The
medical machine was a cyclone of activity with Agatha Beaven at the
epicentre. She was oblivious to all of it. Doctors, nurses and
orderlies ran hither and thither; high-tech gadgets beeped furiously.
The scene would appear to an outsider as total mayhem and chaos, but
each element knew exactly what he or she was doing. They were trying
to save an old woman's life.
Agatha
Beaven was a strange old lady whose eccentricity had made her a local
character, fondly regarded, though by no means understood, by the
population of the village of Tempston. Agatha lived, apparently
alone, in the last house within the village boundary.
Nobody
went near it unless they had business there. Otherwise they'd pass
hurriedly by on their way to do their weekly shopping in Darrowburn.
One notable thing about the house, as any resident of Tempston would
readily relate, was that the curtains were always drawn. Heavy drapes
obscured the windows all day in all weathers.
Agatha
Beaven didn't display any particular dislike of sunshine. She was
often seen sunning herself on the front step or pottering around in
her garden, sleeves rolled up, revealing arms tanned to the colour of
leather.
She'd
venture down into the village every day, cheerily greeting anyone she
met. She took an active role on local committees and attended bridge
evenings; but on no occasion did she ever invite anyone to her home.
Deliveries were left on the front step, no matter how large or heavy
they were.
What
was hidden behind those curtains? People often wondered, but no-one
ever found out. Miraculously, no ugly rumour survived for long.
Agatha Beaven was such a charming old lady. She was always friendly;
always asked after people's children and addressed them by name. It
was hard to believe her secret, assuming she even had one, was
anything sinister. Agatha Beaven was like everyone's grandmother. She
never spoke of any relatives, though, and evaded any questions people
asked her on the subject.
Children
are much more likely than adults to fantasise about spooky old houses
and the people who live in them. Liam and Bradley Prendergast, no
doubt inspired by childhood warnings about the boogie man and
watching too many horror movies, decided it would be an exciting
challenge to try to get inside Agatha Beaven's house. They wanted to
discover what was behind those perpetually closed curtains.
On
a particularly bright Autumn day, the boys watched until they saw
Agatha leave to go into the village. They crept around the house
until they found the loose board in the fence at the back, scrambled
through and sneaked up to the back door. Bradley tried the handle;
the door was unlocked. In they went.
It
took their eyes a few minutes to get used to the gloom after the
bright sunlight, but once they had, the boys began to explore.
Everything
looked normal enough in the kitchen. Agatha Beaven wasn't a recluse
stuck in the last century - she had a washing machine, fridge and
cooker like the ones their parents had. The only thing that seemed
the least bit odd was the kitchen table.
'Didn't
Mum say she never lets anyone into the house?' Liam said.
'Yes,
she said as far as she knew, nobody in the village has ever been in
here,' Bradley confirmed.
'So
why has she set two places at the kitchen table?'
'Perhaps
she's a nutcase who thinks her long-dead husband is going to come
home for his dinner one day,' Liam speculated.
'No,
look, two people have eaten here - the plates haven't been cleared
away; and there's two of everything.'
'A
secret guest, eh? They're not here now though, are they? Let's see
what else is in here.'
They
spoke in whispers as they left the kitchen and wandered through the
hall into the sitting room. The sitting room was furnished like any
other. The only unusual thing the boys noticed was that there was no
television. 'How can she live without a telly?' Bradley wondered.
'She
must listen to the radio.' Liam nodded towards a huge, cumbersome
wireless set which had pride of place on the table.
'Can't
work out what station she listens to, though,' he said, peering at
the dials. The stations the boys were familiar with didn't appear on
them.
'Radio
three, I expect,' Bradley said dismissively, scanning the
bookshelves, hoping to find something like a book of spells. There
was nothing like that; only the encyclopaedias, dictionaries and
classic novels they themselves had at home.
There
were newspapers and magazines, with the crosswords done, and a
half-finished embroidery sampler lying on the settee. 'Nothing here.
Let's look upstairs.'
There
was more evidence in the bathroom for the existence of a second
person in the house. There were two toothbrushes in the glass, two
face flannels and two towels. Bradley still held to the theory that
the old woman had some kind of imaginary companion, since there
didn't seem to be anyone around.
They
heard the front door open and close.
'She's
back!' Liam hissed. 'We'd better get out of here.'
They
tried to sneak down the stairs and out the way they'd come in before
Agatha could see them. They didn't manage it. 'Hey!' The old woman
shouted. 'What do you think you're doing in here?' Liam and Bradley
froze in terror, halfway up stairs. Agatha Beaven was furious. 'Get
out! Get out before I call the police! I shall tell your mother
about this!' She advanced threateningly towards them. 'Trespassing in
my house! You deserve a damned good hiding!' At the mention of a
hiding, the boys made their break for freedom. They darted out of the
front door, with the old woman in close pursuit, waving her umbrella.
