627 lines
37 KiB
Plaintext
627 lines
37 KiB
Plaintext
Path: moe.ksu.ksu.edu!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!sdd.hp.com!mips!darwin.sura.net!jvnc.net!rutgers!ub!acsu.buffalo.edu!ubvmsb.cc.buffalo.edu!v130qh57
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From: v130qh57@ubvmsb.cc.buffalo.edu (sandra guzdek)
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Newsgroups: alt.startrek.creative
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Subject: NEW STORY: Qlue (or, ....)
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Message-ID: <BszEJz.6pE@acsu.buffalo.edu>
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Date: 14 Aug 92 17:16:00 GMT
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Sender: nntp@acsu.buffalo.edu
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Organization: University at Buffalo
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Lines: 613
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News-Software: VAX/VMS VNEWS 1.41
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Nntp-Posting-Host: ubvmsb.cc.buffalo.edu
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well, here it is, the last thing that i shall submit for the approval of all
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of you (well, unless i go back to school). it is a semi-parody.
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at the risk of being flamed for wasting bandwidth/
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being sappy, it's been a good time and i shall miss this newsgroup dearly.
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anyone so inclined may write to me at the below address... i would love if
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those so inclined could post me (snail mail) the latest and greatest fiction
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on this newsgroup... bye! :'(
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+ + +
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sandra guzdek + username: v130qh57@ubvmsb.cc.buffalo.edu + til 28 Aug 1992
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6037 Devlin Avenue + Niagara Falls, NY + 14304 + after 28 Aug 1992
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"Higher emotions are what separate us from the lower orders of life...
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Higher emotions, and table manners."
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--- Deanna Troi, _Imzadi_
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Qlue (or, Man, Do I Ever Need A Vacation!) * Copyright 1992 by Sandra Guzdek
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_______________________________________________________________________________
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There was nothing in the world Jean-Luc Picard wanted more at that
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moment than to reach his quarters. To be more specific and more accurate, to
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the novel he had acquired at the last starbase stop the Enterprise had made,
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but hadn't had time to sink his teeth into. As he turned the corner, his
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pace quickened. Sinking into a chair, lights high enough to read, low enough
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to soothe... he smiled in anticipation. Just a few more steps. Just a few...
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more... steps...
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His door whooshed open under the swift, light touch of his fingertips,
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and he stepped in, deeply drawing in air as if breathing for the first time. He
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smiled and nodded. _Finally, alone._
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He changed out of the restrictive uniform and stretched out along the
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couch, reaching for the book that he had set on the table beside the statue
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he had brought back with him from Risa. _Ariadne's Web_ was its title,
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the latest offering by a proliferative young Terran author called Roth
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Vandalay, whose rather interesting series of mystery books never failed to
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surprise the captain. Before he flipped open the cover, the horgon caught his
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eye; a fleeting thought of the devilishly delightful Vash passed through his
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mind as quickly as the smile that played on his lips. He settled back as he
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read the first line.
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They found her lying face up on a deserted beach, her auburn hair
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tangled artfully with the deep forest green of the seaweed, her pale limbs
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twisted painfully, her blue eyes questioning the clouded sky.
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Picard smiled... until he heard a voice come out of nowhere to comment
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on his apparent amusement:
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"Tut, tut, Captain. Surely you don't smile at the thought of *murder*."
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Picard did not even have to look up at this annoyance to know who it
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was. Impeccable timing as always, to interrupt such well-deserved relaxation.
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The captain slapped shut the text, and let out a huff that would have sent
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any one of his subordinates fleeing. He looked up glaringly. "Q."
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Q was insultingly dressed in a Starfleet captain's uniform, and he
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pouted when he perceived a building anger in Picard. He gestured an
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exaggerated bow. "Always a pleasure to see you as well, Picard."
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"What are you doing on my ship?" he asked with remarkable restrain,
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standing, fists clenched at his sides.
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"Ah, but you have not as yet answered my subtle query. *Does* murder
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please you?"
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Picard held the book up and shook it, as if to emphasize what he was to
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say next. "*Reading* pleases me. That this book happens to involve a murder is
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irrelevant."
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Q took a seat, and shook his finger at the captain. "Au contraire,
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mon capitan. I think the subject is of *extreme* relevance. The circumstances
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surrounding the murder interest you to no end, don't dare deny it. I will tell
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you now, her twin sister did it. Not very creative at all."
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Disgusted, Picard threw down the book. "Get off of this ship!"
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"Poor sport!" Q said. "But do you deny that murder does not fascinate
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you?" Picard opened his mouth to retort but Q continued, "For example, if
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your *beloved* Vash turned up on a deserted beach, her pale limbs twisted
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painfully, do you mean to tell me that it would not interest you to know how
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it happened?"
