The King in Scarlet

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The King in Scarlet Page 7

by Mark Teppo


  I passed out again.

  That was easier.

  III.

  My name is Bernard Rosewood. I am an elf. I work at the North Pole. I am one of the Senior Elves (there are a bunch of us), and my division is tasked with shadowing Santa Claus between Lockdown (the day after Thanksgiving) and Flight Night (Christmas proper). Zero Hour is calibrated out of an NPC station on Beccisa Island in the Pacific Ocean.

  The sled is piloted by the reindeer team—Rudolph in the lead, Santa in the cup. The Time Clock is engaged and the second hand stops at one second past midnight. Santa is in the air and everything is frozen at that one click into the new day while he delivers all the toys.

  It all leads to that instant of time. All our preparation, all the planning and organizing. The North Pole Consortium—the Union of elves who run the North Pole organization—have wrought a structure that functions solely to ensure that Christmas happens every year on the 25th of December. Christmas doesn't just happen by itself, you know. It isn’t just a matter of putting crayon to paper and entrusting your letter to your local postal service. All those requests have to be received, read, entered into the system, catalogued, filled, and packaged back to their requestee. You think Santa does all that himself? The man’s color-blind for one thing.

  Enter the elves—the little, round, merry folk who do all the hard work. We’ve been unionized for several generations now and it is our organization which really makes Christmas happen. Most of the advances of both technology and information systems are the direct result of R & D done by the NPC. Automated package tracking? We’ve been doing it since the mid-20th century. High-speed materials duplication? Twenty years before that. Ceramic and polymer based alloys? At least a decade. Our Elf-net predated Arpnet by a good three years, and data warehousing was last year’s buzz word five years ago. Frankly, we reached the 21st century about six years before anyone else, and we’re about halfway to the 22nd already while the rest of you are still thrashing your way through the early teens.

  Santa is the seasonal mascot. Ever since some wise-ass in the marketing department had the smart idea of putting Santa in a fur-trimmed red suit as part of their promotional outreach during the 1930s, we’ve had no choice but to keep Fat Boy on the payroll.

  The Technology Management team has tried at least three times in as many years to shift RPF—Request, Procurement, and Fulfillment—to an e-commerce style system. Internally, the North Pole has been paperless since mid-’92, but we still recycle over a hundred fifty tons of paper waste every year. The TM plan called for a web-based system for Christmas requests: children would e-mail Santa instead of sending their traditional paper letters. The North Pole, in return, though a number of partnered commerce sites, would procure all Christmas presents on a local basis. Utilizing the existing ground mail system, we could fulfill Christmas without having to send the red sled into the sky or turn on the Time Clock.

  I’m a people person; I’m not proficient in the sciences for the basic reason that my wee elf brain just didn’t have the synaptic connections suited for comprehension of quantum mechanics. Those who did, well, the Clock made them nervous. Supposedly more stable than the Nuclear Clock, we used the Time Clock to freeze the forward motion of Time on Christmas morning so that Santa would have enough time to deliver all the presents.

  I know, mind-boggling. Would you want to be operating in a null-space that exists outside the dimensional restrictions of Time? Yeah, me neither. That’s why we keep Santa Claus on the payroll.

  Most of the year is spent getting ready for the following Season. Production cycles don’t really hit their stride until after Labor Day when the Sales and Marketing team present their annual report on the Toy Hierarchy for that year. R & D finalizes a lot of their technological upgrades at this time and the software daemons start assembling the List. The reindeer, who range across several thousand acres of unoccupied land during the off-season, are brought back to the North Pole, and SECO goes South to retrieve Santa from the Caribbean where he spends most of the summer fishing for marlin.

  Upon return to the North Pole, SECO institutes the rigorous diet and exercise regime necessary to get Santa in shape for time under the Clock. Proper preparation takes several months of rigorously monitored protein intake as well as a regimented dosage of liver tablets, powered Mexican yams, blue-green algae tablets, Boron, Smilax, Yohimbine, amino acid supplements, Choline, Ferulic Acid, and medium chain triglycerides three times a week. He just looks fat.