She was catching up with them fast. She was sprightly for her age, or
so it seemed.
She
hadn't run very far before she stopped, clutched her chest, and sank
to the ground. The horrified boys, terrified they'd be in big
trouble, ran to the nearest phone box, and called an ambulance.
That
was how Agatha Beaven came to be in the hospital emergency room,
where the doctor was now shaking his head. The frenetic activity
slowed to a halt. 'It's no use,' the doctor said. 'With a massive
coronary like that, she didn't stand a chance. We'd better try and
trace a next of kin.'
'That
won't be easy,' Nurse Frances Muir sighed, tiredly brushing a strand
of hair from her face. Frances lived in Tempston, and knew as much
about the old woman as anyone. 'She lives alone. She's never
mentioned a single relative; though I guess some might come crawling
out of the woodwork once it's known she's passed on. The house she
lives in must be worth a bit.'
Late
that night, Frances got off the last bus to Tempston and walked past
the old woman's house. She paused at the gate and looked up at the
upstairs windows. The house was in total darkness. It would be empty,
yet Frances' eye was caught by a movement. Fleetingly, she fancied
she saw a pale face at one of the windows. 'Don't be silly, Frances,'
she told herself. 'Nobody's there.' Certain she must have been
overtired and imagining things, she headed home.
**
'Hello?
Hello? Is there anyone out there, come on? It's Dynamite and Speedy
Gonzales calling, is anyone out there, come on?' There was nothing
but white noise. 'That's frustrating.' Maria said. 'There's usually
somebody out there.'
'I
expect they're all watching TV,' Adam suggested, helpfully.
'I
was hoping one of our more interesting contacts might come on,'
Lizzie said, 'so you can hear how much fun this is. '
'We
could try again later, perhaps,' Adam suggested.
'It
is fascinating, really, if you find lots of people to talk to,' Maria
continued. 'I still can't get over how Judith throws these sort of
things together and they just work.'
'Who
do you talk to?' Adam asked, intrigued. The idea of CB radio
interested him, as Maria had predicted it would. As a genetic variant
who looked like a giant granite statue, he didn't get out much. A
radio like this could be a way for him to communicate with the world,
without strangers actually having to see him.'Tell me about them.'
'Lots
of people,' Lizzie said. 'There's 'Old Blue Eyes', for example.'
'What's
his real name?'
'We
don't know. Everyone uses a 'handle', or a code name. You talk to
people but you don't know who they are. They could be anybody.'
'Then
there's the woman with the husky voice, what's her handle?' Maria
continued.
'Nocturne?'
'Yeah,
that's it. She sounds really nice. We've had some interesting
conversations with her. Then there was that chap who said he was a
trucker, driving up the M1 and talking to us. Dancing Bear, I think
he was called.'
'Certainly
sounds like you get to talk to a lot of people,' Adam said. 'It
sounds good. Perhaps I should try it.'
When
he'd gone, Lizzie and Maria had one last try before switching off. It
was unusual for nobody to answer at all. A voice came over the
airwaves. 'Anybody copy? Is anyone there?'
'Yes!'
Lizzie responded with enthusiasm. 'Speedy Gonzales and Dynamite are
here.'
'Hello!
This is Nocturne, remember me?'
'Yes!
In fact, we were just telling our friend about you. We were showing
him our CB set and telling him about the people we talk to. Typical,
though, there was nobody on air until he left to get a coffee. How
are you?'
'Worried.'
'Why?'
'I
told you I live with my grandmother. She hasn't been home since
yesterday.'
'Perhaps
you'd better go out and look for her.'
There
was a pause. 'I - I can't...'
'Are
you disabled?'
'I
suppose you could say that. I can't go out, anyway, and I don't know
what to do. Suppose she never comes back?' Lizzie and Maria
heard the fear in her voice.
'Where
are you? We could come over and...'
'There's
no need, really,' Nocturne said, quickly. 'Thanks for the offer, but
I don't think it would be a good idea. No, I'm sure she'll come back
soon.'
Bryony
Beaven turned off her radio, her long, thin fingers trembling. The
thought of having to cope without Agatha terrified her. She'd always
known a day would come when she'd have to, but she hadn't thought it
would be so soon. She shied away from any human contact other than
her grandmother and the CB radio. She turned toward the window. It
was still daylight. She could see sunlight though the heavy curtain.
