knocking Jeff over the edge of the cliff.
"Why the
hell should anyone else be spared this?!?" he yelled. "If I
have to hurt like this, why should I care what other people go
through?!?"
Jeff came
to his feet. "Scott, I don't have all the answers. I'm doing
the best I can, doing what I know how to do. How can I help
you?"
"You
can't, Dad. Mom's gone. You can never make that better."
"I'm
sorry, Scott. Truly."
"Yeah,
you're sorry you got stuck with us. That's why I raised
my brothers!" he spat before skidding and sliding down the
cliff to the ground below.
Jeff shook
his head and sank back onto the ledge. Pulling his knees up,
he rested his arms and head upon them. "Oh, Lucy, what have I
done to our sons? What have I done?"
Tin-Tin
returned to the Lounge. She sat in Jeff's chair for a few
moments letting herself cry before looking up to the vid
monitors. Scott's room was empty. Virgil's was empty. Gordon
was rocking to and fro on his patio again, but it looked like
he wasn't crying anymore. Her eyes came to rest on Alan's
room. She jumped to her feet.
Alan's
room was empty.
"Oh, no!
Alan! Where could you be?"
Brains had
just figured out...or thought he'd figured out...what
might be at the root of the Tracy boys' afflictions, when he
heard a sound coming from the open com link. It sounded
like...crying. He turned the volume up and continued to
listen. He could tell it was Virgil...even just crying,
Virgil's voice came through unmistakably. Brains frowned. He'd
never seen any of them cry. Not a one. Slowly he came to his
feet and headed for Thunderbird 2.
Alan felt
extremely smart. He'd made it down to Thunderbird 3, only to
discover that Brains had mechanically locked it so the engines
wouldn't fire.
"I fixed
him!" he crowed. "Guess he's not the only genius in the
house!"
Through
the fog that had settled over his brain, Alan thought he was
doing the most logical thing in the world. He was certain his
brother John hated space duty as much as he did, if not more,
so he was going up to Thunderbird 5 to bring John home. Home.
"Ha!" Alan
barked, slamming his fist into the console. "Father hates all
of us. We're just slaves to him so he can live out his damned
dream. Well, we'll see who has the last laugh in this,
Father! Only one more set of adjustments and I'll be on my
way. Just you try and stop me!"
Jeff
gathered himself together and slid down the edge of the cliff.
He'd no idea where Scott had gone, but decided he should check
up on the rest of his family before attempting to locate him
again.
"Virgil?"
Brains whispered as he entered Thunderbird 2 cockpit via the
passenger elevator.
He sat
hunkered over the ship's steering unit, body shaking like a
leaf trembling in the wind. He sniffled, but kept his head
down. "What do you want?" his voice echoed through the hollow
created by his arms.
Brains
wasn't quite sure what to do. Of all the brothers, Virgil's
size alone made him the most intimidating, even though he was,
by far, the gentlest of all of them. "Uh...I, uh, heard you
crying and, uh...well..."
Virgil sat
up and turned to look at the engineer who was cowering in the
elevator. He laughed. "Geez, Brains, I'm not gonna hurt you."
"Oh.
O-Okay, Virgil." Brains stepped out of the elevator and took a
few steps. "What's wrong?"
"I-I don't
know. I can't...I can't think straight, I-I-" he struggled.
"I know,
Virgil, I know. Just try. Try for me. What are you thinking?"
"Just...anger. I'm so angry."
"Why?"
"I don't
know. I'm angry at Father, at Scott...I was angry with you for
shutting Thunderbird 2 down."
"S-Sorry
about that. I-I was afraid you'd, uh, you know."
"I know.
I'm just...now I'm sad. This overwhelming despair, I can't--I
can't explain it. It's so hopeless. Everything is so
hopeless."
"Virgil, I
think you may have been infected by something on Cumbaquay."
"Huh?"
Brains
could see Virgil's momentary clarity was rapidly beginning to
fade. "Why, uh, why don't you c-come with me?"
Virgil
nodded dumbly and allowed the smaller man to lead him up in
the passenger elevator.
Jeff
looked up as Brains and Virgil entered the Lounge. When
Virgil's eyes rested upon his father, his face took on a mask
of anger once more. Brains and Jeff both noticed, and Brains
had the...well, the brains...to shuffle him off to his Lab
post-haste.
Jeff
wondered where everyone else was. He could see Gordon in his
room, but Alan and Tin-Tin were nowhere to be found. Suddenly
he heard a sound that made his heart stop. He jumped to his
feet and pressed a button on the back of his desk. He leapt
onto the settee just as it disappeared beneath the floor.
"Good God,
no. Tell me he's not," Jeff muttered, willing the damn settee
to go faster.
"NO!
ALAAAAAN!" Tin-Tin cried as Thunderbird 3's engines roared to
life. She was close enough that she felt the heat of the
rockets and the blast knocked her backwards onto the floor.
She could only watch helplessly as Thunderbird 3 roared into
the sky.
CHAPTER THREE
"John,
come in!" Jeff barked into the mike on his desk. Tin-Tin cried
quietly from her perch on the corner of the desk.
"Thunderbird 5 here. What's the matter, Father?"
"John, do
you have Thunderbird 3 on your radar?"
He took a
moment to check his radar screen before nodding and replying,
"Yes."
"What's
his course?"
"Same as
always, looks like he's headed here. Father, is it Alan?"
Jeff just
nodded.
"Why is
Alan coming up here now? I'm not due for shore leave 'til
Saturday."
"John, I
think I'd better tell you the whole story."
It took
almost half-an-hour, but finally Jeff had conveyed everything
to his second eldest son, who sat in quiet shock in front of
the vid camera.
"So you
mean to tell me every one of my brothers has gone mad?"
"Yes,
that's what I'm saying. There's no telling what Alan might do
in his present state of mind."
"What
should I do, Father?"
"Hope to
hell he docks with you. And pray, son. Just pray."
"F.A.B,"
John replied quietly. "Thunderbird 5 out."
"Uh, M-Mr.
Tracy?"
Jeff
sighed as he leaned back in his chair. "Yes, Brains?"
"I think I
may have f-figured out what's, uh, wrong with them."
He perked
up. "What is it, Brains?"
"Well, I,
uh, I got Virgil down to my laboratory and managed to sedate
him. He was awfully angry."
"I'm sure
he was."
"I took a
sample of his blood. I found, uh, some sort of virus. It
attaches itself to the neurons of the brain, inhibiting some
of them and increasing the speeds at which others of them
fire."
Jeff had
barely noticed Brains' lack of stuttering.
"I found a
published treatment of a similar case about thirty years ago.
A sociologist, April Jade, and her assistant found Cumbaquay
quite by accident and decided to remain on the island to study
the inhabitants and their way of life. Seven months after they
first landed, the assistant returned to Peru where she
recounted a horrific story about how Dr. Jade and several of
the indigenous peoples became violent and went insane. In the
end, all five people committed suicide."
Jeff paled
as he thought of Scott's leap from the balcony.
"I, uh,
took the liberty of contacting that assistant, one Clarissa
Maycombe. I spoke with her at length and found disturbing
similarities between Dr. Jade's behavior and that of your
sons."
"So you
think they have contracted this virus?"
"It seems
to be the only logical conclusion."
"Where's
the antidote?"
Brains
looked at the floor, fiddling with the pencil in his hands.
"That's just it, M-Mr. Tracy. There is no known cure."
"No,"
Tin-Tin whimpered.
"Don't
tell me that, Brains."
"W-Well,
there is one possibility. It's a remote one, b-but it's our
only chance."
"Well,
what is it?"
"Mrs.
Maycombe researched the virus for almost ten years after the
incident on Cumbaquay. But the grant funding her research was
retracted after she failed to provide anything more than
conjecture. She feels the virus was somehow plant-based, and
identified one plant on the entire island she thought might
hold a cure. But Cumbaquay was put under quarantine, so she
hasn't ever been able to get back there to get a sample of the
plant for use in a potential vaccine."
"Under
quarantine!?!" Jeff bellowed, rising from his chair. "Why
didn't it show up registered as such when John identified it?"
"Well, uh,
it was just removed from the A-list and dropped down to R.
Only a few weeks ago."
"Has this
Mrs. Maycombe been able to get back to get a sample of the
plant?"
"N-no,
Sir. She's in failing health and too old now to do anything
more about it. And nobody else wants to go to the island,
they're afraid of contracting the disease."
"From what
I've seen, it's well they should be. There's only one thing to
do, Brains. I have to travel to Cumbaquay and find the plant."
"I-I'm
sorry, Sir, but you w-wouldn't be able to find that plant if
it reached up and g-grabbed you by the seat of your p-pants."
Jeff
chuckled, then something occurred to him. He loosened the
collar of his shirt. "Is it just me or is it getting hot in
here?"
"O-Oh,
no," Brains moaned.
"What?"
"Mrs.
Maycombe told me th-the first sign of infection is that the
patient feels unbearably h-hot. Then a f-fever sets in and
finally madness."
Jeff
paled. "Are you saying I'm infected?"
"Did you
touch any of them? Skin to skin?"
"Yes. Yes,
I did. I touched Scott when he was out on the ledge. I still
have no idea where he went."
"Oh,
d-dear. That's what I was afraid of. Mrs. Maycombe said her
findings showed the virus could only be transmitted by
skin-to-skin contact. Tin-Tin, have you touched any of the
boys?"
"No,
Brains. I have not."
"I touched
Virgil's clothing as I was leading him to the Lab, but after
that I wore protective gloves. H-How about M-Mrs. Tracy and
Kyrano?"
"I took
them to Mrs. Tracy's room shortly after we returned from
shopping. They haven't left as far as I know," Tin-Tin
replied.
"Mr., uh,
Tracy, I need to be the one to go to Cumbaquay. If you're
getting sick, the madness could kick in before you find the
plant I need."
"I'm going
with Brains," Tin-Tin announced.
"You most
certainly are not!" Jeff said.
"Mr.
Tracy, please. I cannot sit here and do nothing. Brains might
need help. I have the scientific expertise to provide that
help."
Jeff
sighed. "All right. What you say makes sense. First, go and
tell Kyrano and Grandma to gather enough food and water to
last themselves a few days. Tell them to stay locked in
Mother’s room no matter what they hear happening outside the
door, and they are not to come out until you and Brains give
them the all-clear."
"Yes, Mr.
Tracy." Tin-Tin left the room as Brains walked closer to
Jeff's desk.
"Brains,
contact John and bring him up to speed so he knows what he's
dealing with when Alan arrives."
"Okay. Uh,
if you want, I can sedate Scott and Gordon. To keep them from
harming themselves until we return. I-I could sedate you as
well."
"I think
sedating the boys is a good idea. Where's Virgil now?"
"I brought
him back up to his room on a hover stretcher. He's resting
comfortably in his bed."
"Right.
But since you're not infected and I am...I'll do the
sedating."
"What
about you?"
"I can't
be sedated now, Brains. I have a sick son hurtling through
space to God-knows-where and another all alone and worried to
death on Thunderbird 5."
"B-But
Sir..."
Jeff held
his hand up. "Leave me with a shot of the medication. As soon
as I start to lose my grip on reality, I'll inject myself."
"I don't
know you'll realize it when you do."
"I have to
take that chance. For Alan's sake."
Brains
nodded. "I'll just fetch the syringes from my Lab."
Jeff
watched as Tin-Tin and Brains left for Cumbaquay aboard
Tin-Tin's little plane 'Ladybird'. He then set out to find his
oldest son, whom he hadn't seen since the incident on the
ledge. He decided to start in the roundhouse.
Gordon,
although quite sad and zombie-like, hadn't seemed nearly as
insane as his brothers. It had been fairly easy to jab him
with the needle, and without protest he was out like a light.
Jeff had tucked him comfortably into bed, and then gone to
check on Virgil. He'd smiled at the way Brains had covered
Virgil as well. That Brains was an old softy beneath his hard
science exterior.
Finally,
he'd spoken through the door to his mother and Kyrano,
assuring them they were doing everything possible to save the
boys. He neglected to add that he was infected as well,
deciding they would worry even more if they knew.
Now, as he
took the steps to the roundhouse two-at-a-time, he started
feeling the effects of the fever. He was positively burning
up. Sweat began forming at his hairline and trickling down his
neck and face. He stopped at the roundhouse entrance, setting
his mind firmly. He was not going to give in to this
virus, no matter what. He had to stay strong. For his boys.
As he
entered, he heard a strangled sound, like something was...like
someone...was having trouble breathing!
"Scott!"
he yelled, straining to tell which direction the sound was
coming from. "Scott, are you in here?!?"
Jeff
darted to the left, eyes scanning everywhere at once. When he
was about halfway 'round, he spotted something that froze his
heart in mid-beat.
"NO!
SCOOOOOOTT!!!!"
Swaying to
and fro in front of him was his son, swinging from the
ceiling. He was still alive...the strangled sounds were coming
from him as he struggled against the rope around his neck.
Jeff grabbed his legs and lifted him up, allowing Scott to
gasp in some air.
"Grab the
top of the rope, son!" Jeff ordered. "Hold yourself up while I
pull the chair over!"
He looked
up and saw that Scott had indeed grasped the rope above his
head. He reached for the chair Scott had obviously kicked over
and stood it upright, allowing his son's feet to rest upon it.
He watched as Scott removed the noose and started falling off
the chair. It took all Jeff's strength to stop his fall and
carry him to the nearest chaise lounge.
Tears
sprang to Jeff's eyes as he took in the rope burn forming a
perfect necklace around his son's throat. Scott was still
gulping in large breaths of air, but seemed on the whole to be
okay.
"My God,"
Jeff breathed. "You almost gave me a heart attack. And I'm
serious."
"Why did
you stop me?" Scott coughed. His strength drained, he sank
back onto the lounge.
"What the
hell kind of question is that? I saved you because...because I
love you, dammit!"
Scott eyed
his father warily. When was the last time his father had
spoken those words to him?
"Listen to
me, son. You're sick. You contracted a virus on Cumbaquay, you
and your brothers all did. I've got it, too. Now, Brains is
looking for a cure, but until he finds it, we're all going to
be sedated."
Scott
shook his head. His father was speaking too quickly; he just
couldn't grasp the words. "Huh?"
"Here,
just let me see your arm."
Before
Scott even knew what was happening, Jeff had stuck him with
the syringe and emptied its contents into his arm. That done,
he leaned back in the chair for a moment to gather his wits.
He never ever thought he'd see the day when Scott Tracy tried
to kill himself. He prayed he'd never see it again.
John
fiddled with the sash on his uniform as he watched Thunderbird
3 come nearer and nearer. "Come on, Alan," he said, staring at
the blip that contained his little brother within. "Come see
Johnny-boy."
Both Jeff
and John had tried unsuccessfully to reach Alan by vid or COM
link, but Alan was either ignoring them or had shut down the
communications system altogether.
"Come on,
you have to be coming here. You just have to."
John had
never felt this helpless, not even during the most harrowing
rescues his brothers had gone on. Alan was sick. Very, very
sick, from what his father had told him. If he didn't
come to Thunderbird 5, what would John do? He couldn't just
let Alan keep going.
Then
something triggered in the back of John's mind. Something he
remembered reading several years ago in one of Brains' manuals
on Thunderbird 5. He tore his eyes from the radar screen and
ran to a nearby closet. He looked at his watch as he opened
the closet door. If Alan were going to dock with him,
he only had about twenty-five minutes before their paths would
cross.
That
didn't leave John a lot of time.
Jeff had
loaded Scott onto a hover stretcher and ferried him back to
the villa through the tunnel. He carefully tucked him into
bed, checked on Gordon and Virgil, spoke briefly to his mother
and Kyrano, and headed back out to the Lounge. He took off his
jacket and rolled up his sleeves. He was deathly hot, but
worked hard to keep his brain functioning.
"Base
calling Thunderbird 5. Come in, John."
But John
didn't answer. A chill ran up and down Jeff's spine as he
checked his chronometer. Could Alan have docked already? What
was going on up there?
"John,
this is your father. Come in!"
"Right
here, Father!" John finally answered as his vid clicked on.
"Jesus,
son, don't do that to me. Has Alan arrived yet?"
"No,
Father, and there's only about fifteen minutes 'til he reaches
me. I've, uh, I've come up with a contingency plan, but I'll
have to work fast."
"What is
it?"
"Tell you
what, I'll leave my wristband line open and talk while I
work."
"Okay."
Jeff was
sweating profusely now. He took out his handkerchief and had
it soaked within seconds of it touching his face and neck. He
waited as John's vid winked out, wondering how Tin-Tin and
Brains were faring, praying they were finding what they
needed.
"I should
be able to set it down on the beach there," Tin-Tin said as
they flew over Cumbaquay.
"Right.
Let's do it," Brains replied.
Ten
minutes later, Brains and Tin-Tin were nearing the scene of
the first attack. They reasoned the plant in question must be
in that general area, since that's where the dogs had first
gone berserk. They used hand-held scanners programmed to
search for this particular plant's bio-readings. They scanned
left and right in a fan out from each other.
"I
certainly hope no other animals have gotten sick," Tin-Tin
commented, her eyes glued to her scanner.
"M-Me,
too. I'm afraid I don't make a very good d-defender."
Tin-Tin
smiled. Brains was always putting himself down even though he
was the most amazing man she'd ever met. Well, and she blushed
at the thought, besides Alan, that was. Then she frowned as
she recalled Alan's current predicament. She prayed he
wouldn't do anything foolish, then pushed those thoughts from
her mind as her scanner began to beep.
"Brains! I
think I've found one!"
"L-Lemme
see!"
They moved
quickly in the direction the scanner had indicated. Within
five minutes, they were standing over a tiny light-green plant
that stood no more than five inches high. It had three leaves;
all bearing three yellowish spots each.
"Th-That's
it," Brains confirmed. "That looks exactly like the picture
Mrs. Maycombe sent me. The Corginus Machinis. Quickly, put the
gloves and masks on."
Tin-Tin
nodded and dug into her backpack. Since they knew the virus
was transmitted by skin contact, they covered their hands with
gloves and their faces with protective masks. The rest of
their bodies were fully covered in one-piece flight suits and
boots.
"Right.
Open the container, Tin-Tin. I'm gonna grab it."
She did as
requested and watched anxiously as Brains reached down to the
base of the plant and pulled gently. The plant came out of the
ground with minimal resistance, but just as Brains was about
to place it into the container, he yelped and dropped it.
"Brains!
What happened?"
"O-Oh, no.
I-It has th-thorns. Tiny ones." Brains held up his right index
finger for Tin-Tin to see the spot of blood oozing out of a
hole in his glove.
"Oh,
Brains. Do you think you'll be infected?"
"I don't
know, but w-we have to move even f-faster now. If I am, I-I
won't have the presence of mind to c-create an antidote!"
Tin-Tin
reached into her backpack and pulled out what looked like long
tweezers. She picked up the plant by its stem and placed it
into the container, tightly sealing it with a special digital
combination only she and Brains knew.
They
returned to Ladybird and loaded all their gear inside. "I have
to dress that wound," Tin-Tin said.
"N-No!
Tin-Tin, if you touch me, and I'm infected, you'll get it,
t-too! We can't all of us be insane."
She
sighed. "You're right, of course. Let's get back to the island
and see how they're doing."
"R-Right."
"So what
is it you're doing, John?"
"Well,
Father," John replied as he began flipping switches and
buttons. He pulled a panel off the front of the Control Panel
and lay down to gain better access to its guts. "I remembered
reading something in one of Thunderbird 5's manuals a few
years back. Something about making her move."
"Making
her move?!?"
"Yeah.
See, I figure if Alan overshoots me, or if he looks like he's
going to, I need to be able to stop him."
"Making
her move?" Jeff could feel himself slipping, could feel his
mind going. But he couldn't. He just couldn't. Not yet.
"Right.
Hang on." John fiddled with a few wires before continuing.
"Turns out Brains built a set of rockets into this baby."
"Yes, I
knew they were there. We're supposed to use them if we ever
have to move the satellite."
"Exactly.
So my thought is, why not use them to stop Alan?"
"Well,
what the hell are you gonna do, ram him?"
John sat
up and looked into his father's eyes. "It'd sure beat letting
him get past me."
"John, I
can't ask you to--"
"You're
not asking me, Father. I'm doing it, no matter what you say. I
can't just sit here kicking my heels up if he flies by. I have
to do something!"
"I know
you do, son. I know you do. But...how will you survive? The
impact alone would blow you both to pieces!"
"A-ha,
that's what I thought at first, too. But I won't actually ram
him, Father. If I jet air through the gravity compensators,
combine that with the blast from the rockets and throw open
the airlock in precise conjunction, I can create a disturbance
so strong it'll slow Thunderbird 3 enough for me to fire
Thunderbird 5's grabs and send an electronic command to shut
her engines down."
Jeff shook
his head. Not now, dammit. Not now. "You really think
you can do all that at once?"
John
looked across the room at his radar screen. "We're about to
find out!" he shouted, scrambling to his feet. "He's changing
course!"
"What?!?!"
John raced
to the airlock and hurriedly put his space suit on. Then he
returned to the panel. The space suit's helmet had a built-in
communicator, so he used that for an open line to Base.
"A few
more adjustments..." he muttered.
"John?"
"Yeah,
Dad?"
"I'm...about to go, son. I'm infected, too. I-I can feel
myself slipping."
"What?
Dad! Brains didn't tell me you got it!"
"Sorry,
I-I..."
"Father?"
"Just save
Alan. Save him and get him home. Please."
John felt
tears sting his eyes. "I will, Father. I promise you. I will."
"I love
you, John. Go carefully."
John
choked out a sob. "I love you, too, Father."
"Base
out."
"This is
Ladybird calling Tracy Island. Come in, please."
Tin-Tin
and Brains looked at each other. Why wasn't Jeff answering?
"Ladybird
calling Tracy Island. Requesting clearance to land. Over."
Nothing.
"I-I guess
we should assume M-Mr. Tracy gave himself the sedative,"
Brains offered.
"Right.
I'm landing."
Ten
minutes later, Brains and Tin-Tin rushed into the Lounge. "Mr.
Tracy!" they cried.
Jeff sat
straight as an arrow behind his desk, his hands gripping the
edge of it 'til they'd gone ash white with the effort. His
eyes stared straight ahead and his body trembled slightly.
"Mr.
Tracy, are you all right?"
"Try-ing...to...keep...con-trol,"
he ground out.
"W-We have
the plant. Just t-take the sedative. W-We'll find a way to
cure you."
One
solitary tear rolled down Jeff's cheek.
"Keep...con-tact...John...try-ing...to...save...Al-an."
"All
right, Mr. Tracy, we will, we will," Tin-Tin soothed.
"I'll take
him to his room," Brains offered. "J-Just in case."
"Okay.
I'll start collecting cell samples from the plant."
"Cover up,
Tin-Tin. Every inch of you."
"I will."
Brains
went to Jeff as Tin-Tin headed for the Lab. "Can, uh, can you
walk?"
Jeff
nodded. "Hurry, Brains. I-I can't fight it...much...longer."
Brains
helped him up by his arm and led him slowly back to his
bedroom. As Jeff lay down upon the bed, Brains prepared the
injection.
"I-I'm
so...angry!" Jeff seethed, using every last ounce of his
willpower to keep the feelings at bay.
"I know,
Sir. I-I know. Here. Y-You'll sleep n-now."
Quick as a
flash, Brains had injected Jeff with the drug, and it knocked
him out immediately. It was only then that Brains realized
they were truly alone. Grandma and Kyrano were there, of
course, but they were not going to be at all helpful in this
current situation. Tin-Tin was a pretty delicate flower, and
Brains was...well, he was a geek. At that moment, the engineer
felt the weight of possible failure close in.
"N-No, I
c-can't think that way," he stammered, rising to his feet. He
took Jeff's shoes off and covered him with his blankets. "I
w-won't fail you, M-Mr. Tracy."
"Alan!
Alan don't you overshoot me!" John yelled into the mike. But
it was no use. Alan still wasn't acknowledging. "Okay, little
brother. You asked for it!"
John
watched through the view port as Thunderbird 3 approached just
to the left of his position. Alan would pass only about
half-a-mile from the edge of Thunderbird 5. John took this as
a good sign. As close as he was, John's little trick might
just work. Or blow them both to hell. Either way, John
realized, it was now or never.
Alan had
paced his ship from stem to stern and back again a hundred
times. He'd ridden the lift up and down from the Lounge to the
Cockpit and back at least fifty.
When he'd
first taken off from Tracy Island, he'd been sure he was doing
the right thing. John didn't want to be on Thunderbird 5, he
was certain of it. But as one hour had passed and then two,
Alan began to wonder if he were right about John. After all,
he and John had never really been close. They were never
together except during change of rotation. He hadn't spent any
real time with his brother in five years.
So how
could he be sure what John was thinking? In his crazed mind
that developed into a surety that John was somehow in it with
their father, that John and Jeff together had organized the
whole plot to make Alan rotate with John, getting him off the
island for a month at a stretch.
The nearer
he drew to Thunderbird 5, the more certain he became that he
was right. "Well, I'll just show you!" he growled as he
changed course. "I'll go out and find a place to live where
no one is out to get me and where everyone thinks
I'm the important one. That stupid kid Umbabwe thought I was a
god. I can find others who will think I am, too!"
With that,
Alan was half-an-hour away from passing by his last hope in
the universe.
"Y-Yes, I
think this is it. I think it is!" Brains fairly crowed.
"You have
it, Brains?"
"Yes, uh,
Tin-Tin, I believe I do! Boy, is it getting hot in this suit!"
"Brains..."
"Y-Yeah, I
know, I know. Symptoms. I have to finish this. I just
have to."
"But how
will you know it works, Brains? You'll have to test it on
someone."
Brains
looked up, straight into Tin-Tin's eyes. "If I can finish this
before I lose my mind, I'll test it on myself. I-If I don't,
you have to call for help."
Tin-Tin
nodded. If that happened, International Rescue's secrets would
surely be known by the world. Either way you looked at it, the
end was near.
CHAPTER FOUR
Brains
grew increasingly feverish as he toiled over beakers and
Erlenmeyer flasks, open flames and computer diagnostics.
Tin-Tin helped where she could, but she knew that when Brains
was at his best, he was single-minded and focused, and any
interruption by her could throw him completely off-track.
She
therefore decided to go check on the Tracys in their bedrooms,
to make sure they were still asleep and not trying to do harm
to themselves or others. She doubted Brains even realized
she'd left.
In front
of the side Control Panel on Thunderbird 5 is a chair bolted
to the floor. Having anchored himself to that chair with a
tether, John had the thumb and forefinger of his left hand
poised over two switches, and the thumb and forefinger of his
right hand poised over two more. He watched out the view port
as Thunderbird 3 came closer and closer. When it disappeared
'round to his left, John closed his eyes and counted down.
"7...6...5...4...3...2...1...0!" Quick as lightning, he
flicked all 4 switches with his fingers. The airlock opened,
sucking every molecule of fabricated air out into space. The
rockets fired and the artificial gravity containment released.
John felt Thunderbird 5 lurch violently as he was first pulled
toward the airlock, then jerked to the right as the rockets
fired.
The fourth
switch shot four sets of metal grabs out from Thunderbird 5.
As he feverishly punched a code into the computer, he felt
Thunderbird 3 yank the space station but good as the grabs
ground it to a halt. Somewhere in the back of his mind, he
exalted his success in having stopped the space ship even as
his fingers flew across the keypad to enter the 3rd party
shutdown sequence.
