The Australian Connection


Scene 1

The scene opens on trees, perhaps sunset. The camera pans up through these self same trees, and the crunch of wheelbarrow tyres is heard. We see the bottom half of a wheelbarrow go past (we have a view of a bit of a track). The camera moves a little, following the path of the barrow, and settles on the following scene:

Title:

Kingston, New South Wales, Australia: Saturday 4th November 1997

We are in a quarry. A mechanical digger is being operated and is digging dirt from the quarry floor and tipping it into empty wheelbarrows, which are being moved away by some men. A supervisor stands by.

One man is slow (and drops a bit of the soil) to whom the supervisor says in a sinister voice:

Supervisor

Come on! Hurry up!

Wheelbarrow Man nods and takes barrow away, joining line. The supervisor kicks him, and he sprawls on the quarry floor, looking very frightened.

Change camera angle to from top of quarry, still zoomed in. Zoom out to reveal Lou standing at the top of the quarry, watching what is happening. Lou shakes his head in concern. Removables, by the Manic Street Preachers begins. The camera, in a helicopter, zooms out, and we see the whole of the quarry, and the enormous long line of wheelbarrows leading into it, empty, and the long line coming out full. The helicopter moves along this enormous line, which goes through countryside, along motorways, over mountains, over deserts, through towns, even across the sea, (with the men pushing the wheelbarrows swimming): there should always be two lines, one with full barrows, one with empty ones, going in different directions. The ones with empty barrows can sit in them and paddle if they want, across the sea, but some should sink. The shot fades in and out for each of these scenes, but is from the same angle, to give the impression of the helicopter going the whole way. Then fade out. Removables ends.

Title:

The Band Of Funsters Present...

Title:

A HOKEY Film

(that isn't important)


Scene 2

Mr J's study. Clock ticking in background. The door eases shut, as Peter Vine, secret agent, has just entered the room through a swing bookcase. He stands by the desk in the large room. Mr J is in the chair facing away from Peter on the other side of the desk. It is a grand office like that of M in the Bond films. You know.

Title:

Secret Service Headquarters, West London: Monday February 25 1998

Mr J

Well done, agent Vine. Another mission successfully completed. South America is eternally in your debt for this. And we will never forget it. Can you make the Palace this week?

Peter

Of course, sir.

Mr. J

She's expressed a strong desire to meet you personally, you know. You've made something of a name for yourself. Wednesday morning?

Peter

Thursday would be better, actually.

Mr. J

Alright. I shall talk to the Palace. I suppose that Clinton will have to wait. Oh, by the way, four-three, a new assignment has come up. Trouble with the KGB again.

Peter

Oh dear. How terrible. I had rather hoped I'd sorted them out, sir, after last time.

Mr. J

An unfortunate business, wasn't it?

Peter

Of course, sir. What can I do to help?

Mr. J

We want you, and Ness, acting in a junior capacity, to shadow one of their agents. It's a rather strange case. It will be Home turf this time, but the man we're after's rather a sly operator. One of the best we've seen, in fact. It will be, of course, an AA1 priority assignment, and quite frankly, I would be reluctant to entrust anyone else in the department with such an important brief. But do you think you would be up to a mission of that grading right now? You must be rather tired, after all.

Peter lights a cigarette, looks at Mr J's back as if he is joking. J shakes his head in amazement.

Mr. J

I'm sorry. Stupid question.

He presses a button on his desk and Ness walks in. He and Peter shake hands.

Mr. J

Ah, Ness. Very good. I believe you two have already met several times. Our briefing man will meet you here with all you need to know...

He hands over the map, pointing to a spot on it.

Mr. J

...at twelve-hundred hours tomorrow. The final details are as yet uncertain, I'm afraid, so I can't really tell you any more now. Now, are there any questions?

Peter

Yes. I don't wish to sound nagging, but in briefing for my last mission, I was told, by you, that I would have the use of a powerful new personal combat weapon. That helped sway my decision in favour of accepting the task, yet no such thing was ever delivered to me. Is it ready yet? I am currently rather under-equipped, as you know, since the North Sea incident.

Mr. J

Ah yes. I do sincerely apologise for the delay. We have been having some communication problems vis a vis our technology department, you will appreciate, and I discern that there was some confusion relating the exact nature of the desired weapon, which led to the, ah, procrastination. Of course, in such a delicate situation as yours, this error is unacceptable, and I can assure you that steps were immediately taken to rectify the fault. It will not happen again. I understand our scientific experts have just this week put the finishing touches to the ordnance to which you refer, and by all accounts, our friends in NT4 have surpassed themselves yet again. I would not, of course, seek to steal the thunder of those aforementioned colleagues, and if you wish, I believe one of them would be able to speak to you today on the subject. I personally think you would find it an extremely useful talk. We should be able to provide you with the weapons themselves when you rendezvous tomorrow. Would you like to see Doctor S?

Peter

What exactly is this weapon?

Mr. J

Ah, well. We operate a strict need-to-know policy here, I am afraid. But I am sure Dr. S can enlighten you. Hmm?

Peter

Certainly...

J presses a button.

Mr. J

Ah. Dr. S? Could you come in for a moment? There are some people I would like you to meet... He's just next door. He won't be long.

A mad-professor type enters.

Mr. J

Ah, doctor. So glad you could find the time. Would you be able to enlighten us all as to the precise nature of the fruits of Project F now, perhaps?

Doctor

I'd love to. I think you'll find it... well, incredible. I amazed myself. It should do the job no problem. No trouble at all...

He puts his head round the door, and calls 'Bring it in' or something. Two men, also in scientific costume (you know) drag in an enormous torpedo. They leave.

Doctor

Now will you look at that? It's brilliant! This baby will find and destroy in one even the new Soviet 'Q' class stealth submarines without troub...

J sounds pissed off, a bit despondent even.

Mr. J

Yes... Go away, doctor.

Doctor

Mm.

He winks to J's back, as he leaves, sinisterly. The men drag out the torpedo, which has started to tick loudly, anyway.

Mr. J

I'm... I'm sorry about that, gentlemen. I'm afraid that it looks rather like you'll have to complete this mission armed just with your cunning... And there we must end. I have an appointment with the Libyan ambassador. Be at the rendezvous point tomorrow.

Peter and Alvin leave the room. Mr J spins his chair around to face the camera, and turns on a radio on which the Archers is. He is smoking. Then the camera zooms in on his lap. Shock!!, horror!!, he has a cat on his lap: a stereotypical baddie cat, please, which he is stroking. Sighs deeply (depressed). Fade out to Marvellous by The Lightning Seeds.

Title:

The Australian Connection


Scene 3

An empty field. Peter and Alvin walk into the middle of the field. Stop. Waits a bit. Peter looks around. Looks at watch. Taps watch, and holds to ear. Gets map out. Screws up forehead, and turns map other way up. Painstakingly puts map back in pocket, and starts to walk hurriedly off, then breaks into a run, with Alvin behind. Improbably sized bucket of whitewash falls out of sky, but misses and just splashes his trousers.

Title:

Written by Simon Xanadu


Scene 4

Peter is sitting on a park bench (with smart suit but paint-splashed trousers), next to Alvin, who sits next to Peter, looking shy, for the whole scene. Peter is reading a newspaper. Shot moves to Peter's POV. A man breaks from the bushes behind them (Peter and Alvin ignore this) and sidles up, his trousers ripped a bit by the brambles, with some still clinging on. He sits very close to Peter, and opens a broadsheet newspaper across the two of them.

Paper Man

Ssshh!

He takes all this very seriously.

Paper Man

Your mission, should you choose to accept it...

He looks proud.

Paper Man

... is to trail this man.

Points to part of the paper which says 'Mr John Neville - is he a spy?'.

Paper Man

Mr Neville - Mr John Neville - is the man we suspect is behind the recent KGB operations in the area.

Peter

You don't mean...?

Paper Man

Yes. It's Operation Codfish. Now, this man is ruthless. He has built up a large network of spies, particularly in the Reading area, and he has infiltrated some of the most secure government departments in the country. Mr Neville, as a caterer, is in a very good position to gain access to state secrets. No-one at the fisheries ministry, for example, was suspicious of just another caterer - but by the time someone smells a rat, the person concerned is always long gone. One man is single-handedly responsible for the almost-total erosion of our merchant navy. And that wasn't the worst thing. Last year, at the flick of a button, every community nurse in Reading defected to the Soviets. Eight hundred and fourteen separate government departments have contracts out on his head. J wants this man. It will be your job to find out all you can about Mr Neville and his accomplice, Mrs Neville. And we need details before we can get the Under-Secretary's permission to 'deal' with them.

Looks sinister.

Shot of park bench. People walking past, looking oddly at Peter and Paper Man. Alvin sitting next to Peter v.self-consciously.

Peter

Ah, I see. One of those missions.

Paper Man

It's a filthy job, but someone's got to do it.

Paper Man looks tough. Peter looks pained at the cliché.

Paper Man

J. selected you specially. But I expect you know that.

Shot back to Peter's POV. Peter is 'getting down to business'.

Peter

I'd assumed as much. So how should I proceed?

Paper Man

You will follow standard procedures for this sort of op. We can't risk a leak here. You're going to be on your own ... again. The code name here is...

Gets out dictionary and flicks through it - stops somewhere in the middle. Peter begins to grin. Paper Man scowls at him.

Paper Man

ANTICIPATION. You have three weeks. We need to know this man and his movements better than he does himself, and you're the only man - men, who can find this out for us. Here is his last known address. That is all we have, so you are on your own from here on. Your country is counting on you. As usual, if you are caught, the organisation will disavow any knowledge of your actions.

Looks really pleased with himself.

Paper Man

And now my orders are to destroy this evidence. Good luck, four-three. Oh, and you, Alvin. Wouldn't like to be in your place!

He grins, gets out a lighter and starts to ignite the paper. He notices his trouser leg has started to smoulder a bit, as a result., and he has to pat it out. The paper is ridiculously on fire, with massive flames.

Peter throws the paper on the ground and stamps on it. Crowd of people watching. Peter (& Alvin) and Paper Man set off in same direction down street, ignoring people. Peter nudges Paper Man. Paper Man turns around and goes other way - v. conscious of people watching him. Breaks into a run. Camera follows Paper Man for a bit then pans around, past people, and stops on Peter - similar reaction. Peter starts to run. Fade out.