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Picard had blanched a shade three times lighter that white. "If
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you've hurt her, Q --"
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Q laughed, enjoying that the mighty captain was brought to such
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struggle. "Of course not. I did give you my word, didn't I? She is... *safe*.
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-- But what of murder? What if Riker confided in you that he had murdered?
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Does not the human race have some morbid fascination with the mystery of
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murder? The success of Dame Agatha Christie and your Roth Vandalay, among
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*countless* others, seems to support this without refute."
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Picard's anger was mounting. Not only had Q spoiled his night of
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relaxation, but he had ruined the end of the book before Picard had even
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gotten through the first paragraph, and now Q was broadly supposing something
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yet again about the human race. "This is absurd." Jean-Luc decided he needed
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some tea and went over to the replicator, where Q was already waiting for
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him. "Murder mystery books are purely escapism. If there were only some
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escape from *you*." He grabbed the tea and made for his desk. Some spilled on
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his hand, adding to his frustration, and he cursed under his breath.
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The captain turned to Q and said, "In reality, murder is a very
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serious business. In these times, murder is a rare thing, cold and ruthless.
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Most people, if not all, are able to separate the fiction from the reality.
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Certainly Starfleet officers will know the difference, especially upper rank
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officers. To suppose Will Riker of all people could murder is preposterous. He
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could never."
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Q rose from his seat behind the desk, both hands squarely supporting
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him. "And *I* say he would, given the opportunity, means and motive. *No*
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human is beyind this instinct. Not even 'upper rank officers'."
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"How wrong you are, Q. I would stake my life on the fact that none of
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my senior staff would ever commit cold-blooded murder." As soon as he said the
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words he wished he could take them back, because to Q this would be nothing
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more than an invitation.
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"*I* think you are a fool to suppose anything of the sort!" He smiled
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that charming yet menacing smile. "'Stake your life,' eh? We shall see. We
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shall see."
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He was gone in a flash of blinding light, and Picard was right behind
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him.
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+++
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Howling wind circled in his ears, and nearly took the fedora off of his
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head, as the rain came down blindingly. He looked around himself from under
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the edge of a wide black umbrella. It was dark, but in the brief, illuminating
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flashes of lightning, he could see he was on a short path leading towards an
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ivy-covered estate, surrounded on all sides by acres of lush, manicured land.
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Behind him, in the crescent driveway, sat a large black sedan that he supposed
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he must have 'driven' all the way out here, to the country. He could only
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think that he was to go to the house and knock on the large wooden doors, which
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he did after folding the umbrella closed.
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As Picard waited for a reply, he looked down at his clothing. He had
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on a trenchcoat, and on his feet fine dress shoes. The lower pantlegs
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suggested a tailored suit made from the best linen. Picard smiled, satisfied
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in knowing what Q had done -- thrown him into a Dixon Hill scenario, a big
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mistake on Q's part. Picard knew everything there was to know about Hill.
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Finally the doors creaked opened, and what he saw next almost made
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him laugh. It was Worf, unceremoniously stuffed into the stiffest butler's
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uniform he had ever seen. "Mr. Hill. We have been -- expecting you," said
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Worf in his usual low, almost subaudible tone. Picard smiled, stepping in from
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under the awning.
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"Thank you, Mr. --"
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"Jeeves. Just call me Jeeves, sir." Worf was stone serious, standing
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at an obscenely motionless attention.
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Picard blinked. He had a feeling that this was real, for it was not a
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situation he was familiar with in the holodeck. He felt thrown for a loop. What
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did Q have planned, after all?
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As Worf turned, he said, "This way, sir."
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They went into what appeared to be a library, Picard was brought face
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to face with a roomful of familiarity that was not reciprocated. "Let me
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introduce you, sir. -- Excuse me, but Mr. Dixon Hill has arrived."
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Someone murmured, "Thank God. We can finally get this cleared up,"
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catching the captain's ear. It was... Geordi?
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"Would someone kindly explain what this is all about?" Picard asked,
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not wanting to blow his cover, but confused nonetheless.
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Worf turned to him with a look of surprise. "I thought it had all been
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explained over the phone, sir. Mr. Boddy has been murdered."
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The crowd in the room came closer. Beverly, Riker, Deanna... they
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were all here. But evidently they were not themselves, in the strictest
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sense.
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"Murdered, you say?" Picard turned to face Worf. As he did he caught
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a glance of his own face in a large mirror. Apparently he was not himself,
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either: Q had changed his face. The basic features were the same, but the nose
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was thinner, the eyes more cynical, the cheeks more prominent. And the hair!
