THE VISIT
                         
						
                        by
                        CATHRL
									
			 RATED FRC | 
                        
                          | 
                       
                     
                    
                   
                   
                  
                  
                  Thanks to my husband for 
                  beta-reading. 
                  
                  
                  Set in the TV-verse but before 
                  the series starts, and after my other fic, "I 
                  told you not to put that there". I recommend you read that 
                  one first.  
                  
                  
                  This story won the Tracy Island 
                  Writers Forum's 2006 Halloween challenge as voted by TIWF 
                  members.  
                   
                  
                  He'd never 
                  have admitted it, but Gordon Tracy really didn't like flying 
                  all that much. 
                  
                  Small 
                  planes were, well, small. And fragile. And Gordon had never 
                  got over that sensation you get when you suddenly drop a 
                  couple of hundred feet. Scott and his father always seemed to 
                  take it for granted. He invariably found himself expecting to 
                  carry on falling until a very solid bit of ground got in the 
                  way. 
                  
                  Large 
                  planes weren't a problem in the same way, but sitting in them 
                  for hour after hour, as he was now, was boring. The new 
                  hypersonic service being proposed between London and New York 
                  couldn't come about fast enough for him. 
                  
                  He didn't 
                  even want to think about the sort of flying John and Alan 
                  preferred. Alternately being flattened to your seat by 
                  multiple g-forces and floating about weightless didn't appeal 
                  at all. Scott had demonstrated a brief zero-g flight profile 
                  to him just once, and the effect on his stomach had been 
                  spectacularly messy. He had no desire to try it again. 
                  
                  Gordon 
                  sighed, and flipped through the channels on the video screen 
                  again. Nothing appealed, except for the ancient action flick 
                  he'd already watched. His fellow passengers in first class 
                  were about as interesting as the sea of unbroken clouds below 
                  them. And the one stunningly gorgeous flight attendant had, he 
                  suspected, taken one look at him limping up the stairs and 
                  classified him as substandard merchandise. Oh, she'd been 
                  polite and attentive enough, but completely professional in 
                  that way which people used when they had no interest at all in 
                  talking to him. He didn't think it was his imagination that it 
                  was happening an awful lot more since the accident. The sooner 
                  he could get this leg fixed the better. Where fixed was, 
                  sadly, a relative term. 
                  
                  "The 
                  temperature in London is fifteen degrees, the weather is wet 
                  and windy," the announcement came over the intercom. "Local 
                  time is now four-fifteen p.m. We hope you have enjoyed your 
                  flight..." 
                  
                  Gordon 
                  shivered in unhappy anticipation. Late October in England was 
                  apparently a whole lot chillier than it was mid-Pacific. 
                  Actually he suspected any time of year in England was chillier 
                  than it was mid-Pacific. He sincerely hoped that Penny's home 
                  was well-heated. He'd had more than a few misgivings about the 
                  arrangements this trip - it would have been so much easier 
                  just to stay in a hotel in central London. Much nearer to his 
                  appointment with the consultant who he hoped could help him. 
                  Penny, though, had been insistent. It was rare for any of them 
                  to have a trip away from the island these days, as they 
                  discovered just how many minor details still needed fixing 
                  before International Rescue could be officially launched, and 
                  it was high time that Gordon came on a reciprocal visit. 
                  
                  The plane 
                  dropped down into the clouds, and Gordon peered out of the 
                  window again. He'd never visited London before. Although with 
                  the cloudbase this low, he didn't think he was going to see a 
                  lot. 
                  
                  He was 
                  right. The length of time between dropping out of the bottom 
                  of the clouds and touching down on a runway streaming with 
                  water was short to say the least. The cloud was right down 
                  almost to the control tower level, and Gordon breathed a sigh 
                  of relief that the airport was still open. Much lower cloud 
                  and they'd surely have to shut it. Much more rain and he could 
                  have driven Thunderbird Four along the runway. He was starting 
                  to see why Scott had laughed and said "take your waterproofs" 
                  when he'd asked what the October weather in England was like. 
                  