She
could do nothing while it was light, not while the sun shone. It hurt
her eyes. It would burn her pale skin. Much as she wanted to go
looking for Agatha, she couldn't, not until the sun went down.
Bryony
could only go out at night. She'd often step out into the garden
after dark to fill her lungs with fresh air; but to go into the
village, to have people see her - she couldn't do that.
Talking to Speedy and Dynamite on the radio had calmed her a little.
It was past midday, now, and she needed to sleep. She stood up.
Bryony was tall and willowy; her hair was jet black, though her skin
was almost white. She looked out on her darkened world through
extremely large dark eyes. She was dressed entirely in black, a
necessary precaution to protect her delicate skin from any light that
might accidentally penetrate her secluded world.
While
she could have gone out, wrapped up well and wearing a hat and dark
glasses, she could never hide her most unusual feature - a pair of
large, black, leathery wings, sprouting from her shoulders, folded
flat against her back.
Bryony
was the reason Agatha Beaven had never drawn back her curtains nor
invited anyone into her house. For years, she'd protected the girl,
providing a safe, darkened environment for her; and everything she
required. Bryony never needed to go out and face the world, or have
to suffer in the sunlight. Her nocturnal physiology meant Bryony's
diurnal cycles were at an ebb during the day, as most people's are in
the middle of the night. She slept during the day, waking in the
early evening, when she'd get up and spend a few hours with Agatha
before she retired for the night. Last night, when Bryony rose, she'd
found Agatha gone.
At
first, she'd assumed the older woman was at a whist drive, or the WI,
or something like that, and amused herself with the CB radio,
awaiting her return. As the night drew on, Bryony grew increasingly
worried. She looked out of the window for Agatha, and had hidden
quickly on seeing Frances Muir looking up at her.
Morning
found her frantic with worry, when she'd normally be curling up and
going to sleep. Now, like any person who'd stayed up all night, she
needed her rest. She went to her room and lay down on the bed. She
crawled under the quilt, wrapped her wings around her like a blanket,
and in spite of her worry, was soon fast asleep.
When
she woke, it was dark again. There was still no sign of her
grandmother. Bryony felt something closely akin to panic. If Agatha
wasn't coming back, how would she survive? She couldn't shop for
food; she couldn't go out, and she had no money. Agatha had always
taken care of all that. She crept to the front door and peered out.
Satisfied no-one was around, she stepped outside. She hadn't noticed
the Prendergast boys, hiding in the bushes, watching.
They
saw the dark figure emerge from the house. There was only one thing
it could be - a vampire! They fled in terror.
'Speedy
Gonzales? Dynamite?' The lost little voice came over the airwaves.
'I'm scared. She's not back yet. I'll die here, all alone!'
'Why
don't you call the police?' Lizzie asked.
'They
might want to see me, and I can't go out! There's nothing I can do!'
'Listen,
Nocturne, perhaps we can help. Tell us where you are, tell us about
your grandmother, where she might have gone, and we'll look for her
for you.'
'Could
you? Only, I'd really rather you didn't see me. Don't come to my
house. I'm in Tempston. If you find her, you can tell me over the
radio. Her name's Agatha Beaven, and she's been missing for two days
now.'
**
Peter
hurried to answer the persistent ring of the red telephone, the
G-Men's special line. Anyone requiring the services of the G-Men
superhero team would ring through on the red phone. This would be an
emergency of some kind. 'You're through to the G-Men. How may we help
you?' he responded.
'I'm
calling from Tempston.' A woman's voice crackled down the line. 'I
hope you don't mind me calling you like this.'
'Of
course not,' Peter assured her. 'We wouldn't advertise the number if
we didn't want people to call. What's the problem?'
'That's
just it, I don't really know. My name is Alison Prendergast. I have
two sons. They came home last night, terrified out of their wits.
They're not easily scared, my boys. I can't get anything out of
either of them, so I dread to think what's happening here.'
'I
see. Well, I can certainly come up and talk to you and your sons, and
have a look around. I bet we'll find there's a perfectly logical
explanation for their fear, but if not, we'll deal with whatever it
might be. Will you be at home this morning?'
Peter,
Rosemary and Claire perched on Mrs. Prendergast's plush sofa, eating
home-made scones and listening to the boys tell their garbled story.
Rosemary had assured their mother it was no childish prank; the boys
were certainly genuinely afraid of something. Their fear
seemed to centre around 'Old Agatha's House'.
'Old
Agatha's place is the very last house in the village,' Mrs.
Prendergast explained. 'She died two days ago - she was found by her
front gate. Massive heart attack. The boys said they saw something
come out of the house last night. They've been too terrified to say
what it was. Agatha was a weird old stick. Sociable enough around the
village, but she never, ever allowed anyone into that house of
hers. God knows what could have been in there.'
