Date: Tue, 29 Jan 2008 08:49:09 -0500 From: John Ellison Subject: Aurora Crusade - Epilogue Aurora Crusade is a work of fiction and any resemblance to persons living or dead, or to places and institutions, is purely coincidental. The usual caveats apply. This is the final chapter of "Aurora Crusade". To all who have written with their comments and commentaries, my thanks. It is difficult to think that the first book, the first chapter of which was posted on Nifty in May, 2003, led to five books! It has been a long haul, but not it is over. I hope that you all enjoyed my writings. I know I enjoyed writing the books and bringing to life my beloved Boys of Aurora. My plan now is to take a rest and then concentrate on other works that I have waiting in my computer files. I shall return! One day, I hope, I shall take up the Phantom's story again. I wish to express my heartfelt thanks to my sterling, long suffering editor, Peter, who has over the years borne my grumpiness with patience and humour. His contributions to the overall series cannot be weighed. Copyright John Ellison 2008 Aurora Crusade Chapter 21 Epilogue The storm that had marred the Order Day Ceremonies continued unabated. Snow piled higher and higher, sending sheets of the white stuff whipping across the open areas, drifting into near eaves-high piles. The leafless branches of the trees that lined the Long Walk whipped this way and that as the wind howled through them. The Phantom stared out of the tall Palladian window of his office, glad that at least the power was still on. Winter storms in the Ottawa Valley were vicious and power outages were almost written in stone. As were road and airport closures. The Phantom always kept a small radio on in his office to monitor the weather, and was not surprised to learn of the closure of the Trans Canada Highway between Ottawa and Renfrew. Highway 148, on the north shore of the Ottawa River, was also closed as far as Grand-Calumet. Arnprior was, in effect, closed for the duration. As The Phantom returned to his desk he thought it a very good thing that the ceremonies and afterwards ended when they did. With the roads closed, and the small airport at Arnprior socked in, none of the Knights would have got out, which would have meant a further strain on the Hospital's facilities and disruptions all over the place! So far as The Phantom knew, everybody - Harry, the Twins, and the others - had managed to find Ottawa, although he doubted that the Ottawa airport was open. He knew that thanks to the storm it would be days before he could stir from Flagstaff House, which suited him perfectly. He needed the break. What with the ceremonies, the parties, and dinners, The Phantom was woefully behind in his "boxes". They were delivered every morning without fail by FedEx, and were piled on top of the long, antique sideboard that stood under the window of his office. Then there was the mail, piles of it, sitting on his desk, none of the envelopes opened for days. Colin had been urging The Phantom to find a secretary, someone to take care of the mundane correspondence, someone to help with the schedule, and keep the Appointments Book. The Phantom was not quite resisting the idea. He knew that a secretary would lift a weight off of his shoulders, but who? A secretary would have to be a friend, someone who knew, or would come to know, The Phantom's quirks, which he admitted were many and annoying. As he considered Colin's idea The Phantom thought that there simply was no one whom he could trust, dismissed the idea, and returned to his papers. Although he did not realize it, The Phantom was scowling. He was the Grand Master of the Order and with that title came unrelenting work! On his shoulder seemed to rest any and all questions, queries, complaints and general bitches of the Knights, and those who demanded knighthood! There were also requests for charitable donations, which The Phantom never acknowledged and, except for the Salvation Army, never sent a penny to. He simply would not send a donation to any organization that seemed to spend more money on so-called "administrative costs" and begging for more donations than it ever did on the work it was supposed to be doing. Colin called The Phantom a piker and a cheapskate. The Phantom felt he was merely exercising fiscal responsibility. Which led The Phantom to read again the letter he had received from Edouard Lotbiniere, the Prior of England, who needed money, at least £100,000; more if the Trades Unions staged one of their infamous "work stoppages"? Edouard had written that the London Hospital, which occupied a former embassy compound between Palace Gardens Terrace and Brunswick Gardens, was simply overflowing. The