                  He pushed 
                  himself to his feet the moment the plane came to a halt, 
                  regardless of the pilot's instructions to stay seated until 
                  the doors were opened. It was all very well for him. He didn't 
                  have a leg which ached constantly from the vibration, and 
                  which took forever to get warmed up so he could move anything 
                  like normally. Gordon simply ignored the glares from the other 
                  passengers and paced the short length of aisle until the 
                  stride from his right leg matched his left and he could put 
                  his right heel down without flinching. Man, he hated being 
                  like this. He desperately hoped the new doctor could do 
                  something for him. 
                  
                  It took 
                  three minutes outside in the cold and the wet for his leg to 
                  decide that no, it wasn't warmed up anything like enough for 
                  this. He was limping badly by the time he reached the terminal 
                  building, and cursing the pride that had led him to reject the 
                  transport pulled up outside the steps to first class for the 
                  elderly and infirm. Less than a hundred yards in these 
                  conditions and he was as good as useless. He thanked 
                  everything he believed in that his father hadn't come with 
                  him. Jeff would surely have been rethinking his plans to allow 
                  Gordon a semi-active role in International Rescue as pilot of 
                  the rescue sub if he'd seen this performance. Thoroughly fed 
                  up, Gordon growled his way through Immigration and Passport 
                  Control and headed for the VIP arrivals lounge ready to bite 
                  the head off anyone who so much as looked at him. 
                  
                  "Mr Gordon 
                  Tracy?" 
                  
                  "What do 
                  you -" 
                  
                  " 'Er 
                  ladyship sent me. I took the liberty of acquirin' your luggage 
                  and puttin' it in the car. Would you step this way?" 
                  
                  "And you 
                  would be?" 
                  
                  "Parker, 
                  sir. Parker. Did 'er ladyship not mention me? I'm 'er 
                  chauffeur." 
                  
                  Gordon 
                  sighed inwardly. A miserable hour of discomfort in a car, with 
                  an incomprehensible driver to boot. He really should have 
                  refused Penny and gone for the hotel. Still could - but he'd 
                  have to get his luggage back out of the car, and arguing with 
                  anyone at all was too much like hard work right now. He 
                  shrugged the strap of his hand luggage back onto his shoulder 
                  and followed the uniformed driver towards the exit at a slow 
                  hobble. 
                  
                  The strap 
                  was removed from his shoulder before he could as much as 
                  protest. "I'll take that, sir." 
                  
                  "I can 
                  manage," Gordon growled. 
                  
                  "Course 
                  you can, sir. I wouldn't venture to suggest h'otherwise. 'Er 
                  ladyship'ud 'ave my 'ead, though, allowing one of 'er guests 
                  to carry 'is own bag. This way, sir, we're right h'outside." 
                  
                  Gordon 
                  blinked, attempted to translate, and then completely lost the 
                  thread when he saw the car that was indeed parked right 
                  outside, so close that he wouldn't even get wet. His father 
                  had joked that Lady Penelope was excessively fond of pink. He 
                  hadn't mentioned the car. 
                  
                  "Might I 
                  recommend the front seat, sir?" Parker was already holding the 
                  relevant door open, with that air of someone who isn't going 
                  to take no for an answer. 
                  
                  He was 
                  going to hurt whatever. At least up front he could be 
                  distracted by the scenery. Gordon put one hand on the 
                  headrest, the other on the doorframe, and eased himself into 
                  the seat with the care borne of long practise. At least there 
                  was a decent amount of legroom, and a comfortable seat. And it 
                  was moderately warm in here. 
                  
                  Parker 
                  seated himself in the driver's seat - Gordon had to stamp down 
                  hard on his instincts as to which side of the car was which - 
                  and gave him a long, hard and very knowing look. Looked away, 
                  back to the front, and started the car. It wasn't until they'd 
                  pulled away and exited the airport that he said, almost to 
                  himself, " 'Is lordship always did prefer that seat. 'Ad 
                  arthritis something rotten, 'e did. Special 'eating in that 
                  there seat 'e 'ad put in, controls on 'is door so as 'e could 
                  control it when 'e was 'urting. Weather like this, 'e 'urt 
                  something chronic." 
                  
                  So much 
                  for being discreet. 
                  Gordon sneaked a look sideways, but Parker had his eyes fixed 
                  on the road, all his attention apparently on his driving and 
                  the long queue of traffic leaving the airport. Pride had its 
                  limits, and didn't extend to an hour of pure misery when the 
                  other man was obviously perfectly aware of just how 
                  uncomfortable he was. Gordon flicked up the cover on the 
                  control panel under his left arm, and studied the 
                  sophisticated arrangements there with some astonishment and a 
                  whole lot of relief. 
                  
