Showing posts with label crazyloon99. Show all posts
Showing posts with label crazyloon99. Show all posts

Thursday, March 27, 2014

Insert Ridiculously Complex Family Tree Here

"It is a truth universally acknowledged that a single man in possession of a good fortune must be in want of a wife."

"Either that, or a good shagging!" Alice interjected.

Louise turned to her friend. "Alice! You are ruining good literature!"

"Meh!"

Robert was sat in the corner of the Wardrobe, which Louise had commandeered for the time being. He knew nothing about the fandom that Louise was talking excitedly about and was therefore rather confused. She had tried to convince the Society's leaders to allow her to take Robert as her required chaperone, but Michael had put his foot down, and given her the ultimatum. Either Alice went with them, or Robert stayed in the Library. Alice, Louise knew, had no liking for this style of fandom, and would thus be at best an irritant, and at worst a danger to the mission. Now the three of them were waiting in the wardrobe for the chaperone Louise would be taking.

"What's this I hear about shagging?" came an American-accented voice. Tom stuck his head around the door.

Louise smiled as Tom walked into the room. "Thanks for agreeing to this, Tom."

"No problem."

Louise smiled.

"Let's get you two idiots into costumes then!" Alice called, breaking the silence that had descended, and she, Louise and Tom all broke into laughter. Robert lingered at the back of the room. He had only been in the Wardrobe twice before, and had only used the Automatic Tailorisation Machine under Alice's control, and was therefore a little unsure as to its ability and function.

"Which fandom are you going into?" Robert asked curiously.

"Pride and Prejudice," Louise explained, her voice muffled through the cubicle door, as Alice pushed the button and the machine started to sew her dress around her. "You know, Ali, I'm going to need more than one dress, potentially."

"Then wait till that one is done, come out, strip and go back in." Alice's answer was very direct. Robert and Tom both thought they heard Louise sigh from within the whirring of the machine, but Alice, whether she heard it or not, took no notice.

Louise stepped out of the machine, and Alice cracked up. "Louise..." she laughed. "You look like you are in a nightie!"

"Alice, you know full well this is not a nightdress," Louise reproached her friend. The Regency era dress for women was a long, Empire-line dress in plain or fine print cotton. The waistline being under the bust was much more seen in their contemporary nightwear; Alice found it ridiculous, and therefore funny, but as Louise was a great fan of the era and its literature she found her housemate's mirth annoying.

Alice merely laughed. Robert smiled at the pair, and Tom peered around the screen.

"Is it my turn yet?" he asked.

Alice laughed some more, and gestured for Tom to get into the machine. By the time the Automatic Tailorisation Machine had finished with him, Tom looked every part the Regency gentleman, from the immaculately tailored suit, to the crisp white linen of his shirt.

"So," Louise turned to her friends. "Do we look like brother and sister?"

Robert simply nodded, and Alice snickered. Louise glared at her best friend.

"Yes..." Alice giggled. "You look enough like brother and sister to pull it off."

"Well..." Louise wandered, still in costume, into the depths of the wardrobe. "We need to find more outfits. We don't know how long we're going to be there."

Alice sighed, and the three remaining people followed Louise into the cavernous depths of the Wardrobe.

"Mir... Louise?" Robert asked as he caught up. "What is this fandom?"

Louise smiled, but it didn't quite reach her eyes. Robert was still having issues with her name. "Pride and Prejudice is a story from the early 1800s in my world, it is set in a pre-industrial world when life had a much slower pace." Louise was almost wistful.

"Basically..." Alice cut in, "...it's a love story with lots of inter-related characters."

Louise nodded in agreement.

"And all the main characters end up related to each other in some way," Tom explained, trying on another navy tailcoat.

"And I thought my family was complex..." Louise snickered.

OOO

The plothole opened onto a dark dirt track at the edge of a small town. Tom and Louise stepped through, careful to keep their clothing out of the mud. Lights were coming from a large building in the middle of the main square, and the sound of horses was caught on the wind.

"Do you know what you're doing?" Tom asked.

"Not really. I'm guessing it's a Sue rather than a Stu, given the nature of the fandom, but other than that, I have no idea how this is going to play out."

The pair of them stuck their heads around the corner of the alleyway, and were almost knocked over by a coach, expertly pulled by four horses.

"Oh my..." Louise gasped. "That's... that's..."

"That's who, Louise?"

"That's the Bennett sisters... the main characters. The others will be not long behind."

"You're just being a fangirl, aren't you?"

"I am not!" Louise giggled quietly. "We need to get into that ball before the Sue irrevocably damages this fandom."

"How exactly are we getting in?"

"We are acting as upper-class snobs, aren't we? We just walk in." Louise gestured towards the well-lit building in the middle of the town.

"Okay, here goes." Tom wasn't entirely convinced this was going to work, but as Louise had so kindly pointed out to him back in the Library, this was her history, not his. She knew more about it than him.

The pair of them emerged from the alleyway, and headed for the glow of the assembly room. The men on the door didn't even bat an eyelid as the two of them as they walked up the stairs and into the building. They were now barely a few feet from the youngest of the Bennett sisters.

"You know, that was easy," Tom commented.

As Tom spoke, Lydia, the youngest Miss Bennett turned to stare at him.

"Lydia!" the eldest Bennett sister, Jane, turned to chastise the youngest. "Please forgive me sister, sir."

"Oh, it's nothing, miss." Tom smiled at Jane, who returned the gesture.

This caught the attention of a number of other people, but as the two parties entered the building, Lydia and her older sister, Kitty, spotted people and disappeared. Louise and Tom found themselves a quiet corner; the female agent was silently chastising herself.

"What's wrong?" Tom asked.

"I forgot that people wouldn't have heard an American accent before. We need to think of a cover story and quickly."

The Meryton Assembly rooms were spacious, and Tom and Louise were able to mingle without much problem. Louise smiled as she watched the youngest two Bennett sisters dancing their hearts out, although she was acutely aware of the middle daughter, Mary, always sitting at the edge of the room.

Tom wandered off, and returned not long later with a couple of glasses for him and Louise.

"Thanks Tom, but I don't really drink..."

"Neither do I. It was more out of courtesy that I grabbed them. I was basically handed them."

Louise shrugged. "Okay."

The dance in the middle of the room was in full swing. It was a jig, and there were people moving everywhere. Louise had lost the elder Bennett sisters in the chaos, but knew the fandom well enough to know what was about to happen. She got to her feet as the main doors opened. The jig came to an abrupt halt as the dancers noticed the new arrivals.

Standing in the open doorway, leading to the entrance hall, were two gentlemen and a lady. All of them were dressed finer than anyone else in the room. Louise peered at the new party, before quickly sitting back down.

"That's..." Louise half-mouthed to Tom, who was staring incredulously at her. "That's..."

Louise didn't need to answer, as a voice not far away spoke. "So which of our painted peacocks is Mr Bingley?"

Louise's head whipped round to see three young ladies in whispered conversation.

"He's on the right, and on the left is his sister."

"And the person with the quizzical brow?"

"That is his good friend, Mr Darcy."

"He looks miserable, the poor soul."

"Miserable he may be, but poor he mostly certainly is not."

"Tell me?"

"Ten thousand a year, and he owns half of Derbyshire."

"The miserable half?"

Louise suppressed a giggle as she realised the people speaking were the canon characters of Jane and Elizabeth Bennett and Charlotte Lucas. As the party of three reached the other side of the room, Louise turned to Tom.

"We have some Copyrighting to do."

"Good thing I grabbed a load of them, then."

Over the course of the evening, as the majority of the Bennett sisters swirled and bobbed around the dance-floor, Louise and Tom delicately placed Copyrights on the lot of them. They were even able to Copyright Mary, sitting at the edge of the room.

"You know," Louise commented to Tom as they walked away from her. "Poor Mary is so out of her time. If she had been born a couple of centuries earlier, she would have found her calling in the nearest nunnery."

"Anyone else?" Tom asked, holding up the last of his Copyrights.

"Mr Bingley and Mr Darcy," Louise answered without hesitation. "But how on earth are we going to get to see them?"

"There you are..." came a call from behind Tom.

"Uh-oh..." Louise murmured, for she knew that voice. "Here comes trouble."

The pair turned and there was Lydia Bennett, the youngest of the five daughters – now Copyrighted, but hyper as ever. She was shadowed by the second-eldest Bennett daughter, Elizabeth.

"Miss Bennett..." Tom greeted with a bow.

"My sister and I..."

"Oh no, Lydia..." Elizabeth backed quickly away. "Don't count me."

"...were wondering," Lydia continued as though Lizzie had not spoken. "Where are you from?"

"Lydia!"

"There's no offense taken," Tom waved off Lizzie's rebuff. "I am recently returned from..." Tom struggled for the correct chronological term. The state where he lived didn't technically exist as an entity in 1813...

"From the Americas," Louise interjected.

"Yes..." Tom picked up the thread again. "I was involved in the recent war over there." It was vague enough to cover all the possibilities.

This seems to please Lydia, who disappeared off to dance again. Lizzie lingered in the shadows. Tom bowed to her, and Louise did her best attempt at a curtsey. Lizzie echoed it.

"I am so pleased to meet you, Miss Bennett." Louise stepped towards Lizzie. "My name is Louise Ashworth."

"I am pleased to make your acquaintance."

"May I introduce my brother..." for this was the cover story that they had devised, "... Thomas Ashworth of Chester."

Tom bowed to Elizabeth, as the latter curtseyed.

"Are you in the area long, Mr Ashworth?" Lizzie asked.

"Not long, I am sad to say." Tom was looking around the room, and suddenly he spotted the object of his search. He turned back to Lizzie, looping his arm around his 'sister', he said, "Pray... excuse me." Lizzie and Louise curtseyed and Tom bowed.

As Lizzie left, Tom pulled Louise into a corner of the room.

"What is it?" she demanded.

"Look over there, chatting to Mr Bingley?"

Louise looked around, and there, chatting to said canon character, was the most beautifully dressed lady in the room. It was a surprise that none of the other men in the room were clamouring for her attention. Dressed in the richest pink silk dress, her pale gold hair in immaculate curls that hung perfectly down her back, was a very non-canon character.

"That's her," Louise declared. "That's the Sue."

"Did you manage to Copyright him?" Tom asked.

"I didn't get the..." Louise watched as another character stood gawping at the Sue, "...chance. We need to Copyright Darcy, now!"

"What?"

"Look..." Louise pointed at the protagonist who was standing staring at his friend in conversation with the Sue.

"Oh."

"Give me a Copyright!" Louise demanded, and Tom blinked at her brashness. He didn't question it, and handed her one of his remaining Copyrights, and Louise disappeared into the crowd.

Tom watched the canon characters of Bingley and Darcy, and after several minutes, he saw Louise appear not far behind Mr Darcy. The gentleman was standing at the edge of the room, his eyes fixed on his friend and his new acquaintance. She appeared to trip, and fell into Darcy. Tom smiled as he noticed that the Copyright was now firmly planted on the Derbyshire gentleman's back. Darcy blinked, and resumed his patrol around the room.

She reappeared at his side not long after.

"I wasn't able to get near Bingley," she whispered.

Tom exhaled in a giant gust.

"I'm sorry... the Sue's just too close."

"That's okay..." Tom murmured, as the younger two Bennett daughters skipped past, looking for partners. "We've got the main canon pairing, right?"

Louise nodded.

"Hopefully, that should be enough."

The evening continued for a little longer, but soon people started to make their farewells. Tom and Louise made their way towards the main door, only to find the Bennett family bidding farewell to the Lucas' in the doorway.

"Mama," Elizabeth Bennett drew her mother's attention as the Lucas' disappeared towards their carriage. "May I present some new acquaintances to you?"

Louise whipped her head around, realising that Elizabeth was referring to them.

"Tom, come on," she gestured her fellow agent towards the Bennett family.

"What?"

"You need to be here!"

Louise and Tom soon stood before the matriarch of the Bennett household, Mrs Bennett.

"May I present Mr Ashworth of Chester?"

Tom bowed slightly at this.

"And his sister," it was all Louise could do to suppress a snigger. "Miss Louise Ashworth."

Louise curtseyed, and Mrs Bennett followed suit, although her eyes continued to dart about the room. Louise knew who she was looking for, and the agent suspected where the object of her search would be.

"Good night Mrs Bennett..." Louise curtseyed again, and she and Tom slipped unhindered from the ballroom.

Once they were in the street, Tom turned to Louise.

"Now what?"

"We find a room at the inn… if they have any spare."

Tom sighed. "I'm sure they will, Louise." He then offered her his arm. "Allonsy, my dear!"

Louise merely sighed in exasperation at her fellow agent, but they made her way into the darkness towards the lights of the nearby inn together.

OOO

Longbourn House was situated three miles from the outskirts of Meryton, and so it was a long walk for Louise to visit the Bennett sisters the following morning. Having made their acquaintance during the ball the previous evening, she was determined to visit them, and befriend the elder Bennett sisters. The events of the ball had left a sour taste in her mouth, and wanted to check in on Jane and Elizabeth. She had left Tom asleep at the inn.

The walk would not normally have bothered Louise, but with the long dress, and uncomfortable shoes, it was tiresome. She had left before the sun had fully risen, but by the time she had arrived at Longbourn the sun was comfortably above the horizon.

A servant greeted her at the main door, informing her that Mr and Mrs Bennett had not yet risen, but the eldest two daughters could be found in the drawing room.

"Would you be so kind as to take me to them, then?" Louise asked.

The servant led her into the house, and opened the door to the drawing room.

"Miss Louise Ashworth," and the servant slid back out of the room without another word.

"Louise!" Elizabeth greeted her warmly, getting to her feet. The two women had clearly been in each other's confidence, for the window seat was well padded, and Jane, the eldest Bennett daughter, still sat there.

Good morning Elizabeth," Louise greeted. "Good morning Jane."

As the agent's eyes fell on the elder sister, she drew in a small breath. Her eyes were red and blotchy. She had clearly been crying.

"Dear God, what is wrong?" Louise asked.

Elizabeth took Louise by the arm and led her away from the still distraught Jane. "Mr Bingley has gotten engaged."

"To whom?" Louise looked incredulous.