Lights
flashed and beeps and clicks were heard. Then there was
silence. John looked out the view port and could see the stars
outside moving past...but he knew it was Thunderbird 5 moving,
not the stars. The quick rocket blast had evidently been
strong enough to break the great station's orbit. John knew he
had to get it shut down quickly. Thunderbird 5's orbit was
highly secretive. If it moved too far away, Earth radar would
pick it up...he shuddered. He didn't even want to think about
that.
John
untied the tether from his waist and bounced across the
Control Room to the Master Control Panel. He entered a series
of commands and flipped a few switches. Finally he could see
the movement of the stars outside slowing until at last
Thunderbird 5 stopped altogether. He checked his coordinates
and found he'd drifted 82 miles. John bit his lip. Move
Thunderbird 5 now or check on Alan first? The choice was
simple.
"Check on
Alan."
Tin-Tin
tiptoed into Scott's room. To her great relief, he lay snoring
atop his sheets, having evidently kicked them off at some
point. She saw the sweat matting his hair and dripping from
his face, but knew she shouldn't touch him. So she backed out
of his room and headed for Virgil's. He was turned on his side
facing the door, snuggled down into his blankets.
Leaving
his room, she next headed for Gordon's. Tin-Tin frowned as she
recalled his seemingly drunken confession about being in love
with her. Now he lay peacefully beneath his covers, an almost
angelic smile upon his face. How could she never have noticed
his interest? But that got her to thinking about Alan, and her
stomach flip-flopped at the thought of him piloting
Thunderbird 3 half-crazed into the great nowhere of space.
Stifling
that train of thought, Tin-Tin continued on to Jeff Tracy's
room. Truth be told, she'd only been beyond the doorway twice
in the entire time she'd lived on the island, and was a bit
trepidatious to cross the threshold. She cracked the door and
peered in. Jeff was obviously having a bad dream, tossing and
turning, his sheets winding themselves around his legs and
body as he moaned in displeasure. Tin-Tin walked about halfway
across the room and, even in the dim light, could see the
sheets beneath her benefactor were soaking wet from his sweat.
She shook
her head as she watched, wishing she could somehow ease his
mind, wishing she could help him, comfort him. But she knew
that touching him could prove fatal. Still, she couldn't bear
to leave just yet. His head rolled from side to side as his
rugged face screwed itself up in an expression of anger. This
man meant so much to her. He was her second father, and she
greatly respected and admired him.
Tin-Tin
was startled out of her reverie when she heard someone enter
the room behind her. She turned to see Brains, still in
protective suit, mask and gloves, holding a bottle of
something in his hand.
"Oh,
Brains, you startled me. Have you finished it?" Then she
looked more closely at his face. His brow was furrowed and his
eyes didn't look quite right. "Brains?"
"Tin-Tin."
"Are you
all right?"
"No."
"The
virus?"
He nodded.
"What can
I do?"
"I think
this serum...will work," he ground out between clenched teeth.
"Have you
taken an injection yet?"
"No...fighting...the...anger."
"Brains,
let's get back down to the Lab, okay?" she asked evenly,
walking toward him.
"Want...to...smash...it," he hissed, raising the bottle into
the air.
"No!"
Tin-Tin cried, rushing him and reaching for the bottle.
As she
sailed through the air, she managed to grab hold of the
bottle, but a well-placed fist slammed into her, hurtling her
backwards. She landed on the floor, her back hitting the
wooden chest Jeff kept at the foot of his bed. Tin-Tin moaned
in pain. She'd saved the bottle from being smashed, but Brains
had disappeared. Moving gingerly, she got to her feet and
shuffled out of the room.
"Brains!"
she called out. "Come back!"
Suddenly
he appeared in the entrance to the hall. He'd removed his mask
and gloves and was clearly at odds with himself as several
expressions fleeted across his face in rapid fashion.
Anger...confusion...pain...sadness...anger again.
Tin-Tin
realized the sick room was only two doors away. She walked
slowly backward until she reached the doorway. Inside she knew
there would be syringes. She didn't want to be the one to give
this concoction to Brains, hell, she didn't even know if he'd
stayed sane long enough to actually make a workable vaccine.
But if she didn't try...she had to try. She just had
to.
John
checked his Locator grid. According to the readouts, Alan was
currently in the cockpit of Thunderbird 3. That being the
case, John knew he'd be able to enter the great ship through
its side hatch...so long as Alan didn't beat him there, his
younger brother would be no worse for the wear.
But John
didn't have a sedative and he had no idea what shape he'd find
Alan in once he got on board. The best thing he could think of
was tying his brother up if he became violent. Securing a
length of rope to his utility belt, John checked the Locator
one more time, confirmed Alan was still in the cockpit, and
allowed himself to float out the airlock.
He saw
that three of the grips had indeed attached to the body of
Thunderbird 3, while the fourth floated aimlessly, having
missed its target. Jetting over to the hatch, he keyed the
entry code and watched the door slide open. Pulling himself
in, he shut the door quickly behind him, relieved to find his
brother wasn't there. He decompressed and waited until the
oxygen indicators were at a safe level before removing his
helmet and gloves. Detaching the rope from his utility belt,
he opened the inner door.
There was
no sign of Alan. John headed for the Lounge, only to find it
empty as well. He got into the elevator and as it rose, prayed
long and hard for his and Alan's safety. When the lift reached
the cockpit, he caught a brief glimpse of his brother through
the window before the door slid open. Alan was in the pilot's
chair, slumped over the Control Panel.
John crept
nearer and found that his brother was, indeed, breathing, and
besides being drenched in sweat, seemed to be okay. He pushed
a few buttons on the small panel attached to his left arm and
heard the metal grabs unlocking from the ship's hull. Then he
keyed the release commands that would allow Thunderbird 3's
engines to fire. Moving as gently and quietly as he could,
John then picked Alan up and laid him on the floor.
Seating
himself in the pilot's chair, John started Thunderbird 3 and
maneuvered her so she was docked properly, her nose tucked
securely into the side of Thunderbird 5. He then went about
the task of getting his brother into a space suit.
Holding a
syringe filled with 10 cc's of the liquid from the bottle
Brains had almost smashed, Tin-Tin tiptoed into the hall...and
ran smack-dab into Virgil Tracy.
She
gasped. "Oh! Virgil!"
"Tin-Tin?
What's going on?"
"What?"
Virgil
yawned. "I feel like I've been asleep for a hundred years.
What's in the syringe?"
Well, he
seemed to be acting normal enough, but Tin-Tin was confused.
"The antidote."
"Antidote?
To what?"
"To the
virus."
"What
virus? Tin-Tin, what are you talkin' about?"
She
blinked, staring up into his eyes. "The virus you and the
others contracted on Cumbaquay."
"We
contracted a virus?"
"Don't you
remember not feeling well? Getting angry? Any of it?"
"Cumbaquay.
Sure, I remember using the Muncher to get through the jungle.
Alan tranquilized the dogs, we loaded the injured onto Med 1
and Umbabwe attacked Gordon and me before killing himself by
jumping from a tree. Then Gordon, Alan and I took the
Cumbaquayans to a hospital in Peru."
"And?"
"And what?
Tin-Tin, what's going on?"
A voice
from behind Virgil startled them both. "That's what I'd like
to know. Where is everyone?"
"Gordon?!?" Tin-Tin saw that he, too, looked perfectly normal.
They both looked a little confused, but other than that,
Tin-Tin could find no trace of the lunacy she'd both heard
about and borne witness to.
Gordon
peeked around Virgil and saw the syringe in Tin-Tin's hand.
"Who's getting the shot?"
"Oh, my
gosh, Brains!"
"What
about him?" Virgil asked.
"He's got
it! He's got the virus! This...this is his antidote...where is
he? Where did he go?"
"What
virus?" Gordon asked.
"He's in
danger, we have to find him!"
"Okay,
Tin-Tin, okay, calm down. We'll go find him," Virgil soothed.
"But...no,
you can't, you're infected, too, there's no telling what
you'll do!"
Gordon and
Virgil exchanged glances. Why was Tin-Tin acting so...crazy?
"Listen,
Tin-Tin, I feel fine." Off her look, Gordon added, "Honest, I
do."
"So do I,"
Virgil put in.
"But...I
don't understand..."
"Neither
do we, obviously. But if you say Brains is in trouble, let's
go find him. All right?"
She
nodded, following the boys down the hall.
"Where
should we look first?" Gordon asked.
"Probably
his laboratory," Tin-Tin replied, still trying to figure out
what was going on.
"Right.
Let's go."
Inside
Thunderbird 5, John battened down the hatches and prepared to
maneuver the space station back into its proper position. But
when he flipped the switch that should've started the engines,
nothing happened.
"Oh, no,"
he breathed. Next he tried turning on the gravity
compensators. Nothing. The oxygen. Negative. "I must've blown
them all out," he said to himself. "Now what?"
He turned
when something bumped into him from behind. To his surprise,
it was Alan, fully awake and trying his best to stay in one
place in the zero G of the station.
"John?"
"Alan?"
"What's
goin' on? How the heck did I get up here?"
"You don't
remember?"
Alan shook
his head. "And why are we in space suits on Thunderbird 5?"
"Cumbaquay?
The virus? Hijacking Thunderbird 3?"
"Cumbaquay
I remember. What virus? And what do you mean hijacking
Thunderbird 3? Who hijacked it?"
"Uh...you
did."
"You're
puttin' me on."
"Listen,
Alan, I don't have time to explain this right now. I honestly
don't think I could even if I tried. We have to get
Thunderbird 5 back into orbit."
"Why's she
out of orbit?" Alan frowned. What the hell was going on?
"Later,
I'll explain later. The rockets won't fire, but I have an
idea. I'll need your help."
Gordon,
Virgil and Tin-Tin made their way down the steps to Brains'
lab. Halfway down, they heard glass shattering and someone
yelling at the top of his lungs. They raced the rest of the
way down and back into Beaker Room, as Brains called it.
Gordon and Virgil skidded to a halt, causing Tin-Tin to run
right into their backs.
"Brains?!?
What are you doing?" Gordon asked.
For as
they watched from the doorway, Brains was dropping and
throwing any flask, beaker or container he could get his hands
on to the floor and against walls. He was screaming at the top
of his lungs.
"FINE!
REJECT YET ANOTHER PROPOSAL, MR. TRACY!!! NEVER YOU
MIND THAT I'VE SPENT SIX MONTHS WORKING ON IT!"
Virgil and
Gordon skittered out of the doorway, pulling Tin-Tin with
them, just as a vial of blue liquid sailed their way. It flew
through the opening, landing on the floor. CRASH! POOF!
And a small cloud of smoke rose into the air.
"That was
close," Virgil said. "What's going on with him?"
"It's the
virus, I've been trying to tell you. He's infected with the
virus."
"What
virus, Tin-Tin? I don't understand."
The
confusion plain on Tin-Tin's face slowly dissipated as one
thought occurred to her...then another...then another...until
at last she shrieked, "I think I have it! I think I have it!"
"Have
what?"
"Quickly,
the sedative. We have to give Brains the sedative!"
"I'm
getting tired of asking you 'What?' all the time," Virgil
remarked.
"Never
mind, we have to do this first, then I can try to explain,"
she replied, heading for a locked cabinet in the next room.
She returned in less than a minute holding a syringe
containing an amber liquid. "Now, I'll need your help. I can't
possibly give this to him in his present state of mind."
"What do
you want us to do?" Gordon asked.
"Hold him
down."
"But he's
flinging acid and God-knows-what-else all over the place in
there!"
"Gordon,
please, it's his only chance. If we don't get this sedative
into him, he could very well try and kill himself."
"Kill
himself?" Virgil asked, his voice rising in pitch.
"I know
what you can do," Tin-Tin said. "Put on the hazard suits we
keep down here. That way if he does get you with
something, it won't harm you."
"Good
idea," Gordon replied, heading for the closet.
"Thunderbird 3 calling Thunderbird 5. You reading me?"
"Loud and
clear, Alan. You ready?"
"I sure
hope this works."
"Yeah. If
it doesn't, we're gonna rip Thunderbird 3 to shreds. You're
certain you wanna try it?"
"F.A.B. On
a 5-second countdown. Ready?"
"Ready."
"5...4...3...2...1...0!"
Alan threw
Thunderbird 3's retros on, full-throttle. At the exact same
moment, on the other side of Thunderbird 5, John wrenched two
manual levers from 'Closed' to 'Open', one with each hand.
This act jettisoned the coagulant compound from Thunderbird
5's double walls as well as plasma from the golden meteor
deflector surrounding the great space station. The combined
force of the releasing weight and Thunderbird 3's retros were
enough to begin moving the satellite back the way it had come.
"Still in
one piece?"
"Yeah,
Alan. Still in one piece. Think you'll be able to pull her
back into orbit?"
"Piece of
cake."
John
smiled. "Right. Piece of cake."
"Father's
sure going to be pissed about all the damage."
"I don't
think he will. Not after he finds out you're okay."
"Why
wouldn't I be okay?"
"Never
mind."
"Quickly!"
Tin-Tin urged as Gordon and Virgil appeared wearing blue
hazard suits. She had put on a mask and gloves, just to be on
the safe side.
The men
nodded and entered the Beaker Room, only to be pummeled with
all manner of lab equipment. Ducking and running, they were
soon one on each side of Brains, and before Tin-Tin could even
blink, had grabbed hold of his arms.
"LET ME
GO!" Brains yelled. "LET ME GO!!!"
"Come on,
Brains, knock it off," Virgil said. "Tin-Tin!"
"Yes,
here, hold his arm out for me, Virgil."
As much as
he struggled, Brains hadn't a hope of getting free from both
Tracy boys. Virgil succeeded in holding his arm fairly still,
long enough for Tin-Tin to jab a needle into it. In a second,
Brains went limp between them.
"Whew..."
Tin-Tin breathed. "Let's get him to his room."
Virgil
lifted Brains into his arms and carried him halfway up the
steps to the landing, turning right to enter his bedroom.
Tin-Tin turned back the covers and Virgil laid Brains gently
on his bed. She then removed the engineer's shoes and glasses
before Virgil tucked him in.
"Now,
Tin-Tin," Virgil said as they left the room, "would you mind
telling us what in blazes is going on here?"
A voice
from the top of the stairs echoed down, surprising all three.
"Hellooooo down theeeeeeeere!"
"Yeah,
Scott, right here," Gordon replied.
"What're
you guys all doin' down there? Nobody's up here minding the
store."
"Oh,
Scott," Tin-Tin sighed as she pulled off her mask and gloves.
"We'll be
right up!" Virgil said.
"Thunderbird 5 calling International Rescue."
"There's
no answer," Alan remarked as he bounced through the airlock.
There really wasn't any point in sealing it, but he did just
the same.
"So I
noticed. I sure hope they're all okay down there."
"John."
"What?"
"Are you
ever gonna tell me what happened?"
"Okay.
Hang on. Thunderbird 5 calling International Rescue. This is
Thunderbird 5 calling Base. Come in, please."
Silence.
"John?"
"All
right, all right. The long and short of it is this: the four
of you went on a rescue in Cumbaquay, right?"
"Right."
"You
tranqued some dogs and delivered victims to a hospital.
Right?"
"Right."
"Then what
happened?"
"Uh...well, uh...I woke up here?"
John shook
his head. "No, Alan, you got sick. All of you. It's some sort
of virus from Cumbaquay. I don't know all the details, but you
went crazy."
"I did?"
"You all
did. Even Father contracted it. You stole Thunderbird 3 and he
asked me to try and stop you."
"I
stole my own space ship?" Alan's look was one of utter
confusion. He truly hadn't a clue what had really
happened. "And how the heck did you stop me?"
John shook
his head. "Luck, bro. Pure luck."
"We did
WHAT?!?!" Gordon screeched.
Scott and
Virgil tried not to laugh, as Gordon turned very, very red.
"I'm
sorry, Gordon, but that's the truth. When Mrs. Tracy, Father
and I returned from our shopping expedition, we entered the
Lounge to find you and Alan standing here with no clothes on.
It seemed as though you were all fighting."
"But how
come we don't remember any of this?" Scott asked. "And why do
I have this blistered mark around my neck?"
"I don't
know, Scott. Whatever that mark is from must have happened
while Brains and I were on Cumbaquay gathering the plant. As
for why you don't recall any of this, the only thing I can
think of is that the virus somehow caused a form of amnesia.
Would the three of you mind if I took blood samples from you?
I need to see if you're still infected."
"Infected
with what?" came a voice from the hall.
Tin-Tin
jumped and turned to find Jeff Tracy entering the Lounge.
"Mr.
Tracy?"
"What on
Earth was I doing asleep in bed, in my clothes nonetheless, in
the middle of the afternoon?"
"Well,
Dad," Gordon replied, "It's kind of a long story."
"Oh, my
God," Alan breathed when John finished telling him everything.
Everything he knew, anyway.
"You can
say that again. Thunderbird 5 calling International Rescue."
"Here,
John."
"Father?
Father!"
"Yes,
John, I'm here. Is Alan with you?"
"Right
here, Father."
There was
a moment of silence. None of them really knew what to say.
Given what John had told Alan, and what Tin-Tin had relayed to
those on Earth (for the time being leaving out the part about
Gordon confessing his love to her), they were not only
perplexed, but embarrassed as well.
In his
best Desi imitation, Scott said, "I guess we got some 'splaining
to do."
CHAPTER FIVE
One year
earlier...
A man with
ginger-colored hair and a moustache to match looked up from
checking his chronometer for the hundredth time in the last
half-hour to see a short Peruvian man making his way through
the crowd. As the man passed him, he nodded his head almost
imperceptibly.
"Arrgh,
he's late," the ginger-haired man growled to himself. He took
one last look 'round Pennsylvania Station in New York City.
The station had formerly been one of the largest hubs for
railroad trains in North America. But over the years,
monorails had become the ground transportation of choice, and
trains that ran on regular rails phased out until only a scant
few remained, mostly for tourists and those who were nostalgic
for the old days.
Today's
Penn Station looked precisely as it had when the last ground
train chugged out more than ten years before. Oh, it was a bit
more modern, but it still drew throngs of travelers taking the
Long Island Express Monorail out to the landmass east of New
York City, or the Amtrak Monorails that departed at all hours
for nearly every city in North America.
The
ginger-haired man followed the elderly South American native
through the station's large center, carefully keeping enough
distance so as to thwart anyone who might be watching. They
reached a door that looked as though it hadn't been opened in
over twenty years. The Peruvian man struggled a bit, but
finally pushed it open enough to squeeze through. The
ginger-haired man soon followed.
He found
himself on a large staircase cut from natural limestone,
leading below ground, down many hundreds of feet into the
deserted tunnels that used to be home to New York's famous
subway trains. Those, too, had phased out in favor of
monorails. Now the tunnels stood eerily still, lined with aged
and dirty posters that had once advertised the latest movies
and Broadway shows.
Reaching
the bottom of the staircase, he kept his counterpart in view
as they lowered themselves onto the subway track and walked
for what seemed like miles and miles. Just when the
ginger-haired man thought he was being had, the man in front
of him leapt up to a small side ledge with surprising
dexterity and disappeared behind a metal door.
Grasping
his holstered machine pistol's handle just in case, he climbed
up to the ledge and approached the door. He was surprised as
he peeked into the room. For it was spacious, larger than he
would have expected to find down among these tunnels. And it
was filled to the brim with metal tables, upon which sat all
manner of rather old scientific equipment for use in
experiments: everything from Bunsen burners to Erlenmeyer
flasks, from beakers and vials to microscopes and Petrie
dishes.
The
Peruvian man waited patiently on the other side of the room
next to yet another metal table that held two bottles...one
full of an almost neon-yellow liquid and its companion equally
as full of an amber-colored liquid. The ginger-haired man
curled his upper lip in appreciation...but strangely enough,
to the Peruvian man, it didn't look like his mouth had moved
at all.
"As
promised," the elderly man said softly, bowing low.
"And you
are certain the outcome will be as discussed."
"Yes. The
yellow mixture carries a variation of the virus of the
Corginus Machinis plant, a rare species found in only one
place in the world. The virus will remain dormant until it
enters the bloodstream."
"And once
there, it attacks the neurons," the ginger-haired man
continued, "slowly driving its victim to insanity."
"Indeed.
All who have been given this virus have dishonored themselves
by ending their own lives."
A low,
evil laughed echoed off the room's concrete walls. "That is so
perfect! It is, as they say, poetic justice. And what of the
second liquid?"
"Our
people have guarded this secret for thousands of years," the
Peruvian man replied. "In the days of our ancestors, it was
used only after portions of memory had been damaged
accidentally, or, in cases of torture, by electro-shock and
chemical therapy. The patients who suffered temporary amnesia
prior to receiving this potion were affected most brutally."
"Tell me
once more how it works. I must envision my triumph in my own
mind."
The man
bowed again before continuing. "If short-term memory has been
damaged or lost, the organisms living within this mixture
attach themselves to those portions of the brain which are no
longer operating properly. They feed upon memory cells...but
only memory. No other functions are impaired. It takes less
than one week for the patient to move from short-term amnesia
into long-term permanent memory loss. By the sixth day, their
condition is irreversible. Their memories are lost to them
forever. My ancestors used this potion to enslave their
enemies and traitors to the dynasty. It was...most effective."
The
menacing laugh rang out again. Even the elderly man got
chills. It sounded like pure evil, and he was glad he would
not have to see this man again after the completion of this
transaction.
"Very
well. You have given me the means to destroy my greatest
enemies. Here is your payment."
But the
Peruvian man saw no briefcase or container of any kind. He
looked confusedly at the ginger-haired man. "Where? Where is
the payment?"
"Right..."
the man replied, digging his fingers into his neck, "...here!"
Before the
elderly man knew what was happening, the ginger-haired man had
quite literally ripped his face off and flung it across the
room. He could only stare as the pleasant face of the buyer
gave way to a smooth pate, large black beetle eyebrows and
dark, slanted eyes. His appearance gave new meaning to the
word sinister.
"What?
What is going on? Who are you?"
His voice
now thick with an unidentifiable accent, he growled, "You do
not need to worry about who I am. You will never have to worry
about anything ever again, my friend."
The man
stumbled backwards into the corner of the room, where he
cowered, trembling like a child. Suddenly the bald man's eyes
began to glow. The Peruvian man could not look away from them.
They were mesmerizing. He stared and stared, slowly feeling a
dark cloud form over his mind, bringing coherent thought to a
standstill. He felt his legs and arms grow weak until they no
longer supported his body. Sinking to the floor, he swayed for
a moment or two before tumbling into darkness.
Smiling
most unbecomingly, the man with the glowing eyes pulled his
machine pistol from its holster. He leveled the gun at the
prone figure in front of him, and without hesitation, fired
once, killing the elderly man with a single bullet to the
brain.
The dirty
work finished, he looked 'round the room until his eyes rested
upon an old brown leather satchel. "Perfect," he said,
retrieving it quickly. He returned to the metal table and the
two bottles of deadly liquid sitting atop it. The evil one
began to laugh once more, a low rumble beginning at the base
of his torso and bubbling up through his chest like putrid tar
until it spewed from his mouth, resulting in a most
distasteful sound.
"At last,"
he spoke with barely contained glee, "at last I will put a
stop to you once and for all. You haven't got a prayer,
International Rescue!"
Eleven
months, three weeks and six days later...
"There you
are," he said quietly, peering out the windows of the cockpit.
"Right where the ancient maps said you would be."
A small
two-person sea plane overflew a lush, tropical island two
hundred miles west of the country of Peru. Its pilot, a
forty-something man with dark blonde hair and bushy blonde
eyebrows grunted as he made a U-turn and flew back over the
island once more. Its beaches were pristine white, the water
surrounding it clear and blue. Not thirty feet back from where
the ocean touched the sand, a dense jungle began. This jungle
covered four-fifths of the island, but the man could see small
paths that had been cut through the undergrowth.
He could
also see clearings here and there throughout the tropical
forest. In each of these clearings was a cluster of huts,
sometimes as few as three stood together, sometimes as many as
eight or nine. He saw dark people running out of them as he
zoomed overhead. From his height, they were no larger than
ants. He knew they were watching him, but he also knew it did
not matter. These were primitive people. They didn't have a
communications system to speak of. It was only through
diligent research and traveling to the ends of the Earth that
the blonde man had even been able to discover its location.
"It is
perfect," he grunted. "It has been almost a year to the day,
but my tireless efforts shall soon bear fruit. And if what
that cripple told me was true, there should be, somewhere on
this island, those creatures who will become the vessel for a
plague to end all plagues. A plague to end International
Rescue!"
The man
steered his plane away from the island, heading due east
toward the coast of Peru. As he flew, he recalled how
'willing' the man had been to pass along the secrets of
Cumbaquay, secrets that had been kept for almost six years.
The pilot's eidetic memory recalled every word of what had
been relayed in dramatic story-telling style. Even now he
could picture the man with coffee-colored skin as he sat in
his wheelchair, staring helplessly into mesmerizing golden
eyes he could not ignore. Finally, he'd told the blonde man
something he claimed he'd never told another living soul.
"Shining
like a jewel among the azure waves of the Southern Pacific
lies an island untouched by time, untouched by human
technology and advancement. It is a small island with a small
population of indigenous peoples. This tribe has lived and
flourished on the island of Cumbaquay for over a thousand
years, since the time of Separation, when the island broke
apart from the mainland of South America and slowly drifted
away until at last it came to settle in its present location."
"Yes, a
beautiful tropical island. The virus is native to this place,
so I will never be suspected. It will be known as a world
tragedy, but a naturally occurring one...and at last I will be
rid of you!"
"Almost
forty years ago, a sojourner happened upon this island. But
she was met with a most deadly fate. It would be thirty-four
years before another soul would lay eyes upon this enchanted
place. A small party of four adventurers had set sail from
Peru on an old schooner that they had restored themselves.
They chanced upon a storm, which tossed their ship hopelessly
in the water until at last it crashed upon the shores of
Cumbaquay. Two of the men were washed overboard during the
storm. The third did not survive the impact. The fourth man
survived, but was rendered crippled and sightless in one eye.
That survivor was me."
"Ah,
yes...and the other passengers," the blonde man chuckled.
"They are the ones I seek now."
"I spent
six months with these natives, who were most hospitable and
friendly. We developed a rudimentary understanding of one
another, enough so they were able to convey their remarkable
history to me. As time passed, I grew restless for my own
people. Even my dog Sascha could not lift my spirits after so
long without my family. The dogs of my companions - two
Dalmatians, a Labrador Retriever and an Irish Wolfhound - had
all survived the storm with me, and they kept Sascha and I
company, but it was not enough. I longed for home. In their
infinite generosity, several Cumbaquayans were able to create
a modest dinghy using palm leaves and other flora that
flourished on the island. At my insistence, they launched me
into the vast ocean. Three days later, nearly dead, I was
plucked from the sea by a passing World Navy ship. I had to
leave my beloved Sascha behind with those who had been the
companions of my friends...my friends who were long dead. The
Cumbaquayans promised they would see our dogs were fed. To
this very day, I wonder if they are still alive."
"As do I,"
he replied to his thoughts as he approached land. "As do I."
One hour
later...