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His hairline looked as if it had only recently begun to recede. What the hell
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was going on?
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"Murdered. And one of these... guests has done it."
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Protests buzzed around the room.
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"Quiet all of you!" The man who looked like Riker stepped forward,
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harrumphing boisterously. "Mr. Hill, my name is Colonel Mustard, and I can
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most assuredly say that I am *not* the murderer." He was dressed in a military
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style suit of drab brown, with insignia on his chest that indicated that this
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man was indeed in the armed forces. "I have more important things to do than
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waste time on such... *trivial* pursuits."
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"Oh, and I suppose if all of us come forward like you, we all *must* be
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innocent?" This from the mouth of Ro Larren, who was in a slinky white skirt
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with a matching suit jacket, her head topped with a white pillbox hat. Her
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feet were clothed in heels of white patent leather.
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"If anything is to be accomplished, we must have order." Picard said
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this, and it calmed the crowd at once. "Let me have your names. I will also
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need to see the body." He swallowed hard at the last word. He pulled out the
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notebook in his pocket, and prepared to take notes with the pencil in his hand.
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Ro came forth boldly. "I am Mrs. White."
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"I am Professor Plum," said Data: he had a mustard brown tweed suit on
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with a suffocating bow tie at his neck that was the perfect shade of... well,
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plum.
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Beverly wore a deep blue-green A-line dress that plunged dangerously
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low in the front, and her shapely legs ended with satin pumps of the same
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colour. Her hair was pulled up at the crown, and tumbled over her shoulders in
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auburn curls. "My name is Mrs. Peacock," she said in a deep, resonant tone,
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her smile indicating at once both shyness and invitation. Picard's eyes
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lingered on her longer than necessary.
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"Miss Scarlet." Picard turned his eyes to Troi upon hearing her
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voice. She was in a red satin dress that clung to her like a second skin, a
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showcase for her ample features. Her high-heeled shoes were a little bit taller
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than Beverly's were and matched Troi's dress perfectly. Deanna's black hair was
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swept off of her neck and into a french twist, with a few curls escaping and
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clinging to her face and neck. She smiled at him with ruby red lips, her
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intentions towards him and all other of his gender more than obvious.
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From beside her came a meek voice. It was Geordi, dressed in a plain
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blue wool suit, straight tie, and dress shoes. "Mr. Green here." He offered a
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nervous smile and waved.
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As he jotted down the last of his notes they looked a little like this:
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Mr. Worf ---> butler - Jeeves ___
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Riker, Colonel Mustard. / \
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Ro Larren = Mrs. White, _/
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Mr. Data is Professor Plum. |
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Beverly ------> Mrs. Peacock |
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Counselor Troi, Miss Scarlet.
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LaForge is Mr. Green. O
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He looked at those names, and looked again. Somehow the fact that
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they were all colours was significant and somehow familiar. And what was the
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victim's name again? Mr. Boddy? That was surely a strange occurrance.
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He heard the voice of Q, seemingly emanating from a round, blue
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painting that very much resembled the earth's sky on a sunny day. "Oh, it's no
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coincedence, Captain. If you were the big history buff you claim to be, you
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would know exactly what this is you're involved with." Picard looked around for
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Q and saw him sitting on a bookshelf near where Beverly was standing. Q's face
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scowled. "Don't worry, they can't hear me. I'm here for your benefit, you might
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say."
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Just then he realized why the names had sounded so familiar. A 20th
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century board game. "Clue."
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"What's that? Did you find a clue?" asked Geordi.
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He all but ignored him to hear Q's reply. "I've underestimated your
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knowledge of the past. Very well, you're right. Can you believe it? A *board
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game* that revolves around *murder*!" Q laughed; Picard just seethed. "Well?
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Go take a look at the body!" Q disappeared again.
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As Picard came out of his apparent reverie, he realized all eyes were
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upon him. He suggested the very thing Q had recommended -- to go look at the
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body. Data, in his most professorial voice, informed him that it was in the
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study.
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As Picard approached the room he saw the body lying on the floor, limbs
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askew, face down, in the center of the floor. He motioned that they should
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remain at the door as he entered. Worf said, "We haven't moved it since we
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found it."
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"*Who* found it specifically?" he addressed the crowd.
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"The maid."
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"And where is she?"
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"Right here." From behind him came the voice of Vash. As he turned
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back towards the crowd, she made her way through it, looking at him through
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her lashes, a smile playing on the corner of her lips. It did not help that she
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was dressed in a short black and white French maid's outfit, her bosom pushed
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up for display. Her brown hair was piled on top of her head, ringlets framing
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her pretty face. She cocked one delicate eyebrow upon making eye contact with
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the captain.