"Lady Aaliyah Nejem," Elizabeth explained, and the alarm bells started ringing in Louise's head. It was the Sue. She hadn't gone for Darcy after all. She had gone for the easier canon pairing; the one that already had doubt mingled within it. "Apparently, she is new to the neighbourhood."

"But this isn't supposed to happen…" Louise murmured to herself.

"What's not supposed to happen?" Elizabeth asked, turning to face her new friend.

Louise sighed. She guessed she was about to have to blow her cover to save the fandom.

"I have to be honest with you, Elizabeth…" Louise started, "and it's best that Jane hears this too."

The agent walked back over to where Jane still sat on the window seat. She sat down beside Jane, and Elizabeth drew a drawing room chair up to join them.

"My name is Louise, but I am not the sister of Thomas."

The Bennett sisters stared incredulously at her. It was clear that, to them, the thought of a young woman in the company of a man to whom she was not either related or married was unimaginable.

"I work for an organisation that hunts down people who enter stories, and change them to suit their desires. Aaliyah is one of these people. Your story shouldn't be like this. Bingley should be falling in love with you, Jane…"

The eldest Bennett sister buried her head in her hands.

"When Tom and I have captured her, and left, Mr Bingley will forget that he ever knew Lady Aaliyah, and things we will as they were supposed to be."

"Do you really believe that?" Jane looked up from her hands, her eyes red from the tears she had shed.

"Jane, for the first half of the ball yesterday, Bingley either danced with you, or stared at you. It is obvious he likes you. Aaliyah has just made him forget all that. But if you can help Tom and I catch her, then we can ensure that your lives continue as they were supposed to."

Elizabeth looked from Louise to her sister, and back again.

The silence of thought was broken by a knock on the door, and Hill, the Bennett's servant, entered, envelope in hand. As Mr and Mrs Bennett were still abed, Jane, as the eldest daughter, was in charge of the household.

Jane took the proffered envelope, and looked at the front. She sighed, handing the letter to her sister to read. It turned out that the letter was an invitation to a ball at Netherfield, home of Mr Bingley, to celebrate his engagement to Lady Aaliyah.

"This is perfect!" Louise exclaimed, and the two sisters looked round at her. "Don't you see…" the agent was gesturing wildly with her hands. "This will be the perfect opportunity for Tom and I to catch Lady Aaliyah, because she will be required to mingle with guests."

"What…" Elizabeth was confused, that much was obvious in her expression. "How…?"

Louise sighed. She hoped she was going to be able to convince the sisters into helping her catch the Sue.

"You know how there are characters in plays and books?"

Elizabeth nodded.

"Aaliyah is a perfect character. She doesn't belong here, and it's up to Tom and I to get rid of her."

"Get rid of her?" Jane looked up, concerned.

"Oh, we won't hurt her at all." Louise wished she had picked up a Prohibitor from her room at the inn, but the dress left little space for pockets. It was all she could do to strap her Glock to her thigh.

"Then how?" Elizabeth asked.

"Trust that Tom and I are experienced in catching people like Lady Aaliyah." Louise didn't add that she had never actually caught a Sue on her own, in all her missions for the Society.

Elizabeth turned to Jane. The smartest Bennett sister clearly didn't believe much of what Louise was saying, but she gave her the benefit of the doubt because it was a chance to raise her sister's hopes. "I don't see how we have any option other than to trust her." The eldest Bennett sister nodded weakly.

Louise smiled. "I guess I'd better go find Tom."

"We will accompany you." Elizabeth and Jane both got to their feet, and the three ladies were soon in their overcoats and heading for Meryton. Louise had had the presence of mind to sort out a selection of outfits when she had been with Alice in the wardrobe. A quick trip into the Library the previous evening, following the ball, had allowed her to pick up her daytime dress, and a specially tailored evening dress that would allow her easy access to her gun.

OOO

Tom had been up for several hours by the time that Louise and the Bennetts arrived in Meryton. He had had the presence of mind to remain close to the town, in case Louise were to return. So it was outside the neighbouring shops that the ladies found him. Louise introduced Jane to Tom, explaining to the latter that the Bennett sisters knew who they really were, and were willing to help them catch the Sue.

"We have received an invitation to a ball at Netherfield, Louise," Tom explained.

"I know. It seems the entire population of eligible ladies and gentlemen in Meryton and the surrounding towns have been invited." Louise looked pointedly at the Bennett sisters.

"Are we going?" Tom asked.

"Of course we are going. It will be the perfect time to capture Aaliyah."

The Bennetts were looking from one agent to the other with confusion on their faces, but as Louise had explained that this action would bring Bingley back in love with Jane, both girls had eventually agreed, not seeing any other option.

"We need a plan!" Tom pointed out, "and somewhere to discuss said plan without attracting too much attention."

"There are plenty of fields around Meryton and Netherfield that provide quiet seclusion," Elizabeth chimed in.

"Or," Louise looked up at the grey clouds that were massing over Meryton, "we could always go back to the inn. Tom and I have rooms booked until we no longer need them."

"The inn sounds a perfect location," Tom agreed. It was clear that he didn't particularly want to be caught outside in the rain. Louise nodded; historically, it would have been unheard of for three unmarried woman to have unchaperoned time with a man.

The two agents, along with Jane and Elizabeth, were soon settled into the rooms in the inn. Louise had used the Society's budget to rent a pair of bedrooms and an adjoining drawing room. Tom hadn't asked how much she had blown on it. It couldn't be to the level that Harriet frequently blew the budget... could it?

"How will you know which lady is the correct lady?" Jane asked sensibly.

"I…" Louise stopped, and started again. "She was pretty distinctive last evening. I doubt she will be difficult to find."

"And when we do find her," Tom joined in, "we can take her in, and all will be back to normal."

It was clear that Jane and Elizabeth didn't completely get what the two agents were discussing. Phrases such as Prohibitors, and Copyrights were being used, and neither Miss Bennett knew anything about such things.

"With any luck," Louise spoke to all of them, "we will get this whole thing sorted by the end of the evening, and we'll," she looked at Tom, "we'll be back in our own beds in the Library tonight."

"Harriet will be happy about that. I don't want to know how much of the budget you have spent on booking this inn."

"Oh, screw Harriet," Louise said without thinking, and Elizabeth and Jane looked at her in shock. "Sorry…" she apologised, blushing slightly.

Louise ordered lunch from the inn downstairs, and the four of them ate while they planned. By the time they had finished, it had reached 3 o'clock in the afternoon, the clouds had cleared and the autumn sun was heading towards the horizon.

"I hope we will see you at the ball…" Louise bid farewell to the Bennett sisters as they left the inn. Jane and Elizabeth would walk back to Longbourn to dress for the ball, and then join their parents and younger sisters in the carriage to Netherfield.

"I hope so too," Elizabeth agreed. All three ladies curtseyed and Tom bowed, and the Bennett sisters disappeared into the gathering darkness.

"What do we do now?" Tom asked, as he watched the vanishing figures of Jane and Lizzie.

"We get ready, and order ourselves a carriage to Netherfield. It's all right walking to Longbourn, but Netherfield is a little too far, especially in my long dress." Louise headed downstairs, leaving Tom in the drawing room.

"Carriage booked," Louise announced as she returned several minutes later. "It's almost easier than booking a taxi."

"That's in essence what you have done, Lou," Tom smiled. "The carriage is the predecessor of the cab."

Louise laughed, almost to the point of stopping breathing, before Tom led her to the sofa.

"Breathe, Louise," he said between his own giggles, and slowly the agent got control back.

"What time are we supposed to be at Netherfield?" Louise asked, leaning back against the wooden back of the sofa.

"Six o'clock," Tom explained.

"Then I suggest we start getting ready. I need to get into my tailor-made dress. I don't want to be caught unarmed when we try and bring in the Sue. She looks all innocence, but we have no idea what level she is."

And with that, Louise and Tom went their separate ways into their respective bedrooms to dress and prepare themselves in their own ways for the challenge of capturing a Sue.

OOO

Netherfield House was everything that Louise had explained to Tom on their mission briefing back in the Library. The carriage dropped them off at the front of the building, where sweeping steps rose to an ornately fashioned main door. A pair of footmen stood holding them open.

Louise smiled at all the elegantly dressed ladies, and handsome men, who were surrounding her and Tom as they walked up the stairs and into Netherfield House.

There were even more people inside, and Louise fought back a wave of claustrophobia that threatened to engulf her. She grasped hold of Tom's arm reflexively.

"What's wrong?" he asked.

"Sorry," she whispered, "I'm claustrophobic, and there's a lot of people in here."

The new arrivals were herded into a line, where they were all greeted by Mr Bingley, his new fiancée and Miss Caroline Bingley, the younger sister of the gentleman.

"Mr Bingley," Tom greeted, bowing to the canon character. "Lady Nejem…" their eyes met, and the Sue looked panicked. "Miss Bingley." Tom bowed at each person as he spoke their names. Louise followed, her eyes too meeting those of the Sue.

As they walked into one of the halls of Netherfield House, small groups were already congregating. Louise was looking for the Bennetts, in particular the eldest two. Standing at one side of the room, Mr Darcy watched the crowd with his usual sombre expression. He, at least, Louise thought to herself, would be acting normally.

Once they were out of ear shot of the Bingleys, Louise turned to Tom.

"Did you see how she reacted when she saw us?" she asked.

"I know…" Tom nodded in agreement. "I'm a little concerned that she will create a scene when we eventually attempt to make our move."

"I agree."

The pair moved through the room, looking for Jane and Elizabeth, when a complete male stranger approached them.

"If you are not otherwise engaged," the stranger addressed Louise, and then looking up at Tom for clarification. "Could I be so bold as to claim the first dance?"

He was dressed in a long tailcoat of deep navy, with dark trousers and an off-white shirt.

"Um…" Louise blushed. She had no skill in dancing, only what watching Pride and Prejudice on TV had taught her, and that wasn't much. She looked up at Tom, who was clearly nervous, but also fighting back a smile. "I am not engaged, sir."

As the music started, the brown-haired man smiled, and led Louise onto the main floor. Other partners joined them, including Bingley and Aaliyah, as well as the younger two Bennett sisters.

Louise danced, led superbly by her anonymous dance-partner. His hands were smooth, and he had the air of one born into money.

Tom, however, didn't dance, but lingered at the edge of the room, concern on his face as he watched his fellow agent on the dancefloor.

"Excuse me," a voice drew Tom's attention from his fellow agent on the dance floor. Turning, he saw the eldest two Bennett daughters, both dressed beautifully in flowing gowns of white muslin.

"Miss Bennett!" Tom greeted with a bow.

"Any luck?" Elizabeth's eyes were drawn to figures gliding up and down the Netherfield dance floor.

"Louise is dancing, as you see. We have had no chance to approach the couple yet. Not since our arrival and greeting."

"Do you think she suspects?" Jane queried.

"Yes," Tom answered abruptly. "They know when a member of our Society is stood before them, just as we know when we are faced with someone of her level."

Elizabeth nodded, although Tom could see in her face that she didn't quite understand what he was saying.

Tom and the Bennett sisters continued their conversation as the dance came to an end. The stranger led Louise to the side of the room.

"You are a surprisingly good dancer, Miss Louise," the stranger spoke to her. Tom, Jane and Elizabeth watched from the other side of the room.

"You are an excellent dancer yourself, sir." Louise watched her dance-partner. "May I have the pleasure of your name?" Louise was making small-talk, not wanting to offend the gentleman.

The stranger smiled. "My name is Mr Spencer Worthington of Cambridge." He gave a small bow. Louise curtseyed in return.

"It is a pleasure to make your acquaintance, sir."

"It's a very great pleasure to make yours…" he grinned at her, starting to make Louise feel a little uncomfortable. Mr Worthington took hold of Louise's hand, leading her to the corner of the room. Tom started towards them, something in his gut telling him that this was not normal. "I cannot tell you how beautiful you are," Worthington caught up both of Louise's hands, and held them to his chest.

Louise was stunned for a second, taken aback by this unusual declaration of love. "Um… thank you."

"I have never met anyone whose eyes sparkle the way yours do…"

Oh my God, Louise thought to herself, I think I'm going to be sick.

Worthington began to lead Louise into the darkness, and to start with the agent followed, getting caught up in the moment and the emotion. As the pair disappeared around the corner, Tom picked up his pace, the Bennett sisters following in his wake.

Around the corner, Worthington continued to profess his love for Louise, and the agent was getting more and more disturbed and distrustful by the second.

"Your hair…" Worthington reached forward to touch her hair, and Louise snapped, drawing her Glock from beneath her tailor-made dress.

"You lay one hand on me pal, and you'll regret it!" She pointed the gun in the man's direction, grateful that she hadn't listened to Alice's advice about not needing it. "Nothing happens in those kind of fandoms,"Alice had insisted.

Well, something has happened… Louise thought bitterly to herself.

"Aww, my love…" Worthington seemed untroubled by the weapon now pointed in his face. He reached up, placing his hands on her gun hand in an attempt to lower it. Louise whipped it around and pushed the muzzle into the man's nostril.

Worthington froze, finally seeing the danger he was in.

"Louise!" Tom called, and the agent turned around. Worthington took the opportunity to run headlong down the dark corridor, and out of sight.

"Bugger!" Louise cursed.

"What was that all about?" Tom asked.

"I don't know…" Louise gasped, pulling her dress back into place in an attempt to hide her gun.

A small beep drew the agents' attention to their communicator that was discreetly hidden in Tom's trouser pocket. Jane and Elizabeth looked confused.

"Can you please make sure that Mr Bingley and Aaliyah don't disappear from the ball?" Louise asked Elizabeth, who nodded.

The two agents disappeared into a dark corridor, and Tom activated his communicator.

"Tom here."

The voice on the other end was young Inara.

"The computers here have picked up a plothole leaving your fandom. Have you lost the Sue?"

"No…" Louise murmured… and then the lightbulb in her head illuminated. "Worthington… he must be a Stu."

"WHAT!" Inara's voice echoed in the corridor.

"Shhh…" Louise hissed into the communicator.

"Sorry…" Inara whispered. "So are you still going to try for the Sue?"

"Of course!" Louise was a little harsh with the poor duty agent.

"Well... good luck then."

The connection ended.

"Louise…" Tom turned to his fellow agent. "Are you okay?"

"I'm fine. Let's just get Aaliyah, and get out the hell of here."