                  Fifteen 
                  minutes later he felt somewhat better, and sat up enough to 
                  notice their surroundings. Not that there was much to notice - 
                  by this time they were out of the scenic bit of London, 
                  alternating speeding along with waiting at traffic lights, 
                  past apparently endless rows of identical brick houses 
                  interspersed with local shops and the occasional concrete 
                  church or car showroom. And he'd finally put together 'pink' 
                  and ' 'is lordship' and was more than a little bemused. 
                  
                  "So tell 
                  me, Parker - was that Penny's father you were talking about?" 
                  
                  Parker 
                  glanced sideways. " 'Is lordship? That's right. Passed on five 
                  years ago, rest 'is soul. 'E loved this car." 
                  
                  Gordon's 
                  bemusement only grew, and it must have shown on his face, 
                  because Parker burst out laughing. "Course, that was before 'er 
                  ladyship 'ad it resprayed. Back then, it was what 'e called 'racin' 
                  green'. Nice old gentleman, 'e was, h'even if 'e did 'ave some 
                  funny ideas." 
                  
                  It was so 
                  obviously intended to be queried, that Gordon asked, "What 
                  ideas?" 
                  
                  Parker 
                  looked almost embarrassed. " 'E swore 'is h'ancestors were 
                  watching 'im. Still in the 'ouse. Movin' stuff. Specially at 
                  this time of year. Ghosts, 'e said." 
                  
                  Gordon 
                  chuckled. "Ghosts? That qualifies as a funny idea." 
                  
                  The 
                  chauffeur glanced at him again as he shifted in the seat. "If 
                  you want to stretch your legs, sir, you just say. We're in no 
                  'urry." 
                  
                  "Thanks, 
                  Parker, but the heat's all I need." Gordon leant back in the 
                  seat and looked around again. Suburban London was finally 
                  giving way to something less sterile - now there were trees 
                  alongside the roads, the occasional sportsfield or park. 
                  
                  He felt 
                  much better by the time they reached Foxleyheath. Not only 
                  that, but the sun had crept out from behind the clouds and 
                  promised a watery autumn sunset. Gordon sat up somewhat from 
                  his slumped position as deep in the warmth of the seat as he 
                  could manage, and took more interest in the surroundings. It 
                  was all very English, the sort of picture Gordon had imagined 
                  to exist only on jigsaws and chocolate boxes. Thatched 
                  cottages, a pub, even a village green, and a set of wrought 
                  iron gates protecting a driveway to something much larger. To 
                  Gordon, from a family whose wealth dated back a mere twenty 
                  years and whose home had been built to design, it looked 
                  ancient beyond measure, and impressive enough to be a palace. 
                  
                  "That 
                  there's Creighton-Ward Manor," Parker said with evident pride 
                  in his tone. He pressed a button on the dashboard, and the 
                  gates swung smoothly open, and then closed again behind them 
                  as the pink Rolls-Royce proceeded regally up the long, curving 
                  drive. 
                  
                  "Gordon!" 
                  Penelope came running down the steps towards him as he 
                  struggled out of the car. "I'm so glad you came! And at last 
                  you have brought the sunshine with you - this dreadful rain 
                  has hardly stopped all day." She paused, noticing that all his 
                  weight was on his left leg as he flexed the right one 
                  experimentally. "But you're hurt?" 
                  
                  No, I'm 
                  here to see the consultant about my chronic attacks of hiccups. 
                  Gordon flushed. "This weather doesn't seem to agree with me." 
                  
                  "How very 
                  unfortunate," Penny offered. "I do hope Mr Allen will be able 
                  to help. I hear most excellent reports of him." 
                  
                  "Me too." 
                  Gordon tested his leg, and the warmth seemed to have done the 
                  job. It was working as well as it ever did these days. "Do you 
                  mind if we don't stand out here?" 
                  
                  "Of 
                  course. Do come inside, Gordon. And rest assured - my house 
                  may look old, but inside it is a different story. It is warm 
                  and dry, and Cook has prepared tea for us." 
                  