Scene 5

Title:

Reading: Two days later

Peter is in a urinal, standing peeing next to John Neville. When Neville finishes, totally unaware of Peter, he does up his flies and leaves. Peter follows him out, and the camera goes along behind Peter. Peter narrates as he walks along shadowing the man, Neville.

Peter

Well well! Another day, another mission. Having traced my suspect to North Reading, I had left my competent, but noticeably less able sidekick, Alvin Ness, at the library, doing some background research. I didn't really trust him to maintain surveillance on his own. This man was a real expert, and keeping tags on him twenty-four hours a day proved more difficult that even I had first imagined. On the third evening his wife stopped letting me into their house. I was beginning to worry. By the end of the week, however, things were looking up. I had rented a room in their house, posing as a lodger, and on my eighth day of surveillance, events took a very strange turn...

Peter has just come out of the loo, and the camera catches sight of John just disappearing. Peter hurries after him. Cut to Peter following John into a chip shop, and queuing behind him. John orders fish and chips, and sits outside to eat them. Peter orders the same for himself, and sits opposite John, outside. He tries to look discreet. Neville glances at him a bit strangely. Once he has finished, he notices the papers his chips are wrapped in. He raises his eyebrows. Cut to picture from Peter's eyes - Paper reads 'Top Secret Governmental Document. Do not Read.' Fade out while Peter is reading the document - going 'ooh' and that sort of thing. It ends as he turns the page...


Scene 6

A Party. Trickbaby's Indie-Yarn plays - lots of people dancing to it. Peter walking around while narrating. People turning their backs to him. Everyone's wearing party hats, etc.. There are also some young children there, for no good reason. Again, Peter is narrating.

Peter

I could see that the document which had fallen into my hands was unutterably important. Something big was going down. Bigger than me. Even bigger than J. Enormous. And that's big. I didn't think that it was anything to do with my present mission, either. What was it? Sadly, what looked like the most vital pages were sodden with vinegar - can't resist the stuff - and I had to throw much of it away. I actually knew next to nothing that was useful. But luckily for me, the Covert Operations Branch was holding one of its 'getting to know you' ice-breaker parties, and I was sure that a few carefully placed questions should get me what I wanted to know. ...Unfortunately, I couldn't quite manage to attract anyone's attention. I left early.

Peter walks out of the building (a village hall with party balloons festooning the door), and over to a streetlight, where he lights a cigarette. There are CIA sedans parked right up the road. He looks up and the camera sees a silhouetted figure (Lou) with a corked hat appear on the other side of the road. It has no elbows. (All will be explained later, sort of.)

Flashback: Public toilet again, except this time Lou is standing at the urinal next to him, turns to him, and winks.

Lou starts to cross the street. His shoes make loud echoey footsteps.

Flashback: Chip shop again, except this time Lou serves him, turns to him, and winks.

Lou looks up (he has been wearing a hat and looking at the ground in X-Files or The Third Man style.)

Lou

You're here at last. Come with me.

Peter

What? Why should I do that? Who are you?

Lou

Trust me. I am a friend. And you need one. You don't... you can't know what's going on. But we can't talk safely here.

Peter is a bit amazed, and slightly cross.

Peter

What? Here? Don't you know that... that half the secret service agents in the country are having a party in there...

A woman walks past, looking at Peter. Peter smiles awkwardly, and looks a little embarrassed. Peter realises and whispers...

Peter

This is the most secure place in the country.

Lou

Of course we know. But for what we must discuss, this is the least secure place in the country.

Peter

Alright. But no tricks, OK? I'm watching you.

Lou

You won't have realised this, but...

Cuts back to Lou putting some playing cards in his pocket. (without any elbows, please)

Lou

...we have known about you for a long time. Longer than you'll guess. We have been watching over you with great care.

Flashback: Peter's Childhood. He (the child, but obviously Peter) chases a ball in front of a big black CIA style limousine. Lou suddenly picks him up, appearing out of nowhere, and puts him on the pavement. Remember that Lou hasn't any elbows, please.

Lou

We had to be certain. Look, your present mission...

Peter

I'm afraid I can't talk about that. It's classified.

Lou

You're shadowing a man called John Neville. You think he's a Russian agent. Your boss has told you that he has infiltrated several governmental departments, and is seeking to subvert the entire workings of the state. He has told you that you are the only man who can stop him, and that it is your patriotic duty to do so.

Peter is agape.

Lou

This is not the case. Neville is nothing more than a caterer. Your boss J. knows that you are his best agent and he wants you out of the way. There's a bigger plan. And he's involved. You can't trust J. Some governmental papers will have come into your possession recently, so you will know much of what you need to know already. You have read them, of course.

Peter

Erm, yeah, sort of. But, look! Hang on a moment! You'd better tell me exactly what's wrong. I'm not walking blind into anything.

Lou walks into lamppost, picks himself up, goes on the same.

Lou

Alright. But you must understand that this mustn't be repeated to anyone under any circumstances. ...Australia's in trouble. Big trouble.

Peter

What's wrong?

Lou

It's not... wanted any more.

Peter

What?

Lou

It's going to be... removed.

Peter

That's ridiculous. How?

Lou

I can't tell you how.

Peter

You mean you don't know?

Pause

Lou

I can't tell you how. Or why. But I can tell you where. Woking. Surrey. They're building a huge hill. Constructed from the waste of an equally huge hole, presently being dug in Australia. Kingston, New South Wales.

Peter looks a bit puzzled.

Lou

Don't worry. You wouldn't know it. In a couple of weeks, the critical point will be reached. Gravity will have been changed sufficiently, and Australia will simply float off into space. Up to eighteen million disappointed viewers.

Peter

But... that's silly. That can't happen!

Lou

It is going to happen, Peter.

Peter

But... someone would have seen the hill! That's stup...

Lou

It's a covert hill.

Peter

Oh.

Pause.

Lou

We can't...

Peter

Who's we?

Lou

I can't tell you that. But we cannot interfere. You must. And you must succeed. And you have no more than three weeks. Good luck, Peter Vine. Now I am afraid I must go. Security has been compromised too much already. Nowhere is safe nowadays.

Peter

Oh, I blame television.

There is a stony silence from Lou. Peter looks embarrassed.

Peter

Umm. But... what should I do?

Lou

I can't tell you. But you are resourceful and intelligent. We made sure of that. You'll find a way. I'll see you again.

Peter

Where? When?

Lou

Don't you worry about that. It's Lou, by the way. Lou Smithson.

He gets out a folded piece of paper, and hands it to Peter.

Lou

I suspect that you will be able to make use of this man at some point. Ensure you make contact.

It reads 'Giles Gilbert'. Zoom in on Peter looking thoughtful putting the piece of paper in his pocket, then zoom out and Lou has gone. They have walked into the middle of a large field: the village lights are one side and the sunset on the other so there is nowhere for Lou to have hidden - but he has. Fade out.


Scene 7

Peter narrating as he walks downstairs in the Neville's house.

Title:

Friday 1 March

Peter

On the Neville case, things were becoming increasingly difficult. Mrs. Neville, the suspect's wife, wouldn't allow pets in the house, and my dog Jess's kennel bills were mounting up. I had to crack this problem quickly. I didn't believe for a moment all of what that strange man had told me last night, although he did know an awful lot about me and my work. But I was sure that I could trust J. and that Neville really was a KGB agent. The papers leaked to me were forgeries. I wasn't going to take the bait.

Peter enters breakfast room. Mr & Mrs Neville are eating breakfast. Mr Neville is reading The Daily Telegraph and Peter notices it. To camera he says, pointing to the paper and shaking his head:

Peter

It's just a cover.

The camera pans across to Mrs. Neville reading a copy of The Socialist Worker, banner headline: 'More Stray Dogs discovered in Woking - conclusive proof of Capitalist Menace finally revealed'

Mrs. Neville

Good morning, Mr. Vine. Did you sleep well?

Peter

Very, thankyou, Mrs. Neville. Busy day ahead?

Mrs. Neville

Oh, I don't know about that. I'm just doing a bit of spring cleaning, but John's away for a couple of days: he's got to go to Finland again.

Peter

On business?

Mr. Neville

Yes, that's right.

Peter

Such a pain, isn't it. You wouldn't have thought a caterer would have so many far-flung calls on his time, would you?

Mr. Neville

Oh, you know how it is. Things keep coming up. Apparently, our 'Granny's Own' Delicious Diet Digestives' sales, our top-selling product, have taken a nasty knock because of cheapened whitebait availability - funny sort, these Scandinavians, Whitebait's just the thing with a cup of tea over there, and we need to do something before our market share drops too low, apparently. The boss is resolute that I go immediately. The same old story. Right, love, better be going. See you, Mr. Vine.

Phone rings. Mrs. Neville answers.

Mrs. Neville

The boat's waiting, John.

Mr. Neville smiles embarrassedly.

Mr. Neville

Boat. Yes. Better go. Bye.

Peter

Don't forget your passport!

Mrs. Neville

He won't need... er... he won't need his... er... face flannel. He was worried about it before. But they have them in Finland, you see. Ahahahaha... Ahahaha.

Mr Neville rushes out the door.

Peter

Erm... Mrs Neville...

Mrs. Neville

Yes?

Peter

I don't suppose you happen to know if... if your husband...

Mrs. Neville

What?

Peter

Nothing. Don't worry about it.

Pause.

Peter

What do you think about communism, Mrs. Neville?

Mrs. Neville

Please. Call me Kolya.

Peter

Kolya.

small pause.

Peter

What do you think about communism, Kolya?

Mrs. Neville

It rather depends what you mean. Marxism, Marxism-Leninism, Leninist theory, or just the cruder Stalinist application? Are we talking about Maoist Chinese peasant based systems, the autocratic states of post-war Africa and Latin America, Cuba, the kibbutzes of Israel and the middle east, the semi-Western integrated post-Stalin Soviet regime, or the Marx defined realisation of socialism? Or do you mean...

Peter

Erm... just... just Communism. Big C. Big Brother. Evil. Morally bankrupt?