No-one noticed the pair re-emerge from the corridor. Jane and Elizabeth were standing, chatting to each other at the edge of the room. In the centre, Bingley still danced with his fiancée.

"We need to get Bingley Copyrighted," Tom commented to the Bennett sisters as the two agents approached them.

"How? He spends more time with his fiancée than anyone else in the room," Jane asked; her voice was sad as she spoke the words.

"Let me try…" Louise gestured at Tom for a Copyright. "I've got an idea."

The one downside of the beautiful dress she was wearing was the lack of pockets in which to store useful things like Copyrights and Prohibitors. Tom had, in order to assist his friend, stuffed his pockets with all sorts of things. He handed Louise a Copyright.

Louise walked around the edge of the room, watching the 'happy couple' in the middle. She took a seat close to where the pair were dancing, and waited. Before long, Louise's patience paid off, and Bingley led his fiancée towards her. Aaliyah, convinced that she had eluded the Society, paid no attention to Louise on the chairs behind her future-husband.

"You dance wonderfully," Bingley was beaming at Aaliyah.

Slowly, Louise got quietly to her feet. What she was planning would take all her deception and skill, and more than a little bit of luck. When she was almost to her feet, she purposely let her feet slip from beneath her. This brought her clattering into Bingley.

"Oh, I am so sorry, sir…" Louise apologised profusely. Before Aaliyah could stop him, Bingley reached down to help the clumsy young lady to her feet. Louise was ready, and as their hands made contact, she slapped the Copyright on the back of his hand.

Bingley blinked as the Copyright began to take effect. He turned to Aaliyah, who was staring at Louise. The thought flashed through the agent's mind – 'if looks could kill' – but Bingley was now staring at his partner and soon-to-be ex-fiancée.

"You have tricked me..." he said loudly, causing many in the vicinity to turn and stare.

"My dear…" Aaliyah was clearly desperate.

"Speak not to me, woman!" Bingley was now furious. "Were you after my fortune?"

"No..."

Louise slipped away from the scene, and back to Tom. Word was soon spreading around the room that the engagement between Mr Bingley and Lady Aaliyah had been called off, because Bingley had discovered that Aaliyah was unfaithful, and was only after his money.

Less than ten minutes later, Louise tapped Tom on the shoulder. "Look…" she pointed across the room, where Jane and Bingley were deep in conversation.

"So where's the Sue gone?" Tom asked.

"I don't know… and I'm a little bothered by that fact."

Louise and Tom began to make circles around the room, looking for the now ex-fiancée of Bingley. The sooner they got rid of her from the fandom, the better.

It was in front of the small group of musicians that Louise spotted Aaliyah again. She was sitting down at the edge of the room, trying not to be noticed by anyone, let alone the paroling agents from the Anti-Cliché and Mary-Sue Elimination Society.

"There you are…" Louise approached her, and the Sue took off out of the hall, with the female agent in hot pursuit. Louise chased Aaliyah into the grounds of Netherfield House. In the dark, it was getting impossible to see anything, let alone the quarry she was chasing.

OOO

Back in the main hall of Netherfield House, Tom was still circling.

"Mr Ashworth…" Elizabeth Bennett approached.

"Miss Bennett." Tom bowed, and Elizabeth curtseyed.

"Your friend has disappeared into Netherfield Grounds, following Lady Aaliyah."

"What!" Tom gasped. The last thing he wanted or needed at the moment was a missing agent.

"Yes… this way." Elizabeth beckoned, and Tom followed.

Tom soon outpaced Elizabeth in her muslin dress, leaving the canon character to rejoin the ball and headed out into the grounds in search of Louise and the missing Sue.

OOO

Out in the grounds, Louise had managed to get herself completely lost. She had walked straight into a brick wall at one point, and found herself in the middle of an apple orchard at another. She had no idea where Aaliyah had vanished off to, and was considered heading back towards the big house and telling Tom she had lost her. But something in Louise couldn't bring herself to do that.

A scream cut the air. A female scream.

Louise whipped out her gun, determined to defend herself if necessary, and headed in the direction of the scream.

Round the back of Netherfield House, Louise discovered Aaliyah, but she wasn't alone. A group of drunken members of the Netherfield House staff were backing the poor woman into a corner. It was evident from the expression on her face what was going through their minds.

"Hey…" Louise ran up to the back of the group. "Leave her alone!"

Whilst Aaliyah would never admit it, she was grateful to see Louise.

"Oh look men…" one of the drunks started towards her. Louise raised her weapon. It was like nothing these 19th Century men had ever seen, given that it wouldn't be invented for another 150 years or so.

"You know, she's a pretty one too…" one of the braver drunks commented, but the majority of his mates had already turned and pegged it into the darkness. Realising he was now out-numbered, the remaining drunk swiftly followed his friends. Louise pursued the drunks a little way into the darkness, but their footsteps was soon disappearing into the night, although she could have sworn she heard one of them run headlong into the nearest tree, and knock himself out cold.

When Louise turned back round, she discovered that Tom had arrived, and was already walking towards the terrified Sue.

"Are you going to come quietly?" he asked.

Aaliyah nodded immediately, the fight and fire she had shown earlier had vanished with the drunks. As Tom approached, she held her hands up in surrender.

"Wow…" Louise murmured. "It's not often we get that." She didn't bother placing her weapon back in its concealed holster.

Tom clipped a Prohibitor around the Sue's wrist as she stood there meekly. Slipping one arm around hers to ensure she didn't try to make a run for it, Tom fished around in his pocket for the plothole generator. When he found it, he raised it to eye-level, and firmly pulled the trigger.

The swirling rainbow of the plothole illuminated the immediate vicinity of the two agents and their captured Sue, and without much hesitation they returned to the Library.

OOO

Back in the Library, the plothole opened in the Monitor Room as per normal. Inara was still on duty, and she turned to see who was returning, for there were a number of agents on missions at the time.

"Louise!" Inara greeted her with a smile. "You caught her…" she gave the Sue a quizzical look.

"Yeah… well, Tom technically caught her."

"Technically…?" she asked, returning her glance to the female agent.

"Louise was chasing off drunks at the time."

"Drunks… hey?"

"Let's just get Aaliyah into the basement," Louise hissed quietly, and Tom pulled the prohibited Sue towards the Monitor Room door.

When they were safely out of sight, Louise turned back to Inara.

"I need to add a Stu to the database."

"The one that got away?" Inara queried.

"Yeah…" Louise shuddered slightly.

"What's wrong?"

"He's…" Louise searched for the words. "He's in love with me."

Inara burst out laughing. When she had finally calmed down, the sour look on Louise's face helping a lot, she opened a new page on the database.

"Okay…" her fingers flew across the keyboard. "Name?"

"Spencer Worthington."

"Level?"

"Unknown."

"Home fandom?"

"Pride and Prejudice, I think."

"Agents at risk?"

"Me, I guess."

Inara looked up from her keyboard. "Is he one of Merle's lot?"

"No… not one that I remember at least."

The younger agent sighed. "Well, that's him on the system. I'll get Phoenixia to scan the fandom to see if we can pick up his level."

"Thanks… although I doubt it's too high."

"Let's hope so…" Inara pondered. "The last thing we want is another Edward Casanova on our hands."

Louise shuddered at the prospect.

OOO

The basement office, door currently locked, was silent save for the soft whirring of the computer, and the occasional sob from the young woman on a chair in the corner.

Aaliyah had indeed come quietly, but now that the harsh truth had finally hit her, she was trembling and weeping. She, like all else, had heard the myriad of horror stories about this place, and now they were going to come true. She was afraid. All she had wanted was a marriage to a fine gentleman, and her perfect life had been shattered before it had even begun as easy as dropping a mirror onto flagstones.

Tom, still in his Regency suit, sat at the desk on the other side of the room, entering her information into the computer database. His chivalrous streak was nagging him, and he wanted to go and comfort her, but what on Earth would he say? 'Are you all right' would be utterly ridiculous to ask. Of course she wasn't all right.

He had made up his mind to get her settled now, instead of doing what most others did and just hurl them into a cell until they remembered their existence or were pestered to do their paperwork. He wanted to do better for her than that.

He finished saving the new entry, and turned to look at her. Her once-fine blue silk dress was torn and stained up to her knees, and her pale blonde hair was falling out of their elaborate braids. She shrank away from him as he stood, but watched him as he went to a tall cupboard and opened it to reveal a grid of pigeonholes, each with different colour tops folded up within; there were six holes of yellow, three of orange, two of green and one of an ominous blue which remained glowing from the dark. Tom drew out a garment from the orange collection, and held it up; it looked far too big for her frame, so he refolded it and took another from the next hole along. He laid it in a big machine and closed the lid for about thirty seconds.

Tom paused, thought, glanced at the scared woman briefly and returned to the cupboard, digging around in a drawer at the bottom. She picked up the orange T-shirt, its warmth plunging deep, but it was shapeless and unwomanly. The machine had printed her name and 'B8' small on the front, on both sleeves, and large and ugly on the back. He then returned, having found a long dark grey skirt that would suit her sensibilities more. Surprised by his thoughtfulness, she returned his gentle smile and slid behind a screen to change.

Tom turned to a whiteboard hung on the wall, drawn with grids representing the basement cells. After going through four pens to find one that worked, he wrote Aaliyah's name in the cell that would be hers. He tutted at the scrawls of untidy handwriting in the rest of the grids, the curse words surrounding a lot of them, and the silly doodles in corners. This board had been out of date more often than not and he wondered if the group putting themselves in charge of the basement welfare would replace this board with something more advanced.

And finally, Tom steered the young woman into the basement proper, feeling her stiffen as her fear returned at sight of the strong barred steel. She nearly gagged from the stench; he slipped his handkerchief into her hand and she held it over her nose until she could breathe again. He brought her to a cell in the central block, a small label above the lock matching the code on her T-shirt, and unlocking it with a key that looked like a large wired Yale key, gave her a gentle push on her back and relocked the door behind her. He smiled wryly and left her.

The moment the basement door closed, the curious voices began; but a second afterwards Aaliyah broke down and slumped into a corner of the floor, weeping into her knees.

But almost immediately, there were comforting hands on her back and arms from those in the cells around her, talking in reassuring tones.

"Aww, don't cry… it's going to be all right."

"Don't sit on the floor, it's cold. Go sit on your bed, go on."

Slowly she did, noticing how almost everyone had a smile for her – with the exception of a couple of grumpy Stus and the two in the far corners wearing blue.

"This is probably a piss-poor welcome to hell, but salutations anyway," said a girl with hair almost as blonde as hers. "Apparently we're neighbours. I'm Deliha."

"A…a-Aaliyah."

"Where are you from?"

"Uhh… Hertfordshire?"

There was some laughter, and the questions began. The denizens down here seemed to be hardy folk from their imprisonment, given to pessimism and sadness but fiercely defensive and protective of (most of) their own.

"What fandom's that?"

"Who've you met? Who've you seen?"

"What the hell was that agent wearing?"

She had many questions of her own, and so she proceeded to introduce herself.

OOO

Louise had touched base with Alice and Robert upon her return. The pair were in one of the many reading rooms in the Library, both their noses deep in books. She hadn't lingered long, merely to inform them that she was back.

When she returned to the Monitor Room, the duty shift had clearly changed, and it was now Tash who sat where previously Inara had been sitting.

"Hey Tash…"

"Hey Lou… I hear you had some Stu problems…"

"Oh… my… God…" Louise sighed. "News really does travel fast in the Library."

"It does where Phoenixia is concerned," Tash smiled up at her.

"Tash…" There must have been something in the way Louise spoke the Society leader's name that caused concern.

"What…?" Tash asked.

"I need to go back into the Pride and Prejudice fandom." The words came out in a rush, as words always did when Louise was stressed or nervous.

"Why?"

"I want to go to the wedding."

"Wedding?"

"Yeah… the wedding between the four main characters."

It was only then that Tash looked at what Louise was wearing. She was dressed in a Regency style outfit, perfect for attending a wedding. Tash sighed.

"Okay…" she finally relented. "Just don't do anything that would screw it up."

"Tash, this is one of my most favourite fandoms. Why would I screw it up?"

"Touché. Are you sure you're not going back to look for Spencer?" Tash teased.

"NATASHA!" Louise shrieked, and half-heartedly attempted to throttle the Assistant Librarian.

Tash merely laughed. It was contagious, and Louise was soon laughing too. She removed her hands from around her friend's neck.

When the pair had calmed down, Louise turned to Tash.

"Tash, in all seriousness, I'm not scared of him. He's not a threat. He's a hopeless romantic, barely registering on the radar." Tash started to speak, but Louise kept going. "Okay, yes, he's a Stu. But he's hardly Edward Casanova now is he?"

"Well..." Tash knew her friend well enough to know that if Spencer had been that kind of a person, she would not have been speaking about him so light-heartedly.

"Is he?" Louise repeated.

"Well no..." Tash started.

"If I run into him, I'll do what I did before, and shove my Glock up his nose..."

Tash winced at the image, and then smiled at the expression on Louise's face. There was a determination set there that she hadn't seen in a long time. Opening the plothole, Tash turned to Louise again.

"Well, it's good to have you back to your old self."

Louise made eye contact with Tash, and for a second, the leader was unsure whether they really had the old Louise back or not. How much damage had the incidents in the basement really caused in her? And would she ever trust Adrian again? She watched Louise stepped carefully through the plothole and into the fandom; a thought playing at the side of her mind – you may be back Louise... but what on Earth did Merle want with your research?

OOO

Snow covered the ground outside the Longbourn church as the congregation waited to be allowed admittance to the church itself. Louise mingled at the back, trying to avoid the major canon characters, for whom this was all completely normal. She watched as a number of the characters she had so recently interacted with arrived.

Before long, the church was opened, and the guests began filing in. Louise picked a seat at the back of the church, away from the eyes of the main characters. She smiled at a job well done as she watched Sir William and Lady Lucas take their seats with their younger daughter Maria. Their eldest was recently married to the Bennett's cousin, Mr Collins. He too soon arrived, with his wife Charlotte. Some of the people who seated themselves around her she didn't recognise – they were minor aristocracy and acquaintances of Bingley, Darcy or the Bennetts. She did her best to make small talk, but people seemed to know another person, and she was swiftly left alone again.