                  Gordon 
                  finally relaxed. "Thank you, Penny. I'd like that." 
                  
                    
                     
                   
                  
                  By ten 
                  that evening the atmosphere was completely relaxed, and Gordon 
                  felt able to indulge his curiosity. 
                  
                  "Say, 
                  Penny, this is a big old house. Did your family build it?" 
                  
                  "They 
                  did." She smiled. "One of my many ancestors with an eye to the 
                  future. He purchased all the available land in the area, and 
                  then had money enough to build only a tiny cottage to live in. 
                  At the time he was the laughing-stock of the county. But his 
                  son added to it, and his son, and his son, and in the meantime 
                  all those families who had bought a small portion of land and 
                  built an expensive house on it had nowhere to expand." 
                  
                  "Expensive 
                  to look after all that land, though." Gordon was a farmer's 
                  grandson, and had seen the expanses of entirely unproductive 
                  landscaped park on the way up here. "How did they fund it?" 
                  
                  This time 
                  there was a polite laugh. "You mean, where does my money come 
                  from? There is some farming over the far side of the hill, but 
                  not enough to support an establishment this size. No, my 
                  ancestors have always had a knack for inventions. Not as 
                  inventors themselves, you understand, but as people who 
                  realised what would be the everyday items of the future and 
                  made sure their money was invested in them. My many-times 
                  great-grandfather was a supporter of photography. My 
                  grandfather invested heavily in a small website company which 
                  allowed people to auction unwanted belongings to one other 
                  online. Both were seen as amusing toys at the time by those 
                  who considered themselves to be serious investors." 
                  
                  She 
                  paused, seemed to be considering, and then continued, "in 
                  fact, that's how I met your father. Sadly for me, he has no 
                  need of third party funding. Tell me, are you quite sure your 
                  leg is feeling better now?" 
                  
                  "It's as 
                  fine as it gets. Really, Penny. I guess it must have been 
                  something to do with the flight." 
                  
                  Penny had 
                  been the solicitous hostess all evening, insisting on being 
                  sure he was feeling quite well now. Much to his relief, he 
                  was, with no need to fake it. Some effect of the pressure 
                  change, maybe, that had made him feel quite so dreadful after 
                  landing? It was the first time he'd been on a long-haul plane 
                  flight since the accident. He would have to ask the consultant 
                  whether that was the likely cause, and if there was anything 
                  he could take to avoid it happening on the way home. He did 
                  not fancy Jeff seeing him reduced to that state by a plane 
                  ride. 
                  
                  "Gordon, I 
                  don't think you are listening to me!" Penny laughed. 
                  
                  "What? No, 
                  I'm sorry, Penny. I was thinking about something else." 
                  
                  "You were 
                  going to sleep in your chair. Go to bed, Gordon, while you are 
                  still awake. I'm quite sure I would be unable to carry you." 
                  
                  Now 
                  there's an image. 
                  Gordon smiled at his hostess, getting to his feet with an 
                  awkwardness born of tiredness rather than pain. "Thanks, 
                  Penny. I'll say goodnight. You will wake me before midday? I'd 
                  hate to miss my appointment." 
                  
                  "I'll make 
                  sure you don't oversleep. Good night, Gordon - and welcome to 
                  England." 
                  
                    
                     
                   
                  
                  "You're 
                  sure there's nothing you need, Mr Tracy?" 
                  
                  "I'm sure. 
                  Thank you, Parker." Gordon shut the door behind him and, 
                  finally alone, surveyed the room he'd been allocated. 
                  
                  Penny was 
                  definitely out to impress him. He wasn't sure he'd ever seen a 
                  bed this large, and he'd certainly never slept in one with its 
                  own ceiling before. Four-poster, some random memory jumped up 
                  and told him. It also told him that they'd had curtains to 
                  keep the draughts out - but he wasn't going to need that in 
                  here. There was what he'd thought earlier was a real fire in 
                  the grate, until Parker had demonstrated how to turn it off. 
                  Holographic. The one in the living room was real, though - 
                  he'd seen Parker put wood on it. The windows were 
                  double-glazed, sealed against the vilest of October weather. 
                  And the bed was warm, supportive, and right now one of the 
                  most inviting sights he'd ever seen in his life. The 
                  temptation to kick his shoes off and fall into bed fully 
                  dressed was almost overwhelming. Almost. He had a distinct 
                  suspicion that he might be woken up in person tomorrow 
                  morning, and he was quite sure that Penny would never let him 
                  live it down. 
                  