Mrs. Neville

Well, any free thinker must agree that as a fundamental morality system, it has a more logical, if brashly material starting point than the Christianity of Western civilisation, or the polytheistic beliefs of the East. While one has to agree that the dialectic isn't perhaps as rigorous a scientific principle as Marx or Hegel would have you believe, it and the entire creed is supported by observed scientifically and economically rigorous phenomena in a way that a purely spiritual sense of morality is not, which makes intelligent and of course externally intelligible judgements easier to draw. And Marx's failure to prove the inevitability of a proletarian revolution, if you agree with some, is no better a reason to proscribe the faith than the blow dealt to Christianity with the non-arrival of Judgement Day. Although flawed, Marxism contains large tracts of good which humanity would be unwise to ignore. Similarly, Lenin was a truly good man, working against great oppression and resistance for what he believed was the good of the people, and if you have no interfering and stultifying theological beliefs, capitalism is full of contradiction and is inherently and unjustifiably unfair. While Communism is attacked by its critics for its bleak view of human existence, in a way, religions are worse, suggesting an external force is necessary in order for one to achieve real happiness - this is for many too close to an excuse for evil. It was only a shame that Stalin was corrupted by power, damaging the Soviet reputation, and that the US/USSR power games of the immediate post war period led to the infringement of human and civil rights in both countries and their satellites. But today, I believe that Russia and the renewed Soviet Union with the Motherland at the helm will once again triumph over the odds and regain its rightful, inevitable place as world leader, immediately before the onset of a true communist society.

Pause.

Mrs. Neville

Oh dear, is that the time? I should be at the Post Office.

Peter

I... I'll wash up.

Mrs. Neville

We really will have to buy a dishwasher. Bye-bye, then.

Peter narrates, turning to the camera, but still sitting eating breakfast, as he talks. He stops to eat toast, drink tea, etc. occasionally.

Peter

So. I would have to go to Finland right away. I had better tell Alvin, bring him with me. A job for two, eh? NO. No! I didn't have to go. Quite the reverse. It was imperative that I stay. For suddenly it all fitted into place. What that mysterious man Smithson had told me was true! My hosts obviously had nothing to do with the KGB. They were just innocent caterers. I could always tell, after a while. It was a sort of knack I had. Something in the way they walk. Damn useful in the secret agent business, I'll tell you. But I wished that Neville was a spy. Because the fact of his innocence told me Australia was really in danger, the covert hill was real, and, worst of all, Mr J. was a double agent. He had to be after the lies he'd told me. And I'd drunk port with that man!

He shudders.

Peter

There could be no other sensible series of events behind the motive which caused me to be sent on this wild goose chase. John Neville was going to Finland and J. knew it: with a boat every two weeks, and a crossing of several days, it was the perfect way to get me out of the country. I wasn't going to take the bait. But I couldn't trust J. And that could go for anyone else in the department. I wanted to tell Alvin, but I could no longer be sure that even he was genuine. Almost all of my colleagues in the security services had to be implicated somewhere in this dreadful plot - they would all just have to know too much. Longstanding acquaintances might have been subverted years ago for all I knew. This plan for Australia was possibly the biggest ever threat to the world, (again!) and although I could afford no mistakes, I could trust noone.

Pause.

Peter

I decided to consult my psychic.

Peter gets on a bus, and it drives off. Small pause, then another bus screeches around the corner, same route number. Cut to passengers sitting terrified inside. Cut to speedometer hovering above 50 mph. Cut to peaceful country lane. Traffic policeman standing by 30 sign. Cut back to bus. Passenger's POV, sees policeman by sign. Cut to speedometer again. Policeman walks into road in front of bus, cut to explosion filling screen.


Scene 8

A dark room. Old woman (the psychic) is sitting at one end of a long table, with a big mound of seaweed on it, also crystal balls and some playing cards, which she picks up and expertly shuffles a couple of times. She is very old and haggard. Gypsy clothing. Television is on in the corner: she is watching Neighbours. Volume annoyingly loud.

Title:

The High Street, Reading. The business premises of the renowned psychic and all-round family entertainer, Lindsay Davis: Afternoon

The psychic is playing that childrens game where you fold up a bit of paper and stick two fingers off each hand in it, then open it in and out, and pull up the corners to see what's written inside.

Peter

Hello, Lindsay.

Psychic

Ah! I knew you'd come during Neighbours.

Peter

Well: I made an appointment, didn't I. Of course you knew.

Psychic

Bastard. You don't get many gags, you know, as a psychic.

Peter

Apart from in the stage act.

Psychic

Yeah. Apart from that, of course.

Peter lights a cigarette.

Psychic

Don't smoke, please. It makes my eyes water.

Peter

Sorry?

Louder

Psychic

Put the fag out!

Over noise of television...

Peter

Look, can we turn this off?

Psychic

No. It's good. I'm watching it.

Peter

Alright. Look. I need your help.

Psychic

I knew you'd say that.

Peter

Shut up. I've discovered something terrible. It's... it's very delicate. Umm. Can I be frank with you?

Psychic

You can be whoever you like for [sterling]70 an hour.

Peter

Will you be serious for a bloody moment! The safety of the whole world is at stake. You don't understand how important this is.

Psychic

It sounds like a matter of some gravity.

Peter

If only you knew.

Psychic

I am a psychic. But it looks to me like you've got trouble with a conspiracy. You've noticed by now that your boss J. is a double agent...

Peter

But how did you...

Psychic

I am a psychic. But anyway, cliched situations only become cliched situations because they happen a lot. And you should never trust a man who won't tell you his whole surname. So, tell me what you know...

Fade out, fade in. The psychic's still playing the silly game.

Psychic

...Frankly, there's not a lot I can do for you. I could give you some aspirin if you want, and I've always found Beecham's powder is good for that sort of thing. But you're best off just having a good lie down. Take the day off.

Peter

But... but...

Gives up protesting...

Peter

I do feel a bit off colour actually.

Psychic smirks.

Peter

Alright. Thanks. See you, then.

Psychic

Ta. Bye.

Peter drives 'home'. As he goes along, he drives through a bomb-flattened area (where the bus blew up) and a crooked 30 sign. There are two lines of boots on the road, stereotypical after-explosion remains. Peter doesn't appear to notice.


Scene 9

Peter goes into the house with the Nevilles where he is lodging. It is dark outside. Walks past open kitchen door. Mrs. Neville there with enormous oversized transmitter and Morse tapper, tapping out message. Peter looks in, smiles, waves. Kolya replies in kind. Peter goes on up to his room, looking tired, lies down on bed. Closes eyes.

Strange effects, all swirly. He is stood there. Then suddenly he is through that, and standing in a garden. Realises he is dreaming (slow dreamy motion? children chanting nursery rhymes? Black & white.) Big sign, saying 'You are Dreaming'. He concentrates hard on a spot of lawn in front of him. Sheep appears. Smile turns quickly to expression of horror. he murmurs to himself.

Peter

I really need to see a psychiatrist some time.

He turns around: a psychiatrist is standing there. With a hat on.

Peter

Hello!

Then, suddenly, he is transfixed by horror: aghast, looking at the psychiatrist, who looks back curiously and starts making notes on a clipboard. Peter runs away. Psychiatrist takes out mobile phone, dials number.

Psychiatrist

Yes, quite mad. He's imagining psychiatrists... Oh damn!... He's sto

...and disappears.

Peter is running along: some people are looking a bit strangely at him. All wearing hats. There is a big river of blood in the gutter of the road, and it leads around a corner up a hill, which Peter goes around. There's an enormous pile of hats in the road moving slowly towards him like a glacier, and people's legs are sticking out from under it. Peter is terrified. He runs along, into a house. Big table, with a big hat on it. Peter is totally taken with horror. Falls backwards in faint.

Cut back to eyes flickering, and he wakes. There is a bulge on his chest. He pulls up duvet and looks underneath. Pulls out hat, screams. It is light outside, streaming through the window.


Scene 10

Downstairs telephoning psychic next day.

Peter

Hello: can I speak to Lindsay? No, I haven't.

Pause

Peter

Oh. Hello. How are you? Alright?

Psychic

Well, not too good really. I talked my way into a gig at the local club for next week last night: and I just know this could be my big break, but what goes and happens? Writer's block. I need some new material, something fresh - but I can't think of any. It's hopeless. I knew it'd happen.

Peter

Yeah, yeah, and you can't see any gags coming in the near future, either?

Psychic

I wasn't going to say that. What's the problem this time, then?

Peter

Yeah... I had that... that strange dream... nightmare, again, but... stronger than usual. I think, no, damnit, I know it's relevant to my... Australian problem, although I couldn't really say why. And I'm no closer to an answer there. Or even a proper question. Time's running out.

Psychic

It might be something to do with your sinuses, you know. You should see your GP.

Peter

I'm coming round. But my cold's gone, actually.

Psychic

I knew it w....

Peter slams the phone down. As he passes the kitchen, Kolya is standing by a whiteboard with a plan of Downing St., and bombs & stuff. Other spy types are sitting around.

Peter

Nice day, isn't it!

Spy types dive under kitchen table.

Mrs. Neville

Sunny periods in the morning, but in the Central London area drizzle and showers will set in, turning into heavy mist by dusk. Probably.

Peter

Right... Well, I'll be off then.

Shot of getting on bus (same as before).


Scene 11

Psychic's house. She is sitting there, watching Home and Away very loudly, playing Snakes and Ladders with herself, and writing down the dice scores. As Peter comes in he delivers the first line quickly to anticipate her.

Peter

You thought I'd come? You were expecting me?

Psychic

I knew you'd be like this.

Peter

You have no idea how much you can piss people off. Someone's going to kill you one day.

Psychic

I'm not afraid to die: it's just that I don't want to be there when it happens.

Peter

Ha ha. Been reading your Woody Allen then...

Psychic

You've heard it before? I would ne...

Peter

One day I shall lose my composure and you will be so sorry. I can kill with my bare hands, you know.

Psychic

I fear you'll never strike a happy medium, Peter.

Peter

I'm not rising to that. I need to save the world here. I haven't got time to swop jokes with a psychic. Especially ones stolen from Woody Allen.

Psychic

Yeeees you have! I listen to you.

Peter

I pay you.

The psychic opens her purse, etc.

Psychic

Here's a tenner. My dog's got no nose.

Peter

Give up. Shut up. Now look. Hang on, can you turn that off?

Psychic

No!

Peter

Alright. Look, I had the hat dream again. But it was much more real. I'm afraid to go to sleep. When I woke up, I found this...

He gets out the hat which was on his bed. His hands tremble as he lifts it to show her.

Psychic

Oh, you probably just went to sleep with it on. I do that with my glasses all the time.

Peter looks at her sternly.

Peter

It's quite taken my mind off the Australian problem, and I can't afford that.

Psychic

Probably not. Oh, hang on a minute. I know. I've had enough with this dream of yours. We'll get to the root of it, you'll see. It's the only way to stop it. Wait there a second would you, there was this book I got out of the library. Yes, look, this is it.