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Picard cleared his throat, forcing himself to turn his eyes from her,
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and back to the body on the floor. "Are there any other people in this house
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that I should be aware of?"
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Worf said, "The cook... and Mr. O'Brien."
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*Chief* O'Brien? "What does this O'Brien do?"
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"Isn't he the chauffeur?" asked Ro.
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"I thought he was the gardener," Data offered.
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"He told me he was the stable master," Geordi said, puzzled.
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Worf said, "Officially, he has no title. He just works around the
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house." Picard thought about this, his fingers to his chin, staring some
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more at the notes he was accumulating.
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"And what are you all doing here?"
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"We all received invitations to spend the weekend here at the Boddy
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Estate," offered Geordi, who pushed on the edge of his VISOR as if it were
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the arm of a pair of eyeglasses.
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"We all arrived last night for dinner," concluded Troi, sipping from
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her brandy. "This morning, the maid finds our host as dead as a doornail.
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Some host," she tried to joke. Picard ignored it.
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"Did you all know each other before last night?" asked Picard. At
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this prompt, nervous glances crossed the room. Some answered "yes," some
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answered "no." Picard made note of this as well.
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"And how did you all know Mr. Boddy?"
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Again, intimidated looks went back and forth between them.
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Riker, as Colonel Mustard, said, "We just did." He raised his chin and
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struck a determined pose. Picard knew that was as much as he was going to get
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from them at that moment.
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"Let's examine the body, shall we?" said Picard, changing the subject.
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He dropped to a squat and turned the body over.
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Only to see the spitting image of himself.
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+++
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He nearly fainted. He wanted to scream. He wanted to strangle the
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life out of Q. Instead he looked with a morbid revulsion for any signs of the
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cause of death. There was a large wound on his temple and a bruise that had
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begun to turn purple around the front of his neck. He felt nauseous and could
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look no more.
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"One of them has killed *you*, Picard!" came Q's grating voice. "I'll
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bet you can't guess who."
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Q materialized next to the body, looking up at the captain from a
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reclining position. Picard quickly stood and said to the crowd, "Excuse me, I
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need a moment to myself. I'll join you in the library in a short while. If
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you'd please..." They abandoned the study's threshhold, and Picard closed the
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doors behind them.
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When he turned back to Q, Picard was wearing a completely different
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face, a mask of rage and ill-temper. "Q! What is the purpose of this charade?
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These people are just mockeries of my crew! And to involve Vash, how dare you!"
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"Temper, temper!" scolded Q. "These people are most certainly your
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crew. They all have plenty of motive to kill you without me changing a thing.
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I have just seen to it that they know you, well, *him*--" he indicated the
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body on the floor "--and each other, for different reasons. They are merely...
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shall we say, *enhanced* versions of themselves."
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"What does this all mean, 'enhanced versions'? Have you altered their
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minds?" Picard was not aware that Q had that type of power.
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"Let's just say that they *believe* they are the characters they are,
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and as sure as you and I are here, one of them has killed you. Vash included."
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Q smiled again, and patted Picard's shoulder. "Don't look so down, Mr. Brown!
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Their motives will all become apparent in due time!"
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Q left him alone again, and Picard was filled with a profound hatred
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for the impish entity. But he quelled it, smoothed down his suit, and surveyed
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the study. His mind was filled with turbulent questions. Who did it? Why?
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They were all capable. Data had superhuman strength. Worf was strong
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as well. Beverly had expert knowledge of the human anatomy. And any one of
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them could use a revolver.
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This thought was spurred by the fact that he found a bullet hole in
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the dark leather chair behind the desk. Could he have missed a bullet wound?
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He dashed to the body again and noticed that there was a patch of
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blood staining the shirt covering the abdomen, but it hadn't gone through to
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the jacket. Was he shot before or after he was bludgeoned? And when exactly
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was he strangled? Did he die where he was found, or was that another ploy to
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throw him off the track? God did he need Beverly's expertise. How frightening
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that he doubted his trust for her.
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Suddenly he thought: what if these wounds were three separate attempts
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on the life of Mr. Boddy? Which one succeeded?
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Trust or not, he needed Beverly.
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He left the study, closing the doors behind him. Nervous pacing filled
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the room that he crossed the hallway for. When he entered, all motion stopped
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and all eyes turned to Picard.
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"Well, Mr. Hill? What's the verdict?" asked Riker.
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Picard decided to play it cool. He walked over to the bar and poured
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himself a drink, took a swig of the amber liquid and set it down. He looked
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directly to the doctor. "I understand you have medical training, Mrs. Peacock."