  SECO is more than just Santa’s physical trainer. This elf is also his therapist, his appointment secretary, his bridge partner, his golf caddy (the North Pole has a nine-hole ice course that is a fairly rigorous par 34), his confidante, his shadow, the guy who says “Gesundheit” when he sneezes, the guy who gets the pickle jar off when he gets his hand caught, and the guy who brings the new roll of toilet paper when Santa is on the can and the paper runs out. SECO—me—is the elf who keeps Santa grounded.

  Right.

  Why did I feel like I was flying?

  IV.

  “Turn to one-five-seven. Switch to Spectrum Oscillation.” I knew that voice. “It’s a straight shot from here. Open her up.”

  It didn’t sound like any of the dialogue that I could remember from The Wizard of Oz so I could eliminate Kansas as one of the possible answers to the basic location question which was making all sorts of noises in my head. I felt like I had been stuffed with cabbage and left outside on the roof for about six days. I was still hearing things like I was underwater, my ears filled and swollen. Yet the voice was familiar.

  I wasn’t quite alert yet. I was more than disoriented—displaced even—and I was having a little trouble getting a spark to leap across any of the millions of synaptic connections in my head. There was a sensation worming its way into my body and I grabbed that sensory data like a drowning man and held on. Something was pressing against me, pushing me against something else. The second something was cradling me, like a soft hand or a leather chair.

  Bingo. One down.

  The first something was gravity, or rather, a force of acceleration.

  I opened my eyes as it suddenly dawned on me that I could very well have just been in and out of Kansas in the time it took for me to realize what I was feeling.

  I was in the sled, and the clear canopy over my head was filled with the dark blue of the high atmosphere. There were no points of reference by which to gauge the speed of the craft, but my brain did a quick rewind and came back with “open her up.” Judging from the constant pressure on my chest, it would be reasonable to guess that we were traveling well past the speed of sound.

  “We” being me, Santa, and probably eight reindeer.

  I tried to move and found myself restrained. I thrashed around a bit before I realized the straps across my chest were part of the seat harness and not some home-made BDSM restraints. I was making enough noise to be heard over the constant rumble of the sled and Santa looked away from the instrument panel. “Ah, Bernie,” he smiled. “You’re back.” He was wearing a black flight suit and his face was streaked with camouflaged grease paint, streaks of white and black swabbed over a thick layer of olive green. He looked like a moss-covered tree stump.

  “Where are we?” I managed. My heart was pounding. I wasn’t sure if it was from all the thrashing around or the dawning realization of the situation.

  “Mid-Atlantic somewhere.” He waved a hand at one of the monitors set in the panel in front of him. The Mark V Sled had a surveillance system arrayed about its outside. There wasn’t much to see port or starboard or aft—just pale blue that disappeared into a layer of frothy white—the forward camera showed the small blisters of the reindeer cockpits along the handle of the sled, and the bellycam was filled with more of the thick froth. “Pretty heavy cloud cover,” Santa said. “Comet snagged a US Weather Service report that said the whole Eastern seaboard is busy getting another three to six inches of snow. There won’t be a break in the cloud cover until we pas
s Florida.” He glanced at a chronometer. “Another twenty minutes or so.”

  I put my hand up to my head and encountered something hard. It came off pretty easily and I looked dumbly at the round shape of the Kevlar-covered helmet. Santa grinned. “Bet you wish you had been wearing that last night.”

  “I’m not sure why I’m wearing it now.”

  “We weren’t sure when you were going to come around. Didn’t want to leave your noggin unprotected, you know, in case we hit turbulence.”

  The Mark V sled was the latest prototype out of R & D. We hadn’t planned on using it this year, as there were still some issues with cargo space. Otherwise, the craft packed all of the latest technology: stealth armor, chameleon configuration, auto-gyroscopic thrusters, two Harrier turbines, an on-board sixteen processor RISC system, radar, microwave, infra-red, ultraviolet, GS3-ready, smartwear piloting and targeting systems, and a full GPS scan of the entire globe with a real-time holographic projection system. There was even a 1.6 cubic meter refrigerator, a toaster with four slots wide enough for bagels, and a cappuccino machine. “Turbulence” was not a word that cropped up much during the design and construction phases.