The book, very old and dusty, obviously not looked at in years, has a picture of Paul McEnna flicking his fingers and grinning, called 'Anyone can be a Hypnotist' She flicks through it and settles on one page.

Psychic

Regression hypnosis. I'll give that a try, if you want. You never know. It might help. It could be linked to your Australian problem, too: in my experience these things generally are.

Peter

Fair enough. I'll try anything.

Psychic

Have you got your gavel?

Peter

Eh?

Pause.

Peter

Oh, shut up.

Psychic

Sleep!

Pause, clicks fingers, adopts the pose on the front of the book.

Peter

Didn't work then.

Psychic

Just joking! I didn't really think it'd be that simple. Never judge a book by its cover, eh? Oh, never mind. I've got a surefire method in reserve. Always works for me. So lick this. I would have thought the effect'll be about the same.

He does. Nothing is happening, when...

Psychic

Hang on. Sorry. It was a stamp. I thought it was a bit cheap for acid. I'm not sure it'd work, anyway, actually. It's not really the way Paul McEnna suggests.

Peter

You wanted Class A and got First Class, eh?

Psychic

Hang on, I'll write that down. We could go far, you and me. How about it?

Peter groans, regretting what he's said

Peter

Please just forget I said that.

With a cheery smile...

Psychic

I never forget. It's like elephants. Have you got any Tipp-ex?

Peter

I've got a rubber somewhere here.

Psychic

Probably not much use. But I think I've got some in a drawer. Yes, this should do. Sniff this.

He does. Swirly effects as he passes out?


Scene 12

Alvin is reporting to J , who sits behind a big desk, facing the wall. J appears to be smoking, and progressively larger clouds of smoke waft up from his seat.

Alvin

Sir. Permission to be frank?

Mr. J

Permission granted. Ahem.

Alvin

It's not going well, sir. Vine did alright at first. He always does. He's become a lodger in the Neville's house, and has been observing them around the clock. But I haven't had as much success with my bit. And no connection to known Soviet agents yet at all. None. I've looked over all the documents I could find - Police records, medical records, library records, even The Phone Book, but nothing.

Mr. J

You mean...

Alvin

Yes. They're almost certainly ex-directory. But these commies always are. I'm beginning to despair of ever finding any evidence. It's like banging your head against a brick wall. Are you sure this isn't a wild goose chase you've sent us on, sir?

Mr. J

Rubbish. Of course not. This is the most serious threat to world security since Ronald Reagan. We have obtained information to the effect that the Russians are infiltrating our television network with their own propaganda, slipping their subversive ideas into everything we hold dear.

Alvin

Really?

Mr. P steps from the shadows and reveals himself. Very sinister. Younger than J. He is wearing gardening gloves and wellies. There is a miaow from under his jacket, and he gives the cat hiding under it a sharp bang. It squeaks then is silent. He has a piece of 'Somerset farmer' straw in his mouth.

Mr. P

Yes, really. Whilst certain of our operatives were trawling through the archives of the BBC, they came upon evidence of this grand conspiracy - subversive Russian agents had been implanting subliminal messages into the most popular shows of the times - subliminal messages it took a trained eye to spot. However, it was in an episode of Dad's Army first broadcast in 1968 that these spies made their fatal mistake. Our highly skilled agents smelt a rat when they saw that, upon rather humorously falling into a water filled ditch, Private Pike was heard to say...

Looks down at notes, reads.

Mr. J

'Ooh, Mr Mainwering, how much better this life would be in the workers' paradise of the Soviet Union. Oh! would that it were that we might rise up and overthrow our capitalist oppressors in the glorious and inevitable proletariat revolution, thus liberating the masses into true freedom!'. This small slip might have passed us by if the whole cast had not then proceeded to sing the Soviet National Anthem. Twice. In this, the foolhardy Bolsheviks had made their fatal mistake.

Mr. P

It has taken us less than thirty years to narrow down the search to the caterers at the BBC - who we now believe drugged the tea of the scriptwriters with various hallucinogenic narcotics - and, although we have to thank them for the many hilarious plots this activity caused, this allowed them to slip in unacceptable socialist dogma. We know that Mr Neville was to blame, and we are confident we will catch him in the act, as it were. This is where you come in, Alvin, and we are grateful for your help.

Alvin

I don't believe you.

Mr. J

No, we really are grateful for your help.

P looks in a slightly annoyed way at J, who cringes a bit.

Mr. P

Don't be silly, Ness. You have to believe me. It is vitally important that you do.

He steps back into the shadows and nods to J as Alvin talks.

Alvin

I haven't said anything to Peter, but I've been suspicious from the start. And you've just made me certain. Dad's Army began in 1971. I know something's going on, and I know you're involved. So tell me. Tell me.

Alvin fumbles for his gun, but he sees Mr. P with one in his hand already and gives up. Mr. J spins round, with his cat, stroking it.

Mr. J

It's just... an everyday story. Isn't it, Puss. Won't you join us, Alvin?

Stands up. The cat is stuck to his chest!!!!!!! Shot of Ness gaping in horror.

Alvin

You're mad!

Mr. J

Mad? Mad? Who is mad when we control so many lives? I think not, Alvin. Are you sure you won't reconsider joining us? I am sure you could prove to be a valuable asset to our organisation. You know that almost the entire department is working for us? We can offer... certain incentives....

He gets out a briefcase and opens it: it's packed with money. He turns it round to show Alvin.

Alvin

I already have a briefcase. You might get the others, but you won't pervert me, you evil man. Vine will find out: I'll tell him. He'll stop you.

Mr J

Ha! Think again. You are merely a pawn, Ness, a paper thin character on the stage of life. And I'm afraid that you have just been written out.

J presses a button, and a door opens on the left. With a sort of swishy noise, an enormous demolishing ball swings through it and carries Alvin away through a door which has opened on the right.

Mr. J

Exit stage right.

He leans back on his chair, but too far, with The Archers' music beginning to play, and the scene cuts as he's falling over.


Scene 13

Peter's eyes open. Lindsay bending over him, with a big pile of scribbled notes. The TV is on in the background. Peter is feeling a bit groggy.

Psychic

That correcting-fluid stuff makes you speak very fast, you know. But I think I got it all. I knew I could.

Every time Lindsay does this gag or the ones like it, Peter cringes a bit.

Peter

What?

Psychic

I regressed you. Bloody good, eh?

Peter

Yeah, great.

Psychic

What it is, right, is that you had a bit of a strange childhood.

Peter

Yes?

Psychic

I don't know exactly how to put this. You see, your father: Bit of a strange man, was he?

Peter

Not really.

Psychic

Well, he had a bit of a thing about headwear.

Peter

He was a hatter!

Psychic

That's no excuse. And it was rather more than just a professional relationship. What he used to do to you with them was appalling. Every night, he and your mother...

Peter

I haven't got a mother!

Psychic

That's just your mind blocking her out. Think about it, Peter.

Peter

Oh... yes, I suppose so.

Psychic

Anyway, every night, if you remember...

Peter

No.

Psychic

Of course - I should have known... Anyway, what happened was they were disappointed by you. All they saw was this ugly, underachieving brat who ruined their life. Easily done, let's face it. But still... it's awful what they did. When you were five, you had a birthday party.

Peter

Noone came?

Psychic

No, a few people came, but your parents sent them away again to take your mind off them not buying you anything. They never wanted children, you know. You were an accident.

Peter

How do you know?

Psychic

I'm a ps... They told you every night. You know yourself, deep down. It's not just the Tipp-Ex talking.

Peter

Oh.

Psychic

They would shut you in this room, full of hats, for the slightest misdemeanour. If you got an A- instead of an A. If you forgot to lift the toilet seat in the middle of the night. If you held your knife and fork the wrong way around. Hats. Hats of all descriptions. There was just this little boy - six or seven - alone, friendless. In the dark. Surrounded by hats. You were a bit claustrophobic, and it used to terrify you. Every night. You would want to cry out, but if you made a noise, your father would come in and beat you, with a homburg. But it must have been terrible. In your mind. Screaming. Screaming. Screaming...

Voice fades, replaced by screaming. Brief flashback? If you like. Why not?

Psychic

Are those hats still screaming? Oh. Sorry.

Lindsay turns telly off. Screaming stops. The psychic lights a cigarette, sucks smoke in, and does the Hannibal Lecter sucking sound.

Psychic

It caused terrible trouble, you know. Even then your brain used to block out what had happened to you, so when you came home from school you couldn't remember where you lived. Quite funny, but a bit sad.

Peter

Christ. That's terrible. So is this sort of thing common?

Psychic

Surprisingly so.

Peter

Really?

Psychic

No. You're out of your tree, Peter. Did you not wonder how you grew up without a mother or a house?

Peter

I hadn't really thought about it. Are you saying I'm mad?

Psychic

Well, I have to say, I'm not sure. I checked in a book, and, you know, I was in two minds about whether to diagn...

Peter

...to diagnose schizophrenia. Very funny.

Psychic

No. A regressive sub-oedipal psychosis, actually, smartarse.

Peter looks at her blankly / sceptically.

Psychic

Yeah... alright - so I was going to say schizophrenia.

Peter

Oh, I had no idea. But will all this really help?

Psychic

I think so. I should know. Now you know what's worrying you, you can confront your fears. If we can make you go back there, you should be able to solve your problem for good. And while you were out cold, I sorted out your problem with saving the world. You see, there are an infinite number of parallel universes: when you had that strange dream, you went to a world exactly the same as this one, save the small fact that everyone wears hats. Strange but true. Hatland. Oh, that was the other thing. It had a silly name, too. Anyway, if there are an infinite number of universes, in at least one of them, there will be all the instructions you need to stop whoever is responsible for all this Australia stuff, written on a handy set of cue cards. Or whatever. Bloody strange, this parallel universe malarkey. Anyway... so all we have to do is send you there. I've been to Smith's for the white-pake already. I spilt the last lot. And I've a book here which will tell us which universe you'll be wanting.

Looks in very large book.

Psychic

Oh dear. It's Hatland. I knew it would be.

Peter

H... how?

The psychic bangs the table.

Psychic

Bu-BUM! Got you!


Scene 14

At the hill in Woking.

Title:

The Suburbs of Woking: Sunday March 3

Mr. X. in silhouette is overseeing the building of the hill from his bath: the hill can be seen in the background: the bath is on its lower slopes. He is talking on his telephone.