There were a number of key absentees from this double wedding, although Louise, knowing the fandom, already knew where they were. Lydia, the youngest Bennett sister and her husband, George Wickham had not been invited, despite Mrs Bennett's protests and Lady Catherine de Bourgh, Mr Darcy's aunt had snubbed the wedding, and had refused to attend with her daughter Anne.

By the time that all the guests had arrived, Louise was perfectly content sitting on the end of a row, next to the main aisle of the church. Leaning around the edge, she saw Bingley and Darcy, both looking extremely handsome.

They were both dressed in navy jackets with the tails of Bingley's coat moving gently as he paced back and forwards with nerves. Darcy was the picture of calmness. Every so often, one of the pair would look back down the aisle, and Louise would whip her head back in to avoid being spotted.

Murmurs started from the back of the church, and Bingley and Darcy, at the front, turned to face the high altar. Louise looked behind her, and saw Mr Bennett and Mr Gardiner leading the two Bennett brides up the aisle. The logistical nightmare that would have occurred if Mr Bennett had attempted to give away both his daughters had clearly meant that an additional paternal figure was required to give away the second bride.

Mr Bennett led Jane, and Mr Gardiner – brother to Mrs Bennett – led Elizabeth.

Louise smiled contentedly to herself as she watched the two brides move slowly up the aisle. Both were dressed simply, in dresses of white. On their heads were bonnets of white, and attached to each was a fine veil. Both brides clutched a handful of wild seasonal flowers.

As the brides reached the top of the church, and joined their husbands-to-be, Louise slipped from her pew and out of the church door. No one stopped her leaving, so she left the church up opposed. Louise walked a short way away from the church, to avoid being spotted.

She found herself on a narrow path around the church, leading towards Longbourn house itself. The snow crunched under her feet, and the cold air around her ankles was beginning to chill her.

"Time to return to the Library, me thinks," Louise murmured to herself as she slipped the plothole generator from its place of concealment. Raising it to eye level, she pulled the trigger, the prospect of warmer air half-consciously dragging her back to the Library. With one last glance at Longbourn church, and a wistful smile on her face, Louise exited the Pride and Prejudice fandom for good.

OOO

A few hours later, Alice and Louise were taking a bath.

It was a strange arrangement, requiring a lot of trust and remaining private. Alice was one of the only people in the Library whose adjoining bathroom did not contain an actual tub (she had one of the best walk-in multi-pump showers instead). If she ever wanted an actual bath, she had to use Louise's, and Louise had to sit in with her.

The few people who learned of this arrangement were initially baffled, their minds often rocketing down a different route, but there was a perfectly reasonable explanation: Alice's epilepsy meant that she could never take a bath alone, in case she had a fit and drowned. Therefore, she trusted in her best friend to watch over her in case something went wrong.

Louise's silver and whitebathroom was currently very steamy, and scented with minerals and plants in a way that reminded one of the sea. Alice lay half-submerged in the bubbly blue water, her hair kept dry by a shower cap. Louise sat against the bath wall, using a folded pink towel as a cushion. Alice was behind the wall, and couldn't be seen; but even so, her current focus was on her DS.

"Oh damn it!" she cursed suddenly.

"…Mmm?" Alice was so relaxed she wasn't yet in the mood for speech.

"Bloody Boldore!"

"Oh those things…" Alice mumbled dreamily. "Ehh… my Castform can kick their arses…"

"Show off. Just because most of mine are in the box right now." Louise was doing what most people spent a high percentage of their time on Pokémon Black doing: level grinding.

"You know we just end in stalemate when we battle," said Alice. "Mostly 'cause we keep switching around…" There was the sound of water moving as she rolled over in the water.

"Careful, hon! Tidal wave!"

"Oh relax. Your bath's big enough for me to wallow all I want. Ahhh… wallow." And she did.

Louise laughed, closed her DS, and leant back against the wall. She heard Alice sigh in the warm water.

"Feel nice to relax after the stress of the past few weeks?"

"Mmm…"

"You know…" Louise began, haltingly. "I never did apologise to you, Allie…"

"Lou… don't. You did already. It wasn't you."

"I know, I can't remember it, but… I still feel awful." She slumped against the wall, breathing in the scented steam. "I thought you were avoiding me… I thought I'd scared you away."

"I got myself tied to the bed trying to defend you! If I had thought otherwise… "

There was a short but companionable silence.

"Did you forgive Adrian?"

"Did you?" The water moved again as Alice leant on her arms on the side of the bath. "I know you still go real quiet around him unless your mind's on something."

"Oh I did… but I can't help but feel a little anxious around him still."

"You and Robert both, by the looks of it…" sighed Alice. "I know he's trying, Lou. You reckon he'd have agreed to be Oberon otherwise?" She paused, reaching for the Lush soap bar. "Though I like to think he went along with it anyway just for the shits and giggles we all got out of it."

Louise smiled, but her face fell. "I don't know…"

"He's all right. A bit funny. I like how he takes all my glomps."

Louise didn't reply. Alice shook a hand, and poked her with a still slightly damp finger.

"ARGH! You got me wet!"

"Did not! My hand is dry! …Almost!"

That got her friend to giggle. There was a 'squidge', a 'plop!' and a "Bollocks!" as the bright pink soap slipped out of Alice's hand and fell through the bubbles. Alice muttered something about a floating pumice soap dish as she went fishing for it.

"Ya know…" Louise began eventually. "I'm kinda glad that I was able to get Aaliyah. Makes me feel…almost worth something."

There was a 'swoosh' sound as Alice moved in her bath. "That was awesome! Well done hon. Aww, I wish I could have come with you. Although I dunno if I would have liked wandering around in nightgowns."

"Tom looked really good in his tail-coat."

Alice chuckled.

"What?"

"Ahh… nothing."

"I'm just glad you were successful."

"Mmm, me too. It was a bit of a shame that I needed Tom to come along too. You know I haven't had my first solo capture yet."

"Does it matter, Lou? Neither have I! At least you have her now. All I've pulled in that I can just about slap my name to is that brat McLaren."

"Oh well…"

Louise went back to her DS, watching the red battery light come on. "You a wrinkled prune yet?"

"Nuu. Still being a hippo. Thought I wouldn't get a chance for a bath today, but I got time."

Louise had a thought. "If I hadn't been back in time, would you have asked Robert to sit in with you?"

Alice giggled, slipping down the bath so the water came up to her neck. Louise smiled.

"I don't think so… it might have been… er… rude. Maybe Tash."

"Robert's a gentleman, Allie. I'm sure he'd understand."

"Yeah, but this is a… a delicate arrangement. I'd hate to embarrass him."

"Mmm, fair enough…" mused Louise. "On the subject of Robert, how's the supervision thing going?"

Alice sighed, relaxing in the hot, blue-tinted water. "It's okay. He's really nice. And he listens. I fear I might get bored though…"

"Bored?" echoed Louise. "Naaah. Why?"

"In case something comes up, an' I'd want to go or go and help… and I can't 'cause I have to look after Robert." There was a flat tone to her voice, as if her heart wasn't truly in what she was saying.

"I'm sure someone could babysit," said Louise, laughing afterwards.

"Mmm, maybe. I wonder how his meeting's going?"

"Who's he meeting with?"

"Val, and I think Hati… it's about the basement stuff."

"That's another thing I'm ashamed of…"

Alice stopped drawing her hand through the water. "I didn't know that others weren't…" she sighed. "We didn't know, maybe we should have, but who of us have ever had experience of running a prison? Robert said the Sues are terrified of a fire down there, because there's no way of them to escape."

Louise shook her head. "How are we any better than them when we acted so badly? No wonder they all fight tooth-and-nail to not be caught."

"Lou… don't. This is what this meeting is for. They're going to fix that."

"I hope so," she said. "Robert was always fair. He'll have thought long and hard about what's needed."

"He made a list," agreed Alice. "He's been wondering what he's going to do here."

"It's good to see him around," smiled Louise, her mood lifting at last.

Alice was quiet for a moment, sinking so the water touched her chin. "I'd hope he'd want to stay… join us maybe…"

"He can't exactly go into fandoms on his own though, can he?"

"I don't like to either," Alice replied. "He has a reason for not going solo."

The pair remembered the last times that they were last alone on ill-fated missions. Louise could not shake the memories of the White Tower, and under her bathwater, Alice touched the long ragged scars on her right arm.

"It's safety in numbers. We can defend him. It'll give him greater purpose, more ability to help those he left behind in the basement…"

"Let's hope he agrees."

The water moved again, as Alice sat up, stretching her arms. "Thanks for this, Lou…"

Louise smiled, even though she knew the other couldn't see her expression. "You know me, hon… anything for my best friend."

"I wonder how many people are thinking this weird," said Alice. There was a low vibration in the room, enough to make the bathwater ripple. "Was that the Fourth Wall?"

"I couldn't care less what the others think," snapped Louise fiercely. "Fact remains. You can't have a bath alone. Those who know also know why."

"Yeah…"

"This mean you're done?"

"Mm-hmm. Unless there's anything else?"

"No… no. I'll be in my room waiting for you."

Louise stood up, scooping up her DS and heading for the door without turning around. Alice leant over the wall and retrieved a towel from the warmer on the wall.

"Thank you…"

"No problem."

OOO

Meanwhile, on the other side of the Library, Valerie had indeed 'borrowed' Robert from his parole supervisor and they were heading to Harriet. Robert could feel the notes he had in his pocket. He considered the overall attitude of the Society in this delicate issue of the basement; he had been allowed to witness that big apology through the one-way glass of the duty office, and while not everyone had wanted to do it, at least they did. One of his aims was to make the said duty easier for the agents. He was discussing a few ideas with the healer as they went.

They reached a large, heavy wooden door, with an etched brass plaque reading 'Harriet's Audience Room'.

"She doesn't do anything by halves, does she?" Robert murmured.

"She wouldn't be Harriet if she didn't," said Valerie, knocking and pushing open the door as she heard the reply.

Within lay a large room based around a square walnut table and chairs. There was a fireplace at one end but it wasn't lit. The carpet was deep scarlet shagpile, the seats plush velvet and the lights crystal chandeliers. The owner of the room – who had commandeered this space as her own to use, even though it wasn't strictly necessary – was sat in her large armchair and talking to Tash. She waved the pair in.

"Hello dearlings, we're not finished yet, just hang around or try out the fountain…" said Harriet lazily.

Fountain? thought Robert, watching Valerie need no more invitation and skip over to the brown muddy-looking fountain gurgling in one corner. It was stood on a table, surrounded by plates of fruit and nuts and cakes, and tended by Harriet's seemingly endless army of scantily-clad handsomes.

Valerie quite excitedly scooped up some of the deluge in a glass – and Robert realised what the fountain was. It was one reason he could be thankful that he had known Merle; she had introduced him to chocolate. He could see that Tash had at least three empty plates in front of her, and he joined Valerie in partaking of the rich creaminess.

But in the meantime, he listened to what the two leaders were talking of. His attention was drawn when he heard his brother's name.

"…Richard and Merle. Nixie's said it's wise to, going on their history. She's already writing a programme-kinda-thing to detect the moon phase."

"I don't know… their powers don't really call for it."

Harriet blew a raspberry in response. "And yet the danger does, Tash! Louise went after her alone; she was well and truly squished. Alice and Louise also got squished. We held our own in Rome, just, and you and Merle were pretty well matched, but we were nearly squished."

"But what about this other night level Phoenixia's proposing?"

"Would you want to go against a werewolf one-on-one? No, really? She was almost as fast as you, and it was a crescent moon in Rome…"

"Hmm, maybe then… what about Richard?"

"Richard isn't as dangerous as Merle is at night," Robert interjected. "Not by far."

The two women looked at him, considering his words. "He is dangerous though…"

Valerie watched Robert stiffen slightly. He was torn between helping them and defending his brother.

"What are you doing?" he asked, with difficulty.

"We're re-evaluating Merle and her lot; we've revised them upwards by one," said Harriet. "And now Merle has become 'speshul' enough to earn herself a second rating for night and full moon."

Robert nodded. "And this is for…?"

"Well –" Tash began, haltingly. "It's the Sue Ranking system. The levels are there to guide us in estimating who to send after them, how armed and in what quantity."

"Is this going to stop people from going after her alone?" He was clearly thinking of Louise.

"Probably not…" admitted Harriet, "…but it might give them a second thought."

"Take Merle and @," said Tash. "Until today, they were both the same level: six. With Merle, we've learned a solo or a pair can't take her on, she is extremely dangerous and is one of those who's always several steps ahead. With what you revealed she has now surpassed the danger level that six represents. But with @, she's the same level, but very different. We can't really fight her and she has the power to get into all but one of our computers. But quite frankly she has the mentality of a six-year-old most of the time and poses no real danger to us at all."

"Unless she's used by someone else," said Valerie.

"Unless that, yes, of course."

"Or if you blow up her diamond and obsidian castle."

"Yes, yes…"

"So we're in agreement? Good. All right you, scoot. I'll see you later for girls' night in." Tash scooped up an armful of papers – she swore there were only three sheets when she got in here – and left the room.

As she went out, Dave came in. "Sorry, am I late?"

"Late, late, pffft. You're here. Go get fountain," said Harriet, thinking for a beat then getting up and taking her own advice. The four sat at the table, most still carrying sticks full of goodies covered in melted chocolate.

"Mmmph," 'said' Harriet after several moments of contented chewing. She swallowed and continued. "Right, my ducklings, I call this impromptu meeting of the Basement Reform Committee to order!"

The other three stared at her at that announcement. "Okay…" said Valerie, "shouldn't we get the other Leaders involved in something like this?"

"Naaah, they're busy," said Harriet, waving her chocolate-smeared hand dismissively, before noticing the drips and licking them clean. "You have illustrious me, yourself, the newly-made PR dude and the guy I hope will agree to be our go-between."

Robert jumped as he realised she meant him for that last one. "Er…"

Harriet beamed at him. Dave picked up where the Society founder had left off.

"Basically, now that we know of the previous conditions, it's our job to make them better. I'm hoping that people are remembering that these guys need feeding."

"There's still a problem with that…" said Robert.

"What?" Harriet sounded outraged.

"They're now being overfed," said Dave smoothly, cutting off her angry tirade. "The duty agents are so scared of you, Harriet, that they've been feeding the Sues every single shift regardless of time. They can't eat all that food, so they've begun hoarding."