The blonde
man could barely contain himself as he neared the island of
Cumbaquay with his precious, but deadly, cargo. Sophisticated
monitoring equipment located within his hideout seven miles
inland from the beaches of Peru had picked up five distinctly
canine life forms on Cumbaquay. His plan was coming together
quite nicely.
He made a
perfect landing on the surface of the calm ocean about five
miles west of the unsuspecting island. Releasing a small boat
from where it had been tied to the bottom of the sea-going
plane, the man then hauled two large plastic bags, weighing
nearly fifteen pounds each, out of the small cargo hold,
dumping them into the boat. He then hopped in himself, started
the small motor and sped toward the island.
Once
ashore, he carried the bags about ten feet up the beach before
ripping them open with a switchblade knife. He arranged the
contents into a two-foot long straight line before balling up
the used bags and backing away.
Suddenly
the man lifted a small silver object to his lips. Taking a
deep breath, he blew into the object. It didn't make a
sound...at least not one he himself could hear. He stood there
for ten full minutes, continually blowing into the object
until at last he heard rustling noises. They were coming
closer and closer, and finally he heard the sound he'd been
hoping to hear.
Barking.
He
scurried back to his boat and started the engine, gaining a
safe distance between himself and the beach. He watched as
five domestic...yet alarmingly thin...dogs came bounding along
the beach barking and howling. One who seemed to be the
leader, the one the blonde man knew was Sascha, approached
what the man had left behind. He sniffed carefully and
recognized a scent he had not smelled in a very, very long
time.
Raw beef.
Pounds and pounds of it. With a delighted yelp, Sascha began
ripping into the meat, devouring all he could get his chops
around. His four companions broke into a run and were soon
joining him in this all-too-rare feast.
The blonde
man laughed quietly as headed his small craft for the airplane
that floated nearby. "Yes, my canine friends, eat up. Eat
well. Enjoy your meal. Enjoy every...last...bite."
Sascha and
the other dogs had not been this ecstatic since long before
they'd come to be on this island six years ago. There was no
beef to be had here...very little meat of any kind, actually.
The carnivore in them did not notice that the beef had a
slightly odd flavor to it. Even if they had been able to
comprehend such things, they would have had no idea that what
they were eating had been marinated by the man who had left it
there for them. Marinated for two weeks in a liquid the color
of neon yellow.
Before the
blonde man had even started the engines of his plane, the dogs
had finished their surprise meal. Beneath their fur, beneath
their skin, beneath sinewy muscle...something slowly stirred
to life. Rushing through capillaries, veins and arteries,
something awoke from a long, long slumber. Something that
hungered for one thing and one thing only. In each dog's mind,
a slow transformation had begun.
As they
ambled lazily away from the beach into the jungle behind them,
the friendly dogs could not have known that merely ten hours
later, they would eat again...only this time, their feast
would be on human flesh.
Present
day...
It took
just over a week, but Brains, John and Alan had successfully
returned Thunderbird 5 to normal. Her plasma-cored localized
field meteor deflector was functioning perfectly, as were the
artificial gravity and life support systems. The double walls
surrounding the space station had been refilled with coagulant
compound that would seal micrometeorite punctures to prevent
air leaks. Thunderbird 5 was, once more, fully operational.
Alan remained on board for his tour of duty, while John and
Brains returned to Earth in Thunderbird 3.
While they
had been toiling far out in space, the rest of International
Rescue had spent long hours trying desperately to remember the
events of the week before. It took Scott several days to come
to terms with the fact that he'd attempted to hang himself in
the roundhouse.
"I just
don't understand, Father," Scott had said as the two relaxed
on the patio one evening. "Committing suicide - it's
unthinkable! It's so out-of-character for me. For any of us!"
"You're
right, Scott. But from what little we know, it seems all of us
were acting somewhat out-of-character. Virgil and Gordon said
Brains was mad as a hornet, yelling something about me
rejecting one of his designs."
"Well, you
know, Father, he is a genius. Rejecting his work must feel to
Brains like you're rejecting him."
Jeff
sighed. "I suppose so. But when it just doesn't fit my vision,
I can't see spending millions of dollars to build it."
"I'm sure
Brains understands that. And what of that bruise on Gordon's
stomach?"
"We still
don't know how that happened, but it sure is a nasty
one."
"Tin-Tin
told me you were tossing and turning in your sleep after
they'd given you the sedative. She said you looked very
angry."
"Yes,
well, it seems anger was one of the effects of this virus. I
sure wish Brains were here now investigating the whole thing.
It's disconcerting to have no idea what happened."
"I know,
Father. We could've compromised International Rescue and not
even know it!"
"Now,
don't worry, son. Tin-Tin remained unaffected, and she's
certain we didn't do anything like that. I'm sure if we had
done something to jeopardize our security, it'd be all over
the television by now. I would hope that no matter how insane
we might have become, that we never would've betrayed our
first and foremost loyalty."
"Then
again," Scott replied, staring out at the moonlight sparkling
upon the ocean, "who would've thought I'd betray my own life?"
Upon their
return from Thunderbird 5, Brains immediately sequestered
himself in his laboratory, allowing only Tin-Tin to enter when
he required assistance, or to bring him meals and coffee. Jeff
knew better than to bother his engineer. He knew Brains was
desperate to recover the lost hours, recover their memories
and determine what had happened, what had almost destroyed
them. Hell, they all wanted to know that, but Jeff knew
that for a mind like Brains', it was unacceptable not to have
all the answers.
Deep
within the bowels of Tracy Island, Brains worked non-stop.
Occasionally he'd catnap, but for the most part he stayed
awake for hours on end. After two days, he'd discovered
something alarming...something that made goose bumps break out
all over his body and his hair stand on end.
Up in the
Lounge, every member of the household was present save Kyrano
and Grandma. Tin-Tin and Gordon talked quietly, mostly about
news reports surrounding the events on Cumbaquay. She still
hadn't told him of his confession, but to her own mind it was
moot to do so. It would only embarrass Gordon and make them
all uncomfortable.
Scott
leaned against the piano listening as Virgil toyed with a new
composition. When Virgil wanted to think, he would write
music. It always served to bring order and clarity to his
thoughts. Equally therapeutic for Scott was listening as his
brother's musical aptitude gave birth to sweet new melodies
and harmonies. He'd been known to stand at the piano for hours
as Virgil brought forth a new creation.
Jeff
toiled through paperwork related to one of the many business
under the Tracy Enterprises umbrella. He found it difficult to
concentrate, wishing he were able to do something more than
nothing where the virus was concerned. John was seated at his
desk with him, helping him review the latest financial
indicators. When his eye wasn't glued to a telescope, John
enjoyed immersing himself in the business world. Of all the
Tracy brothers, he had the best head for following in the
public footsteps of his father.
A
thunderous sound shook everyone from their quiet pursuits as
Brains blasted into the Lounge nearly as fast as Thunderbird
1. He panted from the exertion of having sprinted from his lab
and was waving a paper around in the air as he landed in front
of Jeff's desk.
"Good
heavens, Brains, what's got into you?" Jeff asked.
"I--pant--found--pant--something--pant--you--pant--must--pant--see."
"Well,
what is it?"
Brains
thrust the paper right down in front of Jeff, jabbing his
finger at the diagnostic readout it contained. "There!"
"What am I
looking at?"
His
breathing finally slowed, allowing Brains to speak with only
the usual amount of stammering. His voice still rang with the
excitement of discovery and something else...fear, perhaps?
"The virus, Mr., uh, Tracy. The virus - it's different. It's
different!"
"In what
way, Brains?"
By now,
everyone had gathered in a semicircle to listen.
"I was
working on a sample of the virus from the plant Tin-Tin and I
picked up on Cumbaquay. I remembered the sample I had taken
from Virgil after he'd already been infected."
"You saw
me infected?" Virgil asked.
Brains
turned to look at him and blushed. "Y-Yes, I did, Virgil."
"Why
didn't you tell me? What did I do? What did I say?"
"I-It's
really unimportant now. W-We can, uh, talk about it later."
Virgil nodded as Brains turned back to Jeff. "I extracted two
active viral cells from the blood sample and, just for
curiosity's sake, compared them with viral cells from the
Corginus Machinis."
"And?"
Jeff barked impatiently.
"They're
different!"
"What?"
Scott gasped. "Brains, are you sure?"
"Quite,
Scott. Quite. The difference is so infinitesimally small that
I almost missed it altogether."
"What does
that mean, Brains?"
"It means,
uh, Tin-Tin, that the virus which infected Virgil is not
exactly the same as the virus from the plant."
"Could it
have mutated?" Gordon asked.
"I don't
believe so. I've had the virus from the plant incubating in a
sample of Virgil's blood that Tin-Tin took after we all woke
up with no symptoms. Thus far, the virus has not
mutated in any way...just multiplied. But I can only keep them
alive for a few hours. For some reason, they die after that."
"But it
stayed alive in these guys for more than just a few hours,"
John noted.
"Perhaps
it has something to do with what you discovered earlier,
Brains," Tin-Tin said thoughtfully. "It seems this virus
attacks the neurons. Without whatever nourishment it gains
from them, it cannot survive after being activated, even if it
is within the bloodstream."
"Exactly,"
Brains nodded.
"But what
about these discrepancies?" Jeff asked, studying the
diagnostic. "You're not suggesting Virgil was infected
differently than the rest of us?"
"I can't
be certain, Mr., uh, Tracy, without having samples of your
blood when the virus was in your system. But I can say with
certainty that Virgil's virus did not come from
Corginus Machinis."
"Then
where did it come from?" Virgil asked.
"I must
run a few more tests to be certain, but I think it was
altered."
"Brains,
do you realize what you're saying?" Scott asked incredulously.
The
engineer nodded. "Indeed I do, Scott. The virus that infected
Virgil was, somehow, genetically altered."
Jeff
stared at his reflection in Brains' glasses. "Then you mean
those dogs got the virus because..."
Brains
removed his horn-rimmed glasses, looking his employer right in
the eye. "...because someone gave it to them," he
finished.
As if he
had not been so before, Brains stepped up his efforts trying
to determine the source of the altered virus. Tin-Tin and
Scott were by his side constantly, doing everything they could
to increase the pace and help him reach his goal.
Their
goal.
Jeff most
definitely could not concentrate on work now. If everything
Brains had said was true, and he had no reason to doubt it
was, that meant someone had deliberately made those dogs sick.
Eighteen innocent people had died. Four of his five sons, his
engineer and he himself had nearly met the same fate. Could it
have been a terrible accident? Or was it some madman who had
designs on Cumbaquay for some reason?
Or...and
this thought made Jeff shudder...was it someone who was trying
to kill International Rescue?
A second
thought followed this so quickly that Jeff almost didn't catch
it. There was one man he knew wanted them gone more than
anything. One man who'd been trying to steal their secrets
since they'd begun operating. One man who seemed both evil and
clever enough to try something of this magnitude.
"The
Hood," he breathed.
"What'd
you say, Father?"
The sound
of John's voice brought Jeff out of his abstraction. "It's the
only explanation that makes sense," he said, turning to his
fair-haired son.
"What
explanation is that?"
"The
Hood."
John
frowned, trying to fit the pieces together. An altered virus.
Sick dogs. Dead people. International Rescue. His brothers
become infected. They go insane. Scott tries to kill himself.
Recognition dawned, and John rose to his feet. "You mean he
meant for us to die? Every last one of us?"
"It all
makes sense. He wouldn't have any way of knowing one of you is
always far above the Earth in Thunderbird 5. At least, I don't
think he could possibly know that. He would assume
we're all in one place together, and that if even one of us
contracted the virus, the rest would soon follow."
"And we'd
all be driven to madness, finally ending our own lives."
Jeff
nodded. "This is serious, son. Deathly serious. I want you to
gather everyone here. We need to have a talk."
"Okay,
Father." John left in search of the rest of his family.
"Dammit!"
Jeff cursed, pounding his fist upon his desk. "This one hit
way too close to the mark. And all those people dead. The Hood
must be stopped once and for all!"
Later that
night...
A
nondescript sedan pulled into the parking lot of a factory in
Binger, Oklahoma. A large peanut-shaped sign covered with
lights rested atop the factory roof, proclaiming it to be the
home of Oklahoma Peanuts. At 5,075 square feet, the building
was not as large as some factories of the day, but it had
stood the test of time. Oklahoma Peanuts had been in operation
for well over one hundred years, and though the times had
changed, the building housing the successful company had not.
The motor
was turned off and for a moment nothing moved. Then the car
door opened and a blonde man with bushy blonde eyebrows
exited. He looked around and, satisfied he was alone at ten
minutes to midnight, pressed a button that popped the car
trunk open. He fished around for a few moments before
producing a knapsack, which he held carefully with one hand.
Closing the trunk lid, he made his way up the front walk to
the Main Entrance.
Pete
Grayson, the guard on duty at Oklahoma Peanuts that night, had
seen the headlights of the car as it entered the parking lot.
He didn't think a lot of it, as teenagers were frequent
nighttime visitors to this rather remote area. There wasn't
much to do in Binger but drink and make out, and Pete figured
this car was carrying a load of kids bent on doing just that.
He would do what he always did: give them about twenty
minutes, then go out and embarrass the hell out of them before
asking them to leave the property.
The guard
was surprised, then, when he saw a man approaching the large
glass double doors at the front of the factory. He was
certainly no teenager, but why would anyone be here at this
hour? The stranger knocked on the glass, and Pete hefted his
considerable body up from his chair, and then ambled over to
the door.
"What kin
I do ya for, Mister?" Pete asked, keeping the safety of the
locked door between them.
"I've had
car trouble!" the man explained, jerking his thumb back over
his shoulder. "Might I use your vidphone to call for help?"
Pete
nodded. The guy looked harmless enough. He certainly didn't
look like someone who'd be in on spying for one of Oklahoma
Peanuts' competitors. The guard pulled a ring of keys out from
his pocket and unlocked the front door, then held it open for
his uninvited guest.
"Car just
shut down on ya?" he asked as he led the man to the guard
station.
"Yes, er,
it just shut down, as you say."
"Well,
here's the vidphone, go ahead and give it a whirl."
"Thank you
very kindly."
"No
problem, Mister."
The
stranger seated himself in a second chair behind the
semicircular guard desk as Pete lowered himself into his own
chair.
"You know,
I'm not certain I remember the number I need to call," the
stranger said, turning to look at the hapless guard.
Pete
turned to face him. "Oh, that's no problem. I can get Gary out
here with the tow truck for-" He was cut off in mid-sentence
as the stranger's eyes began to glow yellow. He'd never seen
anything like it. "What the--?"
The man
didn't speak. His eyes just kept glowing as Pete's head
wobbled, his mind becoming clouded as though a fog were
descending over it. He tried to shake it off, but felt his
body grow weaker and weaker until at last he slumped forward
onto the desk.
"Good,"
the blonde man said as his fingers dug into his neck. "I will
take care of you later. Now, I must find that well of yours."
He turned
to a computer monitor as his hand pulled his face right off
his head, blonde hair and all. The man revealed beneath was
none other than The Hood. He punched a few commands into the
computer console before finally finding the factory
blueprints. Scanning them, he soon found what he was looking
for.
"Ah, there
it is. Now to put Plan B into motion."
The Hood
rose from his chair, picked up his knapsack and headed for a
hall leading to the south side of the building. As his
footfalls echoed around him, he laughed maniacally, the sound
slowly fading as he entered an elevator at the end of the
hall.
The
elevator descended one floor to the basement of the old
factory. When the doors opened, The Hood stepped out and
looked around to get his bearings. "According to the
blueprints, the well head should be just over there," he said,
pointing to the left.
He made
his way west along the wall until he came to a large metal
structure that housed the pumping unit for water the factory
pulled up from Rush Springs reservoir, a vast underground lake
fed by fresh mountain springs at the head of Rush Creek, for
which the town itself had been named back in 1889.
The Hood
placed his knapsack on the floor, unbuckled it, and opened the
flap. He removed a large round object that had a large magnet
on one side and several buttons and light indicators on the
other. Securing the object to the side of the wellhead, he
pressed a few of the buttons, grabbed his bag and fled across
the way to hide behind a large water tank.
In twenty
seconds, a large explosion blew the wellhead to pieces. The
Hood emerged from behind the tank and drew closer, surveying
his handiwork. He walked right up to the edge of what was now
a deep hole into the Earth, measuring five feet in diameter.
"Perfect. Just as I anticipated."
He headed
for a Control Panel about ten feet from the wellhead and
removed a second object from his bag. This object was flat and
rectangular, and he pressed it up against the Control Panel.
Depressing a red button, he watched as the object began to
click and whir, the panel behind it lighting up like a
Christmas tree. At last a green button glowed, and The Hood
hit it. With that one small touch, he gained access to all of
Oklahoma Peanuts' systems.
It took
him no more than ten minutes to shut down the water intake far
below the ground. This meant that no water was being pulled
into the well from the reservoir. From information he had
gathered earlier in the week, The Hood knew the well tank
beneath his feet held at least four hundred gallons of water.
Just the right amount to suit his purpose.
Removing
the last item from his knapsack, he slithered to the open
wellhead and stood staring at the amber liquid contained
within the bottle he held in his hands.
"Now, my
little microscopic friends, you will be unleashed. I have kept
you safe for over a year in anticipation of this very moment.
Do well by me."
A wicked
grin crept onto his face as he unscrewed the lid from the
bottle. As he tipped the bottle over the edge of the hole, the
grin widened. "Go well, my friends. For in a few hours, you
will have the hosts you so desperately crave."
The amber
liquid slowly began its journey out of the bottle's mouth.
Gravity pulled it down, down, down over eighty feet until The
Hood heard it splash into the water below. He began to laugh
as he watched the bottle become emptier and emptier until the
very last dropped was shaken from its tip.
"Now," he
said, putting the bottle back into his bag, "we shall go and
get our friend the guard."
Alan
listened from his vantage point on the wall as Jeff Tracy
explained to a room full of people his theory as to the
origination of the entire ordeal that began on Cumbaquay.
When Jeff
finished, Scott was the first to speak. "It makes a lot of
sense, Father. We know The Hood's been out to get at our
secrets from Day One."
"Yeah,"
Gordon piped up. "But who knew he would actually go so far as
to murder us? I mean, if we're all dead, he'd never find our
base anyway."
"Well, it
is just a theory. But for some reason it's a theory
that rings true to me," Jeff replied.
"If that's
the case, Father, how do we know that any rescue we go on
hasn't been created by this madman in hopes of killing us once
we arrive?" Virgil asked.
"We
don't," was Jeff's simple reply. "But we can't allow people to
die for the sake of our own skins."
"It seems
like the only way out of this predicament is to catch that
bastard once and for all."
"My
thoughts exactly, Scott. We've got to do something, or more
people may die, and us right along with them."
"What'd
you have in mind, Jeff?" Grandma asked.
"Nothing
yet. But we're going to have to take extra precautions on
every rescue from here on out." He stopped and frowned,
looking around the room. "I was hoping Brains would join us so
we could find out if he's come up with anything more on the
virus."
"I-I have,
in fact," came a voice from the hall. Everyone turned as
Brains entered the room, looking decidedly bedraggled and
unkempt.
"What have
you found out, Brains?" John asked.
"I've been
testing, uh, Tin-Tin's theory about why you all showed no
symptoms of the virus after having been put to sleep with the
sedative we gave you."
"And?"
Jeff asked.
"Well, uh,
Sir, it seems that Tin-Tin was correct."
"How so?"
Alan asked from the wall.
"Since
the, uh, since the virus must feed on firing neurons, when the
conscious mind ceases to operate, such as happens during our
normal sleep cycle, it, uh, it seems to lose its hold on the
neurons and, with no food source, dies within minutes."
"But we
still have neurons firing even when we're asleep," Tin-Tin
challenged. "Why wouldn't the virus just attach itself to
those?"
"I, uh,
I'm not sure, uh, Tin-Tin. I haven't any viable neurons to use
in my experiments. But my computer model suggests that this
virus feeds only upon neurons in those parts of the brain
which house emotion and rational thought. When you are asleep,
you can still feel emotion, say, if you dream, but rational
thought processes close down until you wake up."
"So you
putting us to sleep was just the antidote we needed to shake
this thing."
"It, uh,
it would seem so, Scott."
"That
still doesn't help us figure out how to find The Hood," Alan
said.
"The
Hood?!?" Brains exclaimed.
Jeff
quickly filled him in on his theory, and then frowned as
Brains retreated down the hall. "Where are you going?"
"T-To do
some more research," Brains threw over his shoulder.
"To heck
with The Hood, Brains is gonna kill himself without any help
at all if he keeps this up."
"You may
be right, Virgil, but you know as well as I do that he won't
stop. Not until he gives us something that can help us," Jeff
replied.
Alan
turned away from the monitor and frowned. John noticed.
"What's
up, Alan?"
"Hang on,
there's an emergency call coming through."
Alan
disappeared from view for a few moments. They could hear him
speaking, but couldn't discern his words. When at last he
reappeared, he looked pale.
"What is
it, son?"
"A call
for help, Father."
They all
exchanged looks with one another. This was the first rescue
call they'd received since Cumbaquay. The same thought settled
into everyone's minds: could this be the Hood?
"What's
the emergency?" Jeff asked.
"Oklahoma
Peanuts, a factory located in Binger, Oklahoma, Father. The
night guard has gotten stuck down a well. They've tried
getting him out with conventional equipment, but apparently
he's wedged in pretty tight. They don't have an underwater
vehicle small enough to get at him from the reservoir below.
They've asked for our assistance."
"Thunderbird 4 could do it," Gordon offered.
Jeff
locked eyes with Scott. Although they were both worried, there
was no question International Rescue would go.
"Okay,
Alan, give Scott the details once he's airborne."
Alan
hesitated a moment before replying, "F-A-B."
"All
right, then, Virgil, Gordon, get Thunderbirds 2 and 4 up.
John, go with 'em.”
“F.A.B.!"
they replied.
Jeff
turned to watch as Scott leaned against the wall and Virgil
backed into the rocket picture. He then looked at Gordon and
John as they entered Thunderbird 2's passenger elevator.
"And
boys?"
"Yes,
Father?" they asked in unison.
"For God's
sake, be careful."
All nodded
solemnly before disappearing from sight.
CHAPTER SIX
"What's
the situation, Alan?"
"I've been
speaking with the plant engineer, Scott. They're not sure how,
but the factory's main wellhead blew. Apparently the night
guard went to investigate and fell down the well."
"How deep
is it?"
"Eighty
feet. The guard's caught about seventy feet down."
"What's
the well pumping from?"
"Rush
Springs reservoir. It's a big underground lake."
"Is there
a way for Gordon to get through?"
"Yes.
There's an underwater entrance. He can gain access through the
springs at the head of Rush River, according to the plant
engineer."
"Well,
this should prove fairly simple, then."
"Scott..."
"Yeah, I
know, I know. I won't count my chickens. Thanks a lot, Alan.
Feed Virgil the coordinates for the head of the river. I'll
contact Thunderbird 2."
"F.A.B.
Thunderbird 5 out."
"Thunderbird 1 to Thunderbird 2."
"Thunderbird 2 here."
"Okay,
Virgil, now Alan's gotten some more information from the
factory's engineer. We'll need you to drop Pod 4 at the
coordinates Alan's feeding you."
"F.A.B.,
they're coming through now. What's the action?"
"Gordon
will travel along the river in Thunderbird 4 until he reaches
the underwater entrance to Rush Springs reservoir. From there
he'll proceed to the well tank. He'll need to get up under the
well in a dive suit. The guard's only ten feet up from the
aperture. I think he can get him out without too much
trouble."
"F.A.B.,
Scott," came Gordon's voice. "But I'd sure like to have an
extra pair of hands."
"What
about me?" John asked.
"Sounds
good. You go with him, John. Meantime, Virgil, you meet me
inside the factory. I'll have Mobile Control set up before
you've even dropped Thunderbird 4."
"F.A.B.
Estimated Time of Arrival now sixteen minutes. Thunderbird 2
out."
As he
approached Binger, Oklahoma, Scott watched the patchwork of
fields surrounding the area come into view. He smiled as it
brought back memories of his family's old farm back in Kansas.
Then he frowned as his neck tingled. He brought his fingers to
the most offending point and scratched lightly.
The rope
burns were healing, causing his skin to itch, but he was sure
he looked a sight. Lady Penelope would never approve of his
choice in accessories, he thought grimly, thinking how the
marks left by the rope resembled a gruesome necklace. His
frown deepened as these thoughts led his mind to wander
inevitably to the Hood. He couldn't shake the feeling that
this rescue sounded almost too easy.
"This is
Thunderbird 1 of International Rescue calling Oklahoma
Peanuts."
"This is
Chuck Beasley, Plant Engineer. Boy, am I glad you're here.
Pete's in a bad way down there."
"How so?"
"Well,
he's an awfully big guy. He's stuck head upright far as we can
tell. We lowered a mike down there a while back to try and
make contact, but we could only hear breathing, and it's
started getting pretty shallow. I think he's suffocating
himself."
"Our
underwater vessel should be arriving in a few minutes. Until
then, I need some men out here to help me with my equipment."
"When are
you arriving?"
"Right
now," Scott replied, firing his retros. Thunderbird 1 came to
rest gently in the parking lot. "I want someone to contact
local law enforcement. Our craft must be guarded at all
times."
"Right.
The sheriff's right here, I'll let him know."
Five
minutes later, three men approached Thunderbird 1, gaping
openly at the magnificent rocket plane.
"Hi,
thanks for your help," Scott greeted, shaking each of their
hands in turn.
"Hey,
anything we can do to help old Pete is okay by us. I'm Chuck
Beasley."
"The plant
engineer."
"Right.
This is Mike," he said, nodding to a man about Scott's age who
had dishwater blonde hair, "and Tom," he finished, nodding to
the second man. Tom seemed like he was about Jeff's age, with
salt-and-pepper hair and built just as sturdy.
"Okay,
let's get my equipment into the plant. I want to be as close
to the wellhead as possible. Will there be room?"
Chuck
nodded. "Yeah, it's in the basement. There isn't much else
down there but water storage and treatment facilities and the
guts of our processing plant. There'll be room."
In no time
at all, Scott and the three burly men had Mobile Control set
up not fifteen feet from the wellhead. Scott inspected the
opening, but even with his high-intensity flashlight, could
not see the guard trapped far below. He listened to the
strangled sounds of Pete's breathing on headphones Chuck gave
him, then took them off and headed back to his control unit.
"This is
Mobile Control calling Thunderbird 2. What's your ETA?"
"Mobile
Control from Thunderbird 2. I'm just about to land. Looks like
the river isn't wide enough here to drop the Pod. Will have to
position it on the bank so Thunderbird 4 can launch."
"F.A.B.
When you get up here to the factory, bring the lifting gear,
breathing apparatus and harnesses with you. The guard's having
a hard time. We might have to do some work from this end
before Thunderbird 4 gets to him."
"F.A.B.
I've landed. Raising Thunderbird now."
"That's
some sophisticated machine you have out there," Chuck said
from over his shoulder. "I sure wish I could take a look at
her engines."
Scott
looked up at him warily, but was soon put at ease by the
engineer's friendly, relaxed demeanor. "Sorry, no can do. Our
Thunderbirds are top secret."
"I know, I
know," Chuck smiled. "But a guy can dream, can't he?"
"Sure, no
harm in that. What blew that wellhead, anyway?" Scott asked,
walking around and looking at the bits and pieces scattered
over the basement floor.
"Not sure.