**
'So
what do you reckon we should do now?' Claire asked as they walked
through the village.
'We
should take a look at the house,' Peter said.
'There
it is,' Rosemary pointed. 'It looks normal enough.'
'Who's
that at the gate?' Claire asked. A woman stood there, peering up at
the windows.
Frances
Muir turned as the three people approached.
'Did
you know Agatha Beavan?' Rosemary asked her.
'Are
you her relatives?' Frances asked.
'No
- just acquaintances.'
'You
know she died, don't you? You wouldn't happen to know where her
relatives could be? Someone needs to tell them.'
'I'm
afraid not.'
'Until
they find some relatives, nobody will go in the house,' Frances said.
'Heaven knows what she had in there - she was a funny old thing. It
concerns me - she might have had a cat, or a bird in a cage, or some
other pet, and there's no-one to feed it. It's funny. I keep thinking
I can see someone at the window when I pass by. I'd never seen
anything there before, but I did the day she died, and once or twice
since. I've tried knocking on the door, but there's no reply. It's a
bit spooky. I never used to believe in ghosts, but... Oh, here's my
bus, excuse me.' Frances stepped away from the house, signalled for
the bus to stop, and climbed on.
The
three G-Men exchanged glances. 'There's something in there, then, or
someone,' Rosemary said.
'Squatters,
perhaps?' Peter suggested. 'Local drug addicts or homeless people who
heard the old lady died and moved themselves into the empty house?'
'Could
be,' Rosemary mused. 'Well, it's either something sinister, in which
case, the G-Men should look into it, or it's like you said, in which
case, Social Services should look into it.'
'You
never quite leave your job behind you, do you, Rosemary?' Peter said
with a smile.
'Let's
try knocking,' Claire said, anxious for some action. They walked up
the path and tapped on the door. As they suspected, there was no
reply. Claire thought she saw a curtain twitch. 'Perhaps whoever's in
there is frightened we'll call the police.'
Rosemary
pushed at the door. Locked. With a shrug, she removed her wristbands
and disappeared. 'Now we wait,' she said. 'As soon as I'm intangible,
I'll go in. As a G-Man or as a social worker, whichever's required.'
**
Gladys
Baker, Postmistress of Tempston, watched the two customers out of the
corner of her eye, particularly the child. Children always had to be
watched in her shop, with all the sweets, comics and toys on sale.
She felt a little easier about this child as she was accompanied by
an adult. They approached the counter. Gladys smoothed her skirt and
went to serve them.
For
the first time, she got a proper look at them. There was something
peculiar about the little girl. Her hair was pure white, but without
the extremely pale skin and eyes albino children usually had. Gladys
noticed the girl's well-developed figure, and mature face.
'I
wonder if you could spare us a few moments?' Lizzie asked, holding
out her G-Men identity card. 'We're investigating the disappearance
of a woman called Agatha Beaven, do you know her?'
Gladys
examined the card. She'd never seen anything like it. She decided it
was probably some kind of teenage prank; some craze or fad for
pretending to be detectives, inspired, almost certainly, by some TV
show or other. It was certainly not to be taken seriously, and with
poor old Agatha hardly dead two days, the game these two were playing
was not in very good taste.
'The
woman isn't missing, she's dead. Any proper investigator would
know that simply by checking with the hospital,' Gladys said,
shortly.
'She's
dead?'
'Why,
yes, and don't get any ideas that it was suspicious circumstances,
either. Heart attack, that's all it was.'
'I
see. What it is, nobody informed her grand daughter, and she's really
worried because she hasn't been home.'
'I
think you've made some mistake. Agatha Beaven lived alone. I don't
know of any relatives. So stop wasting my time with these silly
games. G-Men, indeed!'
Lizzie
and Maria looked at each other. They thanked Gladys and left the
shop. 'At least we know where the woman is,' Maria said.
'What
about Nocturne? Why didn't that woman know about her?'
'Obviously
old Granny Beaven kept her under wraps - which would explain why
no-one told her when the old woman died.'
'Why?'
'It
must be something to do with her disability. She must be one of these
people who gets panic attacks if they go out of doors.'
'So
if nobody's bothered to tell her Agatha's dead, I suppose that means
we have to tell her. Ever get the feeling you wish you'd never
started something?'
'Yeah,'
Lizzie agreed. 'I'd rather hoped we'd have good news. I don't
fancy breaking this to her. Perhaps we should get the police.'
'They
probably won't believe she's in there any more than the woman in the
post office did.'