Valerie sighed. "Poor things… no wonder the basement's been smelling a little ripe lately…"

"I'm not surprised they're hoarding," said Robert. "I'd wager that they think this won't last, so they're trying to save whatever they can for leaner times that they think are coming."

There were several nods of understanding.

"What happened to this rota you were dreaming up, Harriet?" asked Dave.

"Aha!" She reached under the table and there was the rustle of paper as she pulled out a large A2 size pad, the top sheet covered with a large grid and written on in different colour inks – people's names, events, duties and times. However…

"Harriet, this rota… isn't really a rota…"

"All the days are different lengths! None of them are twenty-four hours!"

"I don't know…" Harriet grinned sheepishly. "I was trying to find something to fit both Yank and Brit!"

"Just pick a time zone! That'll give you a premade timetable we just have to fill in!"

"But American or British time?"

Valerie pulled a face. "There is no 'American Time'. We have four times – six if you count Alaska and Hawaii."

"Robert? You know what time zones are, right?" asked Dave.

"Uh, I think so. When we went west towards Waterdeep, the sunrise became later and later. Then earlier as we headed east to Blackspire."

"Yes – that's it. It's because planets are round, right –"

Harriet interrupted the science lesson. "And because we have, like, agents living on four or five different time zones, we don't correlate much – there's an hour where we all should be asleep, early morning British to late evening American…"

"Harriet…" said Valerie, exasperated.

"…and a time where we're having dinner to half the Yanks having lunch and the other half breakfast…"

"Hati, there's no American Time. We have Eastern, Central, Mountain and Pacific."

She thought for a moment before announcing her decision. "Therefore if the Americans can't make up their minds, I propose we put the basement on British Time!"

Valerie sighed. "Fine, fair enough."

The top sheet was torn off, screwed up and thrown over Harriet's shoulder, then she produced several different coloured Sharpies and the four proceeded to draw an even hourly timetable for a week. With such a set-up regular mealtimes could be scheduled, likewise with exercise permissions, lights-out and other events. Valerie ensured she had a time where she could go down and see to their health routinely. They talked for a time on the duty itself, Dave coming up with the idea of putting reserve agents on every shift too, meaning the almost-daily mad rushes to find a usually reluctant person to cover someone else's stint would hopefully be lessened. The actual list of who went where would be decided later, wrangled with the help of the computer and everyone's general availability.

"On this note, perhaps it would be an idea to put a clock or two down there?" asked Robert. "Trust me, we… they'll pick up the routine very quickly."

"Clocks, fine."

"Big wall ones! I know where to get some."

"What exactly did you lot do down there when we weren't looking?" asked Dave, filling in his own notes.

"Talking, mainly. Reading, playing paper games if we had the supplies. We invented our own games or extended them; we had impromptu tournaments of Battleships, using a twenty-six-by-twenty-six grid and thirty ships."

"The Christmas party?"

"Was well loved; thank you for that."

"I heard that someone filmed the play we put on and showed it to the Sues later on – and they all loved it. That and the few special 'Making-Of' videos – including one all about the exploding lightbulbs! And they loved that one even more!" smiled Valerie.

Dave and Harriet grinned conspiratorially.

Robert was becoming braver in his requests on behalf of those he left down there. "I was also hoping it could be made easier for rehabilitation? I'm thinking of Tabitha, and Reena and Kerrie; at present it's a life sentence, and it's demoralising. Hopeless, even. Throwing them into a parole hearing unprepared – well, that's why they were unsuccessful."

"If some of them are willing…"

"The Sues or the agents?"

"Both, but the latter we can sort out," said Harriet.

"I agree, we could offer help for those who want it… make the green T-shirts more of a certainty than a forlorn hope," said Valerie. "But what of those in blue T-shirts?"

Robert was quiet for a moment. "There is a reason they're that threat level," he said eventually. "Basically, I have the impression that the treatment is kind but firm; to the point that if there is another breakout, those in yellow T-shirts might rather stay in their cells than run."

"If they're not coerced, of course."

"Of course, but that's not their fault."

"Are any of them going to accept our help?" asked Harriet. "Or are they just going to continue to bitch?"

"They go by example. I'm not sure how they took Harriet's apology, but my getting out would have raised some hopes. Some will jump at the chance of help, and more success will mean more enthusiasm. I lost count of the times Tabitha cried herself to sleep."

There were some sad looks. Poor Tabitha the cat-girl was the current record-holder for the longest imprisonment, and her information had been badly recorded, not registering either her home fandom or the capturing agent. "Would you be willing to be our go-between? Go and talk to them, refine what we're planning on doing?"

Robert nodded. "Of course. When?"

"Soon, I think," said Harriet. "Your inside knowledge of the basement is invaluable, and they have you to thank for getting this ball rolling. If you're planning on joining us, I want to give you the title of Basement Welfare Officer; you'd be the major go-between and the first port of call for any problems in the basement that isn't an attack. Or even then. Whaddya say?"

"I – I mean I…"

Valerie smiled; she was hoping she would get an opportunity to ask. "We already know you have to stay here, because of Merle; but would you be willing to take the exam?"

"…yes, yes I would."

"You've got a few months yet before your probation's over, so it's time to nerd up on our archives. Then you'd be an agent, and you won't have to have Alice following you around anymore."

"I don't mind her around actually…"

OOO

Valerie let Robert return to his room by himself. She knew he was learning the way around still but trusted him not to get lost; but moreover, she was beginning to trust him. All the leaders were warming to him, and he had done nothing to betray that trust; even Michael, who had slowly come round as he realised he really wasn't a threat in spite of all his earlier misgivings.

It was a great sense of relief to Robert. He had been worried after his parole, but being included in the basement reform was something to do. And above all, his supervisor was becoming less a superior and more a friend.

Alice's bedroom door was open as he approached their stretch of corridor, but he heard it long before that; he had been around her long enough to recognise Nightwish when he heard it.

He knocked on her door, and she bounded forwards; she wore a fluffy navy dressing gown, her face was flushed and she smelled pleasantly of soap. She threw her arms around his shoulders and glomped him. He had a moment of horror – was she wearing anything under that dressing gown? – but as the fabric folded away, he could see the light cotton of her pyjamas beneath.

"Robert! You're alive!" she cheered, detaching.

"Hello Alice," he smiled, allowing himself to be led into her room. "How was your bath?"

"Oh, lovely. Just what I needed," she said, flopping back onto her bed and divesting herself of her dressing gown. "It was nice of Lou to supervise."

He nodded, dithering in the middle of Alice's floor. Her chair had clothes thrown over the back and he knew from experience that it was quite a struggle to get out of her giant beanbag.

She shuffled back and thumped her duvet. "Sit down! You're making the place look untidy."

He wondered how this place could get any more untidy…

"What was your meeting like? Not too boring I hope?"

"Alice…" Robert chuckled briefly.

"Sorry."

"It was very good. We made some good progress today, and I hope it will actually bear fruit instead of slipping by the wayside…"

"I'm sure you can make it happen," said Alice. She may have felt guilty about the news of the conditions, but she still had misgivings stemming from the Incident that fought against that guilt. She had not yet shared this with Robert, worried that she would grind his hopeful outlook to a halt… but equally, she would not share it with Louise, as she did not want her best friend's shame to resurface.

"Also, Harriet practically extended an invitation to me to join the Society, provided I can pass the exam."

Alice smiled. "Would you?"

"Well… yes. Yes I would."

"Awesome! Oh, that's great!"

"I have to pass some test first!"

"I'm sure I can help you with swotting for that; mine and Lou's wasn't too bad, actually, but we didn't half listen to Tash waffle on at WARGS every Saturday…"

"Thank you, Alice. I don't know how I can repay all what you've done for me."

She thought for a moment, grinning. "Yannow, there is something you can do…" She leaned towards her bedside table, towards a soft violet glow coming from a small white candle; there were quite a few of these in Alice's room, and there was mild speculation as to what they were. Alice picked up the candle, which sat in both palms comfortably.

The candle opened yellow eyes and cheeped at Robert.

"Al – Alice, what is that?"

"It's… well, you know Combee?"

Robert made a face as he recalled the little wasp-like creature who had had too much sugar, having met her some weeks ago.

"She's a Pokémon, and this is another one…this is a Litwick. Some of them answer to 'Hitomoshi' instead but that's the Japanese name."

"Litwick?" The name could almost be called terrible. The candle creature looked at Robert and cheeped happily, almost saying its name.

"Yeah. They keep breeding in my room. Dunno how they got here but they're here. I've got five of them now. They're really nice, they're pretty, they don't eat much; I've been giving them half a kibble from the bag in the larder every couple of days and they seem to like that…"

"What… what do you want me to do with it?"

"I want you to have it."

He looked at her. "Alice, I can't just…"

"Go on, it's fine," she smiled. "Take it. It'll get you used to the Pokémon who live round here."

He lifted his hands, and the wax creature moved from one pair of palms to the other. It – he made a mental note to find out its gender – was vaguely warm, like a living thing, and didn't weigh much at all. The little yellow eyes closed, it yawned, and the violet-blue flame atop its head dimmed as it went to sleep.

"Thank you, Alice."

Saturday, February 22, 2014

Insert Midsummer Madness Here

Robert opened his eyes and stared at the ceiling of his new room. He had spent a grand total of six days in there so far, and it still was a novelty to open his eyes in the morning and not see the barred roof of his cell. Some of the advice he had been given upon the completion of his parole hearing had done him good. His parole supervisor was not the ogre she had appeared on that day, and slowly she was warming to him, or so he hoped.

One benefit of having Alice as his parole officer, Robert thought as he stared at the ceiling, was that Mirani was nearly always around.

Rolling onto his side, he pondered what the time might be. He had not been given a clock in his room yet, and was used to waking with the sun. There were no windows in the Library, Robert had discovered, and therefore attaining a balanced sleep was providing a challenge.

His room was still as sparsely decorated as it had been on his first day of freedom from the basement. The walls were a terracotta orange with a dark-wood door in one corner. Furniture-wise, he had a bed to sleep in, a desk to work at, and a chest of drawers in which to hang his clothes. Not that he had many of those yet either.

Deciding that languishing in his room was no better than living in a cell, Robert rolled out of bed, dressed quickly in a pair of tan trousers and a white shirt, and opened the door.

There was no one in sight as he gazed into the Library. He looked up and down the corridor and finding no-one present slowly crept out of his room. The door closed behind him with a quiet click. The corridor was lined with bookcases, and a door opened off it directly opposite Robert's room. The brass plaque on the door declared it to be the Ornithological Section. A small picture of a bird was also engraved on the plaque, for ease of information. Robert's room was a little way along the corridor which led from a staircase. Robert had been taken up there on his first day of freedom by Alice.

Alice's room was alongside his, their doors almost touching. Robert faced the stained pine door with a little apprehension. Slowly he knocked, for fear of waking a potentially sleeping agent.

Inside the room there was a grunt. Robert pressed his ear to the door, and the sounds of Alice's gentle snoring reached his ear. So his parole supervisor was asleep. Maybe it was earlier than he thought. Mirani's room was just along the corridor, towards the stairs. Her door and Alice's were divided by a length of bookcase. Robert let his eyes wander over the texts that were contained there. Nothing too secretive was stored on the corridor shelves, he knew this. Robert's eyes took in a strange array of books, whose authors all began with the initial R. All appeared to be fictitious stories, ranging from a book entitled "Interview with a Vampire" to a large collection of very colourful books about a teenage wizard. Robert wondered for a second why anyone would wish to interview a vampire. From his experience, vampires were creatures to be hunted and destroyed, creatures to be feared, not interviewed and questioned.

His pacing up and down the bookcase brought him towards Mirani's door, and he was about to knock on her door when a voice called down the corridor at him.

"What are you doing out?" It was Michael, Chief Agent and one of Robert's least favourite people. Whilst it was nearly a week since Michael had made his threat to Robert during his parole, the possibility of being returned to the basement still hung over him.

"I…" Robert stuttered in response. "I was just…"

"I don't care what you were just doing," Michael sneered, approaching Robert and seizing hold of his arm. "You are out of your room, alone, without the presence of your parole supervisor or a leader. Where is she, anyway?"

"Asleep… sir." Robert murmured. Michael's grip on his arm was firm, and it was all he could do not to fight him.

"I told you what would happen if you broke the rules…"

"Michael!" Robert's saving grace appeared in the form of his friend, Mirani. "What are you doing?"

"Discipline, Louise…"

"Miran –" Robert corrected himself as Louise frantically shook her head at him. "Louise!" he continued.

"Michael, he has not broken any rules from what I can see…" Louise turned on the chief agent. "He is in the presence of a leader… or have you taken a demotion?"

"I found him in the corridor alone, which is against the conditions of his probation." Michael turned, releasing Robert's arm. The former Stu rubbed it gently.

Louise sighed. "Michael, he was probably just looking for Alice, who I'm guessing at this hour is still asleep."

"I warned him what would happen if he broke the conditions –"

"Warned, no Michael, you threatened. But if you want him out of the main part of the Library, he can come into my room."

Robert was edging closer to his own room as the two agents bickered.

"No, because you are neither his parole supervisor nor a leader."

"I'll just…" Robert murmured, "go back to my room…"

Michael swung around, expecting a fight, only to see Robert slink back into his room, a sad look on his face. He sighed.

"Michael…" Louise drew his attention back. "You cannot hate him forever."

"But he…"

"Yes I know he was part of the incident in the basement, and that Claire was a victim of it. With that logic, you may as well hate me too."

"Louise," Michael sighed, "we all know that you were not acting willingly."

"But I am just as much at fault, Michael. It was me who lied to my best friend, and went into Warhammer Fantasy alone. It was me who was dumb enough to get herself caught!"

"You must not think like that." Michael started to leave.

Louise sighed. "I think you need to reassess yourself, Michael. Robert is not a threat. He was never a threat."

"I'll be the judge of that…" Michael murmured as he turned the corner and vanished from sight.

Collecting herself together, Louise walked down the corridor and knocked on Robert's door.

"Come in." Robert sounded sad as Louise opened the door.

"Oh, Robert…" Louise's eyes fell on her friend, sitting on the end of his bed, a dejected look on his face. She rushed forward and wrapped her arms around him.

"You used to be there for me, now let me return the favour."