I was thinking pressure buildup, but the well tank isn't even
full. And there isn't any water up here, so it couldn't have
blown out."
"What are
you saying? That it blew up?"
"Best I
can figure. Must have been a flaw in it or something. Never
had it happen before. It's a new wellhead, though, just went
on a week ago."
"Hmm. I
wonder..."
Thunderbird 2 elevated herself on four hydraulic legs, leaving
her Pod below like a bird laying an enormous egg. The door of
the Pod, covered with a large white number 4, opened slowly,
meeting the edge of the river bank. A long metal track
extended from inside the Pod out into the clear water below.
"Ready for
launch?" Virgil asked through the com.
"F.A.B.
Launching...now," Gordon replied as he brought the small
submersible to life.
"I haven't
been in this thing for a couple of years," John commented as
his brother maneuvered the craft down the river. "And even
then, it was only for some testing."
"Well,
then, sit back and watch the expert," Gordon proclaimed,
flashing him a grin. "You, uh...you do still remember
how to dive, don't you, John?"
John's
mouth dropped open to protest, then he saw the mischievous
look on Gordon's face. "Very funny."
Having
recollected its Pod, Thunderbird 2 lifted off and was landing
in the factory parking lot within five minutes.
"Thunderbird 2 to Mobile Control."
"Mobile
Control here."
"I've just
landed. Will be with you in a few minutes. Going to collect
rescue gear now."
"F.A.B.
And hurry, Virgil. This guy's breathing sounds worse."
"F.A.B."
In
precisely five minutes, Scott watched the elevator door open.
Virgil exited and headed right for him, laden with all types
of equipment. Scott turned and spoke into his mike.
"Mobile
Control to Thunderbird 4. How's it looking down there,
Gordon?"
"Okay,
Scott. We've just reached the reservoir entrance. According to
my readouts, we have about seven miles to go before we're
below you."
"Right.
Now, when you arrive, it'll probably be as simple as you
pulling the guard down through the pipe into the water, but
it'll take both of you. I hear he's a pretty big fella."
"Is he
conscious? Will he know to hold his breath?"
"No, he’s
been unconscious since they found him. We'll have oxygen on
him from up here by that time, so you'll just have to get him
into Thunderbird."
"F.A.B.
Will contact you once we've reached Danger Zone. Thunderbird 4
out."
"So,
what's the action, Scott?"
"Well,
Virg, one of us needs to get down there and secure a mask on
him."
"Right.
Shall we draw straws?" he asked, a twinkle in his eye.
"No,
that's okay," Scott replied, grinning. "I need to keep on top
of Gordon. You go ahead."
"F.A.B!"
Virgil was
soon inside the well pipe, his boots and hands keeping him
from sliding downward. Scott attached the lead rope to four
different buckles on the harness, then handed a mask and small
oxygen tank to his brother.
"Scott?"
"Yeah?"
"I think
I'd better go in headfirst. This pipe's only five feet wide. I
doubt I can fold myself in half well enough to upend when I
reach the guard."
"Right.
Okay, Tom, Mike, Chuck. You wanna give us a hand?"
"Sure
thing," Chuck replied. The three were instantly at his side.
Scott handed them each a portion of the lead rope, while he
kept the fourth.
"All
right, 'round you go," he said.
Virgil
hoisted himself up to the side of the pipe, swung his legs out
and leaned over 'til the top half of his body was inside.
"Okay!" his voice echoed. "Take me down!"
"Let's
go," Scott said to the men helping him. "Inch at a time."
Slowly,
ever so slowly, the men fed out their individual lines, and
Virgil began his descent into the well. He felt the blood rush
to his face, but ignored it, shining his flashlight directly
beneath him. He lifted his chronometer to his face.
"Down
about ten feet now," he said.
"How ya
feelin'?"
"Major
headrush."
"Can you
see him yet?"
"Nope.
Keep it going."
Twenty
feet. Thirty feet. Forty feet.
"Scott, I
see him!"
"How's he
look?"
"Not too
good," Virgil replied, noticing the blue tinge around the
guard's eyes and lips even from this distance. "In fact, he's
suffering from a severe lack of oxygen, from what I can tell.
I'm gonna have to get this tank on him now instead of
waiting."
"F.A.B. As
soon as you reach him and secure yourself, I'll let
Thunderbird 4 know."
"Right."
Ten more
minutes found Virgil's head hanging mere inches above Pete's.
"Stop!" Virgil said.
"You on
him?"
"Yeah.
Boy, Scott, he's in a bad way." Virgil reached out and touched
Pete just under his ear. "He's still alive, but his pulse is
faint."
"Do you
see any way for us to haul him out through this end?"
"No, don't
think so. His arms are wedged next to him against the wall.
There isn't anywhere for me to secure him." Virgil reached
out, grabbed the back of the guard's jacket, and pulled with
as much strength as he could. "He's in tight, Scott. Looks
like Thunderbird 4's our only hope."
"All
right, let me check on their ETA. Secure yourself."
"F.A.B."
Scott
handed Chuck his lead rope and headed for his station while
Virgil attached four suction cups at each compass point on the
well wall. The cups were attached to a belt around his waist,
and would hold him in place should for any reason the people
above let go the ropes. Once finished, he shone the light back
on the guard's face.
"Hey,
Pete, can you hear me?" he asked.
There was
no reply.
"Hang in,
buddy. We'll have you out of here but quick."
Virgil
finally had a moment to realize what a tight fit it was inside
the well pipe. He looked back down to Pete's face and said,
"Sure is a good thing I'm not claustrophobic." He then set
about the task of hooking Pete up to the oxygen tank. He hoped
it would be good enough to keep him alive until Gordon and
John arrived.
"Mobile
Control to Thunderbird 4."
"Right
here, Scott. We were just about to call you. We've reached the
intake, but it's closed. Can you get it open?"
"Chuck,
can you get the intake opened up for my buddies down there?"
"Sure, but
we'll have to close it right back up again. Without the
wellhead to stop it, that water will rise up and flood the
factory pretty quickly."
"Okay,
Gordon, let me know when you and John are ready to go in.
They'll open the valve for you, but once you're through they
have to close it again."
"F.A.B.
Setting Thunderbird down on riverbed now. Will call once we're
in position."
Chuck
handed one of his lead ropes to Tom, the other to Mike. They
didn't really need to hold them now since Virgil was secure,
but if those suction cups failed for any reason, these two men
would be the only things keeping him from crashing headfirst
into Pete.
John and
Gordon, already wearing their wetsuits, donned their breathing
equipment and left Thunderbird 4 through the topside airlock
hatch.
"Keep your
eyes open," John said as they neared the intake. "You never
know if that creep's around here."
Gordon
shivered involuntarily at the thought. "Yeah, I guess so.
Ready to go?"
"Ready."
"This is
Gordon calling Mobile Control."
"Receiving
you."
"We're
ready, Scott. Tell them to open the intake...now."
Scott
turned and nodded to Chuck, who pressed a few buttons on a
nearby Control Panel. "Okay, it's opening."
"Right.
Gordon, tell me once you're through."
About
thirty seconds later, John and Gordon had traversed the
four-foot-long intake and found themselves inside the large
Oklahoma Peanuts well tank.
"We're in,
Scott!"
"Right,
close the intake!"
Chuck
immediately complied, and the valve was soon shut tight.
Gordon and
John made their way to the top of the tank and found about
three feet of open air between the water's surface and the top
wall. Sliding their face masks aside, they shone flashlights
around until Gordon finally spotted the well pipe.
"Scott, I
see the pipe. We're heading over to it now."
"F.A.B."
Scott
returned to the well opening and spoke into his chronometer.
"Virgil, how's Pete doing?"
"Okay, I
think. His color seems to be returning, but he's still
unconscious."
"How about
you?"
"Getting a
little dizzy, but not too bad. Where are Gordon and John?"
"Coming up
beneath you as we speak. You may need to help them out with a
shove or two on the guard."
"F.A.B.
Hey, I hear something."
"Must be
them. Hang on." Scott returned to Mobile Control. "Gordon,
John, Virgil thinks he can hear you. What's your position?"
"We're
right under the pipe now. We can see the guard's feet--hey,
what the heck was that?"
"Gordon?
What is it?" Scott ask, brow furrowing.
Gordon and
John frowned at one another as they heard something like a
muffled explosion. Air bubbles broke the surface near where
they'd entered.
"What's
going on?" John asked.
"Don't
know. Hey, does the water level seem to be rising to you?"
"Yeah,
it--it does."
"Maybe the
intake valve was opened again. Scott, did you guys open the
valve?"
Scott
turned to look at Chuck, who shook his head vehemently. "No,
Gordon, why?"
"It
sounded like there was an explosion, and the water in here
seems to be rising now. We'd better get the guard out of here,
and fast," Gordon replied. "If Virgil's still in that pipe,
tell him to push like hell."
"An
explosion? Well, what would cause that?" Scott asked of the
plant's engineer.
"I don't
know," Chuck replied. "We've never had a problem with the
intake valve."
"Yeah, and
you've never had a problem with the wellhead either. Until
today."
"What are
you getting at?"
"I don't
know, but something just doesn't add up. Hey, Virgil!" Scott
said into his chronometer.
"Yeah,
Scott?"
"Start
pushing. Something's happened below. Gordon and John heard
some kind of explosion. It looks like the valve has blown and
the water level's rising. We have to get Pete outta there."
Scott's
unspoken thoughts settled onto Virgil like a huge weight. He
knew instinctively what his brother was thinking.
"All
right, Scott, I'm on it."
Virgil
grasped Pete's shoulders firmly and began pushing as hard as
he could. He could feel the guard move slightly, and figured
John and Gordon must be working him from the other end. He
soon latched onto their rhythm and matched it, pushing when
they pulled.
"Okay,
Gordon, let's each grab a leg and get this poor fella outta
here," John said, reaching up the pipe.
"Right.
I've got one."
"I've got
the other."
"On three.
1...2...3!"
The two
men yanked hard, budging the man only about an inch.
"Again!"
Gordon said, and they pulled. "Again!" Pull. Get a better
grip. Pull down. Hoist themselves up. Pull down. Hoist up.
Pull down.
"Virgil
must be pushing, I can feel him coming down," John said.
"This
water's getting pretty high. We only have about a foot left.
We should put on our masks soon."
"Right.
But let's see if we can't get him out of...OOF!"
"John!"
Gordon cried out as Pete came flying out of the pipe. He'd
landed smack on top of John's head, propelling him down into
the water of the tank.
"Gordon!
What happened?" Scott yelled into his mike. When he received
no response, he raced over to the well. "Virgil!"
"He's out,
Scott, but I don't know what's going on. I can't see them."
Suddenly
Gordon's face appeared right in Virgil's line of vision. In
his arms was Pete the guard. "Virgil, I can't find John!" he
yelled up.
"I'm
coming!" Virgil yelled, releasing his suction cups.
"Virgil!"
Scott yelled down the pipe.
Virgil
pointed his arms in front of his body as he fell over ten feet
into the cold water of the tank. When he opened his eyes, he
couldn't see anything at first. Then a soft glow below him
caught his eye, and he swam toward it. When he reached it, he
saw it was an International Rescue flashlight. Beaming it
around, he saw John floating not four feet away from him.
Chest growing tight with the need to breathe, Virgil grabbed
his brother's arms and swam for the surface.
Gordon
watched anxiously, doing his best to keep hold of Pete while
he waited for his brothers to reappear. It was less than a
minute before the splash of water and the sound of someone
gasping for air and coughing at the other end of the tank
caught his attention.
"John?"
"I got
him, Gordo," Virgil replied, panting. "But he's unconscious."
Gordon
looked up into the pipe. "Scott! We need a mask!"
Scott
almost didn't hear him, so faint was his voice, but he ran and
grabbed an O2 tank and mask and held them over the well
opening. "Coming down!" he called out.
They all
heard the apparatus clang and clunk its way down the pipe
until at last it landed with a splash in the water below. By
this time, Virgil had reached Gordon and Pete, with John in
tow.
"Is he all
right?" Gordon asked.
Before
Virgil could answer, John coughed and spluttered, water
shooting from his mouth and nose. There was barely enough room
now to keep their heads above water.
"Get his
mask on!" Gordon said. "And here, Scott sent one down for
you."
Virgil
moved swiftly, securing John's facemask before donning his
own. "Let's get outta here," he said.
"You guys
okay?" Scott's voice wafted through their masks.
"Yeah, I
think so," Gordon replied. "We're heading out. We'll need a
pick-up."
"On my
way."
Gordon
hauled Pete below water back to the intake valve, while Virgil
pulled John along. He was regaining his senses, but wasn't
quite aware enough to be of any help. Once they reached the
intake valve, Gordon whistled softly.
"What is
it?" Virgil asked.
"Would you
look at that?" Gordon said, shining his torch along the side
of the valve mechanism. "It looks like it's been blown to
bits."
"So Scott
was right," Virgil breathed, recalling the telepathic
connection he and his brother had made right after the
explosion. "Is the way clear?"
"Yeah,
looks like it. If this was The Hood, he didn't do a
very good job of trapping us in here."
"May-Maybe
he didn't...intend do," John breathed.
Gordon and
Virgil looked at their brother, wondering what he meant,
before continuing on their way.
"I heard
all that," Scott said. "I'm in Thunderbird 2 now. I'll be
landing river-side in five minutes to collect you. Watch
yourselves down there, we don't know if he's still here."
"F.A.B.,"
Gordon replied.
The
foursome returned to the submersible without incident. Gordon
was soon revving up the engines, and Thunderbird 4 was on her
way.
Scott
watched as Thunderbird 4 moved up her track. The track then
lifted and retracted into Pod 4, with Scott close on its
heels. As the autolock door on the side of the cockpit opened,
Scott raced up. "Virgil! John! You two okay?"
The men
nodded as they supported Pete, one on each side. Gordon was
behind them, holding Pete's legs.
"You
mind...giving us...a hand?" Gordon ground out.
Scott
smiled as he helped them get Pete out to the waiting
ambulance. They didn't seem any worse for the wear, and he
couldn't have been more pleased. Once Pete was loaded and on
his way, Scott turned to his brothers.
"John? You
all right? What happened?"
"Pete
popped out unexpectedly. Cold-cocked me. Had a taste of Rush
Springs mountain water, but I'll be fine."
Scott
nodded before looking at Gordon. "I suppose you're fine, too."
"Sure
thing, Scott."
"Virgil?
You look like a drowned rat."
"Thanks a
lot."
The men
laughed as Scott closed the Pod hatch. They heard Thunderbird
2 moving down and before long, her clamps latched the Pod into
place.
"Let's get
back to the factory," Scott said. "We have to clean up before
we can head home."
"I'll
drive," Virgil said, heading for the cockpit.
Scott's
hand reached out and grabbed his arm. "No, you don't. You'll
make a mess in there. Get changed, you can fly her home."
Virgil
grumbled good-naturedly, heading back the other way in search
of clean, dry clothes. Gordon chuckled as he and John strapped
themselves in. He happened to glance over at John as Scott
brought Thunderbird 2 to life.
"Hey,
John, you sure you're okay?"
"Hm? Oh,
uh, yeah, I'm fine. Probably a mild concussion, you know how
these things go."
"Well,
we'll have Brains check you out as soon as we get home," Scott
said. "In the meantime, you stay here while we gather our
equipment."
"All
right."
Scott and
Gordon exchanged looks. It wasn't like their brother to be so
complacent when being ordered to stay put. Maybe he'd gotten
hit harder than he was letting on.
Having
returned safely to Tracy Island, Brains fussed over John, who
seemed even quieter than usual. Scott, Virgil and Gordon
filled Jeff in on the details of the rescue while Tin-Tin and
Alan listened.
"That
intake valve was definitely sabotaged," Gordon said.
"It
wouldn't surprise me if that wellhead was, too," Scott added.
"Yeah. And
somehow I don't think Pete ended up in that pipe by accident.
You ever see someone fall into a hole and wind up wedged in
feet-first?"
"You all
have a point," Jeff replied. "But it doesn't make sense. Why
lure you there and then make such a weak attempt on your lives
by releasing the intake valve?"
"You know,
John said something about how maybe the Hood didn't intend
to trap us in the tank," Gordon mused.
Jeff
turned as Virgil shook his head. But not shaking it as though
saying 'no,' shaking it as though trying to clear cobwebs from
his mind. "Son?"
Virgil
frowned as he looked at his father.
"You all
right?"
"Uh, yeah,
Father, I-I'm fine. I think I just need to go lay down for a
bit."
"Maybe
Brains should take a look at you, too."
Virgil
nodded and headed off to the Sick Room.
"That's
weird," Alan said from his vid portrait on the wall.
"What is?"
Gordon asked.
"I've
never known Virgil to agree to a check-up that easily."
"You're
right, Alan," Scott replied. "And John, too. He was awfully
quiet on the way home."
"Hm. I'll
go speak to Brains and see what he's found." Jeff rose from
his desk and strode toward the Sick Room.
Scott,
Gordon and Tin-Tin frowned as Alan signed off. They were all
thinking the same thing, but none of them could figure out how
it was two and two kept adding up to six.
Jeff
expected to see John lying on the bed when he arrived at the
Sick Room. He was surprised, however, to find that not John,
but Virgil was in that position, with Brains taking his
temperature and blood pressure while John looked on.
"John? How
are you feeling?"
"Oh, fine,
Father, just fine. Brains says it's just a mild concussion."
"The boys
said you were quiet on the way home."
"Yeah, I
had one zinger of a headache, didn't feel much like talking.
But Brains loaded me up with some ASA, and I'm fine now. I'm
more worried about Virgil."
"Why?
What's wrong with him?"
"I-I'm not
sure, Mr., uh, Tracy. His vitals seem normal enough, but his
eyes don't, uh, look quite right."
"Virgil?"
Jeff asked, coming to the side of the bed. "How do you feel?"
"I-I don't
know, Father, I'm a little...confused."
"About
what?"
"That's
just it, I don't know. I feel like I've forgotten something."
Jeff
frowned. "Forgotten something?"
Virgil
nodded. "Yeah, but I can't figure it out for the life of me."
Jeff
patted his son's arm. "Don't worry, son, I'm sure you'll
remember whatever it was. John, let's leave Brains to it."
"All
right, Father. Hey, Virg?"
"Yeah?"
"Thanks."
"For
what?"
"Saving my
life."
"Oh,
you're welcome," Virgil replied. Then he scrunched up his face
in confusion as he watched his brother's lithe form retreat
into the hallway. "Saving your life? What's he talkin' about,
Brains?"
"You, uh,
you dove into the well tank and pulled John out after he went
under."
"I did
what?"
CHAPTER SEVEN
Day One
"Mr., uh,
Tracy, could I, uh, speak to you for a moment?"
Jeff
removed his glasses and laid them on his desk. He could tell
by his engineer's face that something wasn't quite right.
"What is it, Brains?"
"Well, uh,
it's about Virgil, Sir."
"What
about him? Is he hurt?"
"I-I can't
be certain, Mr. Tracy. But he seems to have forgotten the, uh,
the rescue."
"Forgotten
it?"
"Yes, Sir.
John, er, thanked him for saving his life. Virgil asked me
what he was talking about, so I told him that he'd pulled John
from the well tank."
"And?"
"And he
doesn't remember. He doesn't even remember going to, uh,
Oklahoma Peanuts."
"Nothing
at all?"
"Nothing."
"Any
ideas?"
"Well, uh,
the only thing I can think of is the virus."
"But I
thought you said it was gone."
"It was...er...I
mean, it is. I just finished testing a fresh sample of
his blood for traces of it. It's not there."
"So you're
saying this might be an aftereffect? Sort of a time-release
symptom?"
"I just
don't know. I don't have enough information on the Corginus
Machinis virus to make an adequate assessment. Tin-Tin's down
in the lab now running some tests to see if we can come up
with anything more."
"Right.
You let me know the second you find something. In the
meantime, I'm going to check on Virgil."
"F.A.B,"
Brains replied, heading out of the Lounge.
Jeff sat
back and scratched his chin in thought. Virgil couldn't
remember the Oklahoma rescue? They'd only returned two hours
ago. How in the world could he have forgotten?
Virgil
heard a knock at the door and turned in bed so he could see
who was coming.
"Hey, you.
How're you doing?"
"Hi,
Scott. Not too good, I'm afraid."
Scott saw
the confusion in his brother's eyes and frowned. "Yeah, I was
down in the Lab talking to Tin-Tin. She's testing your blood
as we speak. She said something about your memory."
"Well,
it's the darndest thing. Brains tells me we just returned from
rescuing a guard stuck down in a well...but Scott, I don't
remember any of it."
"You don't
remember being down the well pipe?" Virgil shook his head. "Or
diving into the tank when John went under?" He shook his head
again. Scott cracked a smile. "Or the fact that I called you a
drowned rat?"
"No,
Scott," he replied quietly, pulling himself into an upright
position. "I don't remember any of it."
Scott
pulled a chair over next to the bed and seated himself, his
eyes never leaving Virgil's. "Do you have any idea when this
started? This memory loss?"
Virgil
shook his head, looking down at his hands folded in his lap.
"I know I started feeling funny when we were standing in the
Lounge talking to Father. I remember us all being there, we
were talking about...about...what were we talking about?"
"The
Hood," Scott replied, growing more concerned with each passing
moment. "How we thought the Hood had created the Oklahoma
Peanuts rescue just to get us out there."
"Why would
he do that?"
"Virg, do
you remember Father's theory?"
"About
what?"
"He thinks
The Hood is the one who let that virus loose on Cumbaquay
because he wanted to kill us."
Virgil
looked into his brother's eyes once more, a slight frown
creasing his forehead. "What virus?" he asked. "What's
Cumbaquay?"
Jeff rose
from his chair as Gordon entered the room. "Hello, son."
"Hi,
Father. Wanna play a game of chess?"
"Not right
now, Gordon. I need to have a visit with Virgil."
"Is he all
right?"
"I don't
know. Brains was just here, and told me Virgil doesn't
remember the rescue."
"You mean
the one we just returned from?"
Jeff
nodded.
"What
gives?"
"Brains
isn't sure. He thinks it might be an aftereffect of the virus
we had, but he and Tin-Tin are running more tests to try and
figure it out."
Gordon
frowned as he leaned against Jeff's desk. "Father, if it is
something the virus left behind, we could all start
forgetting things."
"I know,
Gordon," Jeff replied grimly. "I know."
Having
left Gordon in charge of Base Control for the moment, Jeff
headed down the hall toward Virgil's room. He chanced upon
John coming out of his own room.
"Hi,
Father."
"Hi."
"How's
Virgil?"
Jeff
explained what Brains had said about Virgil's memory loss.
"Say, you were a little out of it on the way home. Are you
feeling all right?"
"Sure, but
I never contracted that virus from Cumbaquay, remember? If
it's a result of that, I wouldn't be affected."
Jeff
frowned.
"Can I tag
along, Father? I'd like to see how Virgil's doing, too."
"Sure.
Come on."
Scott came
to his feet as Jeff and John entered Virgil's room. He took
his father off to the side as John spoke with Virgil.
"Father,
what's going on here?"
"I don't
know for sure, Scott. How bad is he?"
"Bad. Not
only doesn't he remember Oklahoma, he doesn't even remember
Cumbaquay."
"What?"
Jeff turned to watch John and Virgil speaking quietly. "You're
telling me he doesn't remember the last two rescues you were
on?"
"That's
what I'm saying. He seems to recall the older stuff: Fireflash,
Eddie Houseman, the Seascape, being shot down by the Sentinel.
But he's lost the last coupla weeks."
"And
you're certain he wasn't injured in Oklahoma?"
"No, I
can't see how he could've been. Gordon says he watched Virgil
make a straight, easy dive from the pipe into the tank. He was
underwater for a few minutes, but was fine swimming back to
Thunderbird 4 and all the way home. And you saw him when we
were together in the Lounge."
"Yes. At
first he seemed fine, but...I guess that's when things started
going fuzzy for him."
"Father?"
Virgil called out from the bed.
"Yes,
son." Jeff crossed the floor and took the seat John had just
vacated.
"What's
wrong with me?"
"We're not
sure yet, Virgil. Brains and Tin-Tin are working hard to find
out. Now, I don't want you to worry."
"How can I
not worry? I can't remember the last two weeks of my life!"
Tin-Tin
appeared in the doorway and clucked her tongue in dismay.
"Now, now, everyone, leave Virgil be. He does need his rest,
you know!"
"That's
okay, Tin-Tin," Virgil said. "I don't mind."
"I know
you don't," she replied, pushing John toward the door. "But as
the resident nurse, I insist my patient not be mobbed by
family members! Out! Out you go!"
"Aw,
Tin-Tin-"
"No,
Scott, leave. You can come back in a few hours."
"Tin-Tin,
have you found anything?" Jeff asked.
She held
up a finger, indicating he should wait a moment. He nodded,
and headed for the hall. Then Tin-Tin turned and smiled
brightly at Virgil.
"How do
they ever expect you to get any sleep if they're in here
bothering you? I knew I should've left you in the Sick Room!"
"Tin-Tin,
I'm not really-" yawn "-sleepy."
"Right.
Here, why don't you just lie back and rest?" she said,
fluffing his pillow and pushing him gently onto his back.
"I'll be back to check on you in a moment."
Virgil
nodded. All the effort of trying to recall events that seemed
to be wiped clean from his mind had indeed been exhausting.
Before Tin-Tin's feet had crossed the threshold of his room,
he was asleep.
Jeff was
waiting just outside the door, but Tin-Tin motioned for him to
follow her to the Lounge, where Gordon, John and Scott waited.
"What's
going on?" John asked.
"Well, I'm
not certain yet," Tin-Tin replied as she and Jeff approached
the group. "Brains thinks he found something odd in Virgil's
bloodstream, but he can't make heads or tails of it."
"Odd in
what way?" Gordon asked.
"Well, it
almost looks like...waste."
"Waste?"
Scott questioned.
"Yes. All
living organisms secrete whatever their bodies don't use, as
well as by-products of their biological processes. Brains has
picked up extremely minute amounts of something that doesn't
look like it belongs in Virgil's system. But it's not viral or
bacterial. In fact, it's been broken down to extremely simple
compounds, which is why he thinks it's a waste product."
"But a
waste product of what?" Jeff asked, crossing his arms.
"We don't
know, Mr. Tracy. I need to take another blood sample. I don't
want to worry Virgil any further, but Brains wants a CT scan
and an MI scan."
"The CT
scan I can see, since it's obviously his brain that's
affected," Scott said. "But why the Micro-Imaging scan? That's
for locating...microorganisms. The waste in his blood...an MI
scan...does Brains think Virg is infected with something
other than a virus?"
"We're
just grasping at straws, Scott."
"Yes,"
Jeff interjected. "We need to run every test we have until we
find out what's caused Virgil's memory loss. How about the
rest of you? Are you still in retention of your memories?"
"Think
so," Gordon said.
"I'm fine,
Father," John replied.
"Yeah, I'm
okay too, Dad. I remember everything about Oklahoma."
"Good. You
must let someone know the minute you feel something's wrong.
Understood?"
"Yes,
Father," they all replied.
"I'd
better get those scans done," Tin-Tin said. "John, would you
help me with the mobile scanners?"
"Sure
thing," he replied, following her out of the room.
"Hey, I
just had a thought."
"What's
that, Scott?" Jeff asked, seating himself behind his desk.
