CHAPTER SIXTEEN Having sat brooding the four hours it took Harry to drive from Kenney Airport, Rose now sits expectantly on the stoop of her motherâs house. When his car finally pulls into the drive she runs to meet him. As he bundles out of the car she grabs him up in her arms, almost knocking the video recorder and case out of his hands. She holds him to her until Mabel comes running out. With four arms tightly around him, he is bustled into the house. Once inside he is sat down and interrogated in tandem, one from the other. Mabel finally relents and, after making Harry a meal, retires to bed leaving them alone. The minute sheâs gone, Rose starts on him again.
âMy God, Harry, you went all the way to Edinburgh with thatââ
Harry holds up his hand. âFirst things first, Rose. Iâve got a present for you. I hope youâll accept it this time.â He holds out the necklace heâd offered to Rosette.
â âThis time?â You donât mean to tell me you offered it to that freak?â
âWhat? â No no no, of course not! Itâs an engagement present. I want to do things properly.â
âYou did, didnât you? How the hell could you have mistaken her for me?â
Harry looks away, sheepishly âI knew it was her, I was justââ
ââLiar!â she says as she offers her neck. Harry fixes the clasp.â
âI, I knew all along. I was just playingââ
Her eyes again say âliarâ⦠then she smiles forgivingly and touches the necklace, âHow long has this been in the family?â says she, mocking, âItâs beautiful.â
âItâs tear-drop pearls and coral⦠I had it made to match your eyes.â
She punches his arm. âThatâs crying over you, Creep. My god, me crying over a man⦠what a switch.â
âIâm not just a man, Rose.â
âNo. Not âjust a manâ. So what now, do I take this as a proposal Harry?â
He hesitates, she puts her clenched fist under his chin in a mock threat.
âI love you Rose, but if I marry I inherit a fortune. You may not like me when Iâve got a fortune.â
âIâll force myself, we all have to make sacrifices.â She pushes her fist further into his face, forcing him off his chair and onto his knees.
âHaving money may change my whole character.â
âWhat? You havenât got any âcharacter.â On your knees, creep, your last chance.â She falls on him, kissing him as they tumble.
Harry pulls away. âThe baby, Rose, mind the baby.â He picks her up in his arms and carries her awkwardly to the divan. Rose giggles at his feeble effort, as he all but collapses onto it. They sit quietly for a few moments.
âYou should know,â says Harry, breaking the silence. âIâm going to write a thesis. Now itâs over I want to get it all out of my head and onto paper, then I can leave it. Will you help?â
âIâd rather not. It still makes my teeth shiver. I donât even want to think about it.â
âI think we owe it to my uncle, Rose,â says Harry, trying another tack. âIâm writing this account and having it bound with his. Iâm calling it The Mandrake Syndrome â Itâs okay, Iâm not going to publish it, itâs for the archives.â
âOkay,â says Rose, grudgingly, âThen itâs done with, yeah?â
âYes, yes, definitely: I want you to tell me, first hand, your feelings when you first saw your double.â
âYou really want to do this? Canât you just read the transcript?â
âYou are bloody joking!? Iâm not going back to get that. You think Iâm crazy!?â
âOkay, calm down Harry. I have a copy, here.â
Harry sits up and diligently takes out a notebook and pen from his case. âAnyway, I donât want the transcript version, I want your version.â
Rose studies him with contempt. âSurely youâre not going to do this now?â
Harry ignores. âWhat was your first reaction, Rose, your first thought? Thatâs what I want⦠thatâs not in the transcript⦠when you looked into Cowenâs coffer and saw you were looking at yourself.â
âOh, God, I donât know,â says Rose, reluctantly, âwhat would you think? â Hey, wait a minuteâ¦â she stops and thinks a moment. âWhat do you mean, âwhen I looked into Cowenâs coffer?â I was still in my coffer, she looked down on me⦠she was the first thing I saw when I opened my eyes â the goddam freak.â
âThe tapes, Rose,â says Harry, now with hint of authority in his voice, âRosette destroyed them, but my tape machine automatically made a duplicate copy. Iâve seen it, but I donât understand it.â
âSeen what, for Christâs sake? Seen what?â
âI couldnât quite make out what happened. When the thing entered the Junairo, just after you rounded the planet, it seems the men are fighting something⦠lots of motion. Then itâs unclear⦠lots of thrashing about as if something is loose in the cabin. Then⦠well, I couldnât keep it⦠we lose it. The next part is of Junairo closing on EarthlabOne, just before they make audio contact. You appear to be the only standing figure.â
âGod sake, stop!â says Rose, now on the verge of tears, âI donât want to hear any more.â
âYou have to, Rose, you have to. You were just standing looking down into Cowenâs coffer. When the figure emerges from it, it is Rosette in Cowenâs suit⦠you can see the name clearly. Now hereâs the part I donât understand, you donât seem shocked. You just walk over to the lab section and pick up the lance. Rosette stands there, almost casual.â
âStop it, Hal. I canât believe it. My God, she must have had some kind of control over my mind.â She stops and puts her hand protectively on her stomach.