"Will he ever like me?" Robert asked.

"Michael?" Louise scoffed. "Ignore him. He's hot-headed and doesn't think before he opens his mouth. He'll come round eventually."

"I hope so."

"How's things with Alice?" Louise asked. She already knew the answer, but was trying to distract Robert from the topic of Michael.

Robert's face brightened a little. Whilst Louise suspected that he knew of her motives for asking the question, she was happy to see the change in her friend's expression.

"She seems to be warming to me," he smiled at Louise.

"She'll like you, Robert. I know she will. Ali…" Robert winced slightly at the use of a contracted name, "…Ali's got this hard outer skin, but underneath she's really just a big softy… On the subject of Alice, she still asleep?"

Robert nodded. "I didn't want to disturb her."

"Aww hell…" Louise jumped to her feet. "It's late enough that that girl should be up and about." Louise bolted for the door, tentatively followed by Robert. He didn't want to run into an angry Michael again.

Louise walked swiftly to her best friend's door, and knocked loudly. "Alice, are you up?"

A groan issued from the room, but Louise didn't wait. She barrelled straight into the agent's bedroom. It was tidier than usual, but there were still some books on the floor and clothes over the back of her chair. Louise's eye caught on the soothing purple glow coming from one of Alice's shelves; a small white candle-shaped creature with a violet flame blinked open tiny yellow eyes and cheeped at her. Louise shook her head, and walked forwards to where Alice was all but buried under her blue starry duvet.

"Ali… Ali…" Louise crooned her friend awake.

Alice groaned again, but her eyes blinked open.

"It's time to get up, dumpling!" Louise moved to perch on the edge of her friend's bed.

"I don't wanna go to school today." This was Alice's usual greeting, although she hadn't technically been to school for over five years. Louise smiled. She was used to this. Alice was not exactly a morning person. She looked over her shoulder to where Robert was lingering.

"Don't worry. This is perfectly normal." Louise took hold of her sleepy friend's hands. "Come on, hon. I'll do breakfast…"

It was an offer that Alice couldn't refuse.

"Cwumpets?" she asked.

Louise snickered, rolling her eyes at her friend's playfulness.

"If you want. Then I have something to show you."

Alice tugged against Louise's hold, pulling her onto her. Robert moved to step forward, but both girls were laughing. No harm was done.

"Come on, hon." Louise straightened herself, and pulled Alice into a sitting position. It was only then that the sleepy agent noticed Robert in the room, and her modesty took over. Alice seized hold of her duvet, and yanked it over her.

Louise spotted her friend's insecurity, and grabbed her dressing gown from the back of her door.

"Here you go, hon. Breakfast is calling…"

The offer of breakfast got Alice to her feet and out of her room. Robert trailed behind them. Despite having spent the majority of his waking hours since leaving the basement with the two women, he was still feeling a bit like a third wheel on a bicycle.

Breakfast was a strangely swift affair. Louise rushed ahead of the pair, and by the time Alice and Robert arrived in Rhia's kitchen, there was already buttered toast waiting for them.

"Where's my crumpets?" Alice whined, although it was debatable whether she was actually hurt or just playing with Louise.

"You can have them when we get back. I want to show you something first." Louise was very determined, forcing the toast into her friends' hands and leading them both from the room again.

"Where are you taking us, Mir… Louise?" Robert asked.

"It's something I've just found. I'm not sure whether anyone else in the Society knows about it, but I was really interested, and I wanted to show you both." Louise's words ran together in excitement.

"Whoa..." Alice munched her food as she spoke. "The last time I saw you this excited was when we met those ice-skaters."

"Wait till you see what I've found..." Louise goaded her friends as they trotted along behind her. But it wasn't long before the three of them were standing outside the large set of double doors.

"I know this place!" cried Alice, who had by now finished her toast.

Louise sagged.

"It's..." Alice turned to face her friend. "It is, isn't it?"

"It was supposed to be a surprise," Louise said dejectedly.

"Are we allowed inside?" Alice was almost as excited as Louise had been moments earlier.

Her friend merely gestured to the doors with a sigh.

Robert leaned towards her and asked, "What is this place?"

Louise didn't get a chance to answer as Alice threw open the doors and with a glance over her shoulder, slipped inside. Robert and Louise swiftly followed.

Robert blinked as his eyes took in the gridded appearance of the room within. The expanse of black with the bright yellow lines made his eyes ache from the strain of focusing on the varying perspectives. Alice and Louise stood in the room, the former looking mildly unimpressed with her friend's discovery.

"Well..." Louise asked her.

"Well, I think Adrian will not be happy that you have come into the training suite without permission."

"So have you..." Louise quipped.

"Can you do something about the black and yellow, Lou?" Alice asked, her eyes falling on Robert, who was shielding his vision.

"Sure..." Louise looked around herself for a moment, and spoke to the ether.

"Computer..." there was a small beep from nowhere. "Please create me a sandy beach."

There was a small familiar giggle, and all three of them suddenly found themselves neck deep in beach sand.

"Lou... what have you...?" Alice flailed beneath the sand to no effect.

Robert coughed the sand from his mouth. Given that his hands were already at eye level when the sand appeared, he began digging himself out.

"I didn't do anything..." Louise spluttered, her hands firmly held at her sides by the force of the sand.

"Computer..." Alice spoke to the ceiling, "can you wash away the sand, please?"

"ALICE!" Louise yelped as the sand vanished, only to be replaced by an ever-increasing amount of water. Louise, who couldn't swim, slowly started to sink. Alice, the more competent swimmer, seized her friend under the arm, and hauled her to the surface.

"Lie back..." Alice's voice was breathless from the exertion. "Robert..." the former Stu was bobbing gently at the side of the room, "get me one of those floats, will you? Lou can't swim well."

Robert obliged, and soon Louise was floating atop a silver buoyancy aid. Alice and Robert pulled themselves atop others, to save themselves the effect of treading water. It was only once Alice righted herself that she saw the shape in which the floats were designed.

"DAMN YOU @" she yelled to the ceiling. "LOUISE COULD HAVE DROWNED!"

@ whined in her high-pitched voice. "But this is fun... aren't you having fun?"

"We would be if you had just created the beach like we asked!" Alice was furious, but was careful not to push the AI too far. She had control of the holodeck, and therefore could, in theory, do anything to them.

"@," Louise gasped from the passing float, "please..." the agent was out of breath, and looking a little pale. "Please just create us a beach…"

@ whined again, but slowly the water subsided and the three very-damp people found themselves lying on fine white sand, with the sea lapping gently around their feet.

Their silver heart-shaped buoyancy aids had vanished.

"Thank you…" Louise murmured and @'s tinkle of laughter faded into nothingness.

Robert looked around him. "It looks so real…" Looking over to him, Alice wasn't sure whether his jaw could get any lower. She and Louise had both forgotten that Robert would not have known about the concept of a holodeck, and as such, the changing scenery around him would have seemed magical.

Louise rolled onto her stomach, exposing her wet, sand-covered back. "It's all a hologram," she explained for Robert's benefit. "Made up of…" she looked at Alice for assistance.

"Photons." Alice had a wealth of knowledge at her finger tips.

"Feels real," Robert coughed. Being the natural gentleman, he had been the last to pull himself from the water onto the floats, and had apparently swallowed a number of mouthfuls of holographic water.

"It can do…" Louise sat up, her clothes drying quickly in the Mediterranean-esque sun. "But that's not what I brought you here for."

Alice rolled her eyes. Louise really was excited about whatever she had to tell them, else she would have taken her health into more account. The elder agent coughed a little from her unexpected swim.

"This place can create anything…"

"Within reason," Alice corrected.

"Okay, yes, anything within reason. You guys know how awful I still feel following the incident in the basement, and I wanted to do something for the Society to cheer them up."

"Something like what?" Alice was suspicious, and mention of the basement incident had made Robert close his eyes and blush a little in embarrassment.

"Computer, open Louise programme: Society One." Louise spoke to the ceiling, praying silently that (a) hadn't gotten into her programme.

The beach dissolved and was replaced with a gorgeous vaulted theatre. At present it was the mere bones of the theatre: the stage, auditorium and backstage area. There were no furnishings, no elegance.

"Well…" Alice wasn't sure how to phrase her words.

"I know it's not finished yet, and there are a lot of things that need doing. But can you envision us putting on a play?" The words sunk slowly into Alice's brain, and her friend watched the transformation of her face.

"That would be… so amazing!"

"But what play could we do?"

The girls were suddenly in their element. Discussing and planning what could happen.

Robert sat there, following the conversation as one might follow a game of tennis.

"You know you could put up curtains."

"But what colour?"

"A nice colour."

"I want a theme."

"What theme?"

"Um…"

"How about a Victorian theme?"

"Too dark."

"Um… excuse me?" Robert's voice was barely audible above the plotting of the two agents.

"Tropical island?"

"Alice, that is not the best theme for a theatre."

"Then what?"

"I don't know…"

Robert eventually resulted in tapping Louise on the shoulder to get her attention.

"Yes?"

"What is this for?" Robert asked.

"The theatre?" Louise queried.

"Yes… I know it's for entertainment, but who will be doing the entertaining?"

The two girls looked at each other.

"You know," Alice started again, "he has a point."

"Could we get the computer to create holograms?"

"Where's the fun in that?"

"We could…" Robert's voice was a little louder than earlier. Both girls looked at him.

"Well… when I was," he blushed as he looked at Louise. "When we were in the Witch-Hunters… we sometimes put on our own plays."

"It would have to be something with not too many actors…" Alice began.

Louise nodded, finishing her friend's sentence, "…so there are still agents available to be in the audience."

"And we would have to have people to move the sets around."

Louise jumped up, and sat herself on the edge of the stage area. She was wracking her brain for the right kind of play.

"I've got it!" she jumped back down from the stage. "It's funny, it's got a small number of actors – I think a total of twenty players."

"What play?" Alice demanded.

Louise walked over to her friend and whispered in her ear. Alice's face lit up.

"Can I play…"

"I don't know yet, Alice…" Louise cautioned, "it all depends on what other people say."

Alice was looking around the theatre. "You know, you could make this place tie in with the play?"

"That's a great idea, hon." Louise rushed forwards and hugged her best friend.

Robert was looking very confused.

"We'll explain all," Alice promised, "but this place should be a surprise for the others."

"I agree…" Louise pondered how they were going to hide something this big from the rest of the Society, let alone the Librarian and Phoenixia. "Computer, lock the doors to all but Alice, Robert and myself."

The computer beeped in acknowledgment, and there was a loud click from the direction of the main doors.

"Now… let's begin the transformation…"

OOO

"So..." Louise was sat on a bench outside the holodeck the day after her 'amazing discovery', "... who are we going to ask?"

"Well you know who I wanna play," Alice hinted.

"Yes, but you are one player, hon. Robert, you were pretty good when..." Louise blushed, remembering one particular evening play with the Witch-Hunters where Robert had been so convincing as a corpse that many actually believed him dead. "Do you want in?"

"I suppose I could give it a go," Robert smiled at his friend.

"Yay!" Alice gave a cry that caused the former Stu to cover his ears due to the pitch, then wince a little as the agent wrapped her arms around him and gave him a huge glomp. Louise merely chuckled. "So who're you gonna be?" Alice demanded.

"Ali, we can dish out characters later. We need to find all the players first."

"Yeah, I suppose..." Alice sighed.

"So..." Louise asked again. "Who are we going to..."

"Hi guys..." Tash called as she turned the corner and spotted the three of them on the bench.

"IT'S A TASHY!" Alice squealed, rushing headlong down the corridor and wrapping the Society leader in one of her bone-crushing embraces.

"ARGH!" Tash yelped. She could have easily flashstepped to safety, but years of bracing herself for an Alice onslaught had taught her that enduring the glomp was usually safer in the long run.

As the Society leader and her attacker approached the seated pair, Louise turned to Robert. "You know, you'll have to endure that too." She looked a little sheepish. "Sorry."

"So what are you three doing here?" Tash asked playfully as she and Alice arrived.

"We've been thinking about trying to cheer the Society up, Tash," Alice explained, taking her offered seat at Louise's side. "Do you want to take part in a play?"

The Assistant Librarian studied her friends' expressions with a sceptical look on her face.

"Please..." Alice mockingly pleaded.

"Oh, go on then," Tash grinned at her friends, and then smiled politely at Robert. "What play are you planning on putting on?"

"Ah..." Alice tapped the side of her nose conspiratorially. "That's a secret until we give you all the characters."

Tash laughed at Alice's playfulness, and sighed as she walked away.

"So... Ali, who are you thinking that Tash could be?" Louise queried as she watched the Society leader's blonde hair disappear around the corner. Alice tapped on the pad of paper on bench, indicating a name of a particular character.

"Well," Louise pondered. "If Tash is going to play her, you know who we have to have playing him, don't you..."

It wasn't long before Alice, Louise and Robert were gathered outside one particular office in the Library. The brass plaque on the door declared it to be the 'Librarian's Office'.

"Are you sure about this?" Robert asked. Whilst he was eternally grateful for the Librarian's chance of parole, the former Stu's military mind couldn't help but think of Adrian in a similar way to how he would think of his commanding officer.

"Of course I'm sure." Alice was cheerful, bubbly, almost the complete antithesis of how Robert was feeling. The exuberant agent knocked on the door four times.

"Come in!" Adrian's voice was muffled. Outside the room, Louise and Robert wondered briefly what he was doing, and whether they should be disturbing him. Alice, however, had none of these thoughts. She threw the office door wide and strode in.

The Librarian's office was darker than usual. Heavy shadows hung in all corners, the large pieces of furniture outlined as even darker shapes. In the middle of the room, a shape moved.

"Sorry about this," Adrian's voice called from the darkness.

"Need a light?" Alice asked, her hand automatically drifting towards the switch on the wall.

##CLICK##

##CLICK##

"Oh!" Alice tried to suppress a snigger and failed.

"I didn't know light bulbs in the Library blew..." Louise commented.

"They don't usually," Adrian's voice was coming from the middle of the darkest patch of the room, just beyond where the light from the doorway was illuminating. "Well, at least they don't often. Not for a number of centuries. But for the past few days, I have been plagued by exploding light bulbs."

Robert's face was a picture of horror. The concept of these exploding light bulbs concerned him greatly.