"Well,
Brains thinks there's waste product in Virgil's bloodstream
that doesn't belong there. But he also says the virus isn't
there anymore. I know it sounds crazy, but what if the virus
evolved?"
"Into
what?" Gordon asked.
"I don't
know. It was just a thought."
"We'll
have no more speculation on the matter. We need to stick with
cold, hard facts; something we have very little of at this
point."
"Right,
Father."
"Sorry,
Father." Gordon started out of the room, intending to head for
Thunderbird 4. He wanted to check her over one more time. He
was always overprotective of his ship right after a mission,
and would sometimes spend hours going over her with a
fine-toothed comb.
Suddenly,
though, he shook his head. The motion was almost
imperceptible, but Jeff picked up on it like an eagle spying a
field mouse from far up in the sky.
"Gordon?"
he said, coming to his feet.
"What is
it, Father?" Scott asked, approaching his brother.
Jeff was
instantly next to them. "Gordon, are you okay?"
"I-I don't
feel so good, Father. I think I need to go lie down."
Scott and
Jeff looked right at each other. This was exactly how it had
started with Virgil.
Day Two
Being it
was rather late, Gordon had fallen asleep quickly after being
escorted to his room by the two eldest members of the Tracy
clan. Scott watched over Virgil throughout the night, while
Jeff kept an eye on Gordon. From time to time, Grandma or
Kyrano would bring them coffee or juice to drink, neither of
them able to sleep any better than the others.
Tin-Tin
and John, having successfully completed their scans on
Virgil's head without waking him, had taken them down to
Brains' Lab. There, the three of them worked all night on
various tests, experiments and theories as to what was
happening. When Jeff buzzed the Lab to inform them that Gordon
seemed to be acting the way Virgil had at first, they
redoubled their efforts, putting their heads together to try
and come up with anything and everything they could think of.
When dawn
broke on Tracy Island, Tin-Tin, John and Brains staggered into
the Lounge, bleary-eyed. In spite of their tireless efforts,
they'd come up with nothing at all to explain Virgil's missing
memories.
"I still
don't understand why the MI scan came out blurry in the
northern quadrant," Brains yawned as he removed his glasses
and placed them next to him on the couch.
"Perhaps
we did something wrong," Tin-Tin offered, stifling a yawn
demurely through her hand.
"Yeah, I'm
not exactly an expert running medical diagnostic equipment,"
John added.
"W-We'll
have to try a second one, Tin-Tin," Brains said, yawning
again.
Jeff
walked into the room in exactly the same clothes he'd been
wearing the day before. "You three find anything?" he asked,
taking a sip of hot coffee from the mug in his hand.
"No,"
Brains replied dejectedly, his shoulders slumping.
"Are
Virgil and Gordon awake yet, Father?"
"No, John.
Gordon was still sleeping when I left his room. I looked in on
Virgil. He and Scott are both still out."
"Scott?"
"He spent
most of the night with Virgil, while I looked after Gordon."
"So you
say Gordon started acting the same as Virgil?" Tin-Tin asked.
When Jeff nodded, she said, "How?"
"Well, he,
Scott and I were in the Lounge. It seems innocuous, I know,
but suddenly he shook his head just like Virgil did right
before he started forgetting." Jeff sighed. "Maybe I'm looking
for things that aren't there."
"I don't
think you are, Jeff," Grandma said as she entered from the
hall.
"What do
you mean, Mother?"
"I went in
to check on Gordon just now, and, well, I think you'd better
come talk to him."
Jeff
followed his mother into the hall, with Brains, John and
Tin-Tin right behind. When he entered Gordon's room, he found
him standing in the middle of the floor turning this way and
that, as though looking for something.
"Good
morning, son," Jeff greeted as he walked through the door.
"Good
morning, Father."
"Are you,
uh, are you looking for something?"
Gordon
cocked his head and looked at Jeff, a frown creasing his brow.
"I don't know. I think I am, but...I can't remember
what."
A knot
began forming in Jeff Tracy's stomach. "Could you sit down? I
want to ask you a question."
"Okay,
Father," he replied, seating himself on the bed.
"Do you
remember taking Thunderbird 4 down into a reservoir
yesterday?"
Gordon
frowned. "Uh...I took Thunderbird 4 out yesterday?"
"Oklahoma,
son. Do you remember going to Oklahoma with your brothers?"
He shook
his head slowly. "No, I don't think I've ever been to
Oklahoma."
Jeff came
closer and sat down in the chair he'd occupied the whole night
previous. "What about Cumbaquay?"
"Cumba-what?"
Jeff
turned and looked at the others, who were gathered in the hall
just outside Gordon's bedroom door. Then he turned back to his
copper-haired son, recognizing a look of utter bewilderment in
his amber eyes.
"What's
the last thing you do remember, Gordon?"
"Um...well, I, uh, I guess the last thing I remember is taking
the boat out with Alan. Yeah, that's it. We went fishing
together. We didn't catch anything but little sunfish, but it
was fun all the same."
Jeff
turned to look at the trio in the hall once more. Whatever it
was, he was now certain Gordon had it, too. Alan and Gordon's
day at sea had happened almost three full months before the
Cumbaquay rescue.
Scott was
stretched out on the chair next to Virgil's bed, his legs
crossed at the ankles and arms folded. He snored lightly, his
chin resting on his chest. He nearly fell out of the chair
when Virgil yelled:
"Scott!"
Jumping to
his feet, it took a moment for Scott to realize where he was
and why. He looked at his brother, who was sitting on the edge
of his bed, his eyes wide and puzzled.
"Virg!
Jeez, man, you tryin' to give me a heart attack?"
"Sorry,"
Virgil mumbled.
"S'okay,
don't sweat it. How are you feeling?"
"I'm, uh,
I'm okay."
"You don't
look okay."
Virgil
concentrated on some invisible point just over his brother's
shoulder. "I guess I'm not."
"Why's
that?"
"Scott,
what year is it?"
"Huh?"
"What year
is it?"
"It's
2031."
Virgil
paled and looked even more distraught.
"Virg,
what is it?" Scott asked, crouching next to the bed so he
could look at his face.
"I knew
something was wrong when I looked at the paper," Virgil
replied, gesturing to yesterday's newspaper that sat on his
bedside table. "It said 2031, but I didn't believe it until
you said it, too."
"Why
didn't you believe it?"
"Because
I'm certain it's 2027."
Jeff paced
to and fro across the Lounge. For the rest of the family,
seated or standing here and there, it was a bit like watching
a tennis match.
"I just
can't understand it!" he bellowed, face drawn tight in a
frown. "Virgil and Gordon weren't the only ones to contract
the Cumbaquay virus! It just doesn't add up!"
"Four
years," Virgil whispered to no one in particular. "How can
four years just slip away like that?"
Scott
placed a hand on his brother's shoulder and squeezed it tight.
"Brains!
Tin-Tin! What the hell is happening to my boys?!?"
"S-Something has occurred to me, Mr., uh, Tracy."
"Well?"
"Don't you
find it rather, uh, odd that Virgil and Gordon didn't begin to
lose memories until after the Oklahoma rescue?"
Jeff
literally stopped in mid-stride, pivoting to face his
engineer. "That's it, Brains. That has to be it!"
"Yes...I
had an uneasy feeling throughout the whole rescue. Like it was
too easy!" Scott chimed in. "And the wellhead blowing
up...an explosion at the intake valve..."
Tin-Tin
frowned from her perch on Jeff's desk. "Are you saying you
think this guard down the well was another attempt on your
lives?"
"It makes
sense," Jeff replied. "It all makes sense."
"But what
on Earth could make us lose our memories? And for that matter,
why weren't Scott and I affected by it?" John asked.
"That's a
good question, son," Jeff said, resuming the act of wearing a
hole in the floor. "Think, think, we have to think!"
Alan spoke
from his vid portrait on the wall. How he wished he were there
in person to help them. "Let's assume your theory is correct.
Let's assume the Hood is the one who gave those dogs on
Cumbaquay the virus."
"Okay,"
Scott said. "So he got the dogs sick, probably knowing they'd
go insane and start attacking people. That spread the virus."
"So when
we arrive on the scene," Alan continued, "we pick up the
virus, too."
"It slowly
drives us t-to madness," Brains said, "the point of which
seems to be that we all k-kill ourselves."
"Right,"
Jeff nodded. "But we don't die. We survive. How could he have
known that? We didn't have another rescue call after we
recovered, not until Oklahoma. How could the Hood have known
we were alive?"
"A spy?"
Grandma offered.
"But
where, Mrs. Tracy?" Tin-Tin asked. "We haven't had any
visitors."
"None that
we're aware of," Jeff corrected.
Everyone
silently mulled that over for a moment before Alan continued.
"Okay, let's leave that part of it for later. Somehow he
figures out we're alive. So he sets up the Oklahoma Peanuts
rescue."
"He blows
up the wellhead and stuffs Pete inside the well. When the
first workers arrive for the day, they find him and call for
help."
"Okay,
Scott," John said, "But why Oklahoma Peanuts? Why that
factory?"
"And why
the well? He could've just blown the plant up or something,"
Alan said.
"That must
be the key," Jeff said, leaning back against his desk. "The
well must be the key."
"A-As if
he wanted them t-to go in it?" Brains asked.
"Yes,
Brains, I think that's it!" Tin-Tin cried, leaving the desk
and walking out onto the floor. "I think you have it! It's the
water. It has to be!"
"The
water?"
"Yes, it
all makes sense now. I can't believe I didn't think of it
before!"
"Think of
what, Tin-Tin? Spit it out!" Jeff said...not altogether
unkindly, just rather at his wits' end.
"All
right, let's work this out, shall we? Gordon and John go down
into Rush Springs reservoir in Thunderbird 4."
"Right,"
John said.
"You both
had to swim into the well tank, because the intake valve was
too small for Four."
"Right,"
John said again. "But what's your point?"
"My point
is that you were both swimming in water. And, my guess
is you both swallowed some."
"You
think...you think something was put in there!" Scott breathed.
"And
Virgil dove into the tank after Pete fell from the pipe and
knocked me for a loop!"
"Yeah, but
John," Scott reminded him, "you're not having problems with
your memory."
"Uh,
fellas?" came a quiet voice from the couch. "What's going on?"
Everyone
turned to look at Virgil. His voice seemed smaller than usual,
like he was standing down at the far end of the hall talking
to all of them out here.
"Virgil?"
Jeff said, crossing to his son.
"Father?"
Virgil sounded somewhat like a frightened child as he looked
all 'round the room.
"What is
it, son?"
Virgil
looked from Jeff to his desk to the piano to the patio. His
eyes finally came to rest on the five portraits. He recognized
himself and his four brothers...but...
Everyone
watched as Virgil came to his feet and cautiously approached
the pictures. He stood in front of his own and traced the
outline of his body with his fingers, lingering over the
yellow sash. He then moved to the right, eyeing Gordon's
picture and again, touching the uniform and the sash. He
looked up at where Alan's picture normally would've been but
saw instead the real live Alan watching him. Virgil jumped
back as though surprised to see him.
"Virgil?"
Alan asked.
"Alan,
what...what are you wearing?"
"What do
you mean, Virg? I'm wearing my uniform. I am on duty,
you know."
"Uniform?"
Scott
blanched. "Oh, dear God."
Virgil
backed up and stared for a moment at the pictures of John and
Scott before turning to face an entire roomful of
people...three of whom he did not recognize. His eyes came to
rest on Kyrano and Tin-Tin, who were standing quite close to
one another, and Brains, who was near Jeff in the middle of
the room.
"Who are
you?" he asked.
"Oh,
Virgil, you don't recognize me?" Tin-Tin asked, fighting back
the tears that wanted to come to her eyes.
He shook
his head, his face crumbling as his mind knew only chaos.
"What are these blue uniforms?" He looked around the room once
more as if seeing it for the first time. "This isn't home.
Where am I? What's going on?"
Gordon
slowly approached his stricken older brother. "Virgil, it's
me, Gordon. Do you know me?"
Virgil
nodded, daring to look nowhere but into Gordon's eyes. His own
were full of anguish as Gordon placed a hand on his arm.
"Listen, I
don't know what's going on any more than you do. I don't know
what it is we're all sitting here talking about. I don't know
what's wrong with you. But I do know that something's
wrong...with both of us."
Virgil
swallowed hard, eyes still locked with Gordon's.
"We'll
figure it out, Virgil. Come sit down. We'll figure it out."
Virgil
nodded, but didn't move as he looked back out at the crowd of
anxious faces. He bit his lower lip and looked back at Gordon,
who was gently pulling at his arm. Finally, he allowed Gordon
to lead him to a nearby chair. Once Virgil had seated himself,
Gordon stood beside him, his hand still upon his arm.
"We'll
figure it out. Right, Dad?"
Jeff tried
to swallow the lump in his throat. "Yes, Gordon. We will. I
promise you both. We will."
"If this
keeps up," Jeff said as he poured himself a cup of coffee,
"they're going to regress back to childhood."
"I know,
Jeff, I know," Grandma said soothingly. "But Brains, Tin-Tin
and John are working overtime in the Lab. They'll work it
out."
"I really
think we were making headway out there before...well, before
Virgil's...episode."
"I think
so, too. I have an idea. Why don't I go ahead and take care of
Virgil and Gordon for you? That way you and Scott can join the
others in the Lab and continue your conversation."
"I don't
know, Mother. What if...what if they go off the deep end
again? You'd be defenseless against them."
"Oh, Jeff,
those boys wouldn't hurt me no matter how confused they get.
They need you right now, but not holding their hands...that's
what I'm for. They need you doing everything you can to solve
this."
"You know,
Mother, you're a very wise woman."
"And it
only took you sixty-one years to figure that out," she smiled.
He managed
a small smile before the all-too-familiar frown settled back
into place. "I guess Scott and I'll head down to the Lab.
Here," he said, removing his watch from his wrist. "You take
this. Just in case you need to call us."
"Oh,
pish-posh, I won't need that thing."
"Take it.
Please. To ease my mind."
"All
right," she acquiesced, taking the watch from his hand and
stuffing it into her apron pocket. "Now, go."
"Father
feels so helpless right now," Tin-Tin said to John as Brains
adjusted the portable MI scanner. "He doesn't want to upset
Virgil by hanging about when he doesn't recognize him."
"There's
got to be something we can set him doing," John said
thoughtfully.
"Yes, but
what?"
"I-I think
I have an idea," Brains said softly. "John, you and Scott
will, uh, have to be the ones to try the MI scan on Virgil
again since he doesn't kn-know Tin-Tin or me. I want you to,
er, get a scan of Gordon, too."
"All
right, Brains. But what about Father?"
Jeff and
Scott entered the Lab.
"What
about Kyrano?" Jeff asked.
"I was
just telling John that he feels so helpless. He doesn't know
what to do with himself right now."
"Doesn't
he play an instrument of some sort?" John asked.
"Why, yes,
he does," Tin-Tin replied. "He plays the di."
"Well,
Virgil loves music. It's ingrained into every fiber of his
being. Even though he doesn't remember your father, I'll bet
Kyrano could put him at ease with it."
"It's
worth a shot, Tin-Tin. Why don't you go talk to Kyrano, see if
you can't have him work some of his magic?"
"All
right, Mr. Tracy."
"Mr., uh,
Tracy, I was about to ask Scott if he could help John give
both Gordon and Virgil MI scans."
"Fine. You
two do that while Kyrano prepares for his impromptu concert.
In the meantime, Brains, you and I are going to do some
serious thinking."
"Uh,
y-yes, Sir."
Virgil sat
at the piano. He didn't' recognize it, but it was beautiful.
He found it odd that he could recall entire pieces of music
given his current state of mind, but decided to use that to
his advantage.
Even
though Grandma had tried explaining what was happening, he'd
never been at such a loss in his entire life. As his fingers
slowly moved across the keys, he looked up to see Gordon
standing on the patio overlooking the ocean. The ocean. They
were on an island. They lived here. Virgil kept telling
himself that over and over. Trying desperately to hang on to
information he was supposed to know. Grandma assured him
things would work out, that he'd recover his stolen memories
and be back to normal.
But Virgil
didn't know what normal was. He watched as Gordon slowly
turned 'round and looked him in the eye. Even from this
distance, Virgil sensed something was wrong. He stopped
playing and came to his feet.
"Gordon,
what is it?" he asked.
"Virgil?"
Grandma
rose from the seat she'd been occupying and stepped out onto
the patio. "What's the matter, Gordon?"
"Grandma?
What--where--?"
"Oh, dear
boy, you look so confused."
"I am,
Grandma. Where am I?"
"They're
melting away little by little, Brains. There won't be anything
left of 'em by the end of the week if this keeps up! We've
got to think of a solution!"
"I, uh, I
know, Mr. Tracy. I was thinking a-about what Scott said
b-before, in the, uh, Lounge. About the fact that John was in
the water along with, uh, Virgil and Gordon, but that he
doesn't s-seem to be having any t-trouble with his, er,
memory."
"What are
you getting at?"
"Well, uh,
supposing the Hood did put something in that water."
"But if
that were the case, John would be sick, too."
"N-Not if
it were somehow related to the virus, he w-wouldn't."
Jeff
looked up. "Related in what way?"
"It could
be, uh, several different things, Mr. Tracy."
"Such as?"
"Well,
I've, uh, I've ruled out the virus itself. No matter how many
tests I run, it's simply not th-there. B-Besides the virus
making us lose ourselves, er, what is the one thing that
happened to us after w-we were cured?"
"We
couldn't remember what we'd done."
"R-Right."
"I'm not
sure I follow."
"What if
the Hood put something in the, uh, reservoir, that would only
affect those whose memories were already, uh, damaged?"
"What type
of thing could do that?"
"I'm not
sure, but I think we need to g-get back out to that well tank
and get a s-sample of that water. It's the only way I-I'm
going to be able to h-help them."
"Okay. You
and Scott will get to Oklahoma and back as fast as you can in
Thunderbird 1. Meantime, is there anything we can do while
you're gone? Anything at all?"
Tin-Tin
rushed into the Lab, followed closely by Scott and John.
"Brains!"
Tin-Tin said breathlessly. "Brains, you have to see these!"
"What is
it?" Jeff asked.
Tin-Tin
popped a digital disk out of the mobile MI scanner Scott was
holding. She placed it into a nearby display unit and pressed
a few buttons. Appearing before them on the monitor was a
brain...with an odd spot about the circumference of a pencil
that was blurry.
"I-Is this
Virgil's?"
"Yes,
Brains. That smudged spot...it's still there. Just like the
previous one we took."
"Where's
Gordon's?"
"Right
here," she replied, pressing a button. A second brain came
into view...with the same strange splotch in the northern
quadrant, only somewhat smaller than the one in Virgil's.
"It wasn't
a malfunction," Brains breathed.
"What is
this?" Jeff asked. "What am I looking at?"
"These
fuzzy spots here," Tin-Tin replied, pointing it out on first
one slide and then the other. "The MI scanner is programmed to
display any disturbed portion of the object being scanned."
"Disturbed?"
"A-As in,
something b-being there that, uh, shouldn't."
"So what
is it that's there?" Jeff asked, growing impatient.
Peering at
the smudge, Brains' normally placid countenance crinkled into
a frown.
"What is
it, Brains, for heaven's sake!"
"I c-can't
be sure, b-but it looks almost like...something's living in
their brains!"
"Living?
So it is a virus!"
"N-No,
that would've shown up in our t-tests."
"What
could it be?" Scott asked.
"I don't
kn-know, but it's more critical than e-ever for me to g-get a
sample of that w-water."
"Go,
Scott. Get him to Oklahoma now!"
"Right,
Father. Come on, Brains, let's go."
As the two
disappeared up the stairs, John, Jeff and Tin-Tin stared at
the image of Virgil's brain. Jeff shook his head. What could
it be? And how would they ever stop it?
Gordon sat
on his bed, watching as Virgil fiddled with his model of
Thunderbird 4. Grandma had momentarily left them there while
she went to fetch some food. Suddenly they heard a sound
neither could recall hearing before. It was a soft musical
sound, like a gentle breeze blowing over bamboo stalks.
"What is
that?" Virgil asked.
"I don't
know. Let's go see."
"Grandma
told us to stay here."
"Oh, come
on, Virgil." Gordon walked out into the hall and toward the
sound of the music.
When he
and Virgil entered the Lounge, they saw the man Grandma had
told them was named Kyrano. He was sitting on the step that
led up to the piano, holding a one-foot-long instrument that
resembled a flute to his lips. A haunting and sweet melody
rose from its wooden casing as, eyes closed, Kyrano played on.
Virgil was
entranced. He was a bit wary since he didn't recognize this
man, but the music...anyone who could make music like that
couldn't be half-bad. He and Gordon watched and listened until
Kyrano finished the piece and brought the instrument down to
rest in his lap. He looked up at the men before him and
smiled.
"This is
something I learned to play in my country," he said softly.
"It is called a di."
"It's
beautiful," Virgil breathed. "Won't you play some more?"
Kyrano
nodded and brought the di to his lips. He began blowing gently
into a hole about one-quarter of the way from the end of it.
Once more, soft notes drifted into the air. Moved, Virgil
seated himself on the piano bench, followed by Gordon. Before
Virgil knew it, he was picking up the tune and playing soft
accompaniment on the ivories. His body felt the music
and honed in on it as something he knew, something he could
grab hold of. Something that would make the uncertainty go
away.
Gordon
sighed as he listened, watching Virgil's fingers work their
magic. Then something made him start...like a twinge...he felt
it in his mind. Virgil noticed and stopped playing. Suddenly,
he jumped almost imperceptibly as a small jab of pain coursed
through his head. Frowning, he and Gordon looked at one
another as Kyrano continued to play.
"Virgil?"
Gordon whispered. "I-I don't feel so good."
"Me
either."
They
swayed, blinking their eyes and taking deep breaths, trying to
keep the dizziness at bay. Gordon grabbed hold of Virgil's
arms to steady himself, and Virgil did the same.
"We gotta...we
gotta lie down," Virgil said, shaking his head.
They came
to their feet and unsteadily made their way past Kyrano. When
he saw the state they were in, he stopped playing and rose to
his feet.
"Mr.
Virgil? Mr. Gordon? Are you well?"
Still
clinging to one another, Gordon and Virgil half-turned to
reply. But before they could, they gave one last great sway
together before their legs gave out and they crashed to the
floor.
"Mr.
Virgil!" Kyrano cried, kneeling next to them. "Mr. Gordon!"
Grandma
came running into the room. When she saw her grandsons passed
out on the floor, she dropped the tray of food she'd been
carrying and rushed to their side.
"What
happened?"
"I do not
know, Mrs. Tracy. I was playing the di, and Virgil was on the
piano in accompaniment. Suddenly they rose and walked to this
spot before collapsing."
"We'd
better call Jeff."
Kyrano
nodded just as a terrible feeling came over him. Oh, no.
No. Not now. Not now, please, not now. He grasped his head
and cried out in pain.
"Kyrano!"
Grandma exclaimed. "Kyrano, what's wrong?"
He gritted
his teeth and moaned, doubling over from the effort of trying
to resist the fog that settled over his mind. "N-Noooooo!" he
cried out.
Grandma
yanked the watch her son had given her out of her apron
pocket.
"Jeff!"
she yelled into it. "Jeff, get up here right now!"
KYRANO!!!
He writhed
on the floor, eyes squeezed shut.
"Kyrano?"
Grandma asked, laying her hands on his arms.
KYRANO,
YOU WILL SPEAK!
"No!
Leave...me...alone!"
Grandma
frowned.
YOU WILL
TELL ME WHAT I WISH TO KNOW. ARE INTERNATIONAL RESCUE SICK?
ARE THEY???
Kyrano
grunted. Normally he would just think the answer whenever this
happened, but something told him to say it this time. He
opened his mouth with great difficulty and replied, "Y-Yes.
Two...memory...loss."
ONLY TWO?
"Y-Yes!"
Grandma
watched in horror, he jaw dropping and eyes growing wide. To
her, it seemed as though someone were asking Kyrano questions,
and that he was answering them. She grasped his shoulders and
shook him gently.
"Kyrano!
Wake up!" she demanded.
KYRANO!
YOU MUST DO SOMETHING FOR ME!
"Nooo! I
will not hurt them any longer!" he cried out.
"Kyrano,
snap out of it!" Grandma ordered, shaking him a little harder.
Suddenly she figured it out. She knew what was going on. "Kyrano!"
she yelled, the strength in her voice much stronger than
expected for her years. "Don't listen. Fight him! Fight him!"
"Fight
who? God, what's going on?" John asked as he, Tin-Tin and Jeff
came bounding into the room.
"Mother,
what is it?"
But
Grandma paid no attention to her son or the others. "Kyrano,
it's me, Ruth. Please, listen to me."
Kyrano's
head rolled from side to side, sweat pouring from his skin.
Tin-Tin knelt near him, but sensed something was going on she
shouldn't interrupt.
"Kyrano,
listen to me. Fight him. Don't let him use you like this."
Jeff and
John, in the midst of checking on Gordon and Virgil, exchanged
glances.
"Come on,
Kyrano."
KYRANO! MY
POWER OVER YOU IS STRONGER THAN ANYTHING! YOU WILL LISTEN AND
OBEY!
Suddenly
Kyrano sat bolt upright, his eyes snapping open. "No! I will
not obey!" He turned to look into Grandma's eyes,
trying to find anything that could be an anchor.
"I'm here,
Kyrano. I'm here," she soothed, grasping his arm. "Don't let
him do it. Fight it. You can fight it."
Kyrano
nodded, but the pain became unbearable. He grimaced as tears
began rolling down his cheeks. "Must...fight..."
"Yes,
that's right," Grandma said.
"Must..."
But before
he could finish, Kyrano fainted into his daughter's arms.
Grandma sat back on the floor, looking equally as exhausted.
"Mother?
What was that all about?"
"I don't
believe it," she breathed. "All this time it was right under
our noses and none of us figured it out."
"What are
you talking about, Mrs. Tracy?" Tin-Tin asked, cradling her
father as she rocked to and fro.
"The Hood.
That's how he gets information on us. He's been attacking
Kyrano."
"Attacking
Kyrano?" Jeff bellowed.
"Yes,
somehow, inside his mind. It's like...he's invading his
thoughts, forcing him to answer questions."
Everyone
was quiet for a moment before John spoke. "If that's true,
Grandma, then how on Earth can we stop him?"
CHAPTER EIGHT
Day Two
(continued)
John
lifted Gordon and carried him to his room, where he dressed
him in his pajamas before Grandma tucked him in to bed. With
some difficulty, Jeff managed to pick Virgil up and get him to
his room as well, taking the time to change him into his night
clothes. Grandma was by a few minutes later to tuck her other
ailing grandson in.
John and
Jeff returned to the Lounge to find Kyrano awake and speaking
quietly with his daughter.
"Kyrano,"
Jeff said, helping him to his feet. "Kyrano, what happened?"
"I-I
cannot be certain, Mr. Tracy."
"Grandma
said something about you being attacked," John offered. "By
the Hood."
"The Hood?
Surely you do not mean the arch-enemy of International
Rescue?"
"You mean
you don't remember the attack?" Tin-Tin asked.
"No, my
daughter. I never do remember what occurs. I only know that I
have lost time."
"Making
people lose time seems to be the Hood's specialty," Jeff said
darkly. "Where are Scott and Brains, they should've been back
by now!"