Mr. X

So... yes... say, I've got one... Phil and Simon go out to the pub, and yeah, yeah, Phil tells Simon his humorous sheep-dipping anecdote but it turns out-

Muted noise from the phone.

Mr. X

No. It wouldn't work if Nelson...

Shouting at person pushing a wheelbarrow.

Mr. X

Faster! Faster!

Back to phone.

Mr. X

No, don't worry about...

Shouts.

Mr. X

Soap! Soap!

Back to phone.

Mr. X

No, that's crap. Fuck off! You're fired.

Slams phone down with a splash. Calls someone over.

Mr. X

What's Kelly's number? And get us a fag.

Watson

(01319) 262-3423, sir.

Dials number on a mobile. Then, to phone...

Mr. X

Right. Hi Kelly, how do you fancy... you don't? Fuck you then.

Throws phone away. Calls Watson over.

Mr. X

We're in trouble. There's twenty minutes to fill in Tuesday's and Wednesday's is hardly started. Fuck knows what we're going to do about Thursday and Friday. Is the farmyard impressionist any better?

Watson

No, still in bed with a head cold, sir.

Mr. X

If he's not back at work by tomorrow, fire him. No, fuck it, fire him today. Then ask him back for half the cash. Messy divorce like that costs money...

Watson looks shocked in a kind of 'Divorce? What divorce?' kind of a way.

Mr. X

Mmm, yes. She was quite good, actually. But there's not much going without a full Equity card for a crap farmyard impressionist these days. Not for what we pay him. Paid him. Easy money. How's it going with packing for the holiday, by the way?

Watson

Smashing, sir. The wife's taken the day off work to pack, and the kids are so excited! The doctors say it's given little Jimmy such a boost, sir. At least his last few weeks will be happy, sir.

Mr. X

Yes. Very sweet. But cancel. I need you here.

Watson tries to speak, but is overcome by shock/horror and emotion and just looks at him.

Mr. X

I meant to thank you, Watson. Great storyline, terminal childhood illness. Pencilled in for next May already. Shame we can't fit it in this week. Should have sorted out the pregnancy sooner, eh? Ha,ha! Your Jimmy'll miss it! Never mind.

Pause. Watson is looking pale.

Mr. X

Don't just stand there. Get on with something. Don't abuse our friendship, Watson.

Ness' body is dragged up the hill by two men.

Mr. X

Ah! The famous Ness! Very fucking funny. I must congratulate J. What a tosser, eh? Our friend Peter Vine will find it so funny when he finds out. I almost look forward to it. Upper-class poof. Bunch of wankers the lot of them. Don't know what work is.

Shouting at various people...

Mr. X

You there! Faster! Or you're fired! Listen to me! LISTEN TO ME! This water's cold! More! Now! Or you're fired!


Scene 15

Weird effects. Then Hatland. Black and white. Camera from Peter's P.O.V., swinging round eerily. Children's voices, singing nursery rhymes: top quality postmodernist psycho-drama, eh? Alright, no. Everyone who walks past has a hat on. Peter is in the same field as before, where the psychiatrist was. The psychiatrist suddenly appears just behind him and Peter turns to look. The psychiatrist is mouthing support 'go on!.. go on!' and waving his clipboard, affecting slow motion. Peter turns, and walks down the street, and goes into the house he was in before. A small child (him) walks past crying, hatless. Stereotypical flashback style. Peter looks on the table, at the hat. Pained look. Chanting gets louder, building to a wall of sound. Finally he picks up the hat. There's an explosion, and the chanting stops. Replaced by the sound of the sea, or wind. Gentle. Outside, thousands of hats are falling out of the sky like snow. On the table are the cue cards. Peter looks at them briefly, and picks them up. Fade to black.


Scene 16

We see John Neville get off a boat, and walk down the gang-plank towards the camera. He is alone from the boat, and the port is deserted. There is quite a strong wind, there's frost everywhere etc. Very desolate, generally.

Title:

Finland

A man walks towards him and they greet each other. The man who greets him is very Russian and has a strong Russian accent.

Mr. Neville

Hello!

Russian

Hello, John. It is good to see you after all this time. I trust that your crossing was pleasant?

Mr. Neville

Oh yes. Very, thankyou. I'm surprised how quick it was. And how quiet it was. I must have been the only person on board, apart from the crew!

Russian

Yes. It is strange, isn't it.

The boat speeds off. A diver surfaces, and silently gives the thumbs up to the Russian, who nods. Neville doesn't see; he is facing towards shore.

Mr. Neville

We'd better get on, then. I hear that sweet biscuits have taken quite a tumble!

The Russian takes out a code book, and leafs through it.

Russian

Sweet biscuits. Yes. The...

...pauses for emphasis.

Russian

...whitebait have endangered sales. Severely. Action must be taken.

Mr. Neville

Yes. I heard that too. Very strange. Fish, eh?

As he says words, the Russian is leafing through the code book looking for them. The ship which carried Neville has exploded in the background, silently. There's odd splashes as debris lands in the sea close by. Perhaps a bit of smoke and some fire? Neville doesn't notice, of course.

Mr. Neville

You Scandinavian types...

Shot of the Russian, looking very Slavic.

Mr. Neville

You Scandinavian types are a mystery to me.

Russian

How was your summer, Peter?

Mr. Neville

Oh, fine, fine.

Russian

Did you visit...

He looks expectantly at him...

Mr. Neville

Bournemouth? Yes, we did. It was wonderful.

Russian

No. The... the... the Cumbrian place.

Mr. Neville

Oh! Yes, I'm with you. Windscale - whoops...

He slaps his wrist camply.

Mr. Neville

Sellafield, rather. I remember you asking before.

The Russian looks around nervously. He speaks in a whisper: John is very bubbly.

Russian

Yes. Of course.

Mr. Neville

Of course. Yes, it was very informative. We certainly learnt a lot, once we'd managed to get in.

Russian

You did? Good. Good, John.

Mr. Neville

But yes: it was very useful. You should see it now. They've redone it all, all multimedia. You know what that means? Of course you do. You Scandinavians are all word-perfect in English, aren't you? But it was so busy. We queued for hours.

Him looking Slavic again.

Russian

Yes. Very, very good. But it is cold here. Let us go inside, no, where it is warmer?

Mr. Neville

Fine by me. I would have brought the photos if I'd known you'd be so interested.

The Russian looks rather faint.

Mr. Neville

We went with little Sam; that's our Kolya's godson, and we were so impressed! The visitor's centre was done up so nice, it was just like EuroDisney, and the guide.. Have you seen the adverts?... Oh no, you wouldn't have.. And in May, we went to that airbase you were talking about: there was a really good Steam Fayre there, we won a goldfish and the Red Arrows did a fly-past, and that thing where they...

He starts to mime out aeroplane stunts with his arm. The Russian takes the other arm, and starts to lead him off the quayside.

Russian

Come on, John.

Mr. Neville

Why the hurry? Spies everywhere, eh? Wanting to know about the Whitebait situation no doubt.

Russian

Ssssh!


Scene 17

Now in a KGB office. Lots of papers etc. on the table. The Russian is looking blank and rather exasperated.

Mr. Neville

... beginning with 's'? Come on, it's Sea. Easy one. No? I think I might have missed the point here, I'm afraid. Would you like to explain again?

Telephone rings. Russian answers.

Russian

No. Yes, he's here now. I'm sure he knows nothing. Yes. Yes. We will make sure of that. I will deal with him myself. Of course. Goodbye.

He sits back in his chair, puts The Archers on, and the phone down. (theme-tune plays)

Mr. Neville

Ooh! Can you get that here? I'd have thought the reception'd be too bad. Don't listen myself, but my wife has it on in the kitchen all the time.

Russian

Yes. I see. Curiously, we don't seem to have a problem any more. Now, I think, our meeting is over.

Mr. Neville

That's good. I'm here till Tuesday. Is there anywhere nice I could go for lunch, do you know?

Russian

Ah. Ha. An interesting question, but tragically irrelevant. You won't be needing lunch. I'm very sorry, but I am afraid that... that I must kill you now, Mr. Neville. I (ha) can't think why, but you are apparently a very unpopular man with my superiors. It's orders from the top. Nothing personal. Well, not very. You know (ha) too much.

The Russian takes out a gun from a drawer: fires but it just clicks. He looks up and Neville has disappeared out the door and down the corridor. Sound of running. Russian goes after him.

Russian

Shit! I wish they'd stop playing that stupid roulette game!

Clicking the gun as he runs after Neville, who has grabbed some of the papers on the desk.


Scene 18

Title:

Half an hour later...

Neville is sitting in a large metal dustbin, eating a scrap of meat from inside the dustbin, ripping it with his teeth. Unshaven and haggard. He stops and pokes his head over the top to talk to the camera, his mouth covered with juice from what he has been eating. Then he lifts a wine glass full of red wine to his lips and carefully sips from it.

Mr. Neville

It always happens. I come to Finland, expecting to have to sort out nothing more than a routine hitch in biscuit production. It goes with the territory for us caterers. I was expecting perhaps, at worst, to have to have a 'quiet word' with the current director of 'Crunchie Fancies, inc.' But, no, I meet up with a Russian, and who does he work for? Not 'Boris's Bites,' but the KGB. It's happened before. Last time I went to Brazil, investigating claims that the 'Luxury Rainforest Vegetarian Nibblets' contained squirrel meat, I stopped off in Cuba, and they had me followed by their secret police, and my mother assassinated - apparently, the CIA have a file on me as long as my arm. And I had that lodger in my house, from the Secret Service, he was definitely giving me funny looks. It's just not fair - things like this shouldn't happen to a caterer. Sometimes, I even worry that my wife's trying to help me - but help me do what? Everyone thinks I'm a spy... do I look like a spy? Anyway soon as I twigged I wasn't talking to caterers, but was in the KGB offices... I think it was when he started shooting at me, I made a dash for it sharpish, and managed to get away. I even managed to pick up these documents off of his desk. Thought it might help or something. Don't know why, really. They were in Russian, but luckily, I picked up some Russian myself, icing personalised birthday cakes for the Russian community in my native Reading - not much, but a smattering here and there. Regular work, kept the business going through hard times. Anyway, what I made of these papers was that there was some plan to remove Australia, making it float into space, by building a big hill in Woking. A really big plan: the words they used were 'global conspiracy', except in Russian, of course. Hahaha! Ha, ha, ha!