                  Still, it 
                  was possibly the quickest trip to the bathroom he'd ever 
                  achieved. Washing could wait for tomorrow. His teeth would 
                  survive one night without being cleaned. Gordon dived into the 
                  bed with a sigh of relief, waved the remote control around 
                  hopefully while pressing 'off' buttons and, as the room went 
                  dark, was almost instantly as deeply asleep as he'd ever been 
                  in his life. 
                  
                    
                     
                   
                  
                  It was 
                  cold, with an icy draught blowing across his face. Gordon 
                  reluctantly half-surfaced from a most enjoyable dream 
                  involving him, the girl from the plane and a palm-fringed 
                  tropical beach not owned by his father, and pulled the covers 
                  more tightly around himself. And then something scuttled over 
                  his forehead and down his cheek. 
                  
                  Gordon 
                  jerked fully awake, swiping at his face, his heart pounding, 
                  every muscle tensed. What did they have in England that could 
                  do that? Scott hadn't mentioned giant spiders, and it was 
                  surely too cold for lizards. Mice? No, not in Penny's house. 
                  He forced his breathing to slow, curled under the covers, and 
                  relaxed back towards sleep. 
                  
                  His door 
                  slammed shut, creaked, opened gently, and threatened to slam 
                  again. That must be the source of the draught, then. Gordon 
                  swore, climbed reluctantly out of bed, stumbled across and 
                  closed it. How had he failed to do so when he came in? Stupid 
                  him. He pulled the door closed, checking that the catch 
                  engaged properly this time, and staggered back to bed. Sleep. 
                  He needed sleep. 
                  
                  The flash 
                  of light was bright enough to jar him back to full wakefulness 
                  even through closed eyelids. Gordon sat up, blinked sleep from 
                  his eyes and glared round the room. What on earth was going 
                  on? It must have come from the window, some car's headlights 
                  somewhere. Had he really left the curtains open? He didn't 
                  remember it, and it would be unusual for him. Two years in 
                  submarines had left him with a subconscious dislike for open 
                  windows - windows of any kind, really - in a room where he was 
                  sleeping. He had been very tired, but even so, he couldn't 
                  believe he'd forgotten. And now that he'd noticed, there was 
                  no chance that he'd go back to sleep without closing them. 
                  
                  He pulled 
                  the heavy floral curtains closed, appreciating the double rail 
                  which guaranteed there were no gaps in between them, and 
                  decided to use the bathroom before going back to bed. Penny's 
                  tea was almost good enough to make him a convert - certainly 
                  much preferable to Kyrano's herbal varieties - but it had an 
                  inevitable effect on the bladder. 
                  
                  Two 
                  minutes later Gordon came out of the bathroom, crossed to the 
                  window, pulled the curtains shut - and stopped. No. He was 
                  quite sure he'd just done the same thing two minutes ago. And 
                  now that he thought about it, he was also sure he'd shut them 
                  earlier, when he'd changed for dinner. He'd stood there for a 
                  while, looking at the stars through a gap in the clouds and 
                  resolving to ask John about some of the more northerly ones. 
                  And then he'd closed the curtains. No question about it. There 
                  did appear to be control wires to the wheel at the head of the 
                  curtain rail, though. Maybe he should have used the remote, 
                  and since he hadn't done so the system somehow thought they 
                  should be open? Brains would have fixed it on the spot. Gordon 
                  just recovered the remote from the bedside table, hit "close 
                  curtains" (they twitched obediently, being already closed) and 
                  went back to bed. 
                  
                  He'd 
                  barely lain down again when there was a deep throaty chuckle, 
                  apparently from under the bed, and the fire lit up. 
                  
                  Gordon 
                  sighed, recognising a practical joke when he heard one, got 
                  out of bed, and crawled under it. As he'd expected. No ghosts, 
                  no old men with attacks of hysteria. Just an apparently 
                  blameless patterned carpet, and a discarded book. Old, large, 
                  and covered in a thick layer of dust. 
                  