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Beverly was taken aback, but covered for herself sufficiently. "How did
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you know?" Her voice was sultrier than he could ever remember.
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Picard's smile oozed charm. "I have my sources," he said enigmatically.
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"Right now I need some answers, before I can tell any of you anything. Mrs.
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Peacock, please come with me."
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+++
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"Well, as far as I can tell, bruising occured before death, as did
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the shot, and the head wound. The direction of blood flow suggests that he
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was upright when shot, and possibly upright when he died. It's hard to tell
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without more sophisticated equipment exactly how long he has been dead. The
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rate of rigor mortis does suggest, however, that not more than 18 hours has
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passed, placing the time of death at about one o'clock this morning in this
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very room." Her tone was thoroughly professional. She rose to her feet and
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looked him squarely in the eye; they were very close in height. "It's
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difficult to say which occurred first, though. It could be that all were
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delivered within a short period of each other."
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Unbelievably he felt uncomfortable under her gaze, and turned away,
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making a note in his pad. "Do you think they were all committed by the same
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person?"
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"I'd have to say yes. The injuries were delivered, I believe, one
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right after another. If it's by more than one person, these persons would
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have incredible coordination."
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Picard put the pencil's eraser to his lips, thinking about all she
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had just told him. If she was the murderer, then this was probably all
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misinformation. Dammit! "Someone certainly wanted m-- Mr. Boddy dead. They
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certainly tried hard enough."
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"Well. They succeeded." She came up behind him and touched his arm.
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Whether or not she was really looking at the notes or only pretending to, he
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couldn't tell, but he put the notes out of view. She smiled, catching his eye
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again. "Tell me," she said, her voice smooth, "who do *you* think did it?"
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_And what would a Dixon Hill scenario be without a gorgeous gal
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falling all over him?_ he thought quickly. "I'm afraid I don't have enough
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evidence yet."
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"Come on, Dixon. Can't you even guess?" she cooed, her arms leisurely
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entwining him.
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His brain shouted, _Trust her! Trust her!_ Luckily, though, his
|
|
reason kicked in and he pulled away from her. "No, I can't even guess, Mrs.
|
|
Peacock." She was highly disappointed, and sighed.
|
|
"Come on, back to the others. We all have a lot to talk about." He
|
|
headed for the door and turned back to make sure she was following. She looked
|
|
breathtaking. Did she always look that way? He never noticed. On a daily
|
|
basis she was just part of the well-oiled machinery, even though she was a
|
|
dear and trusted friend. He made a mental note to pay her more attention.
|
|
At that moment the doors swung opened. It was the maid. More
|
|
specifically, it was Vash. She gave him a cold, hard look. For a moment, it
|
|
seemed that she knew who he really was. Not knowing if he and Beverly had been
|
|
locked in a mental embrace for seconds, minutes or hours, he smiled and hoped
|
|
that it would be enough. She was unchanging. "Dinner is ready."
|
|
She left. But she said volumes more without words -- the look exchanged
|
|
between the two women could have frozen nitrogen.
|
|
|
|
+++
|
|
|
|
After a delicious yet tension-filled dinner they all gathered in the
|
|
library for after dinner drinks. Jean-Luc had mentioned at dinner that he
|
|
needed to speak to all of them regarding the case. Now they each in their own
|
|
way acted nervously: Geordi twiddled his fingers, Deanna twisted her hair,
|
|
Riker hovered the bar in a geo-synchronous orbit. He even called for the butler,
|
|
the cook, the maid and O'Brien. When they all seemed quite settled, Picard
|
|
engaged their eyes one pair at a time. "I want to know, and I want to know
|
|
now, how each of you know Mr. Boddy. I assume that all of you worked under
|
|
him?"
|
|
They nodded, though it was like pulling teeth to get them to do so.
|
|
At that moment the cook walked in with Mr. O'Brien. It was Guinan.
|
|
Picard stared for a moment, then brought down the first victim with a
|
|
piercing gaze. "Colonel Mustard," he began, "how did *you* know him?"
|
|
Undaunted, Riker said bravely, "He was my commanding officer in the
|
|
Armed Forces." And the snowball began rolling from there.
|
|
Troi laughed. "And he never let you forget it." Riker shot her a look
|
|
of pure evil.
|
|
"And the old coot was on to you, Miss Scarlet, or should I say Agent
|
|
Fembot, of the international espionage association Bimb--"
|
|
She shrieked: "I could *sense* that you were going to use that against
|
|
me, you traitor! Yes, he knew as well, but that does not mean I wanted him
|
|
dead!" She looked to be on the verge of tears.
|
|
Beverly spoke up. "*I'm* not ashamed to admit, I'm glad that he's gone.