Perfect
timing being what it is, the eyes on Scott's portrait lit up
in time to a steady beep. Jeff crossed to his desk and opened
a channel.
"Base
here."
"Mission
successful, Father. Brains has collected several samples of
the water from the well tank, the reservoir and the river
itself. The guys at the factory were more than willing to
help."
"How's
that guard?"
"Chuck
says he'll be fine. He sends along his thanks."
"Did you
warn them about the potential water hazard?"
"Y-Yes,
Mr., uh, Tracy. I-I made certain they understood. Oklahoma,
uh, Peanuts has ceased operation until such time as their
water is, uh, deemed safe by the World Center for Disease
Control."
"I made
sure Chuck and the others wouldn't tell WCDC about our
involvement."
"Good
move, Scott. We'd risk far too much exposure getting involved
like that. We will, however, share anything we find with
them."
"Right.
ETA to Base now five.point.five minutes, Father."
"F.A.B."
"How's
Virgil? And Gordon?"
"It's
gotten worse, Scott."
"W-Worse?"
Brains asked. "How?"
"Fill you
in when you arrive."
"F.A.B.
Thunderbird 1 out."
Jeff
sighed as he closed the channel, rubbing his tired eyes with a
hand that suddenly felt very old. He turned to the others
gathered 'round and looked at each of them in turn before
speaking.
"Tin-Tin,
didn't you study some psychological sciences in the U.S.?"
"Why, yes,
I did, Mr. Tracy. I took several courses in Psychology. Why do
you ask?"
"Do you
think we could somehow find Kyrano's lost memories
about what the Hood asked him?"
"I hadn't
thought of that. It is possible, I suppose. I could try
hypnosis. Father? Are you up for it?"
"I will do
anything I can to put right that which I have helped make
wrong," Kyrano replied, bowing to Jeff.
"It's not
your fault, Kyrano, surely you must know that."
"It may
not be my fault directly, Sir. But I have had a hand in all of
this. I am ashamed. I must assist in whatever way possible."
Jeff
nodded. He knew his good friend would not be dissuaded from
the guilt he felt, but right now they had to concentrate on
potential solutions, not immerse themselves in remorse and
regret.
"Father, I
will need to gather a few items before we can begin. Why don't
you wait in your room?"
Grandma
entered the Lounge. "I'd like to be there," she said simply.
She and Kyrano exchanged smiles.
"I feel
that you were instrumental in my recovery from this last
attack," Kyrano said, bowing to her. "I would be honored if
you would join us."
"Okay,
then, let's go. Jeff, I tucked the boys in. I left their
watches on so you'll be able to hear them."
"Good
thinking, Mother." Jeff paused as the whine of Thunderbird 1's
engines announced her arrival. He flicked the switch that
would retract the pool, allowing them to land. Once they'd
slipped inside, he closed it again. "John, can I count on you
to sit tight and monitor your brothers and Thunderbird 5? I'd
like to be in the Lab when Brains and Scott bring those
samples in."
"Sure
thing, Father," John replied, seating himself at Jeff's desk.
He turned around and opened two channels. Through one, they
could hear Gordon's soft snore. Through the other, they heard
breath so gentle it was almost inaudible.
"You call
me immediately if they wake up," Jeff instructed. "Chances are
they'll have lost even more of their memory, and we still
don't know why they collapsed."
"F.A.B."
Jeff
headed for the Lab. Halfway there, he met Brains and Scott,
and together the three of them took the water samples down
into Brains' hideaway to begin their work.
Day Three
Tin-Tin's
attempt at hypnotizing her father proved fruitless. She
therefore joined Jeff, Scott and Brains in the Lab while
Grandma, Kyrano and John manned Base Control, cat-napping when
they could. Alan called in periodically throughout the night
just to check in and offer more ideas as they came to him.
Gordon and Virgil barely moved, and were checked on every
half-hour by Kyrano, Grandma or both together.
It was
well past eight a.m. when Kyrano noticed his di was still
laying on the floor near the piano where he'd dropped when the
Tracy brothers had collapsed. He picked it up and used his
kimono to wipe it off.
"I don't
think I've ever heard you play that," John said.
"Oh, it's
lovely, John. Kyrano, won't you play something for us? It
would help since we're not doing anything but sitting here."
"Of
course, Mrs. Tracy."
"Ruth,
Kyrano. Call me Ruth."
"Yes, Mrs.
Ruth."
John
chuckled as Kyrano seated himself on the step leading to the
piano. Just as he brought the di to his lips, the eyes on
Alan's portrait lit up, announcing his incoming transmission.
"This is
Base to Thunderbird 5. Come in, Alan."
"Hi, John.
Any word from the Lab yet?"
"No, not a
thing. Kyrano was just about to play the di. Wanna listen in?"
"Sure. I
barely slept a wink last night, it'd probably do me some
good."
Closing
his eyes, Kyrano blew softly into his instrument, and a
haunting melody began to take shape. John leaned back in
Jeff's chair and closed his eyes, allowing the sweet refrain
to caress his mind and cleanse his thoughts. Grandma sat on a
nearby chair, watching with fascination as Kyrano effortlessly
worked his magic.
Alan
smiled as he settled back in his mobile chair. He, too, let
his eyelids drift downward as the tune wafted to him through
so many miles of space.
Suddenly
Alan sat bolt upright in the chair, his blue eyes widened in
surprise. One eye twitched as he head shook hard in reaction
to a sharp pain.
"Ah!" he
cried out, instinctively raising his hand to his forehead.
John's
eyes snapped open and he jumped to his feet. "Alan?"
Grandma
rose as well, followed by Kyrano, who had stopped playing the
di.
The pain
passed swiftly, and Alan sank back into the chair.
"Alan?
What's wrong?" John asked, approaching his brother's portrait
frame.
"I don't
know, John...I felt a sharp pain in my head. Right here," he
said, pointing toward his frontal lobe.
"Are you
okay now?"
"Yeah, I-I
feel fine. Guess it must just be lack of sleep."
"Okay. As
long as you're sure."
"Don't
worry about it. Kyrano, keep playing, would ya? It was very
soothing."
Kyrano
nodded as he sat down again, followed by John and Grandma.
Once more the unique music filled the air like falling leaves
drifting through the breeze to kiss the ground in autumn.
This time
Alan didn't even get a chance to lean back and close his eyes.
Within two minutes, the stabbing pain had returned. He
grimaced and stumbled from his chair, moving across the Main
Monitor Room to the tube lift. Grandma watched Kyrano, and
John's back happened to be turned. When he stretched himself
out on the couch, his eyes were closed before his head hit the
armrest.
Alan shook
his head, trying desperately to free himself from the
throbbing headache he suddenly seemed to have acquired.
Exiting the lift, he staggered to the bathroom near the main
Sleeping Quarters where he found hypo-sprays of ASA. With some
difficulty, he pounded two into his arm and headed back toward
the lift. The pain had begun to subside, and Alan breathed a
sigh of relief.
When he
returned to the Monitor Room, he could hear Kyrano still
playing softly from Tracy Island. Just as quickly as the
headache had begun to leave, it now returned full-force. Alan
didn't even make it halfway to the chair before he let out an
ear-piercing cry and doubled over onto the floor.
John went
from zero to sixty in about millisecond. "Alan! Alan, where
are you?" he yelled, running to the portrait. All he could see
was an empty chair. There was no sign of his brother, but he
knew he'd heard him cry out.
Kyrano
stopped playing as he and Grandma approached John.
"What's
going on?" Grandma asked. John shook his head, having no clue.
"Alan? Alan, it's Grandma, can you hear me?"
From
somewhere off-camera, they heard him at last. But what reached
their ears wasn't what anyone expected.
Alan
tossed from side-to-side on the floor of the Monitor Room,
growling at the intensity of what he was feeling. Without
warning, his vision faded and was replaced by
pictures...pictures he didn't recognize. It was like a movie
was playing out in front of him; only it wasn't a movie...it
was something from within his own mind.
The first
scene was of he and Gordon splashing in the pool back on Tracy
Island. In his mind, he gasped. They were naked! Then,
just as quickly, he watched as he and Gordon...still, to his
horror, wearing no clothing...stood in the Lounge in front of
their father. It was evident they were arguing, and at first
he couldn't hear their words. Then it all became clear, like
someone had turned up the volume.
"Shut up,
Gordon, you jackass!" Alan fumed, fists at the ready.
"Hey,
knock it off, you little hothead!" Gordon retorted.
"Just you
keep your mouth shut about Tin-Tin!"
"Who's
gonna make me, Squirt, you?"
"Don't
call me that!" Alan roared, lunging for his brother.
"Boys! You
stop fighting this instant!"
"I'll call
you whatever I want, you whiny little shit!"
"Screw you
all to hell you little weakling!"
"I am
not a weakling!"
"Yeah,
that's why you can't do heavy rescue, wimp!"
My God,
Alan thought as he watched, what is this? I don't remember
any of this!
"You know
I have a bad back!"
"Yeah,
because you can't even pilot a Hydrofoil right. That's why
your sorry ass got stuck with Thunderbird 4!"
"Yeah,
well the only reason you've got Thunderbird 3 is because Dad
wants to get rid of you for a month at a time!"
Alan was
helpless. He couldn't do anything but watch this play out. It
was disconcerting, to say the least.
"Discipline me? Jeezus, Father, I'm not a flippin' kid!"
"You were
back then, son. You were out of control. You nearly destroyed
an entire building."
"I see.
So...let me get this straight...I'm a hotheaded, out of
control little shithead that you're glad to be rid of every
other month on that damned space station."
"That's
not what I said."
"You
didn't have to!"
A tear
escaped Alan's eye and ran down his temple before pooling in
his ear. But he couldn't move. He was paralyzed by this
experience. Why was he saying the things he was saying? He
knew none of it was true. Why, then, would he say it? Why?
"And
you...you can take your piece of shit astronaut job and
shove it up your ass! I'm through!"
Oh, my
God,
Alan thought for the umpteenth time. Oh, my God, did I
really say that to Father? I couldn't have. I just couldn't
have.
"I fixed
him! Guess he's not the only genius in the house! Father hates
all of us. We're just slaves to him so he can live out his
damned dream. Well, we'll see who has the last laugh in this,
*Father*! Only one more set of adjustments and I'll be on my
way. Just you try and stop me!"
Mortified,
Alan watched as he seemed to be doing some rewiring on
Thunderbird 3, then blasting her off. He was dressed in
civilian clothes, and didn't see himself change into his
uniform once. He knew that was highly unusual, and wondered
what was going on. Then a thousand thoughts crowded into his
mind, so fast and furious that he couldn't keep up, he
couldn't sort them all out. Before he could even react, he
catapulted over the edge of confusion into oblivion.
Virgil
slowly blinked his eyes, looking around as the room came into
focus. When at last he could see properly, he sat straight up
in his bed, pulling his blankets up around himself
protectively. Eyes wide, he looked all around...not
recognizing one single solitary thing. His breathing quickened
and his heart raced. A strangled sound escaped his throat as
panic began to set in.
Gordon
yawned and stretched, fully intending to turn to his side and
go right back to sleep. But for some reason it was very bright
in his room, so he chose to stumble out of bed and draw the
blinds. When he reached the window, however, he was stunned to
find that instead of being one small window in a wall, it was
a whole wall of windows! He rubbed his eyes with his fists,
and then stared out at a brilliant blue cloudless sky and an
ocean so dark it looked almost black.
"What in
the heck?" he mumbled. He turned to take in his surroundings
and retreated in fright until his back was against the glass
wall. Wrapping his arms around his body, he sank to the floor,
folding his knees tightly into his chest. "Where am I?" he
whispered, eyes round as saucers. "Where am I?"
"Father!"
John cried into the mike behind the desk. "Father, come
quickly! It's Alan!"
"Oh, no!"
Scott exclaimed as he, Jeff, Tin-Tin and Brains raced out of
the Lab.
"John,
that sounded like Virgil!" Grandma said, straining as she
heard a funny sound.
John
turned his attention to the speakers that were tuned in to
Virgil and Gordon's chronometers. Suddenly he heard a quiet
'What the heck?' followed by 'Where am I?'.
"And
that's Gordon!" he said. "They must've woke up."
"Kyrano,
let's go check on them," Grandma said, frowning. All hell
seemed to be breaking loose, and there was nothing she could
do about it.
Kyrano
nodded, pocketed his di, and followed her down the hall.
The
foursome from the Lab burst into the Lounge. John met them
halfway across the floor.
"What is
it, son? What's wrong with Alan?"
"I don't
know, Father. We were listening to Kyrano play the di. Al said
he had a sharp pain in his head, but then he was fine. Kyrano
continued to play, and next thing I know, Alan's not in his
chair. I heard him cry out, then we heard...well, we heard..."
"What?"
Tin-Tin asked. "What did you hear?"
"It was
like a conversation."
"A
conversation?" Jeff asked, walking toward the picture showing
an empty Mobile Chair on Thunderbird 5.
"Yeah,
Alan was having some sort of fight with himself, but I got the
idea he was playing something out. He was talking crazy talk,
Father. Calling somebody a wimp and...well, other words that
aren't exactly nice. Then he was on about a hydrofoil and the
Thunderbirds and being an astronaut...we couldn't catch it
all, but it was a doozy!"
"Alan!"
Jeff barked as he studied the vid picture. "Alan, it's your
Father, can you hear me?"
Tin-Tin's
mouth opened, but no sound came out.
"What is
it, Tin-Tin?" Scott asked.
"John,"
she gasped, "what exactly did Alan say?"
"What? I
don't know, I don't remember every word. It all happened so
fast."
"Please,
John, you must recall, you must."
"What's
going on?"
"Mr.
Tracy, I...I'm not sure. John, please," she pleaded.
"Okay,
okay, uh, he, um, well, he told someone to keep their mouth
shut about you...and, uh, he said something about piloting a
Hydrofoil right...then there was the part about taking your
astronaut job and shoving it up your--"
"JOHN!"
Jeff bellowed.
John's
face turned pink as he clamped his mouth shut.
"Oh, my,"
Tin-Tin breathed.
"What?"
Scott asked for what he felt like was the hundredth time.
"I
remember that. I remember the part about the astronaut
job...Mr. Tracy, that's when Father, Mrs. Tracy and I returned
from our shopping expedition to find Alan and Gordon arguing
with you here in the Lounge!"
Jeff
frowned "What?"
"Yes, I
recall that just as we were coming in, I heard him tell you to
do something rather unpleasant with your astronaut job."
"How
unpleasant, Tin-Tin?"
She
blushed. "Quite, Mr. Tracy."
Brains
nodded. "I-It sounds to me like, uh, Alan's remembered
something of what happened while he was, uh, infected with the
virus."
Jeff
turned back toward the vid screen. "Alan! Alan, can you hear
me!?!?"
When there
was no response, he turned to John and Scott. "You two, get up
there in Thunderbird 3 right away! We'll keep the vid line
open on our end and inform you of any changes. I want to know
what's going on, so use maximum speed!"
"F.A.B.,
Father!" they saluted as they came to rest on the settee. It
moved out-of-sight into the cavern below, but the rest of the
room's occupants barely noticed.
Jeff was
about to say something to Brains when he chanced to look up
and see four people entering the room. He was surprised to see
Grandma flanked by Gordon and Virgil, with Kyrano following
several feet behind.
"Mother?"
Jeff said, approaching them. "How are they?"
Ruth shook
her head sadly. "Worse, Jeff. They're much worse. They're
nothing more than teenagers."
"Teenagers?" Jeff repeated in disbelief. "You're kidding?"
"Father?"
Virgil said, leaving his grandmother's side. "What happened to
you?"
"Whaddya
mean, Virgil?"
"You look
so...old!"
"I what?"
"Whoa,
who's that?!?" Gordon asked, making a beeline for
Tin-Tin.
She
blushed and stepped backwards, ending up pressed against
Brains. The engineer peeked around her, and Gordon stopped in
his tracks. "Father? What's going on? Who are all these
people?"
"And where
in the heck are we?" Virgil added.
Everyone
turned to the portrait wall as John's picture signaled his
call. Glancing once more at his two now-teenaged sons, Jeff
headed for his desk and pressed a button.
"This is
Base Control, go ahead, John."
Virgil and
Gordon watched in amazement as a live shot of their brother
replaced his picture.
"Cool!"
Gordon said, heading for the wall.
"Father,
we've just passed through the rarified atmosphere. We're
running these engines into the ground. ETA to Thunderbird 5 is
one.point.eight hours. Have you heard anything from Alan yet?"
"No, John,
but things are a bit chaotic around here just now."
"How do
you mean, Father?" Scott asked, moving into view.
"Holy
shit!" Virgil exclaimed. "Look at you guys!"
"Check the
uniforms...where are you?" Gordon asked.
Scott and
John frowned at their brothers.
"Father,
what's happened?"
"Well,
it's like this, Scott," Jeff replied, deflating into the chair
behind his desk, "I've got two teenagers in the house again."
Brains and
Tin-Tin returned to the Lab, leaving Jeff, Kyrano and Grandma
to corral Virgil and Gordon. It took them over an hour, but
they finally succeeded in explaining to the boys what had
happened, or as much as they knew anyway, and that they
weren't really 17 and 13 years of age.
"In fact,
Virgil, you just turned 33 three months ago," Grandma informed
them. "And Gordon, you'll be 29 four months from now."
"This is
unreal," Gordon breathed, looking all around. "What a neat
pad!"
Jeff shook
his head. As concerned as he was for his sons, he was also
rather exasperated. "Listen, you two, we've got serious
business to attend to here."
Gordon and
Virgil, although mentally not in the present, recognized that
tone of voice from Jeff Tracy. It allowed for no monkey
business, so they retreated to the patio.
"This is
International Rescue calling Thunderbird 3."
"Right
here, Father."
"John,
when Alan cried out in pain the second time, was there any
indication as to the cause? Did he say or do anything before
he began babbling?"
"No, I
don't think so, Father. But I was on the couch with my eyes
closed, so I can't be sure. I'm sorry I wasn't watching more
closely."
"Don't be,
son. You'd no way of knowing something was going to happen."
"Jeff, I
was watching Kyrano mostly while he was playing, but I do
recall seeing some movement out of the corner of my eye."
"What kind
of movement, Mother?"
"Well, it
was coming from Alan's general direction. You know, come to
think of it, the first time he cried out, I was watching
Kyrano play, too."
"Kyrano,
you were playing the di the whole time?"
"No, Mr.
Tracy. I stopped after Mr. Alan's first pain. When he
recovered, he asked me to play again." Kyrano's eyes widened
as he stared into his employer's eyes. "I believe, Sir, that
Mr. Alan's attacks coincided rather strangely with my music."
"What are
you saying, Kyrano?" Scott asked, having joined John at the
monitor on Thunderbird 3. "You think your di had something to
do with this?"
Jeff
nodded thoughtfully. "I suppose it is possible. Let me
hear you play it," Jeff instructed. "I'll turn the sound off
Alan's feed, just in case."
Kyrano
nodded, bowing slightly, as he removed the di from his pocket
and brought it to his mouth. He blew into it, playing the same
song he'd been playing earlier. Everyone listened, marveling
at his talent, but unable to discern a connection.
"Ah! Ow!"
John
turned. "Scott?"
Jeff
headed for John's live feed. "What is it, Scott?" Before he
could utter another word, he clutched his head as though in
pain. "Arrrgh!"
"Father?"
John asked, staring down to where his father knelt on one
knee.
"Kyrano,
it is your music!" Grandma said. "Don't stop playing.
Don't stop!"
"But they
are in pain, Mrs. Ruth."
Grandma
bit her lip. Scott and Jeff recovered rather quickly, and both
turned to face Kyrano and Grandma.
"What the
heck was that?" Scott asked.
"Kyrano,
what is that di?"
"Mr.
Tracy, it is a simple musical instrument from my country.
There is nothing special about it."
"I beg to
differ, old friend." He turned to look up at John and Scott,
then back at the others. "I want you to try something. I'm
going to shut off sound to Thunderbird 3. I want you to play
that song again."
"Aw, but
Father, you don't know what it might do to you!"
"I have a
hunch, Scott. I'm going to test it out on myself and that's
that."
Scott
opened his mouth to protest, but was interrupted by the
arrival of Brains and Tin-Tin.
"Mr., uh,
Tracy, we've found it!" Brains announced.
"You've
what?"
"We've
found it, Mr. Tracy," Tin-Tin repeated. "We've found what it
is that's caused Virgil and Gordon to regress."
The two
men in question, having watched the drama unfold from their
perch on the patio, decided to re-enter the Lounge.
"Regress?"
Virgil asked.
"Yes, uh,
Virgil. You see, we were right about the, uh, water at
Oklahoma Peanuts being tainted."
"Peanuts?"
Gordon asked, stifling a chuckle.
Jeff shot
him a look as he replied, "But last night we tested those
samples every which way from Sunday. There was nothing but
simple compounds, and the rest of it was just the normal stuff
you'd find in free-flowing water."
"That's
right, Mr. Tracy. It wasn't until we mixed some of the
compounds into one of Virgil's clean blood samples that this
happened." Tin-Tin brought forth a small digi-card.
Jeff took
it from her. "This looks like that spot that was on the MI
scans."
"I-It is,
Mr., uh, Tracy. Or at least a r-reasonable facsimile thereof."
John spoke
from the vid screen. "You mean that separately in the water,
those compounds couldn't hurt a fly, but when they're mixed
together in the bloodstream..."
"...they
form a living organism?" Scott finished.
"Exactly!"
Brains exclaimed.
"Finally,
we're getting somewhere!" Jeff said, very much relieved. "So
now the question is, how do we kill it?"
"I, uh, I
don't know that we should."
"What on
Earth do you mean, Brains?" Grandma asked. "It's eating
Virgil's and Gordon's memories away one at a time!"
"Yes, Mrs.
Tracy," Tin-Tin replied, "but we don't know that killing it
will reverse the side effects of its existence."
Jeff's
face fell. "So even if you do manage to get rid of it, they
may not recover their memories."
"That's,
uh, right, Sir. W-We just can't be sure."
The
patriarch's face hardened with steely resolve. "Then I'm going
to test my theory. If I'm right, we may be able to use both
science and music to solve this puzzle once and for
all."
"Father, I
think it's too dangerous. Why don't you at least wait until we
get to Alan and make sure he's okay? You still haven't heard
anything from him, have you?"
"No, John,
we haven't. All right. You should be there in what, thirty
minutes?"
"Roughly,"
Scott replied.
"Fine.
Kyrano, prepare yourself to play that di like you've never
played it before. Scott? John?"
"Yes,
Father?" they responded in unison.
"I'm
leaving Alan's channel open, and I'm turning the sound back on
for now. Give a shout as soon as you arrive."
"F.A.B.,"
Scott replied.
"Thunderbird 3 out," John said as he cut the line.
"Brains, I
want you and Tin-Tin to come up with a way to kill that damn
thing that's taken over my sons' minds."
"Yes, Mr.
Tracy," they replied as they left for the Lab.
"Mother?"
"Yes,
Jeff?"
"I'm
starving."
Grandma
smiled. "Then I'll get us all something to eat. Virgil?
Gordon? How about giving me a hand?"
"Right-o!"
Gordon crowed.
"I'll be
along in a minute, Grandma," Virgil said, eyeing his father.
"All
right, Virgil. Come along, Gordon. The kitchen's this way."
Jeff
watched as his mother and second youngest son headed out. He
then turned to where Virgil was sitting on the piano bench.
"You all
right, son?"
Virgil
shook his head. "Do you know what it's like, Dad? To know that
I'm 33 years old but feel like I'm only 17?"
"No,
Virgil, I don't know. And I'm sorry you're going through
this."
"Do you
think it'll work? That guy with the glasses and the pretty
girl...and whatever it is you plan on doing?"
"It's got
to, Virgil. It's just got to."
CHAPTER NINE
Day Three
(continued)
By the
time Grandma, Virgil and Gordon finished preparing food for
the others, Scott and John had reached Thunderbird 5.
"Thunderbird 3 calling International Rescue."
"Go ahead,
John."
"Father,
we've just docked with Thunderbird 5. We're about to pass
through the airlock."
"F.A.B.
Keep your line open, I'm still not hearing anything from the
vid."
John
nodded as he and Scott exited the airlock into the access
ramp. They took the lift tube up one floor and passed through
the open emergency airlock doorway into the Main Monitor Room.
John gasped as he took in Alan lying on the floor looking
quite dead.
"What is
it, John?" Jeff barked.
John was
kneeling next to his little brother lickety-split. Scott
followed suit as he replied, "Alan's down. Checking for a
pulse...got one. It's strong."
They could
hear Jeff's sigh of relief.
"I'm gonna
try smelling salts," John said. He pulled one of the small
canisters from his sash belt and popped the lid. Removing a
small plastic tube, he replaced the canister and waited until
Scott had lifted Alan's head a little. John held the tube
under Alan's nose and snapped it in half, releasing a vapor
that would, as Grandma had often joked, wake the dead.
Alan
gasped and choked on his spit as the smelling salts did their
trick. His eyes popped open and he blinked against the harsh
lighting of the Monitor Room.
"Hey,
Alan," Scott smiled down at him. "You okay?"
Alan shook
his head, his mind a mass of scattered thoughts and images.
Closing his eyes, he tried to envision a hundred small digi-cards
sliding effortlessly into their storage slots, making each one
of the cards represent an errant phrase or picture that
refused to be put away.
"Alan?"
John said softly, rubbing his brother's arm. "Come on, say
something."
"G-G-God,"
was all he could manage.
"Scott?"
"Yes,
Father. He's come 'round, but we haven't got him coherent
yet."
John and
Scott nodded to each other, one of them grasping Alan's left
arm, the other grasping his right. They gently pulled him into
a standing position, but were almost completely supporting his
weight. Alan's eyes reopened as his brothers walked him to the
Control Chair and brought him to rest.
"Alan?"
Jeff spoke from the monitor. "Alan, it's your Father. Can you
hear me?"
"Y-Yeah,
Dad, I-I can hear you," Alan replied, much to everyone's
relief. When he focused on the screen, he could see Virgil,
Gordon, Jeff and Grandma watching him carefully. "H-How's
everything back home?" he asked weakly.
"What
happened?"
"I'm not
sure, Father..." Alan's voice trailed off, as he seemed to
recall something rather horrific. "Oh, my God. Father, I-I'm
so sorry."
"Sorry?
For what?"
"What I
said, what I said about...Gordon, I didn't mean it, I didn't
mean what I said, I promise you I didn't."
"Huh?"
Gordon asked as he approached Alan's portrait. "What're you
talkin' about?"
"Son, have
you remembered something?"
Alan
thought for a moment before nodding slowly. "I-I think so."
"From
when?" Scott asked.
"Well, I
don't know exactly. I was fighting with Gordon and then with
you, Father. It was awful."
"Mm, so I
hear. Do you remember why you passed out up there?"
"No...how
long have I been out?"
"A little
over two hours," John replied as he checked over the station's
systems.
"Really?
Last thing I remember is...calling home. I talked to John and
Kyrano was playing something...his di. He was playing his di."
"Then what
happened, Alan?" Jeff asked.
"Uh, I,
uh," Alan struggled to recall the details. "My head hurt. It
was a sharp pain."
"Just like
what I experienced, Father."
"Same
here, Scott. What about this pain, Alan?"