                  Hold on, 
                  though. There wasn't a speck of dust in the rest of the room. 
                  There wasn't anything else under the bed, not so much as a 
                  dropped tissue. How had this been left here? Gordon squinted 
                  more closely at it, but was unable to make out more in the 
                  gloom under the bed than the green leather binding. He blew at 
                  the dust, but in the confined space under the bed it was not a 
                  success. Coughing, spluttering and wiping at his eyes, Gordon 
                  backed out from under the bed, towing his prize behind him, 
                  and was forced to abandon it briefly and head to the bathroom, 
                  sneezing himself silly. His nose didn't appear to like English 
                  dust. 
                  
                  He 
                  returned a couple of minutes later, half expecting it to have 
                  vanished. But no, it was lying in front of the blazing fire 
                  just as he'd left it. Gordon carefully wiped it clean using 
                  the towel he'd fetched from the bathroom - he didn't want to 
                  start sneezing like that again any time soon - and squinted in 
                  the flickering firelight at the old-fashioned gold lettering 
                  on the spine. 
                  
                  '101 uses 
                  for an old sun lounger.' 
                  
                  Gordon 
                  laughed out loud. Penny was taking a well-deserved, and 
                  well-planned, revenge. He knew he'd had it coming. And he had 
                  thought that her careful checking that he felt completely well 
                  again, wasn't hurting at all, was just slightly strange, 
                  almost overstepping the bounds of her usual impeccable 
                  politeness into intrusion. Now it made more sense - she'd 
                  never have played a joke on someone who was feeling rough. 
                  Now, what was the significance of the book? More than just the 
                  title and enough dust to make an elephant sneeze, surely? 
                  
                  Closer 
                  inspection revealed it to be not a book at all - instead it 
                  was a book-shaped box holding batteries, a circuit board and a 
                  loudspeaker, and fiddling with the connections provoked that 
                  same loud chuckle. He had his suspicions that it was Parker's 
                  voice, and helpful as the driver had turned out to be, Gordon 
                  didn't particularly want to spend the night listening to him. 
                  Removal of the batteries should do the trick, and was quickly 
                  accomplished. Now, what other toys had Penny left him? 
                  
                  It seemed 
                  likely now that the curtain incident had in fact not been 
                  accidental. Especially as he remembered just how dark it had 
                  been looking out from the window, even at seven in the 
                  evening. There had been no lights visible, not even from other 
                  houses. There was no road out there to provide traffic with 
                  inconveniently aimed headlights. Gordon announced clearly to 
                  nobody in particular that he didn't want to cut the wire from 
                  the motor, but he would have to if they didn't stay shut, and 
                  moved to examine the mysteriously slamming door. In all 
                  probability, all the incidents were connected. 
                  
                  Now the 
                  door was particularly interesting. An internal locking 
                  mechanism, and some sort of automatic shutting device which he 
                  couldn't see clearly but appeared to be built into the hinges. 
                  This door wasn't the solid wood it had appeared to be, either. 
                  Unless he was very much mistaken, those were steel 
                  reinforcement bars he could see the ends of. Penny hadn't set 
                  this up as a joke, only taken advantage of it - this door was 
                  very much designed to keep someone in who didn't want to be. 
                  He knew she'd worked for the British Secret Service. He hadn't 
                  appreciated she'd been this close to the sharp end. 
                  
                  
                  Examination of the bed threw up a narrow tube attached to a 
                  device which he didn't quite understand, but presumed to be 
                  the source of the icy draughts. He detached it from the 
                  bedpost and tucked the end under the mattress, where it could 
                  blast cold air all it wanted. And nestled in the sheets he 
                  finally found the smallest remote control vehicle he'd ever 
                  seen. Although 'vehicle' wasn't really right - this had legs. 
                  Lots and lots of them. Gordon weighed it experimentally in his 
                  hand, evil thoughts of Alan and his refusal to admit what he 
                  really thought of creepy-crawlies surfacing. An inch and a 
                  half of wandering robot spider on Alan's pillow was a very 
                  tempting thought. He really didn't want it wandering off 
                  overnight. It was quickly wrapped in a towel and tucked firmly 
                  in his suitcase. He'd quiz Penny on how it was controlled 
                  tomorrow. 
                  