He giggles for a bit and gradually stops.

Mr. Neville

Don't ask me how it was going to be done, I'm just a caterer - I really am! What it was, right, there were these two English guys, Mr J and Mr P. One worked for the British Secret Service, the second for Notcutts - well up in wheelbarrows. I think that my lodger, Vine, had been put onto me by J, who was his boss, to throw him off the scent. Common trick. I get the CIA recruits shadowing me all the time. You get used to it after a bit. But Peter: Peter Vine; you know, my lodger, was better than all them. He was probably the best single secret agent in the country. I notice the little things. And I had a hunch that he already knew what was going on and was trying to stop it. I hoped he'd just noticed his boss was a double agent and was on the trail. It was a shame I couldn't tell him. What I was getting from the documents was that the link was their boss (J's and P's) who had them working covertly for him, a certain 'Mr X', who was mixed up in the popular radio show, the Archers. God only knows why. He seemed to be behind this plan, and he had enlisted some fairly major help as well as these two - one of the documents was a list of names of collaborators, and you wouldn't believe who was in on this -

Gets out a big list

Mr. Neville

The Pope , The British Prime Minister... Well, that's it. It was big writing. Anyway, people had to know, that much was obvious, but to whom could I reveal the truth? Once again, it seemed that the only person who could for certain help save the world from the destruction of one of its major continents was stuck in a big dustbin in an obscure part of Finland. I translated a few dates on the papers - I'm good at them, of course, and it seemed Mr. X was in a hurry, although I didn't know why - the documents didn't say but the finish date for Australia's final 'removal' had been brought forward. Australia would have no more than a couple of weeks. I needed to tell someone quickly so it could be stopped. I like Australia. And the Scandinavians as a people are credited with great linguistic abilities, but no-one here seemed to speak any English, and I certainly didn't know any Finnish. And of course I was on the run from the KGB, who were apparently under the command of Mr. X and had been ordered to shoot me so I couldn't leak their plan, as presumably had been everyone else who was mixed up in this global conspiracy. That date I had translated read Saturday 9 March 1998. Today was the 5th. I had only 12 days. I had one idea. It had to work.


Scene 19

Neville walks down a high street in Finland, and walks into a bookshop. He takes a Finnish-English dictionary off the shelves. The shop assistant thinks he's in a Western, taking shots at customers with a imaginary gun. There are bullet holes in the shop's glass front. He kneels by a shelf copying down words. He writes them on his hand. He walks outside the shop, and approaches a passer by. Reading uncertainly off biro writing on his hand, he says:

Mr. Neville

Ka-da qwary, slobovon Mittas.

The precise Finnish is not essential to the plot.

Subtitle:

Please render me assistance in the removal of my secretive hump, lover.

Passer by looks at him bemusedly/angrily

Mr. Neville

Thatry catan. Whee horny trent!

Subtitle:

Kindly give it to me!

A bomb drops. It explodes but is ignored. A couple of these fall during the conversations Neville has with native Finns. OK? Remember that, please.

Mr. Neville

Helly helper! Nak nak! Misty renitbuory!

Subtitle:

There's an enormous erection in England! You have to listen to me!

The passer-by begins to run away. Neville has one last try, but it's a word he's uncertain of to say the least.

Mr. Neville

Qwa! Qwa!

Subtitle:

Goat! Goat!

He gives up, and breaks down a bit.

Mr Neville

But you have to help me! The whole world's in danger!

Subtitle:

I have photographed your wife with sheep. Give me money or I shall inform your three young children.

As Neville is attacked, another bomb falls out of the sky, and explodes nearby, causing much damage, and littering the area with masonry and that. A typical sort of bomb thing. OK? They notice, but are too busy fighting to care much.


Scene

Black.. Suddenly, eyes open (Peter's POV), and Lou is bending over him. Different camera angle, and we see they are in the middle of a corn field, on a sunny day, the 5th. Peter gets up, surprised.

Peter

I wish I knew how you did that.

They start walking.

Peter

I wasn't going to see you this soon, was I?

Lou

Change of plan. I hope you've worked out something, you know, because the deadline's come forward again.

Peter

Where?... Oh, fair enough. Yes. Actually, I think that I've probably got the solution to our little... dilemma. Solved it.

Lou looks at him somewhat amazed.

Peter

Yes. Rather good, isn't it?

Lou

What do you have to do, then?

Peter

It was surprisingly easy, actually. I'm rather pleased. I have the instructions in my head, and all I need to do is think, and I'll have the method to solve the problem entirely. I went to a parallel universe in a drug induced dream to get some metaphorical cue cards with the solution on.

Lou looks at him as if Peter's being stupid.

Peter

No, honestly! My psychic tol... Hmm. Yes, it does seem a bit less plausible now I'm awake. But I'm sure it'll go alright. I can't wait to sort this out and get home: the kennel bills are ruinous at the place I've got Jess, and Mrs. Neville just won't have pets in the house.

Lou

Yes. I hate the way they charge you for two days even if you only have your dog there overnight. It's such a rip-off: but they all do it...

Peter

They all do it.

Nodding

Lou

...so it's a monopoly. Nothing the average dog owner can do. And the boarding prices are ruinous. What are you paying for? I've stayed in cheaper hotels!

Peter

Probably some criminal super-gang that's got the fix on the pet-animals boarding market. Easy money. You pop round once a month to check the books and take a 90% cut, and free board for your animals. It's probably the same people who are destroying Austr... why are you looking at me like that?

Lou

This is deadly serious, Peter.

Peter

I.. I'm going to look in on Jess later. Do you want to come? I was going to go to the pub afterwards.

Lou

No. Can't be doing with dogs. They make me sneeze, mate. I need to go to the chemists, anyway.

Peter looks around and they're in the High Street in Reading, by Lou's car (CIA style sedan). He unlocks it and reaches in for his wallet.

Lou

The psychic's wrong. Trust me. Oh, mind the car for me, would you? I won't be a minute.

Peter

No...

...but Lou is gone. Peter sits down in the car, feet on the pavement.

Traffic Warden

Excuse me, sir.

Peter stands up. As Peter and the traffic warden talk, Peter's attention wanders: he looks at passing people (who are the same- about fifteen people walk past, then come on again in random order. All are going in the same direction.) He also perhaps looks in a shop window, at one of those baker's puppets that kneads dough, or a shoemaker's one that bangs nails in. At one point he walks away and comes back with a cake he's bought, which he eats while they are talking, during a particularly long speech. It is pouring with rain. They are both soaked.

Peter

Sorry?

Traffic Warden

I'm afraid that I'll have to give this car a ticket. Double yellow line, you see. I don't like it, sir, but it's my job.

Peter

You can't do that. It's only been parked here a moment!

Traffic Warden

I said I don't like it, sir, but I'm afraid that this imperfect situation of a bureaucratic capitalist state is an inevitable part of the dialectic which will ultimately resolve itself in communism. So rules are rules. That'll be [sterling]25, I'm afraid, sir. Money's an outmoded concept, but transiently necessary, even to someone of my standing. And yours, sir.

Peter

But it's not even mine!

Traffic Warden

I wouldn't worry, sir. Property is theft. And remember, by giving this money to me, you do help narrow the rich-poor divide, thereby hastening the glorious revolution. Think of the good you'll do, sir.

Peter

Look: this car belongs to a friend: he's just disappeared at the moment. He'll be along in a bit. Well, probably.

Traffic Warden

Well, I'll subscribe to the view that a communist movement should confine itself to a membership of active supporters! Bit of a Menshevik in-joke there, sir.

Peter

I didn't get it, I'm afraid.

Traffic Warden

Not your fault, sir. It springs from the education which you have been denied in order to subjugate your inevitable Socialist leanings with a wage successfully sir. Do you mind if I don't call you sir, sir? We are meant to call clients sir, sir... Pah. Clients? Victims. ...but I'm a little worried that all it does is widen the class divide. It doesn't even do it properly, you know. My father was a doctor, you know. I should have become a lawyer, but thanks to the detestable capitalist state, I'm afraid I ended up a traffic warden, sir. I'm not angry for myself, you know: I'm happy to indefinitely serve the state in any form, only I'm worried that not enough influential lawyers are Mensheviks, sir. It is important that we hasten through this transitory phase of social development as soon as possible, you realise sir. All this waiting around can't be doing any good. Between you and me, sir, sometimes my political views come close to those of Plekhanov, you know!

Peter is nodding but looking over the warden's shoulder: the warden slowly turns around and we see Peter nodding in time to a shoemaker's animatronic model in the window. He suddenly snaps out of it.

Peter

Really?

Traffic Warden

It's alright for Martov, well, was before he died, but seeing as how I'm the country's second most senior Menshevik, I frankly can't wait for us to come to power. Martov was a lawyer, you know. A rich one. Actually, (and keep this very much to yourself), sir, sometimes, when I wake up in the middle of the night, sometimes I lose a bit of faith in this dialectic malarkey. It's bloody ages since the fall of feudalism, and I can't help worrying that Lenin was right after all. What (and this may seem silly), but what if there isn't a spontaneous worker's revolution unprompted by the liberated bourgeoisie? I'd be a traffic warden for ever! Bill said..

Peter

Bill?

Traffic Warden

Oh come on.. Major, Blair, Ashdown... ring any bells? He's only the shadow Prime Minister. And Chancellor. I can't do Marxist Economics, because the book was overdue, and someone else had requested it.

Peter

For who?

Traffic Warden

Eh? For the Menshevik Party, of course.

Peter

And you are?

Traffic Warden

Foreign office, Environment, Home office, Health, Employment... erm... What else is there?

Peter is counting them off on his fingers

Peter

Defence... erm... Education?... Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster?

Traffic Warden

No, we'll get rid of that one. When we execute the Royal Family. Duchy, Marxism - doesn't really go. And we don't know what he does, anyway. But it doesn't matter much, anyway. Few weeks, and the chains of the bureaucratic state will fall away. I think that's what it said, anyway. I had to copy it out of the book, because the photocopying's too expensive. And the old writing's not up to much. My father's a doctor, you know, Comrade.

Peter does a sort of 'double take'.

Peter

Copy it out of the book? Excuse me for asking... how long have you been a communist?

Traffic Warden

Menshevik, Comrade. Communism's probably not for a couple of years yet, if we're realistic about it. These dialectics take time, you know. And you mustn't confuse the imperfect bureaucracy of a Menshevik socialism with the utopia of a global communist community, because it denigrates the word in the eyes of the proletariat and, thanks to the inevitably undermining attitude of the capitalists, delays the coming revolution. Only the other day, Bill was saying...