"Here you go, Adrian." There was a gentle click, and a light appeared on Alice's head. "Where do you want me to point it?"

The torch light from Alice's goggles swung aimlessly for a few seconds, until the Librarian spoke again.

"Over here..." Adrian's voice directed Alice's beam to illuminate the ceiling fixture for the main light of the office. Adrian was standing on a wobbly stool, attempting to screw in a new light bulb.

"What the hell are you doing trying to fix this in the dark, boyo?" Alice asked, whilst keeping her beam steady as the Librarian removed the old light bulb, and replaced it with a fresh one.

"I wasn't in the dark initially." Adrian climbed precariously off the stool as Louise threw the switch and illuminated the room. "That light was working beforehand," he gestured across the room to the bedside lamp, which was pointed towards the main fitting and also now sported a burnt-out bulb. "Thanks Alice. This is beginning to get out of control."

"Well when you have time, Adrian," Louise asked, as Alice turned off her goggle-lamp, "we're planning on putting on a play in the holodeck, and were wondering whether you would like to be a player?"

"Depends what and who?"

Louise smiled cheerfully at the Librarian. She was enjoying baiting Adrian. "Can't tell you," she chirped, "spoilers!"

"You've been watching too much Doctor Who, Louise," Adrian commented, his face cracking into a similar grin.

"Well..." Alice prompted.

Adrian smiled at the manically grinning women, wondering briefly whether agreeing with them was the saner and safer course of action or not.

"Tash has already agreed," Louise chimed in.

"Oh, phooey." Adrian sighed. "I can't say no now."

"So you'll do it?" Alice crossed her fingers behind her back in hope.

"Yes, I will do it."

"Yay!" she cheered, and threw her arms around the Librarian's upper torso. He was getting used to this. Whenever Alice ran into him these days, she would throw her arms around him. As Tash had told him, his ribs were beginning to develop a semi-resistance to it. Adrian made a mental note never to tell this to Alice, for fear that she would squeeze even harder. After releasing him, she called "Thank you!" over her shoulder, and dragged the others from the room.

"You know you'll break someone's ribs one day with all that glomp, hon," Louise muttered as the three of them walked away from the Librarian's office.

"Aww lighten up, Lou," Alice patted her friend on the shoulder. "I know he likes it really."

All three of them laughed.

"Who else do you want to ask?" Robert queried.

"Well," Louise whipped a medium-sized brown book from her pocket. Robert wondered in awe at how she had squeezed the book in such a small pocket; Alice was commonly doing similar with her ubiquitous notebooks, and smiled. The book was old, covered in dark leather, and held together on the spine with good-old sellotape. As Louise began to flick through the pages, the others noticed that the edges of said pages were gold in colour.

"Louise..." Robert started.

"Ah... here we are." Louise had clearly found what she was looking for. "There are a total of twenty-one named parts in this play. We have a total of five players so far."

"So who else can we ask?" Robert may have spent the previous eight months in the Library, but his knowledge of the acting abilities of the agents was poor.

"Well, I know who we can go to next..." Alice turned to face them as they approached one of the kitchens. Louise and Robert stopped as Alice's face cracked into an impish smile. "Rhia...?" she called.

OOO

"Does anyone know what play they've talked us into performing?" Harriet asked.

All those gathered in the wardrobe shook their heads. Harriet looked around at the throng. Louise really had worked wonders. There were people collected there that she wouldn't have been in a play usually. Her gaze wandered over Cristoph, Willie and Dave, all looking mildly awkward in one corner. Harriet had to give it to Louise and the others, as she looked at Tash and Adrian on one side of the room, they had outdone themselves.

The door swung open and in strode the three conspirators. Alice had a pile of paperwork in her arms, and those who had been on the Rome mission with her, sighed in exasperation.

"Greetings, fellow actors!" Alice dropped the paperwork on the table with a giant BANG.

"Alice..." Harriet spoke from her space against one wall, "please tell us what the play is. Some of us are a little unnerved by all the secrecy."

Louise stepped forward. During times like this, when Alice's hyperactivity threatened to overwhelm everyone, she was often in her best friend's shadow; the quieter, more mature agent. People sometimes forgot that these two were the oldest mortal agents, they certainly didn't act it on occasions.

"Guys, I'm sorry for all the secrecy, but I wanted you all to hear at the same time. Alice, Robert and I have put together information packs on your respective characters. They contain a copy of the script, with your lines highlighted..."

"But what's the play?" Ben called from the back of the room.

"All in good time, Ben."

"The packs also contain an outline of the play itself, so you know the circumstances in which are you acting. So..." Louise looked down at the first pack in the pile. "We have a pack for Tash..."

The Assistant Librarian stepped forward a little hesitantly to collect her package. It was a simple white card folder, with a large amount of paperwork inside.

It wasn't long before Adrian, Ben, Jared, Michael, Clare, Inara, Kyle, Harriet, Jess, Aster, Rhia, Valerie, Phoenixia, Tom, Gareth, Lily and little Emily had all collected their packages.

"If your script has a gold star in the corner of the front, you have a main character. If you don't have a gold star, feel free to swap around if you don't like your character."

"But this is..." Tom's voice came from the huddle of exchanging agents.

"Yes..."

"A Midsummer Night's Dream..." Tash called from the back of the room, where she and a number of other 'lead characters' were already conversing.

"Yep!" Louise cried from the front. "It's approaching Midsummer, and I wanted to do something to cheer us all up after... well, I thought we could all do with a pick-me-up."

Some of the agents around her looked a little shame-faced at Louise's reference to the basement incident, but most nodded in agreement. A good laugh was exactly what they needed at the present time.

"Um... Lou..." Tash wandered over to her several minutes later. "You've cast me as Titania..."

"Yeah..." Louise looked over her shoulder at the Assistant Librarian. She was trying to find where Alice and Robert had vanished to in the chaos.

"Who's Oberon?"

"Tash," Louise took her friend by the shoulder. "Do you really need to ask?"

The Society leader turned around, her eyes meeting those of the Librarian, who smiled. "Oh..." was all she was able to say.

Alice and Robert returned not long later, dragging a giant screen with them. No one asked where they had gotten it from.

"Now..." Alice jumped onto a nearby chair so that everyone could see her. There was going to be no problem with everyone hearing her. "We need to sort out everyone's costumes. I have a rough idea of what the costumes should be, so," she clapped her hands. "Shall we get started? Those in Greek costumes, that's Michael, Gareth, Robert, Ben, Jared, Phoenixia, Harriet and Jess. We'll do you guys first."

Alice collected everyone into their respective groups. The Greek costume was reasonably simple. Michael had gotten away with a modification to the toga he had worn to Rome, and Phoenixia, Harriet and Jess were soon glowing with pride over their beautiful Greek dresses.

"Um..." Dave raised one nervous hand, and looked as though Alice might bite it off if he spoke up about anything. "What do you want us three for?"

"What?" Alice looked up from arranging the costumes for the next set of victims. "Oh, you three can go. We don't need you until the rehearsals start."

Gratefully, Dave, Cristoph and Willie escaped. Rhia watched her boyfriend leave with a sigh.

"Now, where was I?" Alice asked herself. "Ah yes..." She looked down at the six agents gathered in front of her. "My players..."

There was a loud guffaw of laughter from Harriet and Jess in one corner.

"Guys!" Alice yelled. "If your costume is sorted, leave it on the rack, and you may go!"

The room rang to the sound of hangers being placed on a metal rail, and those who had been in Greek costume left. The next group were given simple Medieval-esque costumes. It wasn't long before the only people stood in the wardrobe were Tash, Adrian, Alice, Robert, Louise, Inara, Lily, Terrie and Emily.

"I think it'll be easier to do the five fairies now," Alice called, although she needn't have shouted. Louise, Inara, Terrie, Emily and Lily – who had been cast at Titania's attendants – gathered around the Automatic Tailorisation Machine. Louise and Alice had discussed the fairies costumes at great length, much to Robert's boredom. All five girls were going to be dressed in similar outfits, but each would have a distinguishing colour. Louise's would be red, Lily's dress was a beautiful pale blue, far removed from her usual green. Inara's costume was a dark blue hue. Terrie's costume was a trouser set of a mixture of brown and green tones, and little Emily wore a knee length dress, also in green.

"I am so glad Harriet is not here to see that dress," Tash commented to Adrian, as the five fairies changed back out of their costumes and hung them on the rail.

"Yes, I have had enough things breaking recently not for a Harriet tirade to do more damage."

Four of the fairies left, giggling about their costumes. "My wings were so beautiful," Emily said to Lily, Terrie and Inara as the four girls left.

"And now for you two," Alice turned on the Librarian and his Assistant, standing in the middle of the now empty room. "Who wants to go first?"

"Ladies first," Adrian said with a mock bow.

Tash chuckled, and stepped behind the screen. "I hope you are not going to put me in anything too ridiculous, Alice?" she called, throwing her various items of clothing initially over the top of the screen, and then with more force at Adrian, who merely smiled and picked up the objects of his lover's poor aim.

"Ready?" Alice asked as Tash walked gingerly into the Automatic Tailorisation Machine. In a few seconds, the machine has sewn a beautiful dress around the Society leader. As Tash stepped from behind the screen, Adrian gasped.

Tash was dressed in a beautiful vision of silk and taffeta. She stepped carefully around the screen, allowing her lover a complete view of her dress. It was a mixture of pink and cream, and atop her head was circlet of flowers.

"A vision of beauty…" Adrian commented.

"Oh, stop it!" Tash teased, blushing a little at the compliment.

"Your turn, Librarian!" Alice drew Adrian's attention from the sight of Tash in her beautiful dress. "Get behind the screen and strip."

As Adrian removed his trenchcoat and other items of clothing, he gazed at the Automatic Tailorisation Machine.

"You know," he said, sticking his head around the screen to look at those still in the wardrobe. "I've never actually seen this thing working before. I didn't even know it was broken." He looked back at the machine. "Are you sure it's safe?"

"I never took you for a coward, Adrian," Louise commented, sat on the edge of the table which until recently contained all the packs for the actors.

"Oh, get in there!" Tash walked around the screen, and pushed her boyfriend into the machine. Alice hit the button the moment he was inside.

"ARGH!" The Librarian yelped as the Automatic Tailorisation Machine began covering him in fabric. "Ouch, I am NOT a pincushion!"

Outside in the wardrobe, the assembled masses were giggling.

"It's not that bad, is it Adrian?" Alice asked loudly.

There was no response from within the machine, but before long a large amount of steam issued from it, and out stepped a silk-covered Librarian.

Robed in a dark green, Adrian certainly looked the part of a Fairy King. He, however, felt a complete prat.

"Very nice..." Tash commented, trying to suppress a giggle.

"Ok, hang it up on the rail then..." Alice interrupted the sentimental scene.

Adrian did as instructed, and soon the Librarian and Tash left the three conspirators alone.

"Well, I think that went quite well, don't you?" Alice asked as the door closed.

OOO

"Ill met by moonlight, proud Titania," Adrian spoke the lines to himself in his room. He was experienced in many things, but the words of Shakespeare still left him tongue-tied. The rehearsals were starting that afternoon, and he really wanted to make sure he had at least some lines learnt. There was no need for him to make more of a fool of himself than he already felt, but strangely he was looking forwards to the play. It sounded like a lot of fun.

Whilst Tash had told him countless times over the previous few days that his costume was wonderful, Adrian still felt like an idiot in long robes that looked more like a dress.

A knock on the door drew the Librarian's attention away from his script.

"Come in," he called, and Tash's head peered around the doorframe.

"You ready?" she asked, gazing on Adrian in his long green silken robes.

"Tash, I feel ridiculous."

"You look nice," she smiled at him. "You coming for rehearsals or not?"

"I'm coming," Adrian murmured under his breath as he got up and followed Tash from the room.

The holodeck was utterly transformed when Adrian and Tash arrived. They were the last of the actors to appear, and the others were gathered on the stage in their costumes. Rhia, Tom and the other players were dressed in browns and greys, a typical medieval-style costume. The fairies were huddled in a corner, gossiping and giggling, and Alice sat on the stage, her legs dangling over the edge. She was dressed from head to foot in green. A wreath of green leaves and yellow flowers encircled her head. She had her nose in a copy of her script.

Looking up, Alice spotted Tash and Adrian, both in costume.

"We're all here," she called, and the room fell silent.

Adrian and Tash looked around the holodeck. Alice, Louise and Robert had surpassed themselves with the decoration. It was everything one could want in a theatre, and more. Long velvet curtains hung at the side of the stage, each one a deep shade of red. The wood of the stage was a dark mahogany tone, and there was even space for the holographic orchestra, should they be needed. The chairs in the auditorium were covered with a plush deep red to match the curtains. As he approached the stage, Adrian looked up and smiled briefly. They had even remembered the safety curtain. That must have been Louise.

"Shall we read through the script before we start the acting?" Louise suggested, emerging from the huddle that was the fairy attendants. The group all sat down in a circle on the stage, the Greek and Fairy characters were provided with chairs to sit to, to save spoiling their intricate costumes. The players and Alice sat on the floor.

As the read-through progressed, the actors became less inhibited, and the words flowed more easily.

"'Ill met by moonlight, proud Titania,'" Adrian spoke to Tash.

"What!" Tash, as Titania, returned comment to her boyfriend. "Jealous Oberon. Fairies..." She turned to her five fairies. "Skip hence! I have forsworn his bed and company." She managed to get to the end of her line, but then broke into a guffaw of laughter.

Alice rolled her eyes as the rest of the group burst into fits of giggles, but soon she joined in and it was several minutes before they were able to resume the read-through.

Harriet and Jess, slipping a little too far into their characters, started arguing, and Louise had to gently remind them that they were only actors, and not to take it too seriously. Both girls grinned apologetically in response.

Alice eventually got to speak the final lines of the play. "Give me your hands, if we be friends…" she paused, the last half of the line slipping from her memory. She looked deep in thought trying to remember it.

"Someone put another twenty-pence in Puck?" came the quip from Tash, eliciting more giggles.

Alice scowled, then grinned, and finally finished off her line. "And Robin shall restore amends."

The whole room sighed. Midsummer Night's Dream was not Shakespeare's longest play, but it did have long speeches for some of the major cast. Adrian and Tash were now looking at each other with expressions that both questioned their own sanity for agreeing to this.