Harry gives a despondent sigh. âItâs true, Rose, itâs there on the tape.â
âI wonât believe it until Iâve seen it. Run it Harry, run the damned thing.â
Harry picks up the remote control and walks to the video player and slips the tape in.
âWhat else did that freak make me do?â she screams from across the room, âNo, donât run it. I donât want to see it.â She runs to him and holds him. Harry, still holding the remote control, presses the play button in the direction of the video recorder. âHal, for God sake letâs leave it, itâs going to drive me crazy.â
âItâs okay, Rose, itâs over. I told you, itâs all overââ
She kisses him, muffling his words with her lips. He is lost for a moment in the fragrance of her hair and the warmth of her body. The whole dreadful mess seems to ebb away under her flood of honey sweetness.
The video constructs a picture. They both turn and watch: A ghost-like Rosette starts to climb out of the coffer. Rose is just standing, watching and waiting. Once out of the coffer, Rosette nods and Rose picks up the lance. After a few moments, Rose cries out from the video. âOh, my, God! I must be dreaming. Can you see this, Major?â
Rose turns away from the screen. âFor Godâs sake, leave it, Harry⦠it wonât make any difference. Whatever happened out there, I still love you.â
âNo!â he yells, pushing her away from him, âGet away from me!â
Rose is shocked by his outburst. He holds her at arm's length then pulls her towards him as if in a last embrace. With all his strength hurls her across the room. She crashes to the floor. In an instant he has his syringe in his hand, the other hand still holding the remote. He starts across the room toward her. The door opens just in front of him and Mabel enters and stands between them. âWhat in heckâs going on?â
Harry brushes her aside and lunges toward Rose again. Rose is just about up. Mabel recoils and leaps at Harryâs back. A long serpentine tongue whips out around his neck. The vice-like grip needs no explanation. Harry lets loose a reaction right-hook that disappears over his left shoulder, the syringe held tightly in his fist. The razor-sharp needlepoint finds the white of the old ladyâs eye â novocaine voids directly into her brain. Her grip slackens and she slithers to the floor in convulsion, spewing out blooded mucus. Harry immediately grabs his other syringe from inside his jacket.
Rose now stands facing him. They stare across the room at each other, Rose in typical heavily pregnant stance, one hand on her stomach the other hand in the small of her back.
âYou wonât use that Harry, youâll harm the baby.â
âYou mean there is a baby? Iâve seen your babies.â
âThere is a baby, Hal.â
âI donât need to use this, Rose. I told you, itâs over. There was always something nagging at me⦠Why was all the flesh from Cowen and Fitzgerald used up?â
âDoes it matter?â
âMy uncleâs calculations were right. He said it uses one body as material and just over half another body as, shall we say, fuel. Thatâs why we always found a remaining torso. Two bodies make one, with half a body left over, but three bodies make two, with nothing left over⦠elementary physics really. I checked with the old manâs calculations, pound-for-pound, what was made, what was lost. You couldnât have made Rose and one of the men, there wasnât enough material. But there was enough for two of you â just enough.â
Rose takes a step towards him, âIt wonât make any difference Hal, I love you and you love me, Rose. So Iâm half Martian,â she smiles sardonically, âDonât tell me youâre speciphobic, Harry? New word, you heard it first here.â
âYes, that is funny.â
âSee, gods can be funny, Hal.â
âIâll laugh later⦠when Iâve got more time?â
âI really do love you, Harry.â
âYou were the smartest on that ship, Rose, and when it came to a fight for intellectual superiority there was no contest, you won hands down. You worked it out; you needed a scapegoat. The whole bloody thing was a sham right from the start, even Rosetteâs rogue cell disorder, all to throw them off the scent. And the only danger was myself. You knew about me, and my uncleâs records.â
âYes.â
âWhy didnât you just kill me, you had enough chances?â
âI had to run with it. Someone else would have taken your place⦠someone competent.â
âOh, thanks very much.â
âAnyway, Harry, I fell in love with you. Iâm still human⦠just a little different thatâs all. It really is your baby, yours and Roseâs⦠mine. Youâve seen the ultra-scan⦠youâve even named him⦠Barney. It will still work, Hal, youâll see. Youâll have knowledge.â
âKnowledge?â
âYes, knowledge.â
âWill I be like Kit Marloweâs Faustus, selling my soul?â
Rose ignores. âThis isnât our first time, Hal, weâve been here before, thousands of years ago, before your recorded history. When we first came you were Neanderthal, when we left you were Cro-Magnon. That was our legacy â we are in your legends. â
âIs that what you are, Rose, a god?â
âIf you like. Iâll make you a god too, Harry, a Titan.