Peter

How long?

Very embarrassed...

Traffic Warden

Two weeks...

Peter

Huh.

The traffic warden is very bubbly.

Traffic Warden

So do you know about this dialectic thing, then? How long is it yet, till the populist revolution, d'you think?

Peter

I'm sorry, but I..

Traffic Warden

D'you think before Christmas, Comrade?

Peter

I really don't know.

Traffic Warden

Would you like to be Heritage Secretary, Comrade? You seem the right sort of man. Of course, it won't be for very long, but it's probably quite good fun, you know. Though I was thinking, like, when we abolish money, how do you buy stamps? And I'll be out of a job, because no-one'll be able to pay parking fines. Perhaps I could talk to people about leading a successful Comm... sorry, Socialist revolution. And being a traffic warden. Now, about this ti...

They turn around. The car has gone.

Traffic Warden

Oh, forget the ticket.

He rips it up.

Traffic Warden

It's only a tax on the poor, really, because rich people fly, or have chauffeurs. I used to throw the money away...

Peter

Why?

Traffic Warden

To starve the evil capitalist government of funds, Comrade. But Bill pointed out that all it does is decrease inflation and strengthen the monetary instrument of oppression, or more likely, some rich person who doesn't need to work and walks round all day finds it and widens the class divide, so now I give it all to him.

Peter

Why?

Traffic Warden

Well, I didn't understand that bit at first either, but basically what he's going to do is save up that, and my salary, and his dole money, and when we've got enough in the bank - we don't like them, but you do get the interest, and some money off vouchers as well at Pizza Hut, so we can hasten onwards the glorious revolution and take advantage of capitalist naivety springing inevitably from a politic of nepotism and corruption to undermine the system from within - and anyway, the day before we seize power, we're going to flood the international money markets, to prepare the way for the onset of world-wide communism. We'll need to save up for a fair bit, obviously, but we were hoping for donations. Apparently it's very popular in France. Do you want to be heritage secretary, then? You'll have to be third in command, and you can boss people about, once me and Bill have got people to boss about. As long as you stop, after a bit.

Peter

When?

Traffic Warden

When the chains of bureaucracy fall away, stupid.

Peter's being annoying. (And annoyed).

Peter

How do you know?

Traffic Warden

Eh?

Peter

How do you know? I could be oppressing the masses as Heritage Secretary for far too long if I didn't notice the chains of bureaucracy falling away.

The Traffic Warden wants to say something, but just looks cross, then carries on regardless, ignoring Peter's question.

Traffic Warden

A... A... Actually, Bill was saying, before he went off to that conference in Switzerland... or was it Austria? Somewhere with mountains, I know. It's traditional. Every winter. Anyway, he said, perhaps... Oh, I don't know. Oh look! There's a new Porche over there! I'll go and ring the clampy people. Wait there a moment, Comrade.

Peter walks away... The traffic warden doesn't notice / doesn't care, and is preoccupied anyway.


Scene 21

Peter walks down a back street in the same town. There are some cars on a double yellow line on the street, which have parking tickets, and communist propaganda spray-painted on the windscreens and bodies in a variety of colours.

Peter

Think... THINK! No; useless. Oh, Lindsay! SHIT!!! If she was 'only joking'... Aaaaargh!!!!!

He kicks a tin can, which rattles down the street in a sinister fashion. The sign for a kennels swings rustily on a sort of pole thing, creaking. The sound of wind. The windows of the kennels are boarded up: the place is abandoned. Somewhere a dog barks, a long way away. Peter knocks at the door. No reply (of course). He throws himself at the door: we see papers strewn all over the place as he bursts through. He recoils at the smell. As he walks around he calls out:

Peter

Jess! Jess!

A dog barks a long way away again. He rushes outside into the road and a bird flaps away, wings beating. A crow, please.

Peter

Every dog in the kennels was gone. Since the collapse of the USSR, I knew of no formal organisation with the clout to pull off this sort of op: for all J's claims the KGB were a shadow of their former selves. The only people I could think of were the people involved in this Australia business. Yes, I had a hunch, and my hunches were rarely wrong. There was more to the loss of my dog than I had first thought, and I had to find out what was going on. Though she had stopped the nightmares, I'll say that for her at least, I had been having doubts about my psychic's reliability for some time now, and her latest suggestion about the cue cards in the cold light of day proved even more eccentric than usual: I evidently couldn't trust her any longer. Perhaps she was even caught up in the Australian mess, working for J! Well, maybe not... (!). And I hadn't been able to get any more help from Lou, my shadowy Australian friend, either, so this was my only lead. Lead! Ha! Besides, I couldn't leave my dog to the mercies of those evasive yet unscrupulous rascals. I was determined to get my dog back, and I would follow her wherever necessary. Yes, Peter Vine was on the case, and I was going to get to the bottom of it. If there was a man in the country who could, it was me. Nobody more able, I was the best: top of the pile, the man with the know. You had to stir yourself damn early of a morning to best me, and when it came to the crunch, I got up with the midnight news.

He thinks about that phrase for a while and looks pleased with himself.

Peter

Yes siree Bob. No problems. If I didn't find the solution to Australia's problem, I would eat my hat.

Looks worried for a moment.


Scene 22

A Police station in the same town. Peter walks in, sweeping through the doors. He is still soaking wet.

Peter

Let me speak to the most senior officer here, please.

Constable

I'm afraid you can't.

Peter

MI11.

Flashes a warrant card, then looks at it, mutters 'sorry' and gets another one out. Several fall out of his pocket and he bends down to pick them up.

Constable

No, you really can't. He's having his afternoon rest at the moment. But you can talk to me.

Peter

I'd like to report a theft.

Constable

What of, please?

Peter

A dog. Well, several dogs, I suppose. But I'm only sure about one of them.

Constable

OK. Where was this dog, last time you saw it?

Peter

I was keeping it in Kennels: the one in North Street.

Constable

There isn't a Kennels in North Street.

Long pause. Dramatic tension, and some music, please, as Peter looks at the PC in horror / shock. Then:

Peter

Oh yes, that's right. Sorry, it was West Terrace I was thinking of. West Terrace.

Constable

Right. West Terrace. And you were coming to collect this dog.

Peter

No, to visit...

Constable

Yeah. Could I see that warrant card again, please?

He sees it, and shakes his head sadly in a 'what's the world coming to when MI11 agents are this strange' sort of a way. You know.

Peter

Look, it's a long story. I haven't time to tell you.

Constable

Sorry. None of my business, really.

Peter

No.

Constable

I'll just need to ask a few questions, if I may.


Scene 23

Fade in and out to indicate some passage of time. Now they are in an interview room. Peter is pointing to parts of his body. He's only wearing one shoe, and his shirt is partially undone.

Peter

There there there and there. Oh, and I remembered that one...

points to another question on the many sheets the officer is filling in.

Peter

...it was 'sideways'.

A man bursts in through a trap-door in the floor, covered in cobwebs. Sees Peter, smiles, talks to the P.C.

Constable II

You know that dog theft thing? There's new news. The traffic lot have just got a report, north of Watford Gap Services. A blue lorry, from which 'barking has been heard...'

Reads from a piece of paper he is holding...

Constable II

'...dropped two animals believed to be of the canine persuasion from its rear end, whilst in motion, in the fast lane. Two officers followed it in an unmarked car, observing several infringements of traffic safety regulations, and have traced it to a location somewhere north of Leeds.'

Both of the policemen in the room assume stupidly worried expressions at the phrase 'north of Leeds'.

Peter

Oh my god! Jess!

Constable II

What colour was she?

Peter

She's golden. A golden Labrador.

Constable II

Oh, you're alright then. These are both a sort of gooey red.

The first constable slaps a custard pie in the other's face.

Peter

Thankyou very much. Goodbye.

And Peter legs it out of the room, past a small brass band just arriving, who ask him if they're late. He hardly notices and rushes past. The door is left open, and we see the policemen in the room, rising to their feet, and the brass band hastily setting up, perhaps tuning up. Do brass bands tune up? They bloody well do here.

Constable

Come back! No! You mustn't go off there on your own! It's too dangerous! You don't understand. The people we think are behind this are... are... Come back!!

Nothing. Then Peter pokes his head around the door frame.

Peter

Where did you say it was, exactly?

The brass band make a sort of Oomph...AA! noise. (like Bu BUM! with drums).


Scene 24

Title:

The Royal Oak Public House, Stavenley, North Yorkshire: Tuesday Evening

A country pub, quite full. Ageing landlord mopes behind bar, old rural types sit there contemplating their stout. Peter enters. Deathly quiet falls upon the place. He walks up to the barman, who ignores him. Peter coughs a couple of times. A vicar, younger than most of the clientele, sits next to him. He's in full vicar costume. You know. There is a sort of space around the vicar: an 'he's an outsider' sort of physical and social space.

Peter

Could I see your cocktail list, please?

The landlord ignores that, and goes on glowering at him. The vicar winces.

Peter

Do you serve Bloody Mary...

Vicar

'Scuse me. I think you might have left your lights on.

Peter

Sorry?

Vicar

Yes. I'd say you've definitely left your lights on.

Peter

But...

Vicar

I'd go and check, if I were you. Can run down quickly, these car batteries.

Vicar gets up and walks towards the door.

Vicar

Yes. Your boot's unlocked, too. And your engine wants looking at as well. Now! Come on.

Outside the pub. Peter points about 150 yards away to his unlit, locked, (obviously, you can't tell that - but the engine is fine too!!!!) car.

Peter

But it's...

The vicar roughly pushes him against a wall.

Vicar

You're a secret service agent, aren't you?

Peter

Sorry?

Vicar

Yes you are. Cocktails list? Why didn't you just walk straight up and ask for one shaken but not stirred? This is Yorkshire, Mr. MI5. You stick out like a sore thumb.

Peter

A Bloody Mary isn'...

Vicar

It's enough to tell. You can't walk into a North Yorkshire country inn and ask for a cocktail. There's plenty of pubs round this way that lager drinkers avoid once it starts getting dark early. We're going to go back in there, nice 'n' slowly, and you're going to ask for a pint of Black Sheep. And you're going to drink it. That's if you want to see the South of England again.

Peter

But...