  “Where are we going?” I croaked.

  “Purgatory,” he answered.

  Asking why was either going to be considered rhetorical or Santa would wind up and soapbox me for the next half hour, belaboring me with a whole lot of crazy talk that would include the rationale for kidnapping me, stealing the prototype sled, and hauling ass with the reindeer across the surface of the planet.

  How to deal with this sort of situation was NOT covered in the mandatory crisis management training session last August.

  “Look,” I said, licking my dry lips, “we should talk about this.”

  Santa shook his head. “I’m not interested in talk, Bernie. That’s all you guys do. Talking and meetings and regulations and SOPs. There is no action. ”

  “It’s an incredible complex situation, Santa. Christmas is too big for just one person any longer. We need the organization—the procedures—otherwise the whole thing would fall apart. We need the SOP documentation in order to regulate quality and ensure that any member of the staff can perform—”

  “Stow it,” Santa snorted. “I’ve seen the Blue Book. You’ve got procedures for making sure that the water I take my vitamins with is the proper temperature.”

  “The human body absorbs the nutrients from the supplements at maximum efficiency in a fluid environment of 99.3 degrees. We spent a lot of money doing the research.”

  “I remember when we put the first microwave in. It had two settings: “on” and “off.” And before that, I used to heat water on the stove. A gas stove. You think I bothered to put a thermometer in the kettle or did I just wait until the damn thing started whistling before I poured the water?”

  “You probably waited…” I said.

  “And did all that hot water kill me?”

  I shook my head. “That’s irrelevant. Systems of codified behavior and operational policies are mandatory for the efficient functioning of any complex production environment,” I said. “You can’t have individuals working without systematic work-flow structures. It would be—”

  “The early twentieth century?”

  “Anarchy,” I finished. “Don’t be deconstructionist.”

  He laughed. “Deconstructionist? I’m not interested in dismantling anything. I’m operating outside your mission parameters. I’ve gone over the wall. Native. The rest of you have gone snow-blind. I’m the only one with a decent pair of goggles.”

  I wanted to raise a finger in argument, but discovered that the restraints weren’t just in place to keep me from falling out of the chair. Santa watched me struggle for a minute. “Can’t have you doing something foolish, Bernie,” he said, softly. “It’s too important.”

  “Why bring me at all?” I asked.

  The intercom crackled, interrupting his reply. “Snow White to Prince Charming.”

  Santa toggled a switch on the console. “Charming. Over.”

  The communication system in the sled was over a dedicated digital line. It sounded like the reindeer was in the small chamber with us. “Eyes downside, Charming,” Rudolph replied. “A Scenic vista awaits.”

  Santa acknowledged the transmission and toggled the bellycam to the heads-up display. The cloud cover beneath the sled was patchy, streaks of distant blue could be seen through the rents and tears. We shot across the edge of the storm front and the monitor was suddenly transformed from white to blue. On the right edge was a narrow edge of dark green and brown. Santa adjusted a dial and the camera tracked right and cycled down through several steps of magnification until the gantries and towers could be picked out against the flat landscape. “Canaveral,” Santa said.

  He moved a white cursor over the image and clicked on a specific launch pad. The imaging system performed a GSP lookup, locked onto the object, and started tracking that location as we streaked overhead. He magnified the image one more step and I could make out the slender shape of a booster rocket. “SLS,” Santa said. “NASA’s next generation launch system. They’re going out farther than the International Space Station. They’re going to try for the Moon or Mars, one of these days.” He turned away from the image and looked at me. “What happens then, Bernie? What happens when they establish a lunar base and take their families to the moon?”

  “I don’t know, Santa.”

  “Christmas will still happen on the moon. Am I going to have to make the trip?”

  I swallowed. “I’m sure there is a team monitoring the progress of the Space Launch System. I’m sure a feasibility study is being done right now.”