|
|
He was, after all, responsible for the death of my husband, rest poor Jack's
|
|
soul." She was totally cool and confident as she said this.
|
|
"How can you say that?" It was Vash's voice. "No wait, let me guess!
|
|
You're jealous that he never gave you the attention I got. How could he have?
|
|
*You're* nothing but a cold medical *robot*!"
|
|
"And he knew about your son!" chimed in Troi, or Scarlet, or Agent
|
|
Fembot. "He knew that he was your son's real father!" Even Picard was
|
|
surprised at this revelation. Hopefully, like the Fembot claim, this was Q's
|
|
idea of a joke.
|
|
Beverly turned with a look that could frighten the dead. Picard was
|
|
surprised at the hatred in her always kind eyes. "We all know the only thing
|
|
*you* were ever good for," she said, addressing the both of them, really.
|
|
"Yeah, the one thing he couldn't get from *you* any more!" Vash
|
|
retorted angrily, raising her chin in victory. Picard also noticed Troi's
|
|
angry look had found its way to Vash, and it didn't seem like it was going to
|
|
be leaving any time soon.
|
|
Beverly rose to her feet, and for a moment there was a tangible
|
|
tension in the air. Picard said, "Ladies, please control yourselves!"
|
|
Bev sat back down, unflustered, but said under her breath, "Cow."
|
|
Ro's voice was small by comparison. "He never did give me the
|
|
promotions I deserved, that old windbag."
|
|
"When did you deserve any promotions?" Geordi muttered. "The phaser
|
|
tester is more useful than you are."
|
|
"I could say the same about you," she returned coolly, folding her
|
|
arms and staring him down. "You're no better than any of the people he put
|
|
you in charge of. You are incompetent, and he full well knew it... He was
|
|
going to get you transferred, with a sizeable demotion!"
|
|
The look on Geordi's face told that he knew, but did not know anyone
|
|
else had known. "Why you little-- "
|
|
"My son," Worf's voice cut through soberly. "He sent my son out of this
|
|
house. He has *no* honour." He looked restrained, like he wanted to beat
|
|
*someone* up, but knew not who.
|
|
Riker stood. "And you, Professor! He knew of your trysts with a certain
|
|
Head of Security, and was prepared to spill the beans on it now that she's
|
|
dead!" Data's normally impassive face became enraged. Well, enraged for Data.
|
|
"That is true, but everyone knew about that!"
|
|
"But not everybody knows about the night that you used your detachable
|
|
arm to--"
|
|
"*COLONEL*!"
|
|
And through all of this he made notes.
|
|
So far, all of them except Guinan and O'Brien had all but volunteered
|
|
a motive. Jealousy, revenge, hatred. They were all there. The thought of any
|
|
one of them striking him down sent shivers along his spine.
|
|
Picard tugged down on his jacket subconsciously as his voice
|
|
attempted to slice through the chaotic chorus of shouting. "MAY I HAVE
|
|
QUIET?!?!?!"
|
|
The noise rumbled down, and finally all was still. Picard smiled.
|
|
"Now *that* is more like it. I can see I'm getting nowhere talking to all of
|
|
you like this. Go on to your rooms, I'll be around for personal interviews."
|
|
He swept out of the room with the air of authority he always did. But as Dixon
|
|
Hill, he wondered if it was appropriate.
|
|
|
|
+++
|
|
|
|
Luckily, the butler had prepared a room for the private investigator,
|
|
which Picard went to after this outburst amongst his senior officers. He
|
|
noticed with some sort of irony that he, too, had a round, blue painting on
|
|
his wall, that looked rather like the sunny blue sky of earth. From a carafe
|
|
of water he poured himself a drink and sat on the bed, his head in his hands.
|
|
He was exhausted, and needed sleep desperately. He seriously contemplated
|
|
heading for bed at this "early" hour when he heard a knock on his door. He
|
|
sighed for the umpteenth time that day. "Who is it?" he called.
|
|
"It's me," called the familiar voice of Vash in a low, secretive tone,
|
|
"the maid. I have a message for you."
|
|
Opening the door to her might have proved fatal to his libido, so he
|
|
merely called back, "What do you want?"
|
|
"Miss Scarlet would like to see you."
|
|
_I'll bet she would,_ he thought wryly.
|
|
"I'll be right there."
|
|
He headed for her room; the door was slightly ajar. He pushed it
|
|
opened. It was smoky and dark. "Hello?" he called softly. Strange... on her
|
|
wall was, again, the blue, round painting. Must have been a series. Or at the
|
|
very least, a discount sale.
|
|
A voice called from deep within, "Come in, make yourself comfortable."