Vicar

Just do as I say. In half an hour, you can come with me to the Vicarage, and you can tell me what you want in this part of the world. You owe me one, you know. It's risky for me too. By the way, I'm the vicar.

Peter

Mmm. Peter Vine.

They shake hands, and walk in again. The barman looks up, frowning.

Barman

Aye?

Peter hams dreadfully a Yorkshire accent, then looks at the vicar, and stops.

Peter

Aye! Ahd li... ...I'd like a pint of your best please.

Barman

Roight.

Peter bites his lip to avoid laughing, and sits down. A space is created around him and the vicar. He and the Vicar sit very self consciously at the bar, the Vicar trying to ignore it. The noise level has increased back nearly to normal.


Scene 25

The vicarage. Peter and the Vicar enter. The Vicar sits down and while he is talking, works at repairing a broken lathe.

Vicar

Put your coat there.

Peter

Thanks.

They sit down, the vicar under a big crucifix hung upside down.

Vicar

Right. So what exactly do you want here?

Peter

I'm here looking for a dog. My dog.

Vicar

Things have quietened down a bit for you Intelligence lot since the Cold War finished, haven't they?

Peter

No, no, not at all. I'm taking time off for this.

Vicar

What happened, then?

Peter

It was stolen from a kennels in London. The van the police suspect is involved was seen near this village. I wanted to come and look for him. We're very close. And it might be connected to another case I'm working on. A much more important one. Important to the safety, perhaps of the whole world. I can't tell you the full details: I don't know them myself. But the theft of my dog, and many others like it, seems to be the only trail I have if I'm to bring to a stop an almost inevitable sequence of events in a global conspiracy and thereby prevent the disappearance of an important continent.

Vicar

Oh. So that's why you were in the pub, then.

Peter

Umm... yes... yeah.

Vicar

That was stupid. Totally the wrong way to go about things, trust me. You haven't told anyone else you're here, have you?

Peter

No.

Vicar

Good. If you want to see that dog again, you'll have to work very differently. I hope we weren't followed. Christ! it's a godforsaken place here. I hate this life.

Peter

Godforsaken?

Vicar

Your present company excepted, of course. But apart from me, yes. It's a real shithole, to be blunt. I need the money. They hate me as much as I hate them - they like their priest to be inbred and local.

Peter

Is your congregation small, then?

Vicar

I wish! It's enormous. That's the problem. They heckle me.

Peter

Don't they like your sermons?

Vicar

They frequently heckle The Lord's Prayer.

Peter

Oh. Right. I sympathise.

The vicar breaks down crying a bit.

Vicar

You think you do, but you don't know what I'm going through. It's terrible. I'm from Croydon. I hadn't seen a southerner in 15 years. You can't understand what it's like. I have these nightmares... you don't know how glad I am to talk to someone. This vicarage is a prison.

Peter

God!

Vicar

I know, I know. I look tough; resilient. But I'm not. I'm a quivering wreck, Peter. A wreck!

embarassed...

Peter

Sssh. Sssh. OK. Nolite te bastardes carborundorum,eh?

Bringing out an old board-game box from beside him, and blowing thick dust from its top, he says tentatively...

Vicar

W... would you like a game of scrabble?

Peter

Umm. Yes, I suppose so...

Joyously...

Vicar

Hold me, Peter!

Peter

No!

quickly

Vicar

sorry.

They both look uncomfortable and embarrassed. They sit there in silence. The vicar sniffles a bit. The camera pans away from them, and a farmer (Giles Gilbert) is hiding outside the window with a stethoscope to it, listening. next to a small burning cross. He crawls away through a shrubbery, and runs down the road. Everyone who was in the pub is standing outside it watching. He runs past - the pub clientele are possessed, all turning and moving together. Aaaah! Cut to the farmer, who runs up to his farm, out of breath, lights a match which easily ignites a beacon: petrol or whatever on it, behind the farmhouse. We see a long line of beacons appear, stretching over the horizon.


Scene 26

Mr. X sits in his bath again, in a room. He is talking on a phone. The window on the left hand side of the room is broken. Watson is outside on the right.

Mr. X

What? What? Bollocks! There's no way that would work! Because I fucking say so! Fuck off!

Throws non-mobile phone handset through right hand side window. Base unit left dangling in the air - he kicks it hard, viciously.

Mr. X

Watson! Watson!

Watson

Yes sir?

Mr. X

Where the fuck are you!

Watson

Just getting the phone, sir.

Mr. X

It's here, idiot!

Watson

The other one, sir.

Mr. X

Come here!

Watson enters from the other door, please.

Watson

We've been contacted again, sir.

Mr. X

What? Oh, fucking hell. WILL you tell those Martians that it's NOT GOING TO FUCKING HIT THEM!

Watson

No... erm... you know.... erm...

Mr. X

I'd like to see those jaundiced tossers take the fucking responsibility for a major radio serial. Have you got those accounts?

Watson

Yes, sir, of course, sir.

Gives him it.

Mr. X

About fucking time, too.

Snatching it, eyes it, suspiciously.

Mr. X

Ah, good; I see we've made a sa-... WHAT THE FUCK IS THIS?

Reading...

Mr. X

Set design ... [sterling]23,350.11. Set design? SET DESIGN? FOR THE RADIO? WHAT THE FUCK DO WE PAY FOR FUCKING SET DESIGN? WHAT THE FU... COME HERE! COME HERE NOW! WATSON! HERE!

He has backed off, squirming, shielding himself behind his arms.

Watson

I.. I - sorry, sir. But the cast were so miserable, sir. They really hated the studio, sir, especially when you stopped letting them out. I really am so sorry, sir. You did say how nice the barn was, sir.

Mr. X

YOU DIDN'T TELL ME HOW MUCH THE FUCKING THING COST! Oh well. I suppose it'll just have to come out of your salary again. That's the fourth fucking time this month. You'll have to sell your other kidney. And stop fucking snivelling, you miserable cretin. What was it that you were going to say?

Watson

N... nothing, sir.

Mr. X

SO WHY THE FUCK ARE YOU HERE! GET ON WITH SOMETHING! WHAT THE FUCK DO YOU THINK I PAY YOU FOR?

Very nervously

Watson

Oh... oh... there, there was that one little thing, sir.

Mr. X

What?

Watson

Well, you see, it wasn't the Martians signalling. Not this time. It was, erm... it was...

Mr. X

WHAT WAS IT?

Watson

It was Badger 2, sir.

Mr. X

WHO?

Very nervous

Watson

Giles Gilbert. The... the farmer in Stavenley, sir. There's trouble.

Mr. X

Stavenley? Where the fuck's that?

Nervous

Watson

Where... where the dogs are, sir.

X seems a bit deflated.

Mr. X

Oh, that.


Scene 27

Title:

Wednesday 6 March

Peter in bed. Men's and women's underwear and other clothing lies scattered on the floor - the camera traces this along in stereotypical 'sorry, it's a cop out but it's a family film' film style. Slinky music too. A dog bursts through the door, carrying a pair of Peter's pants. The vicar follows and starts picking up the clothes as quietly as possible: looks very embarrassed. Peter wakes up.

Peter

What's happening?

Vicar

Scamp! Get off the bed! He's been at my wardrobe again.

The dog gets off the bed. He has been lying on a pair of knickers. Peter holds up the knickers. The vicar is extremely embarrassed.

Vicar

Erm... An old girlfriend's. I erm, I, err, never quite got... got round to throwing them out.

Grins sheepishly, picking up last of undergarments and going out...

Vicar

Anyway, breakfast in ten minutes.


Scene 28

Cut to Peter standing in front of the kitchen door. Muffled sound of the lathe. Peter enters, the vicar is sitting at the table, repairing the lathe, reading the newspaper and drinking a glass of orange juice. The lathe occasionally bursts into action forcing them to shout.

Peter

Morning.

Vicar

Morning.

Peter sits down and begins to eat his breakfast. The toast pops up. The Vicar turns the lathe on satisfied, there's a bang and a flash, and the power cuts. The vicar gets up and flicks it on again and continues repairing.

Peter butters his toast.

Vicar

Sorry about last ni... umm. ah. Sorry.

Peter mumbles 'quite alright' or something.

Vicar

Ahem. Could you pass the Flora?

Peter passes the Flora. The vicar butters his toast, while he is lathing.

Vicar

So, what do you intend to do?

Peter

Well, to tell you the truth, I don't know. I thought I might drive round the villages, see if anyone knows anything. You've been very helpful, but...

Vicar looks a little concerned.

Peter

What?

Vicar

I'm afraid they'll be on your trail by now. It'll just give away where you are, if they don't know already. No, I know who I can talk to. A retired farmer. He's very isolated, and I don't think they'll have got to him. I do hope not.

Peter

Who's they?

Vicar

Them.

Telephone rings. They look at each other a bit worried. The Vicar answers.

Vicar

Yes?

Sinister voice

Don't look for the dog! Don't look for the dog! Leave the dogs alone!

The phone goes dead

Vicar

Hello? Hello?

He's frantically pressing the thingy you put the receiver on on old phones, like you do. You know. Peter looks at him strangely, and the vicar looks sheepishly back, slowing down the whole pressing thing, looking down at the phone.

Vicar

Mmm. Yeah... I never really knew why you're meant to do that, you know... I'm afraid it looks like they're onto you: they do catch onto strangers very quickly here. It's a bit uncanny. But I thought they might.

Peter

Eh?

Vicar

If you're looking for conspiracy, you've come to the right place in Yorkshire. It's full of it: but on the up-side, someone's bound to know something about your dog in this part of the world, even if they won't tell us. It's just a generally suspicious county. Anyway, this man: I've talked to him before. I think he's isolated from most of the people round here: well, most of the people round here are, but he's even more so. And he might well know something useful, or one of his friends: anything you want to know about your dog. They hear things.

Peter

So when can I see him?

Vicar

You? I don't think you should. It's too dangerous. I couldn't live with myself if you got hurt.

Peter

Oh, I'll be alright.

Vicar

Erm... no... I really don't think you should. I'm afraid I'll have to ask you for some money, too. I have to cover my expenses, you see.

Peter

How much?

Vicar

A hundred, hundred and fifty should do it. I'll have to check that, though.

He gets out a copy of 'The Sheep Farmer', (which has sheep prices in, OK) and leafs through it.

Peter

What for?

Vicar

You'll see. You can come, I suppose, as long as you stay in the car. We'll go after Matins. Have you the money with you? It'll be a hundred and fifty three for starters: and that again at least for each man