"Well, it
came and went and that was that, I think. Then I asked Kyrano
to play again, and before I knew it I had one splitting
headache!" Alan frowned in thought before continuing. "I
remember going down to the bathroom in the Sleeping
Accommodation. I-I took two hypos of ASA. I got back into the
lift tube, but--I'm sorry, that's all I can remember 'til just
now."
"So Kyrano
was still playing when you got back from Level 2?" John asked.
Alan
nodded. "I heard the music as I stepped out of the tube. Then
it felt like someone buried an axe into my head."
"Did you
say something about me and my astronaut job?" Jeff questioned.
Alan
turned about four shades of scarlet. "Yes, Father," he
whispered. Then, more forcefully, "I didn't mean it! Honest, I
didn't!"
"I know,
son, I know. I'll tell you what I think. I think you've
recovered your memory from the time when you were infected by
the Cumbaquay virus."
"That's
it!" Alan replied, rising to his feet. "That's it! You're
absolutely right! Now I remember! We had just returned
from taking the Cumbaquayans to the hospital, and you told us
Scott had thrown a tantrum!"
"I did
what?!?"
"Now, calm
down, son. I think it's pretty clear we weren't in control of
ourselves while the virus was attacking."
Scott
reddened, but remained silent.
"Yes, you
told Gordon, Virgil and me that Scott had taken a shower, then
exploded at you. You asked us to watch Base Control while you
went after him. Then Virgil got really mad at us, so we went
to the pool."
"What'd I
get mad at you about?" Virgil asked, trying desperately to
remember. But how on Earth could he remember something that,
to his 17-year old mind, hadn't even happened yet?
"You were
just sore about being the pilot of Thunderbird 2," Alan
replied.
"Pilot?
Thunderbird 2?"
"Never
mind, boys, this isn't going to get us anywhere. Alan, Virgil
and Gordon have lost so much of their memories, they think
they're teenagers."
"Finally,
I'm not the youngest one anymore."
John and
Scott smirked. Yep, Alan was just fine.
Ignoring
Alan's remark, Jeff said, "Now that we know Alan's okay, I
want to test my theory. Kyrano, are you ready?"
"Yes, Mr.
Tracy."
"Right.
Mother, I want you get Virgil and Gordon down to the Lab. That
way we can be certain they won't hear Kyrano play."
"Okay,
Jeff. Come along, you two."
Virgil and
Gordon followed Grandma out of the room.
"Jeff
Tracy calling the Lab."
"Yes, uh,
Sir."
"I'm
sending Mother, Virgil and Gordon down to you. I'm going to
see if Kyrano playing the di brings back any of my memories.
But I don't want Gordon and Virgil to hear the music."
"Good
thing, I need to get new sc-scans of their brains."
"Right.
Alan, are you fit for duty?"
"Yes, Sir.
I feel fine now. My head's finally beginning to clear."
"Okay.
Scott, John, I want the two of you to return to Base as soon
as everything seems squared away up there. Do not call us
unless it's an extreme emergency, is that clear?"
"Yes,
Father," John replied.
"Let us
know what happens, Dad."
"Don't
worry, Scott."
"I can't
help it! You have no idea what might happen to you!"
Jeff
sighed. His eldest, overprotective as always...only now it
wasn't limited to his brothers. He smiled at Scott's face
hanging in the picture frame. "I know what will happen
to your brothers if we don't figure out how to reverse their
memory loss," he replied.
Scott
nodded. He wasn't convinced it was a good idea, but once Jeff
Tracy got something in his mind, he wasn't one to let it go.
"All right, Father. But I'm next. Thunderbird 5 out."
Jeff
stretched himself out on the couch as Kyrano took a seat on a
nearby chair. "Are you certain you wish to attempt this, Mr.
Tracy?"
"Yes,
Kyrano. Mother gave you my watch. You can call for help if you
need to. But remember, Alan was in a lot of pain as his
memories returned. Don't use the watch unless it's something
terrible."
Kyrano
nodded and raised the di to his lips. He began blowing softly
across the opening, but kept his eyes on his employer. Two
full minutes passed before he saw the first sign of pain.
"Arrgh!"
Jeff grunted, his hand covering his forehead. "Ah, damn!" What
had started out as a piercing shot through his frontal lobe
soon turned into a pounding headache. "Keep...play-ing," he
ground out between clenched teeth.
Kyrano
nodded, not missing a beat. Jeff tossed and turned on the
sofa, clearly in agony. Kyrano watched helplessly, but
continued on as he'd been instructed. With each set of
harmonic notes, Jeff's pain seemed to increase exponentially,
but he remained silent. In less than ten minutes, his body
went limp.
Jeff
watched as pictures appeared in front of him. He didn't quite
understand what he was seeing, but somewhere his consciousness
was able to remind him they were scenes from when he'd had the
virus.
"Scott, I
don't have all the answers. I'm doing the best I can, doing
what I know how to do. How can I help you? How can I make it
better?"
"You
can't, Dad. Mom's gone. You can never make that better."
"I'm
sorry, Scott. Truly."
"Yeah,
you're sorry you got stuck with us. That's why I raised
my brothers!" he spat before skidding and sliding down the
cliff to the ground below.
Jeff shook
his head and sank back onto the ledge. Pulling his knees up,
he rested his arms and head upon them. "Oh, Lucy, what have I
done to our sons? What have I done?"
Jeff
watched the scene play out and felt anguish creep into his
heart. But before he could even think about it, another scene
flashed before him.
He jumped
to his feet and pressed a button on the back of his desk. He
leapt onto the settee just as it disappeared beneath the
floor.
"Good God,
no. Tell me he's not."
Jeff
frowned. What was that all about? What was he doing using
Thunderbird 3's pilot ferry?
"So you
mean to tell me every one of my brothers has gone mad?"
"Yes,
that's what I'm saying. There's no telling what Alan might do
in his present state of mind."
"What
should I do, Father?"
"Hope to
hell he docks with you. And pray, son. Just pray."
It all
came back to Jeff, so very quickly. Alan had taken Thunderbird
3. John had stopped him from getting past Thunderbird 5.
"So you
think my sons have contracted this virus?"
"It seems
to be the only logical conclusion."
"Where's
the antidote?"
Brains
looked at the floor, fiddling with the pencil in his hands.
"That's just it, M-Mr. Tracy. There is no known cure."
"No,"
Tin-Tin whimpered.
That
virus. That damned virus. Jeff was surprised at how much he'd
forgotten as his mind flashed to the next scene.
"Is it
just me or is it getting hot in here?"
"O-Oh,
no," Brains moaned.
"What?"
"Mrs.
Maycombe told me th-the first sign of infection is that the
patient feels unbearably h-hot. Then a f-fever sets in and
finally madness."
Jeff
paled. "Are you saying I'm infected?"
The
pictures began coming faster now.
"Scott!"
he yelled, straining to tell which direction the sound was
coming from. "Scott, are you in here?!?"
Jeff
darted to the left, eyes scanning everywhere at once. When he
was about halfway 'round, he spotted something that froze his
heart in mid-beat.
"NO!
SCOOOOOOTT!!!!"
Jeff
wanted to cry out, he wanted to scream as he watched his son
dangle wildly from the end of the rope. But he couldn't make a
sound. He couldn't move.
"Mr.
Tracy, are you all right?"
"Try-ing...to...keep...con-trol,"
he ground out.
"W-We have
the plant. Just t-take the sedative. W-We'll find a way to
save you."
One
solitary tear rolled down Jeff's cheek.
"Keep...con-tact...John...try-ing...to...save...Al-an."
Suddenly
feeling like his brain was about to explode, Jeff felt himself
spiraling downwards out of control. He was helpless to resist
the fall, and plunged headlong into darkness.
"This is,
uh, B-Base Control calling Thunderbird 3."
"Reading
you strength five, Brains. Has Father gone through with it?"
"Uh, yes,
John, he has. He l-lost consciousness j-just like, uh, Alan."
"Is he all
right, Brains?" Scott fairly bellowed.
"Y-Yes, he
s-seems to be. Uh, Mrs. Tracy is with him in the, uh, Sick
Room. He says he remembers everything, uh, now. H-He's resting
comfortably at the, uh, moment."
"Right.
We're about 45 minutes out. Have Kyrano get ready. As soon as
we get back, he's playing for me."
"O-Okay,
Scott. International Rescue out." Brains watched as Kyrano,
Virgil and Tin-Tin entered the room. "Uh, where's Gordon?"
"He's gone
to the kitchen for some iced tea," Tin-Tin replied. "How far
away is Thunderbird 3?"
"Oh, uh,
about forty minutes now, I w-would imagine. Uh, Kyrano,
S-Scott wants you to, uh, play the di for him u-upon his
return."
Kyrano
nodded solemnly. "Were you able to discover the means by which
Mr. Virgil and Mr. Gordon can be cured?"
"We think
so," Tin-Tin replied. "We tested it on the organism we grew in
the Stasis Chamber. Within six minutes, it was dead."
"Well,
then, what're we waiting for?" Virgil asked, frowning. "I'm
sick of not knowing what's going on!"
"I-I still
don't f-feel comfortable g-giving it to you," Brains replied,
approaching the distraught man. "W-We just don't know if your,
uh, memories will return."
"Well, if
the di worked on Alan and Father, it should work on us."
Virgil swayed a bit and blinked rapidly, shaking his head.
"Virgil?"
Brains said, moving forward. He was just in time as the larger
man fainted into his arms.
Kyrano and
Tin-Tin moved to help as Brains struggled to get Virgil to the
couch.
"What has
happened?" Kyrano asked.
"Oh,
d-dear. I-It looks like he's about to, uh, lose some more
memory."
The sound
of shattering glass made them jump.
"What was
that?" Tin-Tin asked.
"It came
from the kitchen," Kyrano said as they hurried out of the
Lounge.
Gordon
mulled over his current predicament as he set about making a
pitcher of iced tea. He'd gotten used to the confusion that
was now his constant companion. But he couldn't get used to
the fact that he couldn't remember what seemed to be the most
important years of his life. His family had explained to him
and Virgil that they were an organization called International
Rescue. And that they were in possession of incredible
technology, which they used for the sole purpose of saving the
lives of those in peril the world 'round.
It
figured, Gordon thought, that he and his brothers would so
selflessly risk their lives for people they didn't know. He
wondered how it was they'd gotten to this point, how it had
all come together. As he dumped ice cubes into the pitcher and
filled it with water, his mind clung to the hope that surely
if his father were smart enough to get something like
International Rescue going, he'd find a cure for his and
Virgil's progressive amnesia.
As he
carried the pitcher from the sink to the counter, Gordon found
himself feeling lightheaded. He shook his head as the room
began to spin. Without warning he dropped the pitcher,
watching in slow motion as it hit the floor and shattered. A
soft cry of surprise escaped his lips as his legs buckled
beneath him and he went sprawling onto the tiles covered with
broken glass.
Tin-Tin,
Brains and Kyrano raced into the kitchen.
"Oh!"
Tin-Tin exclaimed, running to Gordon's side. His hands and
face were trickling blood from where he'd landed on the broken
pitcher. "Brains, help me, he's been hurt!"
"I shall
prepare the second bed in the Sick Room," Kyrano offered,
shuffling out of the kitchen.
Being
somewhat smaller than his older brother, Gordon's dead weight
didn't pose too much of a problem as Brains lifted him into
his arms. Tin-Tin was suddenly struck by how much tenderness
Brains exhibited as he folded Gordon into his body. She'd
never really seen him be anything but completely practical,
logical and scientific. This was certainly a new side he was
showing. Tin-Tin smiled as they headed for the Sick Room.
Jeff was
sitting up in bed speaking with his mother as the trio entered
the room. "What happened?" he asked, coming to his feet.
"Both
Virgil and Gordon have passed out," Tin-Tin replied, watching
Brains lower Gordon gently into the second bed. "Gordon
dropped a pitcher and fell on top of it."
Brains'
fingers danced across Gordon's face and hands, his brow
furrowed. "Th-They don't look t-too severe," he said.
"Tin-Tin, you can just cl-clean the wounds and, uh, wrap his
hands."
"Right,"
she replied, heading for one of the cabinets.
Jeff
turned as Kyrano entered. "Kyrano, old man, you did it."
"What did
I do, Sir?"
"I've got
my memory back. Whatever that di of yours is made of, don't
you let anything happen to it. It may just do the trick for
Gordon and Virgil. Tin-Tin, you said Virgil passed out, too.
Where is he?"
"In the
Lounge, Mr. Tracy."
"Right.
I'm off to check on him."
"Jeff, are
you certain you're well enough?"
"Yes,
Mother, I feel fine. Those smelling salts of yours will keep
me awake for the next week!"
Grandma
laughed softly as Jeff left the room, followed closely by
Kyrano.
"International Rescue from Thunderbird 3."
Jeff heard
the beeping before he even entered the Lounge. He loped to his
desk and opened the channel. "This is International Rescue. Go
ahead, John."
"We're
approaching Base now, Father. We should be with you in a few
minutes."
"F.A.B.
Get up to the Lounge as soon as you arrive. Gordon and Virgil
have gone unconscious again. We're running out of time, boys."
"F.A.B,"
Scott and John replied in unison.
Scott's
face appeared on the vid. "And don't forget, Father: I'm
next."
"I'm
counting on that, son," Jeff replied before cutting the
channel.
"I-I
really think I have a go at it before Scott, uh, returns, Mr.
Tracy."
"Right,
Brains, it makes sense. No use sitting around here wasting
time. Are you prepared?"
"Yes,
Sir."
"Kyrano?"
"Yes, Mr.
Tracy."
"Right.
Okay, then. I'll stick around just in case."
Brains
chose to sit on a chair instead of lying down. He closed his
eyes as Kyrano began playing the di. It wasn't long before a
sharp stabbing sensation made him gasp, but he did not cry
out. He'd prepared himself for the pain. Gripping the arms of
the chair so hard his knuckles went white, Brains squirmed,
his face scrunched up as a grand ache settled into his head.
He fought it as long as he could before finally giving in.
"Ohhh..."
he exhaled, slumping forward in the chair.
Unprepared
for the way in which the memories would return, Brains was
stunned as he literally began seeing past events.
"N-No, I
c-can't think that way," he stammered, rising to his feet. He
took Jeff's shoes off and covered him with his blankets. "I
w-won't fail you, M-Mr. Tracy."
And I
didn't, he thought with relief. I didn't.
"Y-Yes, I
think this is it. I think it is!" Brains fairly crowed.
"You have
it, Brains?"
"Yes, uh,
Tin-Tin, I believe I do! Boy, is it getting hot in this suit!"
"Brains..."
"Y-Yeah, I
know, I know. Symptoms. I have to finish this. I just have
to."
"But how
will you know it works, Brains? You'll have to test it on
someone."
Brains
looked up, straight into Tin-Tin's eyes. "If I can finish this
before I lose my mind, I'll test it on myself. I-If I don't,
you have to call for help."
But it
hadn't come to that. He had lost his mind, but they
hadn't needed to go outside the fold for help. It had been
right there, and by a stroke of luck, they'd found it in the
form of the sedative. Brains' memories rapidly returned as the
next scene unfolded.
"Tin-Tin."
"Are you
all right?"
"No."
"The
virus?"
He nodded.
"What can
I do?"
"I think
this serum...will work," he ground out between clenched teeth.
"Have you
taken an injection yet?"
"No...fighting...the...anger."
"Brains,
let's get back down to the Lab, okay?" she asked evenly,
walking toward him.
"Want...to...smash...it," he hissed, raising the bottle into
the air.
"No!"
Tin-Tin cried, rushing him and reaching for the bottle.
Oh, my,
Brains thought. I can't believe I acted that way toward
Tin-Tin. How embarrassing.
"Brains?!?
What are you doing?" Gordon asked.
Brains was
dropping and throwing any flask, beaker or container he could
get his hands on to the floor and against walls. He was
screaming at the top of his lungs.
"FINE!
REJECT YET ANOTHER PROPOSAL, MR. TRACY!!! NEVER YOU
MIND THAT I'VE SPENT SIX MONTHS WORKING ON IT!"
Oh, I hope
they don't remember that. I'd hate for Mr. Tracy to think I
mind it all that much.
"LET ME
GO!" Brains yelled. "LET ME GO!!!"
"Come on,
Brains, knock it off," Virgil said. "Tin-Tin!"
"Yes,
here, hold his arm out for me, Virgil."
As much as
he struggled, Brains hadn't a hope of getting free from both
Tracy boys. Virgil succeeded in holding his arm fairly still,
long enough for Tin-Tin to jab a needle into it. In a second,
Brains went limp between them.
It wasn't
as bad as I thought it would be. Thank Einstein for that. In
his mind, Brains smiled as he felt sleep tug at him. He wanted
to wake up, but was suddenly so very tired. So he allowed
himself to be lulled into unconsciousness.
The
setting sun beat through the glass wall of the villa. Virgil
and Gordon had both been moved to their rooms, with Grandma
and Tin-Tin flitting back and forth between them to keep a
watchful eye. John, Jeff, Kyrano and Scott prepared for the
task at hand.
"Now,
Scott, I have to warn you, it's gonna hurt like hell."
"Okay,
Father, I can handle it. Let's get this show on the road. The
sooner we see it work on me, the sooner I can have my brothers
back."
"Right.
Okay, get comfortable. Kyrano, if you please."
Kyrano
nodded as he took up the same chair he'd been in while playing
for Jeff. Scott settled onto the couch while John and Jeff
hovered nearby. Kyrano raised the di to his mouth and blew
softly. Music filled the room, sad and sweet.
Scott
waited for the pain his father had spoken of, but it did not
come. At least, not right away. He was about to lose patience
and start griping when it hit.
"Eeeyaaa!"
he cried out, squeezing his eyes shut.
Jeff began
to lunge forward to help his eldest, but John's hand reached
out and grabbed his arm. He looked into his father's eyes and
shook his head 'no'. Jeff bit his lip and nodded, glad for
John's calming presence. He'd almost loused up the whole
thing. Damn parental instincts.
Kyrano
watched as the scene before him eerily echoed what had
happened when he'd played for his employer. He couldn't
believe this simple instrument from his home country of
Malaysia could have such a powerful effect on peoples' minds,
but he was very glad he could assist in their recovery.
Scott
writhed in pain, grunting and groaning as it felt like someone
was burrowing into his skull, intent upon cracking it right in
two. Nine minutes passed before he ceased to struggle and gave
in to the darkness.
He tried
to get up and run, he tried to move or cry out, but he was
paralyzed...stuck in a black place that held neither light nor
sound. He got the odd idea that he was in a movie theater
waiting for the show to start. This feeling was confirmed
seconds later when something appeared before him, something he
didn't recall ever seeing before.
"What's
got into me?" Scott yelled, jumping to his feet again. "I'll
tell you what's got into me, Dad. I'm sick and tired of
being the one making all the decisions out there. I'm tired of
telling everybody what to do! They're all grown men; they can
make their own decisions! Why do I have to be first? Because
I'm the oldest? To hell with that! I don't want the damned
responsibility anymore! I'm sick to death of this whole
thing!"
What on
Earth was going on? When had Scott ever said that to his
father? And furthermore, why had he said it? Saying he
didn't want to be first on the scene, to be in command of
almost every rescue? Nothing could be further from the truth!
Scott loved the position he held in the organization,
and within the family. What was this all about?
"Yeah,
Father, you thought. You always think.
You think you know what's best. You've locked us on this
island, a bunch of grown men. Grown men with needs! Did
you ever stop to think about that? Are we s'posed to be
goddamn monks for the rest of our lives just to save a bunch
of ingrates who couldn't care less?"
"But you
went into this willingly, Scott. You knew what life would be
like. You all knew."
"You're
right. We did know. But did you honestly think any of us would
say no to you? To our father? To the great astronaut and
billionaire Jeff Tracy? Please, you already had Brains
building the damn machines; you already had most of this hunk
of rock carved out before you even asked us. What were we
gonna do? We had no choice."
Scott
wanted to yell, to scream, to get his father's attention. "I
don't feel that way, Father!" he wanted to say. "None of us
do!" But words would not come.
Suddenly
Scott's eyes snapped open. They filled with tears that
overflowed onto his cheeks as he began to cry. He grabbed his
father's pant legs and pulled himself up until he was grabbing
his shirt and jacket, then finally buried his face in his
chest, sobbing so hard Jeff could feel the wetness soak
through his clothing.
"I...I
miss Mom!" Scott wailed, clinging to his father like a lost
child.
"I miss
her, too, Scott."
"It's so
unfair! Why did she have to die? Why???"
Tears
stung Scott's eyes as he watched the scene before him. He'd
always felt it unfair that his mother had been taken from them
so suddenly, but he never remembered crying so openly about
it, especially not in front of his father. If these pictures
left him feeling sad, the next ones positively sickened him.
Scott tied
the rope into a noose, and then got up on a chair he'd pulled
over and fastened the rope to the track lighting near the
roundhouse wall. The look on his face was one of hopelessness
as he lowered the noose around his neck.
Scott was
horrified. What am I doing? What am I doing?
He
tightened the rope so it fit snugly 'round his neck and in one
sudden and swift move, kicked the chair away. His eyes bulged
as the rope cut into his throat, constricting his airway and
making breathing impossible.
NOOOOOOO!!!!
his mind cried out.
But just
as quickly, another replaced that scene.
"My God,"
Jeff breathed. "You almost gave me a heart attack. And I'm
serious."
"Why did
you stop me?" Scott coughed. His strength drained, he sank
back onto the lounge.
"What the
hell kind of question is that? I saved you because...because I
love you, dammit!"
I love you
too, Father,
Scott thought as he was sucked into a whirlpool of
nothingness.
Night came
far too quickly. Scott was sullen, and refused to speak of his
returned memories. Jeff knew there would be time for that
later. Right now they had to concentrate on curing Gordon and
Virgil before it was too late. The Lab was soon filled to
capacity with Tin-Tin, Brains, John, Scott and Jeff as they
tested and re-tested the antidote Brains had created for the
organism plaguing Gordon and Virgil's brains. Jeff wanted to
be certain they had everything in order before they tried to
kill the parasite and return wayward memories to their
rightful owners.
Brains had
the Lab well in hand, so Jeff wandered up to check on his
sons. Grandma was sitting with Gordon in his room, and said he
hadn't stirred. Jeff entered Virgil's room just as he began to
open his eyes.
"Virgil?
Can you hear me, son?'
"Daddy?"
Virgil squeaked. "Where's Mommy?"
Jeff's
eyes widened as he approached the bed. "What did you say?"
"Where's
Mommy? I had a nightmare. I want Mommy to sing to me," he
pouted.
"Virgil,
how old are you?"
A big
smile lit his face, which somehow seemed more boyish than it
had before. "I'm eight!" he declared proudly.
Jeff sank
into the chair next to Virgil's bed. Even though three years
had passed since his mother's death, Virgil at age eight had
still asked for her when he'd had nightmares. "Dear God in
Heaven."
Grandma
and Jeff managed to soothe both Virgil and Gordon, and get
them back to sleep. Gordon awoke in a fit, crying for his
mother. They soon figured out he was about four years old--at
least, mentally--but neither wanted to delve into reminding
them their mother had died. And so Jeff told them she was on a
trip, and would return soon.
It broke
Ruth’s heart watching her son lie to her grandsons about
Lucille. Jeff struggled to maintain his composure as he
watched his mother stroke Gordon's hair. He kept reminding
himself that, if he had his way, his sons would be returned to
normal by dawn.
Day Four
Jeff
checked his chronometer. Virgil had had a rough night, waking
almost every hour on the hour as Jeff kept silent vigil. He'd
also kept in contact with Alan on Thunderbird 5 throughout the
night, explaining to him what they were going to attempt and
giving progress reports. It was now nearing five a.m. and he
sighed, running a hand through his hair. Virgil had been
asleep this time for almost 45 minutes, so Jeff decided to
check on those in the Lab. Before long, Gordon would be
nothing but an infant. The time to act was now.
Scott
looked up as his father entered the Lab. He yawned almost big
enough to split his face in two, which prompted everyone else
in the room to follow suit.
"Well?"
"Looks
like it's a go, Father. We've run every test imaginable,"
Scott replied, forcing himself to his feet.
"Brains?"
"Yes, uh,
M-Mr. Tracy. I believe we're ready."
Jeff
nodded. "Then let's get it going. Virgil and Gordon have
regressed back to eight and four years of age. Whatever we do,
it has to be soon."
"Oh, my,"
Tin-Tin sighed as she gathered some papers and equipment.
John,
Jeff, Scott and Brains gathered more items and walked
single-file up the stairs. In the privacy of their own minds,
each and every one of them was praying. Praying like they'd
never prayed before.
"N-Now, we
have to be certain the sigma radiation beam doesn't m-move one
millimeter th-throughout the, uh, procedure."
"Right.
The sedative should keep him knocked out and the restraints
should hold him in place, but Scott, I want you at his head,
just in case."
"Okay,
Father."
"John,
stay at his feet. If he starts moving, do everything you can
to immobilize him."
"F.A.B."
Brains and
Tin-Tin checked and double-checked their equipment as Jeff
looked on. They were all in the Sick Room. Having been given a
sedative, Virgil was strapped to the bed as tightly as
possible to keep him from moving. A large, black square
machine mounted on something that looked like an I.V. pole was
at the head of the bed. A thin tube eight inches long and
about the thickness of a pencil extended from the machine,
coming to rest just centimeters from Virgil's hairline just
above his right eyebrow. The section of hair directly beneath
the tube had been wetted with lubricant and slicked back to
afford the most accurate placing of the beam possible.
Kyrano
stood nervously in the door, watching. He'd been instructed to
wait until Brains declared the entity in Virgil's brain had
been killed, and then he was to begin playing his di
immediately. Grandma hung behind him, wringing her hands.
"We're,
uh, ready, Mr. Tracy."
Jeff
nodded slightly, knowing his next words might doom the grown
man on the bed to remain in the world of an eight-year-old
boy. "Do it."
Scott and
John looked at their father's stoic face, but could sense none
of what was running through his mind. They looked at each
other grimly as they took up their positions at the head and
foot of the bed, respectively.
"O-Okay,
Tin-Tin, uh, give Virgil the injection of Antidote L."
"Right,
Brains," she replied, sliding a needle into Virgil's forearm.
Brains
flicked a switch and the large square machine hummed to life.
He watched the life monitors above the bed. Everything seemed
to be reading normal. He pressed a series of buttons and the
tube extending from the machine began to glow as a red beam
shot out the end of it and pinpointed a spot on Virgil's head.
"Here
goes," Brains muttered as he made final adjustments. His
finger hesitated above the button that would begin blasting
the organism in Virgil's head with pure sigma radiation. He
turned to look at Jeff, who nodded that he should continue.
Brains turned back, looking at his finger as though it
belonged to someone else. Then he pressed the button.
Externally, nothing seemed to be happening. But the monitors
to the side of the bed showed the group that the organism,
which had over the past 24 hours grown to the size of a grape,
was now shrinking. Everyone's eyes were riveted to the display
monitor. What was only minutes seemed to pass like hours.
Millimeter by millimeter, the organism disappeared.
"It's
working," John breathed. "It's working!"
"Yes, it,
uh, seems to be," Brains replied, a smile on his face. "Just a
few more seconds should do it. Tin-Tin, uh, turn off the
radiation machine a-as soon as I give the w-word."
"Okay."
Finger poised over the switch, Tin-Tin held her breath. What
she didn't realize is that everyone else was holding their
breath as well.