|
|
He imagined she was doing the same, and when she emerged, he knew he had been
|
|
right: she was dressed in a lacy red peignoir, her ebony hair unbound and
|
|
falling around her shoulders. She smiled. "You're probably wondering why I
|
|
called you here."
|
|
He stood up to leave. "I think I have a pretty good idea, Scarlet. I
|
|
don't have time for that."
|
|
She grabbed his sleeve. "That wasn't the only reason, love. You may
|
|
have heard Mustard mention that I am an agent of Bimbo, an international
|
|
espionage agency. He was correct. But what I didn't want to say in front of
|
|
all of them is that I believe our agency has vital information to implicate
|
|
one of our guests in the murder of not only Mr. Boddy but--"
|
|
At that moment she doubled over, her hands at her temples. "Oh, the
|
|
PAIN! The PAIN!" She sobbed and screamed this over and over again. Finally
|
|
she collapsed onto the floor, unconscious. He tried to pick her up and put
|
|
her into the nearby bed, but she was heavier than she looked, heavier than
|
|
Picard could manage, absolutlely dead weight.
|
|
Undoubtedly, this was the work of the murderer. He thought for the
|
|
moment, then left the room in search of more clues.
|
|
|
|
+++
|
|
|
|
Picard headed for the study where the body had been found. He'd called
|
|
O'Brien and had him take the body down to the meat freezer in the kitchen
|
|
until he this had been solved. Had this been a holodeck scenario, he would
|
|
have abandoned it long ago. He sighed as he entered the room and closed the
|
|
door behind him.
|
|
With his hands on his hips, he looked around himself. What was that
|
|
vital something that he had overlooked before? With that he noticed that the
|
|
walls were covered with the finest of paintings -- Monet, Matisse, Cassatt.
|
|
Look there, another one of those round, blue, sky paintings! That it was in
|
|
every room had to be more than just a coincedence. He stepped closer, letting
|
|
his eyes roll over the beautiful and subtle clouds, its landscape, almost.
|
|
Coming nearer he became lost in it. Serene, beautiful... safe.
|
|
Safe.
|
|
He reached out his fingers and ran them along the right side of the
|
|
curve and smiled as it came forward on a hinge to reveal a slate-coloured iron
|
|
wall safe. "Damn," he muttered to himself, an amused smile on his face, "if
|
|
only I was a safecracker."
|
|
Dressed as a black cat-burglar complete with the tools of the trade,
|
|
Q was beside him in an instant. "Did I hear the word 'safecracker'?" This
|
|
was actually one instant that Picard actually welcomed Q's appearance. Q
|
|
pushed his head through the wall of the safe and a muffled voice echoed from
|
|
within, "Oh! Well, this could certainly be helpful to your case!"
|
|
Picard didn't like to beg, but in this instant he came very close to
|
|
it. "Can you open it, Q? More importantly -- *will* you open it?"
|
|
Q made a pouty face. "You didn't say 'Pretty please with sugar on
|
|
top'!"
|
|
The anger on Picard's face told Q that the fuse had come to its
|
|
end. "Here you are." As Q snapped his fingers, the lock was released and the
|
|
door slid smoothly open. "Have fun, my little P.I.!"
|
|
Again, Q was gone. For that Picard was grateful. Perhaps the entity
|
|
had finally learned the limits of human patience.
|
|
As Picard opened the door, his eyes became as wide as saucers. At
|
|
least now he had somewhere to begin.
|
|
|
|
+++
|
|
|
|
He approached Professor Plum's door, passing Mrs. White's and hearing
|
|
sounds coming from behind that made him glad he didn't have to interrupt her
|
|
and her paramour-du-jour, undoubtedly the dashing Colonel Mustard/Will Riker.
|
|
He at first knocked delicately. From behind Data's door, the sound of drilling
|
|
permeated the air almost at the same time, just as from under the door came
|
|
flashes of bright blue light. What in the world was he doing in there? Picard
|
|
banged with his fist and the drilling ceased.
|
|
The door opened and there stood Data -- Professor Plum -- with
|
|
smudges on his face and a sweat just beginning to bead on his brow. "May I
|
|
help you, Mr. Hill?" His head tilted as he said this like a marionette's string
|
|
had just been snipped.
|
|
The captain forgot for a moment what he was there for and strained to
|
|
look around the android-become-academic. "What's going on in there?"
|
|
Data was immovable. "I am an inventor."
|
|
"What are you... inventing?"
|
|
The android, looking particularly silly in the tweed suit, finally
|
|
stepped aside. On the table sat a large, flat, electronic looking metallic
|
|
device, a blue beam connecting the components that stood up from its surface.