'Perhaps
we should get Rosemary to talk to her.'
'Good
idea.'
Lizzie
set down the bag which had their portable radio inside it and pulled
the microphone out. 'Nocturne, Nocturne, do you copy?' At first there
was nothing. Lizzie tried again.
'Speedy Gonzales calling, do you
copy?'
'Yes,
yes, I copy,' came the voice. Nocturne spoke quickly, with fear and
apprehension.
'We're
in Tempston,' Lizzie went on. 'Dynamite and me...'
'Are
you outside my house? Have you been knocking?'
'No.
You told us not to, so we didn't. We're in the village; we've been
talking to the woman in the post office.'
'Please,
wait a minute. I can hear something. I think there's someone in the
house!'
Nocturne's voice was edged with panic. 'I'm going to see.'
Lizzie and Maria heard her place the microphone on the table. There
was nothing for a while, then they heard someone scream in
blood-curdling terror. 'Oh, my God - she's being attacked!' Lizzie
dropped the receiver and sprinted towards the house.
'Hey,
wait for me!' Maria yelled after her, in vain. 'Rats,' she said under
her breath, and set off as fast as her short legs would carry her,
after her colleague.
**
Rosemary
finally gained the power she needed - intangibility. She slipped
through the door, and having done so, put her neutralising wrist
bands back on, enabling her to open the door for Peter and Claire. 'I
can't see anything out of the ordinary yet,' she said. 'Peter may be
right, in which case, you'd better leave this to me - I know how to
deal with these things. If I need you, I'll shout.'
'Be
careful,' Peter called after her as she disappeared into the
darkness.
Rosemary
tried a light switch, but nothing happened. She was considering
summoning Claire to provide some light, when she heard a movement on
the landing above her. 'Hello? Is anyone there?' she called. No
response. 'I won't hurt you, whoever you are, I just want to speak to
you. Won't you come down?'
Bryony
stood motionless on the landing. Bryony could see Rosemary clearly,
and tried to ascertain whether she was likely to be a threat.
'I
want to help you,' Rosemary continued. 'Please come down.'
Bryony
was lonely and hungry; she needed help from someone if she was going
to survive. At the same time, she didn't want to put herself at risk.
She came to a decision. I'll go down, but I'll keep out of reach,
just in case. Over the years, she'd taught herself to fly. That
skill would finally come in useful.
Rosemary
whirled around as she heard the flapping of giant wings behind her.
Her eyes were sufficiently used to the darkness now to enable her to
make out what was launching itself from the bannisters and flying
towards her; the shape of a giant bat.
Rosemary
wasn't afraid of many things. She coped, calmly and coolly, with most
things her dual career could throw at her: dangerous criminals, some
with super-powers; hostile aliens; crazed, desperate drug users;
she'd faced them all with an unshakeable courage which astounded all
those who witnessed it. Even Peter often looked on with his heart in
his mouth, fearing for her safety.
There
was one thing alone which could shake that courage to its very
foundation, making it crumble and collapse like a skyscraper in a
disaster movie. That thing was bats; and heading straight for her was
the largest bat she'd ever seen.
All
resolve, logic and sensibility deserted her. Face to face with her
greatest fear, Rosemary stumbled back, screaming in terror. Peter
felt a prickly shiver run up his spine when he heard it. His only
thought was to save her from whatever evil was lurking inside that
house. He burst through the door, closely followed by Claire.
Their
eyes could make out nothing in the darkness. Claire acted
instinctively to remedy the situation. She mustered her power, and
generated a bright light to allow them to see what was happening.
From Bryony's point of view, it was the worst thing she could have
done. The flare blinded her and burned her skin. With a strangled
cry, Bryony fell to the ground and lay there, like a bird with a
broken wing, whimpering in pain and trying to cover her face with her
wings.
Peter
hesitated, torn between investigating the creature, which looked
perfectly harmless now, and comforting Rosemary, who crouched in a
corner, hysterical with fear. Claire stood in the doorway, staring at
Rosemary in disbelief. Rosemary, her role model, reduced to a
gibbering wreck? She'd never seen that happen.
Lizzie
reached the house, breathless and fearful for Nocturne. The door was
open; it was obvious it had been forced. The only sound Lizzie could
hear from inside was a soft whimpering.
Gingerly,
she stepped through the door. She could just make out the stricken,
bat-like form on the floor, and three human figures, one clearly in
severe shock. 'Nocturne? Where are you?'
'Lizzie?'
Peter recognised her at once. Although surprised to see her, he
wasn't so taken aback that he couldn't put her to good use. 'Check
out the bat-thing, will you? It may be injured.'