They
watched as the life form grew so miniscule it was barely
visible. Then all at once, Brains shouted, "Stop!"
Tin-Tin
flicked the switch off as everyone looked down at Virgil. He
lay quite still, seemingly none the worse for wear.
The life
monitors indicated he was fine, so Jeff turned to Kyrano.
"It's time," he said simply.
Kyrano
nodded and took two steps into the room. He raised the di to
his lips and began to play. The song was now as familiar to
the others in the room as it was to him. They watched Virgil
expectantly as the music drifted over them, everyone willing
his memories to return.
Scott was
the one who noticed the slight twitch of Virgil's right eye.
He stared intently at the area, wondering what it meant. When
nothing else happened, he looked up and signed to the others
what he'd seen. Again, the minutes seemed to drag as Kyrano's
song continued. He'd been told to play for ten full minutes,
for in the previous three trials with Alan, Jeff, Brains and
Scott, it had seemed to take no longer than that for the di to
do whatever it was doing.
As they
approached the sixth minute of the song, Grandma noticed
Kyrano's body stiffen. She frowned and came 'round to stand in
front of him. His eyes had taken on a rather glassy
appearance, and her frown deepened. She turned to look at Jeff
and motioned him over.
He bent
down so she could whisper in his ear. "He doesn't look quite
right, Jeff."
Jeff's
frown matched his mother's as he watched his old friend, who
no longer seemed to be aware of their presence. "Kyrano?" he
whispered.
Kyrano
felt it coming this time. He felt himself being called as
though from a distant star. The now-familiar fog enveloped his
mind, but he struggled to maintain clarity, knowing he had to
finish what he was doing for Virgil's sake. He stiffened,
playing the di automatically as his brain fought to keep
itself in the moment.
KYRANO.
No, no,
no.
KYRANO!
No, leave
me alone. I cannot! I will not!
KYRANO!!!
Noooooooo!
"Aaaaaaaaaa!" Kyrano wailed, dropping the di to the floor.
Tin-Tin gasped as it broke into two pieces.
"Kyrano!"
Grandma cried as he fell toward her.
Jeff's
strong arms caught his friend just as he toppled. He carried
him to the Sick Room's second bed and laid him upon it as
Kyrano thrashed about in pain.
"It's the
Hood again!" Grandma said as she and Tin-Tin rushed to his
side.
"Not now!"
John said, rising to his feet. "We were almost there!"
"Aaaaah,
arrrrrrgh!"
"Kyrano,
it's Jeff, can you hear me?"
"Fight it,
Kyrano," Grandma intoned, leaning as close as possible to his
face. "Fight with everything you've got!"
KYRANO!!!
WHAT IS THE STATUS OF INTERNATIONAL RESCUE?
Somewhere
in the haze of this uncertain reality, Kyrano knew he had to
force himself to speak aloud. "I...will...not...tell...you!"
"That's
right, Kyrano, don't tell him. Don't tell him anything,"
Grandma said, her hand on his arm.
YOU HAVE
NO CHOICE! MY POWER OVER YOU IS GREAT! YOU WILL TELL ME
WHAT I WISH TO KNOW!
"I...will...not...betray...them! No...longer!!"
KYRANO!
YOUR FEEBLE ATTEMPTS TO THWART MY EFFORTS ARE LAUGHABLE! YOU
TELL INTERNATIONAL RESCUE THEY WILL NEVER SURVIVE!
"They...will...survive!
They will!"
"Kyrano,
get him outta your head!" Jeff bellowed.
"Father!"
Scott exclaimed. "Virgil's waking up!"
"What?"
Scott
remained in his seat, leaning forward so his eyes were mere
inches from his brother's. John and Jeff hovered over them,
frowning.
Virgil
moaned as his head rolled from side to side. The strain was
almost too great, but he managed to force his eyelids open
enough that he could see through the resulting slit. The first
thing that came into focus was his brother's cobalt blue eyes.
Virgil blinked a few times before his eyes would stay open all
the way.
"Virg?"
Scott said softly.
He opened
his mouth to reply, but before he could do so, Virgil's vision
blurred as his mind knocked into high gear, flooding so
quickly with images and ideas that it was unable to keep up.
Scott
leaned even closer, one hand coming to rest on his brother's
hair, the other on his arm. "Virgil, can you hear me?" he
asked softly. "Please, Virg, come on."
Virgil
began to sweat as his rate of breathing increased. Brains
watched the monitors with increasing anxiety as his heart rate
and blood pressure soared. "Tin-Tin, get on it!" he yelled.
She left
her father's side and grabbed some items from a nearby
cabinet, racing to Virgil's side. Before anyone knew what was
happening, she'd injected him with something, but his heart
rate continued to increase. By now, Virgil was panting, trying
desperately to get oxygen into his lungs.
"Do
something!" Jeff begged, grasping one of Virgil's hands.
"We're
trying!" Brains replied as he and Tin-Tin flitted about the
bed like angry bees.
Grandma
tried her best to focus on Kyrano, who still seemed to be
waging his internal war against the Hood. "Kyrano, it's me.
It's Ruth. Mrs. Ruth. Please, Kyrano, you must stop him.
Virgil needs you now. Please."
Kyrano's
eyes opened and found Ruth’s. He tried to focus on them, tried
to use them as he had before: an anchor, a tether to reality.
"M-Must...fight..."
"Yes,
Kyrano, yes. Fight. Remember? You did it before. Fight!"
"Go...away!" Kyrano cried out to the evil invading his mind.
"You...will...not...have...me...any...longer!"
As
suddenly as it had begun, the attack was over. Grandma
breathed a sigh of relief as Kyrano sank unconscious back into
the pillow. She then turned her attention to her grandson, who
was surrounded by activity. From her vantage point, she could
see Scott whispering to his brother while simultaneously
stroking his hair.
"Virg,
it's Scott. It's your brother, Scott. Please talk to me. Say
something. Say anything."
"Father?"
John croaked as he watched Virgil's condition continue to
decline.
"He's
strong. He'll make it," Jeff said, more to convince himself
than John. Jeff knew that Scott and Virgil had always been the
closest of his sons. He turned his eyes to his eldest, who
looked oddly like a worried mother hen at the moment. "Bring
him back, Scott. Bring him back."
Virgil
felt like he was running a marathon. He couldn't get his
thoughts in order; everything was abuzz with activity and
noise, bleeps and blips, voices and pictures flashing through
his mind. But one small voice seemed to cut a swathe through
the reeds of confusion. In the midst of incomprehensible din,
he heard Scott.
"Virgil,
I'm right here with you. I've got you, like always. Stay with
me. Come on, you can do it."
Virgil
tried hard to open his eyes. When at last he succeeded, the
only thing he saw were the eyes of his brother. "S-Scott?"
Scott
nodded. He could feel Virgil's breath on his face as it became
more ragged. "Virgil, keep it here. Keep it right here," he
said, pointing to his own eyes.
"Scott?"
Virgil choked as tears fell. "Scott? Help me."
CHAPTER TEN
Day Four
(continued)
"I'm here.
I'm here, Virgil. I'll help you. Just stay with me," Scott
said softly.
"C-Can't
th-th-think-" Virgil panted as he began shivering.
"H-H-Help..."
Scott
reached up and unfastened the restraint holding Virgil's head.
John and Jeff reacted by removing the rest of the binds.
Tin-Tin ran from the room as Brains continued administering
hypo sprays of medication to Virgil.
"His
temperature's too high!" John exclaimed, watching the life
monitors above the bed.
"Brains,
what's happening?" Jeff asked, still holding tight to Virgil's
hand.
"H-He's
going into shock!"
"Oh, God,
why? What's making him into shock?"
"I-I don't
know. I-I'm trying everything I-I can."
"The di,"
Grandma spoke from behind them. She'd picked it up off the
floor and now held one broken piece in each hand. "It's
broken."
"Oh, no.
That means Kyrano can't play again," John said.
"Gordon,"
Jeff sighed, eyes closing in anguish. Now he would never
regain his memories. And Virgil...who knew how much Virgil had
been able to recall before the Hood's most recent attack?
"You don't
have to think, Virgil," Scott whispered, still in his
brother's full line of sight. "Don't panic, just stay calm."
But Virgil
was shivering so badly he couldn't keep his arms and legs
still. His head thrashed from side to side as he cried out.
John held Virgil's feet while Jeff grabbed his other hand so
that he was holding both.
Scott
couldn't think of anything else to do...toeing his shoes off,
he crawled into the bed, his back resting against the wooden
headboard. He pulled Virgil up until the younger man was
sitting between his legs, his entire back up against Scott's
chest. He wrapped his arms around his middle and began
whispering into his ear.
"Virgil,
listen to me. Listen to my voice." A small smile formed on his
lips. "Do you remember the time you climbed up into the tree
house? You were scared of heights and by the time you got up
there, you were terrified to even try and come down. Do you
remember?"
It was
like being underwater. Somewhere dark and full of things to
bump into, like creatures clawing at you from every direction.
Above he could see the surface, but no matter how much he
fought, he couldn't get any closer. These things, they kept
him down, hundreds of fingers digging into his flesh, pulling
him down, down, when all he wanted to do was go up.
Then the
surface rippled and Virgil saw something enter the water. A
hand. It was a hand. But not one of the ugly lifeless ones
keeping him below. It was brilliant white; it glowed as it
extended itself further and further into the water, coming
nearer and nearer. Virgil cried out and reached his own hand
up. If only he could grasp it. If only he could reach it.
"Virgil,"
he heard in his mind. "Do you remember the time you climbed up
into the tree house? You were scared of heights..." Virgil
grabbed hold of that memory. Yes, he remembered it. The white
hand--it was that memory. One memory he could fish out from
all the others tearing at his mind. "...and by the time you
got up there, you were terrified to even try and come down. Do
you remember?"
"Yes...yes..." Virgil wheezed. His fingers were just inches
from the hand...the memory of the tree house...Scott had
climbed up to help him...but he wouldn't come down...he
couldn't...in his mind, he so clearly saw himself at age six
and Scott at age nine that he could've sworn it was real.
With his
last ounce of strength, Virgil's fingers met the white
hand...the memory of the tree house engulfed him...he'd been
so frightened that he'd backed up against the tree house wall,
crying...he sank to the wooden floorboards...Scott sat down
next to him and put his arm around him..."It's okay, Virg,
it's okay. You don't have to go down. We can live up here."
"You'd stay with me?" "Of course I would. But then you won't
see Mom or Dad again. Or Grandma and Grandpa. Or Johnny or
little Gordon. Or the new baby Mom's going to have." "I won't
see the new baby?" "No, Virg, you won't." "But I wanna see
him." "Then you'll have to come down."
Virgil
recalled how Scott had gone down the ladder, sheltering him on
the inside as he clung to the outside...Virgil slipped once
and cried for help...Scott pressed into him from behind,
keeping him from falling...Virgil didn't want to continue, he
was too frightened..."Virgil, I'm right here with you. I've
got you, like always. Stay with me. Come on, you can do it."
Suddenly
the white hand closed around his, and Virgil felt himself
being pulled toward the surface. When at last he broke free,
his eyes opened wide and he inhaled deeply, his chest roaring
from the effort.
"Scott!"
he cried out, his body stiffening.
Scott
tightened his grip. "Right here," he said into Virgil's ear.
"I've gotcha."
Every
muscle in Virgil's body gave way as he sank into Scott's arms.
As soon as Virgil had stopped thrashing, John let go of his
feet and practically fell onto the edge of the bed, wiping his
sweaty forehead with the back of his hand. Jeff released
Virgil's left hand, but kept his right firmly within his
grasp. Brains fell against the wall as Grandma backed into
Kyrano's bed, completely spent.
Tin-Tin
charged into the Sick Room, expecting to find it in as much
chaos as when she'd left. But she was shocked to find everyone
quietly staring at Virgil who, it seemed, had calmed. Jeff
looked up at her, his face pale and drawn. Then he looked down
to her hand. In it she held:
"The di."
Tin-Tin
nodded breathlessly. "It's Father's second one, Mr. Tracy. I
remembered where he kept it. That's why I ran from the room
before."
"Then all
is not lost," Jeff replied, allowing himself the luxury of a
smile. He turned toward the head of the bed. Scott had relaxed
his hold on his brother, whose head now rested on Scott's
shoulder. He watched as Virgil's breathing slowed, and the
life monitors showed all other bodily functions returning to
normal.
"Virgil?"
Jeff said, doing his best to keep his voice level. "Virgil,
how are you?"
Virgil
blinked as his eyes came to rest on his father's face.
"F-Father."
"Virgil,
how old are you?"
"What?"
"How old
are you, son?"
"Uh,
um...I'm twenty-five, Dad. Why? What-what's going on?"
"Damn,"
Jeff swore softly. Their scheme had worked...but not enough.
"Is Kyrano awake?"
"No, Jeff,
he's really out this time," Ruth answered.
"Virgil
needs to hear more. He's not back to the present yet."
"I can
play, Mr. Tracy," Tin-Tin offered sheepishly.
"You?"
John said, rising to his feet. "You know how to play that
thing?"
Tin-Tin
nodded. "It's been awhile, but I know the song Father played
for Virgil. I would like to try."
"Scott?"
Virgil asked, cocking his head sideways to get a better view
of his brother. "Why are...why are you in bed with me?"
Scott's
face reddened as tension found release in laughter. He
disentangled himself from Virgil and helped him lie back down.
"And that's the thanks I get," he mumbled good-naturedly.
"Thanks,"
Virgil said softly, his eyes never leaving Scott's. "I know
what you did. I don't know what's going on, but I know you
brought me back."
Scott
smiled.
"Virgil,
we have to get the rest of your memory back."
Virgil
nodded, although he had no idea what his father was talking
about. But he trusted him, and he could tell something very
strange had been happening, so asked no questions.
"It's
gonna hurt, Virg."
"It's
okay. Whatever it is, I'm ready."
"Brains?"
"Yes, uh,
Mr. Tracy. He seems fine. I think it's o-okay to proceed."
John
turned to Tin-Tin, who raised the di to her mouth. "Play well,
little sister," he said softly.
Tin-Tin's
eyes met his and she smiled, pursing her lips and beginning to
exhale. Air swept through from her mouth and tickled the top
of the bamboo instrument. The same melody as before was
brought forth, and everyone's eyes were once again on Virgil.
It took
less than a minute for pain to find Virgil again. "Owwww!!" he
cried out, squeezing his father's hand so tight Jeff wondered
if he were breaking it. He twisted in the bed as John grasped
his other hand. Scott placed his hand protectively on Virgil's
head.
What was
he seeing? What were these things? What kind of movie was
running through his mind? Pictures sped by so quickly he could
barely register one before it moved on to the next.
His
brother Gordon, lying in a hospital bed after his terrifying
hydrofoil accident...Thunderbird 5 being built...the elevator
car crashing after Fireflash came down...being in the freezing
cold at Mount Arkan with Brains...pushing reactor rods back
into place at the atomic irrigation plant in the
Sahara...catching Alan on the Jet Air Transporter as he falls
from the San Miguel River bridge...shooting Lady Penelope free
just as the Anderbad Express approaches...being attacked by
missiles...he and Alan saving Tony and Bob from the
mine...talking to Chip about Thunderbird 2...catching the KLA
satellite on Thunderbird 2's wing and crashing it into the
desert...bloody bodies and body parts scattered over a
clearing on Cumbaquay...diving into the well tank to save
John...
My life,
Virgil thought. This is my life. But other scenes soon came
into play, and seemed to slow down enough for him to grasp
their meaning.
"Probably
because he's sick of being in command all the time, just like
I'm sick and tired of being the Second Fiddle ferry boy,"
Virgil retorted from the piano bench. His brothers looked at
him in surprise. "We oughtta switch places. See how he'd like
being stuck in Thunderbird 2 for a change."
What?
Second Fiddle ferry boy? I am not a Second Fiddle ferry
boy!
"I'm tired
of playing second banana to the Great and Powerful Scott,"
Virgil began, pacing across the Lounge to the patio doors and
back as he spoke. His voice dripped with hatred. "He always
goes first, he's always telling us what to do. He's not so
great. I don't get a chance to make my own decisions unless
for some reason you can't get hold of the Golden Boy."
"Virgil,
that's not true, and you know it."
"You can
deny it all you want, Father, but you stuck me behind a
goddamned freighter. I wasn't good enough to pilot Thunderbird
1. I wasn't smart enough to be made commander of International
Rescue whenever you left the Island. I'm the one who has to do
all the dirty work while your perfect firstborn sits on his
ass at Mobile Control! God forbid one flippin' lock of hair
gets out of place or one tiny scratch mars his James Bond
face."
What the
hell? That's not how I feel! What am I saying?
But then there was another flash.
"Just...anger. I'm so angry."
"Why?"
"I don't
know. I'm angry at Father, at Scott...I was angry with you for
shutting Thunderbird 2 down."
"S-Sorry
about that. I-I was afraid you'd, uh, you know."
"I know.
I'm just...now I'm sad. This overwhelming despair, I can't-I
can't explain it. It's so hopeless. Everything is so
hopeless."
"Virgil, I
think you may have been infected by something on Cumbaquay."
"Huh?"
The virus!
Of course! This all started with that virus! The virus given
to them by...The Hood. Suddenly it all became clear. But just
as it did, the pictures faded from view, leaving him locked in
a place void of light. Gratefully, Virgil succumbed to the
nonentity of unconsciousness.
"Tin-Tin,
you did it!" John exclaimed, rising and enveloping her in a
bear hug. "You did it!"
"Let's
hope so," Jeff said, finally releasing Virgil's now-limp hand.
Scott
sagged against the wall as Brains reviewed Virgil's vital
signs. "H-He looks good," he announced.
"Thank the
stars for that," Grandma said.
Suddenly
they heard a cry. But not a cry of anguish or cries for
help...the cry of a baby.
"What
the--?" Scott said, heading for the door. Everyone else
followed as they traced the cry...to Gordon's room.
"Oh, my
God!"
"What is
it, Scott?" Jeff asked, entering the room. Then he saw.
Kicking
his arms and legs like an infant, Gordon wailed and cried,
tears streaming down his face.
"No!" Jeff
exclaimed, rushing to his side. "No, no, not yet. BRAINS!"
"Y-Yes,
Sir?"
"Sedate
him! We have to do it NOW!"
Brains ran
back to the Sick Room for the sedative, returning within
seconds. He quickly injected Gordon, who at last stopped
crying and fell into a deep sleep.
"Father,
he's a baby!" John said worriedly as he touched Gordon's arm.
"I know,
John, I know," Jeff ground out. "You and Scott get Virgil out
of the Sick Room. I'll bring Gordon in. We have to kill that
damned thing in his head, there's no time!"
Everyone
scurried out of the room to prepare as Jeff sat on the bed
next to Gordon's still form. He gently wiped the tear tracks
from his son's face and whispered, "My boy. You've suffered so
much. I only hope we're not too late."
Everything
was set up. Gordon was strapped to the bed as Virgil had been.
This time, John insisted upon taking up the position at his
head, while Scott stayed at his feet. Jeff stood nearby while
Kyrano slept on in the next bed, oblivious to the goings-on.
Tin-Tin and Brains had prepared the radiation machine and
Antidote L for their latest intended, and Grandma sat on the
edge of Kyrano's bed. The room was crowded, holding every
member of the house save Alan in Thunderbird 5 and Virgil, who
was resting in his own room.
"We're,
uh, ready, Mr. Tracy."
"Go."
Tin-Tin
injected Gordon with Antidote L and watched as his life signs
remained stable.
"Okay,
I'm, uh, switching on sigma radiation...now," Brains said,
flipping the switch.
The tube
glowed as a red light pinpointed the same spot on Gordon's
head as it had on Virgil's, his hair slicked back to increase
visibility. Six pairs of eyes watched the monitor closely. As
before, the organism within Gordon's skull slowly reduced in
size. In almost exactly six minutes, it seemed to disappear
altogether.
"Tin-Tin..."
"Ready."
"Now!"
Tin-Tin
flipped the switch and the radiation machine went silent.
"Vitals
are still, uh, good," Brains said.
"The di,
Tin-Tin."
"Yes, Mr.
Tracy." She stepped away from the bed, pulling the di out of
her white lab coat pocket. She began to play her song,
silently praying for it to work. It was Gordon's only hope
now.
Mom
twirling him around the room, laughing as he laughed, holding
him tightly, kissing his skinned knee. His first day of
Kindergarten, how he'd been teased by his peers for talking
about nothing but the ocean, and how John had found him crying
on the playground at recess. "What is it, Gordo? Why are you
crying?" "They don't like me. They think I'm weird." "We all
do, little bro." "That's not funny, Johnny!" "Hey, shh, it's
okay. If they catch you crying, they'll tease you even more."
"I don't like it here. I wanna go home!" "Just stick with it,
Gordo. It'll be okay. You'll see."
Just then,
a group of four boys from John's class approached the
brothers. "Aw, will ya look at that? John Tracy's playin' mama
to little bro," they taunted in a singsong voice. John ignored
them, moving his body to shield Gordon from view. "Come on,
Tracy, give it a rest," the largest boy said, pushing his
shoulder from behind. "Let's see the little mermaid."
Gordon
began to cry as John rose to his full height, which, for a boy
of eight, was pretty tall. "I would suggest you watch what you
say about my little brother," John menaced. "Oh, yeah? What're
you gonna do about it, Tracy?" "This," John replied quietly as
he raised his fist. Before Gordon knew what was happening,
John had flattened the bully with one good punch to the jaw.
Then he turned and offered that same hand to Gordon. "Come on,
Gordon. These boys aren't worth our time."
Gordon
smiled to himself as he watched John lead him away. He had
always protected him, even when John had been a senior in high
school. He was never embarrassed to be seen with a mere
sophomore. It was when John finally graduated and left for
Harvard that Gordon came into his own, learning to fight his
battles and stand up for himself, thanks in part to long
late-night vid conversations. He'd always respected John for
how much he'd helped him, but suddenly realized he'd never
actually thanked him for it. He cringed as the next scene
appeared.
Gordon's
heart stopped as the hydrofoil sped out of control. He flew
through the air, his one thought that he'd never see his
family again.
He almost
choked on the lump in his throat. God, how did I ever make
it through that?
Again, it
was John. He sat by Gordon's bedside 24 hours a day in the
hospital, and was the first one Gordon saw when he woke. John
patiently waited until Gordon could speak, developing a crude
sign language with which they could communicate in the
interim. All his brothers helped with physical therapy as
Gordon regained his strength, but it was with John that he'd
spent most of that time.
I have to
let him know. I have to tell him how grateful I am.
Pictures flew by more quickly now, as Time and Gordon finally
began to catch up.
Designing
and building Thunderbird 4 with Brains and his
brothers...cutting off Fireflash's engines so it could float
to the surface...holding the EPU wiring in place so Fireflash
wouldn't crash into the ocean...in a shootout with Dr. Godber
in the Anderbad Tunnel...finding Ned and Joe deep beneath the
island of Manhattan just in the nick of time...ramming
Thunderbird 4 into the Martian Space Probe command module to
dislodge it from the main craft...pulling Brains out of danger
at the bottom of Lake Anasta...retrieving the stolen film from
a mini-sub at the bottom of a harbor in the French
Riviera...shooting a massive alligator with a tranquilizer
dart to save Alan from being eaten...hoisting the diving bell
to the surface of the Atlantic Ocean...being attacked by
Umbabwe on Cumbaquay..."
Gordon
felt like his head was about to implode, but he forced himself
to continue watching this strange movie.
"Put some
clothes on, Kyrano, Grandma and Tin-Tin will be returning
soon. You can't be standing here like that when they do."
"Oh,"
Gordon snickered, "like Tin-Tin's never seen a naked Tracy
before." Alan punched him in the arm. Hard. "OW!"
"What did
you just say?" Jeff asked, his face turning scarlet.
Holy shit,
did I say that in front Dad?
Gordon winced.
"No, I
will not go away, Gordon. You're in pain. Why?"
"Because
of you, Tin-Tin."
"Me? What
on Earth do you mean?"
"Why did
you have to love Alan, Tin-Tin? Is it because he's stronger
and heartier than me? Or because he has dashing blonde hair
and blue eyes and I don't?"
Realization dawning, Tin-Tin covered her mouth with her hand.
"Oh, my," she breathed.
Gordon
sniffled and came to his feet, turning his back to her and
leaning his elbows on the balcony railing. "I can't believe
you've never noticed," he said quietly.
"Gordon,
I-I'm sorry, I had no idea."
He
groaned. Oh, my God, how can I ever face her again? Why did
I tell her? Why didn't I just keep my mouth shut?
"I don't
care what you want! You've made your decision!" he yelled, his
eyes darkening. "Just go! Go to your lover!"
Tin-Tin
backed away, tears welling up in her eyes. "I'm so sorry," she
said before running out of the room.
Poor
Tin-Tin. I have to tell her it's okay. I have to tell her.
I've made my peace with it. I have to let her know.
But Gordon didn't get the chance to take that train of thought
any further. His mind went blank and he was left in total
darkness. He felt something pulling at him, but resisted.
No, I
don't want to go down there, he heard himself saying. No, I
don't want to go. Let me stay. Please, let me stay.
"No, I
don't want to," Gordon mumbled, fighting against the
restraints. "Let me stay. Please, let me stay."
"Gordon?"
John said, kneeling beside the bed.
"Johnny,
please, please let me stay."
Everyone
was surprised at Gordon's use of John's childhood nickname.
They watched as John removed the arm and head restraints. Jeff
silently removed the ones from Gordon's legs, and then came to
stand on Gordon's left side. He picked up his son's hand as
the room's occupants looked on.
"Shh,
Gordo, it's okay, you can stay. You can stay. I'm right here."
"Johnny?"
"Yeah,
little bro."
Gordon
rolled his head toward the sound of John's voice, his right
hand reaching up and grasping at the air as he squeezed Jeff's
hand with his left. John took hold of the wayward hand and
held it tight. That small gesture served to calm Gordon
considerably. He lay there for a moment before slowly opening
his eyes. He blinked a few times as the room came into focus.
Then he saw John's blue eyes looking into his own amber ones.
"John," he
smiled, his voice cracking. "Just like old times."
His older
brother smiled, remembering the long hours spent in the
hospital just like this. "Yeah, Gordon. Just like old times."
Epilogue
Whatever
Kyrano had done during the last attack seemed to work, for as
months passed into years, the Hood was never able to gain
access to International Rescue again. Kyrano and Grandma had
become closer during the horror of the virus and the strange
organism The Hood had tried to kill them all with, and their
friendship remained strong until Ruth Tracy's death at the age
of one hundred and ten.
Jeff Tracy
and his sons decided the best thing they could do was talk
through everything that had happened. It took a couple of
months, but at last they came to terms with their guilt and
shame and put it all behind them. Gordon apologized to
Tin-Tin, who told him they'd never speak of his confession
again. And they didn't.
Both the
first di, which had been broken, and the second one were
placed into a display case in the Lounge, a constant reminder
to everyone how close they'd come to losing it all, and that
you never knew what seemingly simple and innocuous object
could prove to be the one thing that would help save your
life.
Rescues
came and went. Thousands of lives were saved. Five brothers
who were each other's greatest strength faced down countless
dangers. The rigors of International Rescue never went away.
And neither did the spirits of the men of Tracy Island who,
with the touch of a virus, had fought their greatest battle
ever...and survived. |