                  Now, where 
                  was she watching from? She had to be observing him somehow. 
                  The timing had been just too good to be coincidence, every 
                  incident happening just as he had relaxed from the previous 
                  one. As a long-term connoisseur of practical jokes, the family 
                  expert if he did say so himself, he could respect that. And 
                  know that it hadn't happened just by chance. Not a camera, 
                  though. Gordon couldn't see Penny as a voyeur. Infra-red? 
                  Probably not, given the presence of the fire. Motion sensor? 
                  
                  He did 
                  find a camera, up in the moulding of the picture rail in the 
                  corner by the door, with full coverage of the room. It was 
                  covered by a lens cap masquerading as a carved rose, so his 
                  faith in Penny's character remained. Given the angles and the 
                  fish-eye lens, he suspected it was the only one. He stepped 
                  back and addressed it, on the assumption that it also 
                  contained whatever monitoring methods she had active. 
                  
                  "Okay, 
                  Penny, you got me good. But I need some sleep. Leave me be 
                  now, okay?" 
                  
                  The only 
                  answer was a frigid blast of air at the back of his neck. 
                  Gordon turned, resigned to seeking out more airvents, and 
                  found himself face-to-face with the best holographic 
                  projection he'd ever seen. 
                  
                  It was a 
                  ghost in the traditional sense. White, transparent, apparently 
                  floating just off the floor. An elderly man, dressed in a 
                  style Gordon recognised only from history books. He would have 
                  been tall, maybe taller even than Gordon, if he hadn't been 
                  bent almost double, supporting himself with an old-fashioned 
                  cane walking-stick. He was surveying the camera with some 
                  interest, peering up at it through his eyebrows. 
                  
                  "Wow." 
                  Gordon walked round it, taking in the sheer detail in the 
                  image. "Man, Penny, Brains is gonna want to know how you did 
                  this one. I can't believe I haven't found holoemitters. And 
                  it's seamless! Can you make it walk?" 
                  
                  The 
                  gentleman's eyebrows rose, and he obligingly shuffled towards 
                  the door. He was even wearing carpet-slippers. She really had 
                  missed no detail. 
                  
                  He 
                  couldn't see any flaws at all - no jumps in the image, no 
                  blurring or shaking. This was classy work. He wanted to see 
                  more of it, at another time. 
                  
                  "I'm 
                  impressed. Very impressed. But I'm going to bed. Goodnight, 
                  Penny. Goodnight, Mr Hologram." 
                  
                  The 
                  image's eyes twinkled, if something so totally white and 
                  ephemeral could ever be said to do such a thing. It threw him 
                  a casual salute, and hobbled off through the closed door. 
                  
                  Gordon 
                  yawned so widely he idly wondered if the top of his head would 
                  fall off, checked that everything was closed, turned off the 
                  lights, crawled back under the covers, and slept. 
                  
                    
                     
                   
                  
                  He didn't 
                  emerge for breakfast until well after ten, feeling refreshed 
                  and well able to face the day ahead. Even Penny, who was 
                  sitting at the table sipping her tea. 
                  
                  "Good 
                  morning, Gordon. I trust you slept well?" 
                  
                  "Oh, 
                  excellently." He grinned. "Once I found all your little toys. 
                  Nicely done." 
                  
                  "You were 
                  not offended? I was a little concerned, when you arrived 
                  feeling unwell." 
                  
                  "Penny, if 
                  you'd woken me up feeling like I did when I landed, I'd have 
                  left by now. Nah. It was fun, and I had it coming." 
                  
                  She smiled 
                  in obvious relief, and took another sip from the china cup. 
                  "So, did you find everything?" 
                  
                  "Well," 
                  Gordon leant back in his chair, considering whether to add jam 
                  or marmalade to the toast which Parker had just put in front 
                  of him. "There was the slamming door, the opening curtains, 
                  the false book with the loudspeaker. Let me see...the cold air 
                  puffer on the bed and the little creepy bug. Say, can I borrow 
                  the remote for that for a while?" 
                  
                  "Let me 
                  guess...Alan?" 
                  
                  "Alan. And 
                  you have to tell me how you set up that ghost of yours. I 
                  never did find the emitters, not even when I looked this 
                  morning. That was one slick hologram!" 
                  