"I think that went quite well..." Alice said from her perch on the floor. She had enjoyed the role of Puck immensely, although her usual stage partner was a little nervous about all the hyperactivity.

"Alice?" Adrian asked. "Is Puck supposed to be that..." he searched for the correct word that wouldn't offend the young agent, "excitable?" he asked.

Alice merely shrugged, and commented that this Puck was her creation, and therefore the character would be excitable.

Louise looked swiftly between the pair and, sensing a potential problem, called to the group. "I suggest we disband this rehearsal for today. We can all go back, learn our lines, and meet back in a day or so."

The cast were more than happy to oblige Louise's suggestion, and slowly clambered to their feet.

"Please look after your costumes," Alice called off the stage as the trope headed for the door.

"Yes Alice," Tash called with a sigh as she and the majority of her train closed the door.

"You know," Louise turned to Alice. "He was right. You are a little hyper as Puck."

"Oh, shut it..."

OOO

It wasn't long before news of the play reached the ears of all members of the Society, even those, like Karissa and Chloe, who had no part in it began to talk about it. It was at this point, a week after the initial rehearsals, and about a fortnight before the actual performance, that Louise took it upon herself to produce flyers and posters for the play. She had taken photographs of some of the agents in their costume, and now these were safely saved onto a USB pen, to which Phoenixia had no access.

Louise had produced hundreds of leaflets about the play, all containing pictures of the lead characters, and they were now left in strategic places around the Library. She had locked herself in her room for an entire day, the weekend before the final rehearsal, and the agents involved in the play were beginning to worry as to what she was doing.

"Lou…" Alice knocked on her door on the Sunday morning. "Lou, are you in there?"

The door opened, and Louise's head appeared in the gap. Alice tried to see what her secretive friend had been up to, but Louise's body blocked the majority of the space.

"Yes, Alice?"

"Whatcha doing?" she asked.

"Ali, it's a secret. You'll all find out tomorrow." Louise gave her friend a smile that told her not to push the subject any further. So Alice didn't.

A MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM
 Dramatis Personae

THESEUS, Duke of Athens – Michael
HIPPOLYTA, Queen of the Amazons, betrothed to Theseus - Phoenixia
EGEUS, Father of Hermia – Robert
LYSANDER, in love with Hermia – Ben
DEMETRIUS, in love with Hermia – Jared
PHILOSTRATE, Master of the Revels to Theseus – Gareth
QUINCE, a carpenter – Claire
SNUG, a joiner – Rhia
BOTTOM, a weaver – Tom
FLUTE, a bellows-mender – Miriku
SNOUT, a tinker – Kyle
STARVLING, a tailor – Valerie
HERMIA, daughter of Egeus, in love with Lysander – Harriet
HELENA, in love with Demetrius – Jess
OBERON, King of the Fairies – Adrian
TITANIA, Queen of the Fairies – Tash
PUCK, or Robin Goodfellow, attendant to Oberon – Alice
FAIRIES, attendants to Titania – Louise, Lily, Emily, Terrie and Inara,
Other roles played by holographic actors.

That night, Louise packed up all the work she had been doing, and snuck into the Library. It was weird walking around the Library with no-one in sight. She had timed it so that the majority of agents should be asleep, regardless of whether they were American or British.

Quietly, Louise tiptoed around the Library, a wad of paperwork under her arm, and a roll of blue-tak in one pocket. She was putting up her posters for the play.

"Louise…" came a voice from behind her. The agent turned around, half way in the act of putting up a poster, and walking down the corridor was Adrian, piece of paper in hand.

Damn! Louise thought. She had forgotten that the Librarian was more nocturnal than the majority of agents.

"Um…" she blushed as Adrian approached. Her eyes fell on the paper. It was one of her posters.

"What is this?" the Librarian asked, although there was no harshness in his voice.

"Um…" Louise was speechless. Whilst she had forgiven Adrian a lot over the past few weeks, she couldn't help but be in a little awe of him. She, all of a sudden, felt very small.

"I have no problem with you advertising the play," he held up the poster in front of him. "But this?" The poster was an enlarged image of the Librarian, dressed in his costume grinning manically.

"Um…" Louise mumbled. "It's eye-catching."

Adrian sighed. Louise's enthusiasm for this play was catching, but sometimes he felt it should be restrained. "Yes, it is eye-catching, and also highly embarrassing."

"I promise I'll destroy all the posters after the play."

"Very well…" Adrian sighed again. The play was going to be over in a week or so, and then he could forget the terrible embarrassment that Alice and Louise were inflicting on the Society.

"Thank you…" Louise murmured, finishing attaching the poster to one of the Library pillars. She watched Adrian disappear around the corner, and whipped the poster from the pillar, and replaced it with a shiny new one. Soon Adrian's face stared out at her. Louise smiled, and headed off further into the Library.

Several hours later, when the British agents surfaced, the Library was festooned with technicolour posters, all showing the principle actors in their costumes. No-one knew how the images had been obtained, and only Adrian knew for certain who was responsible for a little late-night advertising.

OOO

"Right, now," Alice was stood on the stage. "This is the final rehearsal before the big night." As though the others gathered around her didn't already know this.

"Yes, Alice..." Michael commented from the middle of the gathered throng. "We know that the play is tomorrow."

"Yes..." called Emily, currently somewhere at the back of the group, "I spent most of the weekend doing the painting of the set with Jenny and Kiara."

"Aww, I didn't know they were here," Jess squealed. "I hope they're staying for the play."

"Oh yeah," Tash murmured. "They wouldn't miss me making an arse out of myself for the world."

"The rest of the Society is going to be watching," Adrian muttered. "And others who have gotten wind of it. Heaven help us all."

"OKAY THEN!" Alice called over the rabble. "Everyone into costumes!"

It didn't take long for the cast to disappear into the holographic dressing rooms, and reappear in their finery. The fairies were given a wide berth, their wings increasing their width to three times its original.

"WHOA!" Phoenixia cried, as Inara turned and almost side-swiped the ex-hologram. She was dressed in a Greek-looking outfit, and yet it was skimpy at the same time. Her costume was exactly suited for her character – Greek, and yet holding aspects of the character's Amazonian heritage.

"Shall we start the rehearsal then?" Alice asked, beginning to shepherd the actors into the wings of the stage.

The cast were good. Everyone knew their lines, and when their characters were supposed to do various things. Even Jess and Harriet had put a halt to their light-hearted bickering. Everything was going well until...

Adrian, as Oberon, crept onto the stage. He approached the sleeping figure of Titania, played by Tash.

"What thou seest when thou dost wake," Adrian leant over Tash with a prop petal in his hand. "Do it for thy true-love take." The Librarian squeezed the dropper, carefully concealed within the prop.

#TINK#

The entire stage was plunged into darkness.

"Oh bollocks!" Adrian cursed loudly, accidently squeezing the entire vial of water over Tash.

"EURGH!"

"Someone find a light."

"Accursed lightbulbs!"

"You know you're getting more and more British, Adrian," Harriet's voice laughed in the darkness.

Someone's footsteps approached on the blacked out stage, and suddenly a torch light blared into vision.

"I found this out the back," Dave commented.

"What's with the lightbulbs blowing all of a sudden?" Tash asked, sitting up from her log and dabbing her damp hair.

"I wish I knew," Adrian muttered darkly to himself. "Now it's even the holodeck lights."

"Light's fixed," called the holographic light tech.

Tash lay back down as Adrian disappeared for a refill of his prop. This time he managed to finish his scene without any interruptions.

"Well done everyone," Alice congratulated as the exhausted agents flopped around the holodeck. The rehearsal was over.

"This time tomorrow," Louise reassured, "it will all be over, and we can party."

"Party?" Phoenixia asked, sitting up from her horizontal position on the stage. "Where?"

"That's a surprise," Louise whispered. She hadn't even told Alice and Robert about her plans for the after-show party.

OOO

"Lou..." Alice called as she stuck her head into the ladies' bathroom. "Lou, are you in here?"

"Eurgh..." was all the response she got from one of the cubicles.

"Lou... we're up soon." Alice walked into the bathroom, and found her friend. Louise was kneeling in front of one of the toilet. She wasn't even in costume yet. "Lou..." Alice asked, more concern in her voice than before. "Lou, what's wrong?"

"It's either... something I ate..." Louise sat back onto her heels. "Or it's the worst stage fright I have ever had."

"You going to be okay for the play?"

"I have to be, hon." Louise pulled herself gingerly to her feet. As she turned to face Alice, her friend got the first glimpse of her face. Louise was pale... very pale. "The show must go on, and all that jazz." She wobbled against the edge of the cubicle.

"Are you sure?" Alice asked again.

"Help me to the sink," Louise gestured towards the row of sinks on the far side of the bathroom. Her friend did as instructed, although it was clear that Alice thought Louise incapable, in her current state, of performing. Louise turned the tap on, and splashed the cold water across her face. Cupping her hand, she gulped down a couple of handfuls, and wiping her hands across her eyes, she turned to Alice.

"There..." she certainly sounded a little more alive than a minute earlier. "Much better."

"Well... we best get you into costume then," Alice supported her friend from the bathroom and into the dressing room area.

"There you are," Tash called from the middle of the room where she was stood with Adrian and the four fairies. She then saw the paleness of Louise's complexion. "You going to be okay for this, hon?"

"That's what I asked," Alice pointed out. "She says she's okay to go on."

"Let's get you into costume then." The other four fairies approached Louise, and led her into a corner where they had been storing their delicate costumes, away from the rabble of the rest of the cast.

Soon, she was dressed in the finest red silk.

"You know," Phoenixia commented as she walked in and spotted Louise in her costume, "that colour really suits you."

"Thanks." Louise smiled, and blushed a little as Robert stuck his head around the door.

"Act two is about to start."

Inara darted from the room, and after a couple of seconds of silence, Adrian turned to Oberon's 'faithful servant'. "Alice... that's you too."

"Oops," Alice shot through the door after Inara.

The rest of the cast followed her into the wings as the curtain rose on Act Two. Alice and Inara were already on the stage.

"How now, spirit! Wither wander you?" Alice, as Puck, asked.

"You know," Louise whispered to Tash in the wings, "she's actually quite good at this."

"We're on soon," Tash smiled. She was nervous, but it was coming through as excitement. Adrian placed a calming hand on her shoulder, and Tash tilted her head onto it.

The play progressed well. Cristoph, Dave and Willie all performed their roles to perfection, moving the staging around to create the impression of different areas of woodland, and placing the props in their agreed locations.

The only real hitch was the transformation of Bottom into a donkey. Tom had wandered behind a movable piece of set. Emily had been hiding behind the set with the foam donkey head to hand to Tom. But he had trouble getting the head on, and Emily was forced to help. This delayed the scene and Emily sat behind the set knowing the head was on wonky, but thankfully no-one in the audience appeared to notice.

Eventually the play was drawing to a close. Oberon and Titania exited the stage, taking their train with them. This left Alice, as Puck, alone on the stage. She delivered her final monologue, directing it out to the audience, where the character of Puck, acting as narrator, asked them to forgive the frivolity of the play, and if they were offended to imagine it all a dream.

"Give me your hands, if we be friends." Alice spoke the final lines as the holographic lights started to dim. "And Robin shall restore amends..." The final words issued from the darkness.

A giant round of applause sounded from the audience as the cast returned to the stage to take their bows.

OOO

"INCOMING!" Louise yelled as Alice launched herself through a group of agents towards Adrian. The Librarian turned from his conversation with Michael to see a blur of brown and blue, before...

"ARGH!" The air was pushed from his lungs as her arms wrapped around his torso and squeezed hard. It was a miracle that no ribs were broken, but then Adrian was tougher than he looked.

"Let the poor man breathe, Alice," Michael commented, trying hard to suppress his own giggles. Laughter broke out around them as Alice peeled her arms apart, allowing air to flood back into Adrian's bruised and battered body.

"I think Michael's right though Adrian," Harriet spoke up as Tash wrapped her lover in a gentle embrace. "You really did look great in green..."

"Oh shut up..." Adrian laughed, collecting a drink from the side of the bar. At the end of the play, and once the actors were out of their costumes, Louise had instructed the holodeck to change programme, and now the majority of the Society was crowded into the three-tier bar.

Two tiers below, Dave was sitting alone. He was watching the movement around him with interest. At the squeal of the Librarian from Alice's glomp, he had actually smiled.

"Hey Dave..." Louise broke his concentration. "You okay?"

"Yeah... I'm just..." he looked up at Adrian, now laughing with Tash and Michael. "I don't know. There's something niggling at the back of my mind, but I'm not sure yet, and I'm not prepared to point fingers until I am."

"Well, I think tonight went rather well..." Louise pulled over a seat to attempt to distract her friend from whatever gloomy thoughts were invading his mind at the present time.

"I agree," Dave said, with a quick glance at Alice and Robert, who were chatting to Rhia in one corner. "Even with the lightbulb issue that seems to be plaguing the Library, I would say it did."

"Thanks for agreeing to be a stage-hand with Cristoph." Louise patted her friend's arm warmly. "I knew the kind of sets we were dealing with, and the amount of movement they would require. It's more than a one man job."

"So I'm the back-up," Dave laughed.

Louise smiled. She was smiling at the fact that Dave appeared distracted for the present time, although she knew him well enough to know that, like her, for him façades were common place.

"Nah... You and Willie were just as important... plus, can you imagine someone like Tyler or Aster doing that job?"

Dave laughed at the mental image of blue-haired Aster in a blackout suit.

"Her hair," Louise continued, "would stand out at the back of the theatre." Louise looked around at the gathered people in her cabaret bar. "You know what?"

"What?" Dave asked automatically.

"I'm thinking of keeping this place," Louise smiled to herself. "It would be a wonderful escape from the chaos of the Library, and we could put on entertainment, holographic or otherwise."

"Well, if you want to," was all that Dave could offer in encouragement.

"Yeah, I think I will... although it might need a bit of a refresh following this evening's festivities." She laughed, her laugh mixing with that of the others in the room, creating one great big ball of laughter.

And, Louise thought, as she watched her friends eating and drinking around her, I guess this whole affair, and I suppose the Society in general, is one great big laugh...

#SMASH#

The room went black as all the bulbs blew at once.

"Oh Bollocks!"