  He snorted. “A study. Email traffic for six months, capped off with a bulleted presentation that will send 99% of the audience to sleep. You’re missing the point, Bernie. You’re all missing the point.”

  “I’m trying,” I shouted. “But I’m finding it a little hard to concentrate after I’ve been shot at, assaulted, bagged up, and tied down.” I burned off a few more calories going epileptic on the straps.

  Santa watched until I wore myself out. I was breathing hard and I worked a few nostril flares into the power grimace I was sending his direction. “You feel better?” he asked.

  I realized my head was still itching. “No.”

  “You going to behave if I untie you?”

  I thought about it for a few seconds. “Maybe.”

  He glanced at the instrument panel. “We’re over ten thousand kilometers up, Bernie. We just hit Mach 3. You think you can just step off?”

  “I could bite your ankles.”

  “Would that solve anything?”

  “Make me feel better.” He waited and I signed finally. “Okay, I’ll behave.”

  He made two cuts in the nylon straps with a red-handled, black-bladed knife and then got out of the way as I thrashed out of the restraints. He kept the knife in hand until I was done making sudden motions. I pointed at the refrigerator. “Can I get some water?”

  “Sure,” he answered, folding up the knife and putting it away. “That sounds good. Grab me a bottle too, would you?”

  The cockpit of the Mark V was about three meters by six meters. At one end of the rectangle was the pilot’s chair, the main instrument board, and the navigation station; at the other end was the hatch to the sled’s cargo bay. In between was what we called the No-Fly Zone: the only things within reach in this part of the sled were the espresso maker, the toaster, and the refrigerator. Standing there, you were making snacks; you most certainly were not piloting the sled.

  I grabbed two mineral waters from the fridge, handed one to Santa, and sat back down in the navigator’s chair. We sucked water quietly and watched the bellycam track across the eastern edge of Florida. It was barely dawn down there, and the frantic shopping activity of the day before Christmas hadn’t started yet.

  And speaking of shopping . . .

  “So what do you expect me to do?” I ask
ed Santa after I had done a little hydrating.

  He wiped his mouth, smearing some grease paint across the back of his hand. “I need your fingers, Bernie. You’re the one who found it. I may have a subscription to 2600 but, you know, I really don’t understand half the articles. And Blitzen and Cupid, while they’re pretty sharp, they’ve got hooves and can’t type for shit. We’re going to need you to access the computer when we get there.”

  “Purgatory.”

  There; I said it. SECO training did include a couple of basic psych courses. One of the things they taught you is that you should never give credence to the patient’s delusional state. You should never allow the patient to draw you into his mental fugue, never willfully participate in the fantasy environment. Of course, when it came time to write up the several thousand reports I was going to have to file when I got Santa back to the North Pole, I was probably going to skim over this whole bit. Frankly, when you’ve had as rough a morning as I was having, most of the psych stuff seemed like an awful lot of bullshit.

  “We know where the entrance is. Blitzen and Cupid did something with some log files and figured out where you went. They found that same web address that you found, but they couldn’t get in. They said there was no way to hack into it externally, but if we could get to the terminal itself, then maybe we could do something.”

  “Like what? Look under the keyboard for a sticky note with the password written on it?”

  Santa shrugged. “Sure, if that’s all it takes.”

  “You haven’t thought this through very well, have you?”

  Santa was quiet for a minute. “We need access, Bernie. I just couldn’t wait around for you to wake up. We’re on a tight schedule here.” He pointed at the chronometer on the instrument panel. “We’ve haven’t got a lot of time to find David Anderson before Zero Hour.”

  V.

  In the nineteenth century, the French engineer Gaspard Coriolis discovered that the rotation of the Earth had an effect on the direction of the streams of air that swept across its surface. Dubbed the Coriolis Effect, this observation on the part of Gaspard detailed the fact that, because the Earth spins to the east, objects in the Northern Hemisphere have a tendency to turn to the right when they are moving on a straight path, while objects Down Under gravitate towards the left. While this has an effect on the water in your toilet bowl, it makes no difference to circular thinking.

 

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