|
|
Wires ran down from it to an anvil that sat on the ground, dirty and rusted.
|
|
Data pulled out a flat, flaccid object and placed it in the beam's path,
|
|
singeing it to a dark golden brown.
|
|
"It," Data began, "is a device to change the outermost layers of a
|
|
cross-section of a starchy lattice structure to being darker, crispier, and
|
|
warmer; in essence, baking it."
|
|
"A *toaster*? You've built a toaster?"
|
|
As always, Data did not understand the confusion. "That is what I
|
|
said."
|
|
Picard rolled his eyes impatiently, and remembered the task at hand.
|
|
"Tell me, Mr. D--uh, Professor Plum, what can you tell me about... *THIS*?"
|
|
He held up a brown bag and reached inside for its contents.
|
|
It was Data's head, wide eyed and rather wrinkly.
|
|
Data was obviously surprised. "Where did you get that?!?"
|
|
Picard smirked. "Found it in Mr. Boddy's safe. What else did he have on
|
|
you?"
|
|
Data just lunged for it, and being superhuman in strength, he took it
|
|
and had it in the path of the blue beam before you could say "temporal
|
|
distortion."
|
|
"There can be only one!" he yelled, as the head incinerated to a black,
|
|
smoldering ball, filling the room with the smell of burning plastic.
|
|
Picard was aghast. "What was the meaning of that?!" Picard demanded.
|
|
"He was using this head against me, threatened to tell the world that
|
|
there was more than one operable positronic brain. Now no one has that kind
|
|
of leverage against me!" He cackled with a robust laugh. "I killed my
|
|
brother, took his place... no one knew, except Mr. Boddy!!!" Realizing that
|
|
this whole scenario was moving farther and farther away from reality, it dawned
|
|
on Picard who was standing before him.
|
|
"LORE!"
|
|
Lore smirked. "You got it, pal. Now with that insufferable brother of
|
|
mine and his boss out of the way.... heh heh heh..."
|
|
In a split second Lore was on top of Picard, pummeling the life out
|
|
of him. "Now I shall see to it that no one else can ruin my plan!!! There can
|
|
BE only one! There CAN be only ONE!"
|
|
All hope was fading away, until the door opened and Worf stood there,
|
|
growling, ready to kick some android butt. Lore abandoned the wilting captain
|
|
for fresh blood.
|
|
Within moments, Worf was flat on his back, paralyzed, cursing to
|
|
himself about being a warrior and other such nonsense. Picard was to become
|
|
the prey again when the threshold was filled by another, more powerful being.
|
|
Lore went pale, and backed off from Jean-Luc. "Uh, uh... um..." he tripped
|
|
over his own tongue. She stuck her arm out and he fell over. Finally, his
|
|
circuits overloaded and he shut down once and for all.
|
|
Picard turned a swollen eye to see the cook standing there. "Guinan,"
|
|
he managed.
|
|
"No, I'm not Guinan. I am Whoopi Goldberg, actress and comedienne,
|
|
and proud leader of the Men Against Bodacious Baldies, of which Lore here was
|
|
our renegade field operative. He was supposed to kill Boddy... just to get Mr.
|
|
Dixon Hill here." From behind her came other members of MABB; the likes of
|
|
Will Smith, Luke Perry, A Martinez and Burt Reynolds. "But we know that you are
|
|
not really Mr. Dixon Hill at all. Dixon Hill doesn't exist anywhere." The men
|
|
behind her came forward more menacingly, looking to finish him off.
|
|
Picard turned his head towards Worf, who said apologetically, "Oh, did
|
|
I forget to mention that these ten or so men were here as well? Oh, man, I'm
|
|
really sorry."
|
|
_Typical murder mystery,_ he thought, rolling his eyes.
|
|
"Yes, we know who you really are --- MR. PATRICK STEWART!!!!"
|
|
|
|
+++
|
|
|
|
As the horde of men were about to land on his chest to crush the life
|
|
out of him, Patrick Stewart's steely eyes flew opened in a panic, only to see
|
|
the sun coming in through the blinds on this, a beautiful Sunday morning in
|
|
the hills just outside of Los Angeles. He sighed, picking the book up from off
|
|
of his chest. Fell asleep reading again. Whew. It was all a dream, after all.
|
|
_____________________________________________________________________________
|
|
..a tribute to the Net and to the inane discussions on r.a.s.* that i enjoy
|
|
so! i'll really miss it, sniff, sniff...
|
|
_____________________________________________________________________________
|
|
Copyright 1992 by Sandra Guzdek
|
|
standard disclaimers about Paramount, and threats of death for plagiarism,
|
|
apply.
|
|
_____________________________________________________________________________
|
|
|