âAnd which one are you?â
âOh, believe me, Harry, youâll know me when you see me.â
âThe baby, is it one of your kind, will he be a god?â Harry raises the syringe ready. Rose backs away.
âI told you, Hal. We donât breed, weâre parasitic. You know what we do. But the child will be human.â
âI donât believe you.â
âYes, you do! I wouldnât lie about that, I love you. Itâll be in the childâs interest. Youâre a flawed race⦠youâll eventually destroy the Earth out of greed and selfishness⦠itâs inevitable, even you must see that. Itâs the only place, Harry. Thereâs nowhere else in the Galaxy. The only life is here, and weâve as much right to it as you, more, we donât covet, we donât despoil, we donât destroy. Weâre more deserving, more human, than you are.â
âWhat about Mabel? You donât seem much upset about your mother. Youâre not human. Who did you kill for her donor?â
âI killed no one! Cameron sacrificed himself, itâs what he wanted, forâ¦â
âFor⦠what? For, what!?â
âFor the Greater Good, Harry. The salvation of our species, ours and yours.â
âWhat utter, utter rubbish.â
âWell⦠if thatâs your final word?â
âYes.â
âYouâll never make it â you do know that? I promise it wonât take long. I really do love you, Harry, and I really was jealous of Kate. And I promise Iâll look after our baby.â
Harry takes a step backward. Rose rolls her eyes, her irises disappearing under her lids. Her mouth sags open and starts to drool, wider and wider. Her mouth is now a gaping gash, awash with thickening, digestive slime. From this gurgling mess, the tongues leap: three, six, and now a dozen. Her head tips back grotesquely and more blood-coloured tongues spill out, thrashing, whipping. The Medusa stands, trembling like a great sea anemone, weaving its snake hair as if through a rushing current.
Harryâs right-hand drops to his side in shock. The heavy syringe slips from his slackened grip to the floor. The Rose-beast takes a lumbering step toward him. Harry lifts his left hand to shield his face, the remote-control-unit still clasped in his sweating, white-knuckled fist. Nearer it lurches, its head tipped back, just neck and tentacles surrounded, in comic horror, by the beautiful pearl and coral necklace. Closer and closer comes the gaping mouth and necklace â closer and closer come the cluster of pearl and coral-coloured pellets â the same pellets as the ones Harry had fixed to the lift device.
He pushes the button on the remote. A blinding flash accompanied by an ear-splitting crack, like the noise of water spilling into boiling fat, as the ring of thirty pellets detonate, hurling the Medusa head, tentacles, and a huge gout of blooded strands to every corner of the room. Harry simultaneously falling to the floor and shielding himself as best he can. After a few moments, he staggers up and edges along the wall and out into the hall, wipes away the blood and tissue from his face and hands and stands with his back to the wall, not daring to look back. A long silence, then he reacts to a faint rustling from within the room. His eyes widen with fear. A gurgling of fluids being displaced, then a pitiful cry, no more than a whimper. A look of horror now occupies Harryâs face as he enters the room.
What is left of Rose is piled in the middle of a widening pool of blood, her legs buckled under her as she had fallen. Something is moving inside her sodden dress. Harry picks up the syringe and puts it between his teeth. He bends down and slowly thrusts both hands into the grisly pile of steaming offal.
Bewildered he lifts a blood-soaked baby, umbilical still attached, from the gory mess ââa perfect boy-child, wailing for its demon mother. Harry blinks unbelievingly at his son.
Coleridge END BLOC ONE Now read BLOC TWO:
then read concluding BLOC THREE: