The monolithic 1920âs Ridley Building, home to the Carnegie Space Agency headquarters, stands as sentinel of good taste to a chaotic jungle of angular skyscrapers. The interiorââstill in its original art-deco furnishing and fittingsââcontrasting sharply with the hi-tech equipment and attractive, scholastic people there employed.
Rex enters the main hall, followed, a step or two behind, by Hamish, who is busily attempting to placate a grouching Harry.
âWill you cool it, Hal? Youâre always complaining about food. Dear God, you had a steak sandwich just two hours ago! Didnât they feed you on the plane?â
âJust catching up with the jet-lag, Hamish, old luv,â says Harry, patting his stomache, âI never eat when Iâm flying⦠upsets the old Derby Kelly, do ya see?â
âOh, drinking a goddam aircraft dry of gin and champagne is okay, is it? And donât call me âold loveâ.â
Harry is about to retort. Rex moves between them. âFirst meet the team, then weâll have a working lunch, then straight to it.â
Harryâs mood changes as he takes stock of his new surroundings. The place is bustling with attractive women. He is introduced to the numerous nubile ladies, all of who appear taken with his genteel Englishness, which, on his realising, Harry exaggerates with cavalier charm. He is now in top flirtatious form, appreciated, seemingly by all, especially a gorgeous black-haired, blue-eyed technician, Kate Ottman, standing a little way back from Rose.
âRose, this is Henry Mandrake,â says Rex. âMandrake⦠let me introduce Rose Hawkins.â
Rose smiles, âHi, Henryâ
âHarry, please. I hate Henry... but I insist you call me Hal. Iâve heard so much about you, Rose.â He takes her hand and kisses it. Rose is impressed and, for a moment, slightly flushed. She feigns comedy to hide her embarrassment.
âWhy, thank you kindly, Sire.â She mocks a slight curtsy. âI guess youâve heard a lot about me because there are two of me. Youâll be meeting the alien host, Rosette, as these morons call her, after lunch. We thought it better that way⦠she has a bad affect on some peopleâs appetite. Sheâs in sickbay.â
Harry looks puzzled. âSickbay, Rose, how come?â
âSheâs very sick⦠cancer⦠of a sort. An acute cellular disorder.â
âIâm sorry.â
âIâm not,â says Rose, with a flash of malice.
Harry shrugs. Rose looks away⦠the conversation seems to stall. He takes a small gift-box out of his inside pocket and offers it. âIâve brought you a little gift, Rose. Been in the family a hell of a time, not expensive, not the family jewels, ha ha, but Iâd like you to have it.â
Rose is totally overwhelmed â a simple costume-jewellery necklace, seemingly of some great age. As she puts it on she leans to Harry and kisses him on the cheek. There is a bit of chemistry mixing â Rex looks at Hamish and rolls his eyes. The other women also notice, especially Kate Ottman.
Rose smiles and leads Harry, Rex, and Hamish off to the restaurant where they are to meet Major, leaving the group of women to their tittle-tattle.
âJeesâ what a dreamy guy,â says Kate, barely letting them out of earshot, âI could eat him alive. How about you, Helen?â They all laugh.
âMe?â says Helen, âWell⦠for my money, heâs a fag. No regular guy talks like that.â
âOr dresses like that,â adds the third woman, âAnâ if heâs not a fruit, then heâs a goddam dyke!â
âTalking of dykes,â chips in the forth woman, âRose seems to like him, fruit or otherwise. What you make out of that, Kate, what dâya think?â
âIâll tell you what I think: I think she and her zombie-dyke sister really do think men are to eat.â She turns to Helen, making a personal jibe. âIs that right, Helen, is Rose a dyke, you two were buddy-buddies, once?â
Helen looks embarrassed, âOh God, donât start that again. We were not âbuddiesâ, we were friends for a while, when I first arrived here â Christ, Iâm friends with you, donât mean I wanna slam into your goddam pants.â
âYou offering, Honey?â says Kate, laughing and fluttering her eyelashes.
âGimme a break! We just did some shows and stuff. Leastways, you can find out if heâs gay,â says Helen, forcing the subject on from herself, âyouâre going to work with him. You gonna try it⦠Satchel Mouth?â
Kate, taking the retaliatory jibe in good humour, waggles her tongue in her ample mouth, âAll the better to eat him with, Grandma!â
They all laugh.
Joseph Styles, the commander of EarthlabOne, a tall, executive-dressed man normally of steely and controlled temperament, sits nervously at his roll-top desk in the circular command room. He is staring, lost in troubled thought, into a hand-held mike, waiting for the line to connect. The moment it does he rams it to his mouth and gushes, âMajor, weâre a man down!â A moment passes. âDid you hear what I said? Weâre a man down!â
Majorâs voice booms over the radio-link, âAre you certain?â
âYes. Heâs been missing for at least thirteen hours â he was off duty, so it could be as long as twenty-four. Weâve checked all the suits, theyâre all present and accounted for.â
âHave you checked the SBS?â
âYes. Weâve checked again with video on. Heâs not moving about, Iâm certain⦠I wouldnât have said if I wasnât. Thereâs something else, Major: Weâve found decomposed tissue, human residue similar to that in the Junairo⦠weâre still testing it. And something has been jettisoned without authorisation. Thatâs where we found the residue, in the tube.
âYou have to take precautionsââ
âJesus Christ, you donât have to tell me that! The whole crew is crapping themselves⦠the can-seat hasnât cooled all day. I want a complete change of crew, Major. Immediately!â
âNo way!â yells Major, still sitting in the agency restaurant, âNo fucking way! Weâre coming up â Listen to me Buddy, youâre under contract. Shape up or youâll lose the lot. You hear me?â
âA new crew, Major â You hear me?â
Major smashes a hand down on the dining table and hisses into the phone. âNow you get this: No-one gets access to the SBS. Keep everybody off. I donât care what workâs being done. Close it down. If you wonât do it, weâll pull the plug from down here. You understand what Iâm saying?â
âYes. Do you understand what Iâm saying!?â
Major calms slightly. âListen, Joe, this affects us all⦠all weâve worked for.â He is silent for a few seconds. âOkay⦠Now, get as many people together as you can. Try not to leave anyone alone, keep your people in threes if you can. We must keep up morale. Iâll be with you in ten hours. Keep this line open. Iâll be in constant communication. Thatâs it for now. Come through for me, Joe⦠you wonât regret it. In ten hours â Out.â
Major puts the receiver down, then picks it up again and makes another call. He speaks immediately it connects, âMake ready the Orion. And thereâs a special job I want you to do.â He slams the receiver down again and stares icily into infinity.
Across the crowded restaurant, Rose and party approach. Major shakes away his thoughts and looks up. âRose! ⦠And this must be Henry Mandyke.â They shake hands.
âMan, drakeâ¦â corrects Harry, â⦠drake.â
âDrake!â says Major, looking at him bewildered. They take their seats at the table. Major continues to all. âWeâve got a problem. We got to go back to EarthlabOne. Theyâve lost a man, one Erick Ronan⦠a weather technician⦠Anyone know him?â Nobody answers, they all look at each other. Major continues. âOkay. Now, hereâs the bit, theyâve found decomposed flesh residue, same as the Junairo.â
Rose looks shocked. âExactly the same?â
âYes, exactly the same⦠Sounds fishy to me. The whole crew is on the verge of panic, so the commander says. They all want out. Weâve got to get up there and show some grit.â He looks from one to the other, âUnderstand this, if this gets out weâre finished. If we miss a Mars rendezvous, thatâs a whole goddam season wasted. And, after that elapse of time, we probably wonât be needed.â He studies Harry for a moment. Harry nods understanding. Major continues. âThey say heâs been missing thirteen to twenty-four hours, that means he possibly stowed away with us. I reckon he stole some of the sealed containers and scattered residue in the tube to fuck us up, to throw us off the scent. Probably took some copy data. It would be worth a fortune to the international market, to say nothing of the press. I donât think he could have got shots of Rose and Roââ he stops and corrects, ââthe double. You were never together on the station, at least not where Ronan would get access. Were you, Rose?â
âNo, I donât think so⦠maybe.â
Major makes a fist and hammers his forehead. âGod, if heâs got a shot of the two of you⦠Okay, this needs sorting. None of this gets out, not to anybody! One word could finish us. We must contain it.â He looks to Hamish. The big man stands and without word walks off. Rex follows.
Major leans towards Rose, takes her hand and speaks softly. âDo you mind going back, Rose? I wouldnât ask but the whole goddam sack is about to split⦠We must go.â
âSuits me â the further away from the freak the better.â
Harry, feeling uncomfortable at Majorâs intimacy with Rose, takes her other hand. âWhat is the latest on the host, Rose?â
Rose pulls away from both hands. âVery sick, Harry, dying, thank God. Youâll be okay for a day or two, Kate will show you around?â
Harry nods. âWeâll take a rain-check on that dinner, yes?â
âWhat? Oh, yeah⦠yes,â she smiles, then looks to Major, slightly embarrassed. She shrugs and turns back to Harry. âAll that you asked for, Harry, has been installed in your office. Your âRollerâ, as you call it, is in your own park-bay. Itâs got your name on it â the bay that is. Oh, and you have full accreditation.â She hands him some credit cards and car keys. âMake the most of the time, Harry⦠we need you desperately.â
Harry lifts her hand offering the cards and keys, and kisses it yet again, at the same time deftly palming the offered.
Rose smiles, âHey! Quit that. Youâre making Major blush.â
âSee you later, Rose. You take care, now.â
Rose and Major start to leave. They stop at the swing doors, to talk to Kate, who has just entered. Rose looks back and nods another farewell to Harry, and then they are gone.
Kate joins Harry, giving him a sensuous, âLo, Harry.â
âKate. How nice. I understand youâre going to work with me. Iâve got a little pressie for you. Itâs been in the family for ages. Donât worry, itâs not the family jewels.â