                  Penny's 
                  cup was placed carefully in its saucer, her back stiffening as 
                  she turned to look fully at him. "Hologram?" 
                  
                  "Aw, come 
                  off it, Penny! I know it was you." 
                  
                  "No." 
                  
                  "Right. So 
                  the old guy in the slippers and the tweed suit, hobbling with 
                  his walking stick, pipe and all, I just imagined him? The 
                  eyebrows? That expression, having a good laugh at my expense? 
                  I don't think so. Come on, Penny. Tell me. He was great!" 
                  
                  "I didn't 
                  have a hologram." 
                  
                  "Really. I 
                  couldn't find the equipment because there isn't any." 
                  
                  "No." 
                  
                  "So, what? 
                  I could see right through him. It was not Parker in a suit." 
                  
                  "No." 
                  
                  Gordon 
                  leant back in his chair and laughed. "Okay, I get it. I just 
                  caught you using some top secret British secret service James 
                  Bond supergadget you shouldn't have. Not to worry, Penny. My 
                  lips are sealed. But you've got a whole lot to learn about me 
                  if you think I'd fall for a holographic ghost --" 
                  
                  He was 
                  interrupted by a tap at the door. 
                  
                  "H'excuse 
                  me, milady, but we 'ad best be goin', if Mr Tracy is not to be 
                  late for 'is h'appointment." 
                  
                  "Of 
                  course, Parker. Please bring the Rolls round to the front 
                  door." She stood up again. "Parker is right, I'm afraid. The 
                  traffic into London is simply murder, these days. Do you have 
                  everything you need?" 
                  
                  "My coat's 
                  hanging in the hall," Gordon told her. 
                  
                  "Then I'll 
                  see you this evening. I do hope Mr Allen has some answers for 
                  you." 
                  
                  Penny 
                  stood in the bay window watching the car pull away down the 
                  drive. Only when it was out of sight did she go to her desk 
                  and remove a small, ornate key. This, she fitted in the glass 
                  door of the large bookcase near to the fireplace. 
                  
                  She opened 
                  it, and returned to the table with an old, green leather-bound 
                  book with the Creighton-Ward family crest embossed on the 
                  front. Sat down and opened the book on her lap, supporting it 
                  carefully to put no strain on the binding. She folded aside 
                  the tissue paper, and stared at the first image, labelled in 
                  archaic, flowery handwriting. 'Lord Albert Creighton, Foxley 
                  Heath, 1844'. 
                  
                  The 
                  picture was tiny, only a couple of inches across, slightly 
                  blurred where the subject had failed to keep completely still, 
                  and a faded sepia brown. Even so, it was quite uncanny. There 
                  were the thick eyebrows, the piercing eyes. Even the tweed 
                  suit. He was seated, but leaning forward on his stick in such 
                  a manner to indicate discomfort. The carpet slippers had been 
                  replaced with immaculately polished shoes, but even so there 
                  was no question in her mind that it was the man Gordon had 
                  described. The same man that her father had sworn till his 
                  dying day he saw on a regular basis in the middle of the 
                  night. 
                  
                  Penny 
                  swallowed hard, smoothing the tissue interleaving carefully 
                  back over the ancient photo. She would never get Gordon to 
                  believe her, that was evident - but he wasn't here. He and 
                  Parker would be away for hours. Cook had taken the morning 
                  off. Penny was alone in the house. 
                  
                  Putting 
                  the photo album back in its place - the first one in a long 
                  row containing nearly two hundred years of Creighton-Ward 
                  photographic family history - she made her decision. Family 
                  legend said he had used the room Gordon occupied now, but it 
                  would be inappropriate for her to go into a guest's room 
                  uninvited. She would have to make do. Her ancestor must have 
                  spent a large proportion of his time in this room, worked at 
                  her desk, eaten at the table. Warmed himself at the fire in 
                  the winter. This was as good a place as any, although midday 
                  probably wasn't going to be the optimal time. Still, there was 
                  no harm in introducing herself now. 
                  
                  Penny 
                  stepped back, cleared her throat nervously, and addressed the 
                  fireplace. "Lord Creighton? My name is Penelope 
                  Creighton-Ward. I'm a descendant of yours, and I would dearly 
                  love to meet you."  |