Lizzie
did a double take, wondering what Peter was doing there, but didn't
ask questions. She gingerly approached the creature. It was a human
female, trying vainly to cover herself with her giant, leathery
wings, and whimpering in pain. Lizzie gasped. So this was why
Nocturne could never go outside. Lizzie crouched down and placed her
hand gently on Bryony's arm.
'The
light! The light! I can't stand the light!' Bryony moaned, covering
her eyes with her hands. 'It hurts!'
'Nocturne?'
Lizzie whispered. Bryony squinted up at her, trying to make out who
was talking to her. 'It's me, Speedy Gonzales. We heard someone
scream. What happened?'
'Light...
I can't see... It hurts... help me!'
'I
will if I can,' Lizzie said, gently.
Peter
was beginning to understand the situation and quietly asked Claire to
take Rosemary outside. 'Nocturne, is it?' he asked, gently, kneeling
beside Lizzie.
Lizzie
explained about the CB radio, Nocturne's fear for her grandmother.
Peter nodded gravely and spoke softly to Bryony. 'Come with us,
Nocturne. We can help you.' Bryony struggled to a sitting position
and with her face in her hands, sobbed, 'I can't. The light...'
'Go
find a blanket or something, Lizzie. We can't leave her here all
alone, not in the state she's in.' Peter spoke gently to Bryony. 'The
light's gone. We'll protect you from the light outside. Come with us.
We can help you.'
Lizzie
returned with a blanket. 'It's okay,' she said. 'He's my friend. You
can't stay here on your own.' Peter wrapped Bryony in the blanket,
lifted her effortlessly and carried her out to his car. Lizzie and
Maria climbed in beside her. Maria reached under the blanket to grasp
Bryony's hand. Bryony held on with a grip like iron.
Claire
got in, too, but said nothing. Her power was responsible for
Nocturne's pain, and she didn't know what to say. Peter left them, to
go and find Rosemary. She stood staring wide-eyed at the car, as a
child woken by a nightmare stares into the dark. Peter slipped his
arm around her and she buried her face in his shoulder. She was still
trembling.
'Rosemary.'
He stood with her for some time, stroking her arm until she seemed
calmer. He'd all but forgotten her terror of bats until now. 'It's
all right. It's not a bat. It's a very young and frightened, genetic
variant girl. She's in a much worse state than you are. She's lost
her grandmother, her lifeline. She needs our help. Come on. You can't
stay here.' He guided her to the car. She got in, but stared doggedly
out of the window for the entire drive, refusing to look at the
shrouded bundle in the back seat. She got out of the car first when
they arrived at Peter's huge, Gothic mansion, and hurried inside. She
went into the study and closed the door as the others helped Bryony
up the stairs to a small bedroom which had only a tiny window and
thick, dark curtains.
**
Twenty-four
hours later, Bryony sat on her temporary bed, collecting her
thoughts. On the plus side, now she knew her condition had a name.
Even though she had a hitherto unknown form of it, she was by no
means alone - genetic variants came in all shapes and sizes. She'd
met Adam, a young man as cursed as she was. He lived in the mansion
and rarely left it. Her new friends Lizzie and Maria lived there too.
Peter
was so kind. He'd told her she was welcome to stay at his mansion for
as long as she wished, and even become one of the G-Men. It was a
tempting proposition, in some ways. She'd never be alone; the grounds
of the mansion were large enough for her to roam around at night,
getting more exercise and fresh air than she ever could in the garden
of her grandmother's house. She could have a bigger room once the
windows of whichever vacant room she chose had been measured up for
blackout curtains. Adam, Lizzie, Maria and several others resident in
the house would give her more social contact than she'd ever enjoyed.
Most of all, her unusual physiology would be celebrated.
However,
in her heart, Bryony knew she didn't really belong there, no matter
what Lizzie and Maria might say. How could she ever be part of a team
with Claire, whose power was the ability to generate searing bright
light, which she knew from bitter experience she couldn't tolerate?
Ann,
too, was a source of irritation. Her power was based on sound waves;
Bryony's ears were highly sensitive, too. Ann's voice jarred on them.
Even her normal speaking voice was too much for Bryony, and her taste
for loud music didn't help, either.
The
hardest thing to accept was Rosemary's reaction to her. The older
woman's obvious repugnance had made Bryony feel wretched from the
start. She didn't know Rosemary felt wretched, too. She'd failed to
conquer her fear. She felt her failure keenly; her inability to
befriend and help this variant as she had so many others. It wasn't
through want of trying. Rosemary had, so many times, stood in front
of her mirror in the morning and spoken to herself firmly, as she
might one of her clients who was suffering from an irrational fear.
There was nothing to be afraid of. Bryony wouldn't harm her. She
wasn't a bat, but a human, and every inch the beautiful person the
rest of them could see; but somehow it never worked. She longed to
overcome her feelings of repulsion and give Bryony a big hug. But she
couldn't.
Bryony
knew Rosemary could hardly bring herself to even look at her. That
hurt her as much as Claire's light had done. This sat uneasily beside
what the others said about Rosemary. Maria, particularly, couldn't
speak too highly of the woman. They all said she was kind,
courageous, caring; they all admired her, even loved her. All Bryony
had ever seen in her was fear and reticence.
Bryony
saw clearly the dynamics of the G-Men; Peter and Rosemary were the
supporting pillars, complementing and supporting each other. Each had
a vital role in maintaining the whole. Bryony's presence in the house
weakened the whole team.
She'd
been there just over a week when Lizzie came to see her with exciting
news. 'We told you about Judith,' she said. 'She's back from her
holiday you're going to meet her, and her friend Wil. You'll like
them.'
'I
hope so.' Bryony sighed.
Wil's
car drew to a halt outside the mansion and he and Judith got out.
They made a striking pair, both with bright red hair, which had
attracted much comment in the old days, when they'd been lovers.
Finally, they'd negotiated the choppy waters from passion to
friendship.
Judith
was disturbed to see Wil hesitate as he stepped inside, as if
sniffing the air.
'Something's not right here,' he observed.
Judith
felt her blood run cold. Everything looked the same as it always did,
but Wil's words filled her with dread. Wil's feelings about such
things were always accurate. 'What is it, Wil? Is there danger?'
'No,
Jude, no danger; but there's something strained about the atmosphere,
like there's been an argument, and people won't, or can't, resolve
it.'
'Judith!
Wil! Welcome back! I hope you had a good time. Would you like some
tea?' Peter appeared from his study, smiling.
'We'd
love some,' Judith said, and glanced at Wil. He shook his head
slightly, as if to assure Judith Peter wasn't the source of the
problem. Did he even know about it? she wondered.
'Judy!'
Maria dashed across the hall. 'There's such a lot to tell you!
You'll never guess what, we've got a new member! You must meet her,
when you've had some tea.'
'Really?
That is exciting. Can Wil meet her too? Where is she? Is she
coming down for tea?'
'Not
just yet,' Peter said. 'She's a classic case of dark-dependency so
she sleeps during the day. It's starting to get dark, so she'll wake
up soon and you can meet her.'
'Great.
I'll look forward to it,' Judith said.
When
Rosemary entered the room, Judith saw immediately how strained she
looked, despite her smile of welcome. Wil bent and whispered in her
ear, 'If I knew what was eating at her, I'd have the answer.
She's hiding it reasonably well, but she's nervous as hell; and she's
not happy with herself. That's a fair part of what I was picking up.'
Judith
sipped her tea, answered questions about her holiday politely but
briefly, all the time looking sidelong at Rosemary. She wasn't sure
how much she'd have worked out for herself without Wil's
emotion-sensing power, but she could see he was right. It was
disconcerting. Rosemary was the last person to be nervous and
ill-at-ease with herself as a rule. Was the new person's power
causing unease? If so, why was nobody else affected?
'Bryony
should be awake now,' Maria said. 'I'll take you to meet her.'
Bryony
felt a little apprehensive when Maria knocked and told her Judith
wanted to meet her. Judith, she'd worked out, was Rosemary's
understudy, the next in superiority. Perhaps she'd turn out to be
kind and calm like Peter, or they might instantly dislike each other.
That would shake the foundations of the G-Men still further. It was
with more than a little trepidation that Bryony greeted Judith and
Wil.
Judith
seemed to be perfectly at ease, and Bryony began to feel they could
be friends. She felt the same way about Wil, and was happy to answer
his questions about her condition.
'So,
are you going to join us, Bryony?' Judith asked.
Bryony's
expression clouded. 'I-I don't know. Probably; but I wish I knew what
else I could do.'
'Don't
you like us?'
'I
like - most of you; but you don't all like me. I suppose I'll
stay because I guess as a genetic variant I belong here. It's not
like I can live out there on my own; but my presence is bad for the
G-Men.'
'That's
silly,' Judith said, kindly.
'No,
it's not, Jude. She's right.' Wil said, quietly. 'She doesn't want to
harm the G-Men in any way, but she is harming them in ways she
has no control over.'
'How?
Tell me, Bryony. Tell me what makes you unhappy about staying here.
Perhaps we can do something to help you feel more comfortable with
us.'
Bryony
paused. Eventually, she said, 'How can I join a group where one of
the leaders is so afraid of me she can't even look at me?'
Judith
stared at her. 'Rosemary? Surely not!'
'You
can't accept that either, can you?' Bryony cried, 'that your perfect
Rosemary could be inadequate in any way.'
Judith
exhaled. 'I'm sorry.'
'Everyone's
inadequate in some way,' Wil said. 'It's part of being human. Having
superhuman powers doesn't make you immune from human weaknesses.'
'She's
afraid of bats.' Bryony said, wretchedly.
Judith
groped for a half forgotten memory of Rosemary leaving the room when
a documentary about bats was being shown on TV. 'Oh, yes - now I
remember. She is... but you're not...'
'Of
course she isn't,' Wil said, 'but there's enough likeness between
Bryony and a bat to freak Rosemary out. I don't doubt, from what I
know about Rosemary, that she finds it as hard to deal with as Bryony
does. That's why she's not a happy bear at the moment. She feels
she's letting the side down, unable to do what she's usually so good
at, helping young variants come to terms with themselves. It's shaken
her confidence.
'Through
no fault of anybody's, certainly not yours, Bryony, Rosemary isn't
quite firing on all cylinders; the longer it goes on, the worse she
feels. It's a vicious circle. The rest of you have always looked up
to Rosemary, as a linchpin of the group. It's undermining the
strength of the G-Men to see her unable to cope. You're used to
having her sort you all out. That's what I felt when I came
in.'
'It's
my fault,' Bryony wailed. 'If it wasn't for me, it would be all
right. I wish I had somewhere else to go. I wish I didn't have to
stay here and see the damage I'm doing.'
'You
could come with me to London,' Wil said. 'I have a group of my own
there, not unlike this one, except I'm pretty sure there aren't any
bat-phobics in it. Why not give us a try? My house isn't as big, but
the garden's a fair size and my basement tenant has moved upstairs.
The basement flat would be perfect for you. Your own kitchen and
bathroom - what do you think?'
'We
still have the CB radio,' Lizzie said, 'and we can come and see you
sometimes. London isn't so far away.'
'If
it doesn't work out, we'll think of something else,' Wil said, 'but
I'm sure it will.'
'I'd
like to try,' Bryony said.
'Take
care of Rosemary,' Wil said to Peter as they stood at the mansion's
heavy front door. 'You're the only one who can give her the support
she needs right now. The others are too used to depending on her. You
know what it's like to have her depend on you.'
Peter
went into his study, where Rosemary was absently browsing through a
copy of New Scientist.
'Rosemary.'
'Yes,
Peter?'
'Bryony's
gone.'
'I
thought she'd choose to go. I failed her, didn't I? I feel terrible.'
'I
think you're wonderful.' He sat beside her on the leather sofa.
'How
could you? I've been behaving like an idiot.'
'I
thought you were wonderful the first day I met you, when Alan put a
bat in your room. That was before I knew how brave you could
be about other things. In any case, it wasn't just you. She couldn't
tolerate Ann's voice or Claire's light. So stop blaming yourself, and
put your coat on.'
'Why?'
'Because,
to prove to you that I still like you, I'm taking you out to dinner.'
**
Bryony
fell in love with the basement flat straight away. While the garden
wasn't as big as Peter's, it was big enough; and the other tenants
welcomed her warmly. It would take a while to get to know them, but
with Wil's help, she soon had her CB radio set up; Lizzie and Maria
chatted to her often, as did Adam and Judith. Bryony had a new
forever home.
*******
Like these characters? Here's how to read more about them:
Running in the Family
An alien craft approaches Earth. The alien on board is a fugitive, fleeing from an arranged marriage to freedom on our world. She befriends James, a genetics student, and shares her knowledge about the future of the human race with him.
A science experiment gone wrong gifts James with superhuman abilities; but they come at a price, leading him to mentor others like himself. He founds a group of amateur heroes called the Freedom League.
The Freedom League suffers a string of losses and tragedies; it seems doomed to failure; but one of its members, Peter Mayfield, has vowed to form a group of his own. He is determined to keep his vow, despite having lost Rosemary, the one person he wanted by his side to help him.
Lizzie Hopkins is a talented young athlete and dancer. Peter sees her in action and guesses her exceptional abilities are far more than they seem. He offers to train and mentor Lizzie - but her mother is violently opposed to his suggestion.
As soon as she is old enough, Lizzie takes matters into her own hands; she seeks out Peter and his group for herself. She soon makes a discovery which shakes her world at its very foundations. Her search for the truth will resolve many unanswered questions, but it will also stir up old heartbreaks dating back to the Freedom League's early days.
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