main building needed new plumbing, and the Hospital was too small to house the small army (or so it seemed) of rescued rent boys and waifs. Edouard wanted to build a new wing. He could, and would, put the touch on his friends and his partner, Andreus Maartens, who was a diamond broker of some prominence, and who would guarantee the whole sum. This was not surprising. Andreus was well-respected in the City, and his signature alone was good for any sum, from any bank, including "The Old Lady of Threadneedle Street": the Bank of England. The Phantom twiddled his silver Cross fountain pen, thinking. Money was not a problem. The Order was not exactly flush with cash, but there were other resources available. In the corner of the office was a floor safe in which were kept not only The Phantom and Colin's Chains of Office, but also the emerald parure that The Gunner's aunt had bequeathed to him so many years ago. The jewels had never been used to finance any of the Order's activities since then, although The Gunner had come close a few times, before and during his tenure as Grand Master. They would easily fetch the required sum at "Uncle's". Still, a decision had to be made so The Phantom flashed up his laptop, punched in his password and accessed the financial files of The Keeper of the Common Treasure. Gabriel Izard, who had more or less inherited the post from Major Meinertzhagen when he passed on, was a very careful, very conservative man when it came to the Order's money. He had invested well and the accounts were in order. There would not be, on Gabe's watch, any fiddling with the books, as had happened back in 1976. Of course, the fiddlers had paid a price for their malfeasance, and the Order had actually gained much more than it had lost, thanks to the efforts and general all-around sneakiness of Joel Chiang. Joel, a cousin of Michael Chan's, was a computer geek of the first water and what he could not do with a computer had not yet been thought of. The Phantom missed the cantankerous man, who complained and moaned but always came through. Joel had managed to hack into mainframes of many banks and found the hidden hoards not only of Logan, but of Willoughby, and also of three of the Knights who had supported them, using their financial acumen to milk the Order of millions of dollars, through a non-existent German pharmaceutical research company. Much of the money they had sequestered had gone to pay Willoughby's debts and to cover his stock losses. Logan, who had been a miser, simply hid his profits in off-shore accounts in Switzerland, Liechtenstein and the Cayman Islands. They had also laundered money for Edmund Stennes, who had been even more secretive than Logan. Joel found it all, using a prototype Cray Super Computer, cackling away as his fingers followed the money trails. Thinking of Joel, The Phantom felt a wave of melancholy sweep through him. He stared into the fire blazing in the fireplace. Joel had died much too young, and in great distress from AIDS. So had Joel's partner, Cousin Tommy Chan, who had lasted a year after Joel died. There had been others, of course. The epidemic had lasted 20 years now, and while the list of Knights who had perished from AIDS was small, there had been others. Paul Greene, the nemesis and bane of the Boys of Aurora, was dead of it, dying noisily in the Hospice of St. John in Toronto, with only Simon Keppel, whose ministrations Paul refused, as he did not believe in God . . . ****** GRIDS . . . AIDS . . . The virus had many names, all of them promising death. The governments of the United States and Canada and of England and France and Germany, paid little heed to the reports of their health services. No one in power cared a damn. Why spend money on a disease that killed fags? The churches, the charge led by the bishops of the Catholic Church and the demented televangelists of the Fundamentalist Religious Right, considered the disease God's vengeance on man for their being queer. The epidemic was in its early stages, the first cases reported in 1981, and public outrage turned victims, no matter how innocent, into pariahs. Children were driven from their burned out homes by overweight, slatternly self-righteous viragos, trailer trash for the most part. Doctors refused to treat patients, no matter that they had sworn an oath to treat the sick - one dippy female surgeon would only operate on an HIV positive patient wearing what could only be described as an astronaut's space suit! The preachers had a field day. The day of wrath had come to those who ignored the Word of God! Families were shattered, friendships destroyed, and the victims, denied their basic human rights, denied medical care, denied housing, denied work, and were left to die in whatever corner they could find. Mutual consent said that they deserved what was happening to them. Government callousness and public indifference led to the formation of AIDS communities, which rallied the local gay communities. They and they alone, would care for their brothers. Michael Chan was fully aware of what was happening. He could not help it for the disease touched not only the Order, but his family. Joel Chiang, Michael's cousin and schoolboy lover, fell ill and wasted away. Cousin Tommy Chan, Joel's partner, followed. Demonized by his children, and vilified by his wife, Cousin Tommy had suffered the torments of the damned. Michael had arranged for his care and when Cousin Tommy mercifully died, had ordered, as he had for Joel, a monumental funeral, complete with a band. He dared the Chinese community to take exception. Wisely, none did. Michael's wrath descended on Cousin Tommy's wife and children. Although Cousin Tommy and his family were estranged and lived apart, there had been no divorce and in the Chinese tradition Tommy was still the head of their household. Cousin Tommy had provided for them and when he fell ill should have been able to rely on them for his care. Cousin Tommy's family did not offer even lip service to tradition. They refused to have anything to do with their provider and when Cousin Tommy died they did not attend his funeral. It was whispered that Cousin Tommy's eldest son had murmured, "Let him die in the street like a dog!" when informed of his father's illness. The whisper did not take long to reach the ears of the Emperor of Chinatown. The money that had kept them all in style and paid for the tuitions of Cousin Tommy's children to the finest schools suddenly stopped flowing. The bank, with the principal borrower dead, demanded immediate payment of the mortgage on the house the family lived in. Cousin Tommy's widow appealed to the family for help. None was forthcoming, for Michael had growled, "Let them eat grass!" Eventually, with no home, no prospects and no money, the family moved away, some said to San Francisco, some said to Toronto. Michael knew where they had fled to and his wrath followed them. The last he heard of them was that they were living on Social Assistance in Montreal, in a welfare flat. As time passed, other names would be added to the list of the dead, although only one would be a Knight. Nathan Berman, who was not Jewish by the way, and a rising star in the Democratic Party in Seattle, suddenly withdrew from public life. While there were rumours, Nathan never admitted or denied them. His family, who knew the truth, and ashamed that a son of their house would be not only gay, but suffering the Wrath of the Lord because of it, turned their backs. Friends drifted away except for two memories from Nathan's past. Bob Herzog and Jeremy Cohen, ex-Sea Cadets who had sailed with Nathan, and loved him, stepped forward. They knew of Nathan's love for Cory and when Nathan called for him in his delirium, Jeremy Cohen called Vancouver. Nathan died in Cory's arms on the 12th of March 1984. ****** Other names, more than could be believed, began to surface. Sandro Signaransky married and with sons of his own, had never forgotten his first true love, Chad Peters. Sandro knew of Chad's promiscuity, and his openly gay lifestyle. Chad had loved widely, and so it seemed inevitable that he would contract the disease. When the Boys had left Aurora back in 1976, Chad had gone home. He was not in love with Sandro, but he did stay in contact with the Russian boy. Later, Chad had moved to Toronto. Here he cut a broad swathe in the bath houses of what would become known as the "Gay Village". Arrested in the infamous "Bath House" raids in February 1981, Chad had evolved into an activist for gay rights. He never gave up, and spent much of his time lobbying the city, the province and the federal government. Chad blamed no one for his condition when he was diagnosed. He knew that he had been handed a death sentence and worried only that he might have infected someone who had never ceased loving him. Chad, a founding member of the AIDS Committee of Toronto, in extremis, reached out and contacted Simon Keppel. When he was informed that Sandro was not only healthy, but married and the father of two fine sons, Chad nodded, turned his head and closed his eyes. He never opened them again. Simon contacted Sandro, who came to Chad's funeral and afterward sat alone in a dark room. Before he flew back home Sandro visited Chad's grave and placed on it a small bouquet of red tea roses, in the language of flowers a sign that Sandro would never forget his first love. Each year, on the anniversary of Chad's death a similar bouquet appeared. ****** Michael Chan realising that the gay community and the dying could not depend on the government or the churches to care for them met with The Gunner. AIDS was in the Canadian mainstream, it was now a part of life and something had to be done. The Gunner agreed and arranged for the proceeds of the auction of his aunt's jewels to be paid to the Order. Held in Monte Carlo, the auction had attracted bids from all over the world. Chaim Goldschmidt, The Gunner's agent, had spent a small fortune researching the provenance of the jewellery and the sum raised, 3,378,450 US dollars, far exceeded the initial estimates. While perhaps half of the money was allocated to the Toronto Hospital, and in the initial construction of the Hospital at Arnprior, the balance was used to establish two hospices, one in Vancouver, and one in Toronto. The Gunner found a rambling old wreck of a Victorian mansion, bought it, and refurbished it, turning it into a pleasant home for gay men to die in. He reached out and appointed Simon Keppel, one of the original "Boys of Aurora" and an ordained Anglican priest, as administrator. Simon left his small working-class parish in Richmond and moved to Toronto. Simon had grown into a warm, caring young man. He understood the hatred and bigotry that drove homeless men to the hospice. With the help of caring volunteers he turned the hospice into a refuge, and while he knew, as his patients knew, that none of them would ever emerge alive, he persevered. The doors of the hospice opened in 1983 and never turned anyone away. At the time The Phantom was busy furthering his career as a Reserve naval officer, and fulfilling his duties as Prince of the Order. He and Colin had taken the second floor of Mary Randolph's house in Victoria and were quite happy. For The Phantom, 1983 had been busier than usual. He had foregone his usual summer of training with the Naval Reserves - they didn't seem to be going anywhere soon and, as he was also a Honourary Aide-de-Camp to the Queen, and a Midshipman in the RNR, he decided to standardize his Royal Navy connection by attending a course for Reserve Officers at Britannia Royal Navy College. When he returned he was faced with Christmas, which was approaching at a rate of knots. He had always enjoyed Christmas, and had returned from shopping, trying to find a gift for Colin, when the telephone rang. It was Simon, and one of his charges was dead. When Simon spoke the name of the charge, The Phantom had to sit down. Paul Greene, Little Big Man, was dead. ****** The death of Edmund Stennes had left his protégé and sometimes bed partner a wealthy young man. Paul was living in Germany, at first in a duplex supplied courtesy of the Canadian Armed Forces. His father, falling deeper and deeper into alcoholism, had been arrested for his neo-Nazi activities and given a rare (for the CAF) dishonourable discharge. Only the fear of a scandal had kept him out of jail. Paul, flush with money, paid the old man off and he disappeared. Where he went, no one cared. Frustrated at his inability to wreak his revenge on his brother, Matt, Paul had also arranged for the repatriation of his mother, sisters, and brother back to Canada. He never regretted his decision and was glad to see the back of them. Save for a large cheque, enclosed annually in the tackiest Christmas card he could find, he had no contact with his family. Stennes had chosen his heir well. Paul was a sharp operator, and smart enough not to continue Stennes' activities in the buying and selling of young boys. Stennes' business partners had tried to take over, which Paul had expected. Stennes had expected that and had ensured the legality of everything he had bequeathed to the tow-headed young man. His will had been watertight and the partners knew better than to push Paul. He knew too much, and was not averse to revealing certain facts and secrets and once they realized that he was a venal as they were, and much more vicious, they left him alone. That he also surrounded himself with thugs and Nazis, all of whom catered to his every whim, and knew how to use their fists and feet, and his connections with the German and French criminal underworld, made his enemies pause. Paul's age prevented him from having direct access to his money. Stennes had expected this and had appointed a conservator, a Silesian priest name Bernard Huber. The priest was very old, but completely honest and, at least as far as Stennes had been concerned, his credentials were impeccable. Huber had spent much of his career in Rome, in the German College and had been actively involved in ODESSA, the organization that provided documents and assistance to high-ranking SS officers escape the clutches of the Allies at the end of World War II. Huber, who had been forcibly retired back to Germany, at first tried to restrain Paul's spending. Paul threatened to inform the German authorities about Huber's wartime activities. Huber, old and frightened, and not keen on spending his declining years in a dank prison, signed . . . and signed . . . and signed, until Paul grew weary of him and spoke to two of his neo-Nazi associates. One day the priest left his small house and never returned. Paul settled into a small villa in the town of Weltersbach, which was just north and west of Ramstein. The villa was surrounded by over 300 hectares of forests and fields, and boasted a huge barn. This Paul turned into a "studio". With Stennes dead, Paul could now indulge himself and put into play several of his ideas. He had deliberately settled near Ramstein because just to the south was the large U.S. Air Force Base, populated by thousands of airmen who craved booze, sex and drugs. The near-collapse of the U.S. military after the war in Viet Nam played into Paul's hands. He listened to the gossip, read the papers, and heard the reports that his skinhead colleagues gave him. Drug use was rampant and if half the stories that made the rounds about the Amerikaners were true, then a good portion of the base population was high most of the time. Paul used this dependency on narcotics to his advantage. Before Stennes' death, Paul had thought of exploring the new video cameras, and using them to tape porn. Pornography was a huge business, Paul knew, and while much of the product was on 16mm film, he thought that videotaping the "actors" would be easier. Using his contacts (or rather Stennes') with the criminal underworld and black market, Paul purchased equipment, refurbished the barn and hired a man who had once worked with Leni Riefenstahl. From Paul's perspective it was all ridiculously easy. A thousand marks went a long way with the always broke soldiers and airmen. Paul laid in a supply of cocaine, marijuana and heroin. He spread the word through a network of whores and pimps and before very long he had a stable. The Americans, all young, some hung, could not resist Paul's lures. Not only were they given free access to drugs and booze, which loosened their inhibitions, and broads, they were paid larges sums to have sex with the women. Since most of them were high during the videotaping, they made no objections to their actions being taped. If they did, Paul stopped filming, threw more money at them, and then showed them the door. At first, Paul concentrated on straight, run of the mill, heterosexual porn. However, given his proclivities, he soon ventured into the world of gay porn. He had strengthened Stennes' ties with the neo-Nazi organizations and gathered around him a large group of men and boys who revered Adolph Hitler and all he stood for. Paul used these "Jugend", as he referred to them, for all his dirty work, and as his partners in sex. In was no great leap to convince them to become part of his stable. As the popularity of home videotape players exploded, so did the market for videotaped pornography. Paul's early decisions had placed him at the core of a most lucrative business. Paul continued to expand his empire. Sex was a money maker, and while he was astute enough to know if something was forbidden, the more men lusted after it. While he stayed clear of anything that hinted of sexual slavery, Paul invested in brothels in Hamburg, in Antwerp and Marseilles. He also invested in a small travel agency. In the summer of 1982 Paul went to Bangkok, studied the demographics and the sex trade there, and soon men were being offered all-in packages to Bangkok, complete with hotel accommodation, and tours of the red light districts. Business boomed and Paul was well on his way to being an even wealthier man than he had been. The only cloud on Paul's horizon was the slight malaise he seemed to be suffering. He felt achy, had a fever, and more and more woke up to a sweat-soaked bed. He saw a doctor who diagnosed general fatigue and recommended that Paul take a long vacation. As his symptoms increased Paul felt worse and worse. He had been tested for sexually transmitted diseases (one never knew, after all) but everything had come back negative. By the end of 1982 Paul was nauseous most of the time, and could not keep anything down. Shortly after the New Year, Paul also discovered small, wine-coloured lesions on his torso. Then he developed pneumonia and ended up in hospital where he was diagnosed with Kaposi's sarcoma, a relatively indolent disease affecting elderly men from the Mediterranean region, or of Eastern European Jewish descent, neither of which Paul was. While he lay ill, Paul's businesses began to unravel. His partners moved in and before he knew it Paul was no longer as important as he once had been. His money was being frittered away on medical expenses. His friends avoided him, thinking, rightly, that he was suffering from what the news media called "The Gay Plague." Not wanting to die in Germany, Paul returned home. He first went to Ottawa, but as he knew no one there, went on to Toronto where he checked into St. Michael's Hospital, where they were doing research on his disease. When the doctors told Paul that he was dying, and soon, he looked around for a nursing home. None would have him, not even with the money he offered for his care. He had AIDS and the mainstream medical establishment wanted no part of him. A friendly orderly told Paul about a hospice that would take him and he spent Thanksgiving, 1983, in the Hospice of St. John of the Cross of Acre. As the days passed, and Paul's condition worsened, he became, if it were possible, even angrier at the world. He abused the volunteers who nursed him, and refused the comfort of the Church. He was dying, so let him die in peace. Simon Keppel watched in silence as Paul Greene deteriorated. As Christmas approached Paul was bedridden, incontinent, and medicated to near stupor. During Paul's lucid moments, Simon urged him to make his peace with God. Simon had known Paul when he had been a Sea Cadet, knew that Paul had tried to implicate his fellow Sea Cadets in a sexual non-existent scandal involving homosexuality and Sea Puppies, and was universally loathed thereby. True to his vocation, Simon did everything he could to ensure that Paul Greene would die with some dignity. Faced with Paul's stubborn refusal to accept reality, and tendency to blame God and everyone and everything but himself for his condition, Simon took to avoiding the man. He prayed for Paul, as he did for all the hospice patients, but that was all. Let Paul face his Maker on his own terms. Simon was administering the last rites to a dying patient when one of the volunteers came into the room. With the last prayers said, the volunteer told Simon that Paul wanted to see him. Hoping against hope that Paul had at last seen the light, Simon hurried to his room where, not unexpectedly, his hopes were dashed. Paul would not reconcile himself with God. He would not reconcile himself with man. He was quite lucid, knew where he was, and knew that his time was short. He asked about the Boys of Aurora and Simon told him of their successes. Paul was unimpressed. He had hated them all his life and he would hate them with his last breath. Most of all he had hated his brother, Matt. Paul's only regret was that he had been unable to wreak his revenge on his brother. He had tried, but The Gunner, aided by Laurence Howard, had kept his promise. Matt was placed under surveillance by a team of former SAS and ex-Royals. They had been discreet, and Matt never knew of their presence. The neo-Nazi thugs that Paul had ordered to take care of his brother did, however. One night, Matt had left his school in Lahr, the Canadian military base, and went into town, to buy Christmas cards. He did not see the car following him - the streets and sidewalks were filled with shoppers - but those in the car saw the boy being accosted by three obvious skinheads. While shoppers scattered, the men in the car rushed to Matt's aid. The skinheads, who had been assured by Paul that there would be no problems paused in their attack, and paid the price. When the police arrived they found three bodies sprawled on the sidewalk, bleeding, one with testicles so badly damaged that they had to be removed. Paul tried to be stoic, and while he did rage at the failure, never let his hatred for Matt die. Simon listened to the raving and the hatred, tried to convince Paul that there was a new life waiting for him, that death was but pause on the pathway of God's plan for all mankind. Laughing behind the oxygen mask that covered his face, Paul cursed God and mankind. He ripped off his mask and spat at Simon. "That to God!" he snarled. Simon watched as Paul's wasted body grew paler. Never a muscular man, Paul resembled a talking, raspy-skinned skeleton. As Simon watched Paul began to descend into dementia, ranting, raving, cursing, Sieg Heiling and calling on Adolph Hitler. He returned once, to the time when he had been a Sea Cadet, his moans of lust filling the hospice corridors with his moans and lascivious demands for an unknown partner to increase his thrusting, to hurry and slake the appetite of a beast that raged in the dying man. Shaken, Simon had retreated and prayed, not only for Paul, but for deliverance from this horrible plague. It was all he could do. Paul Greene died alone, with no one there to hold his hand, or wipe his brow. As he had rejected God, his body was cremated and buried in the Hospice Plot in Mount Pleasant Cemetery. His grave was not that far away from that of Chad Peters, and no flowers ever appeared on it. ****** An exploding ember brought The Phantom back to the reality of now. He shook his head sadly. As he uncapped his fountain pen and wrote a note to the Keeper of the Common Treasure to arrange for the requested funds to be sent to Edouard Lotbiniere in London, he thought that while Paul Greene had been the personification of evil, he had also been, for a brief time, a part of the Tapestry. His shade had faded into nothingness, and The Tapestry lived on. Other figures had been added, all of them men and boys who had participated in the rescue of the Lost Boys. Alex Grinchsten, Pete Sheppard, Ned Hadfield, the minders and the Cousins, all had been woven into the cloth. Brendan Lascelles, The Phantom's brother, his figure vibrant in red and blue and gold, stood amongst them, his face calm, his eyes bright with the love for his brother, the ivory baton of a Knight of Justice clutched in his hand. As the Tapestry grew, so did the Order. Priories were re-established, new men welcomed and other men rejected. The Order was stronger now, the strength of the Order resting with the men it accepted. Michael Chan, and Stephen Winslow, as Grand Masters had done their best to ensure that the Order chose wisely. It was only after he had accepted the Sceptre and Collar of the Grand Master, The Phantom realised just how difficult the selections could be. Character of the candidate was everything, and both Michael and The Gunner had relied heavily on Chef, who could spot a farceur at a hundred yards. But . . . Chef was gone his expertise and experience with him. The Phantom, while he had proven near-infallible when adding figures to the Tapestry, never claimed to be as great a judge of character as Chef had been and relied on the reports sent to him by the Priors of the Order. These men had been appointed either by Michael or The Gunner. They made mistakes - as all men did - but in the main had chosen new candidates well and The Phantom was smart enough to overrule them only rarely. Still, from time to time problems did arise, witnessed by the letter he extracted from the next box he opened. The Prior of Germany and East Prussia had decided to reject the application of a candidate. His reason was valid. The man, a princeling of the Catholic branch of the Hohenzollerns, refused to abide by Article 24 of the Rule of the Order. He had been offered, and rejected a Companionship. The Prior had tried to reason with the prince, to no avail. He would not under any circumstances be circumcised. His Church forbade it, and his tradition confirmed the ban. Sighing, The Phantom resorted to the Internet. He flashed up his laptop, punched in his password and "Googled" the prince. The man was well known, was a member of every aristocratic organization in Europe, a Knight of the Golden Fleece, and related to half the Almanach de Gotha. He was also as rich a Croesus. He could be a good friend; he could also be a bad enemy, one with money and connections. The Phantom was, if anything, a purist when it came to the Order, and the Rule. What was written was written. The Rule had been codified, not without difficulty, and Article 24 confirmed by Proclamation. There could be no exceptions, no mitigating circumstances and no amount of money could buy a knighthood. A candidate might rant, he might rave, but no amount of shouting or threatening could, or would, persuade The Phantom to break his Oath. To refresh his memory, The Phantom called up the Codified Rule of the Order, and the proclamations issued by Michael Chan. Everything was as clear as a crystal note. Closing the laptop, The Phantom frowned. Every priory had a copy of the Codified Rule, and there should have been no problems at all, which had not been the case back in the early days of the resurging Order. Everything back then depended on memory, on making things up as they went along, or on the incomplete history of the Order written by Bertie Arundel - the Twins' father - and crumbling, faded archives rescued from wars and a century, at least, of indifference. There were no questions now, but back in 1976 . . . ****** As Grand Master of the Order, Michael Chan had dedicated his life to rebuilding it. He was prepared to expend vast sums, if that was what was needed, to re-establish the "Lost Priories". He was, however, a man of business, with far ranging contacts, partners and interests. He could not, no matter how much he tried, or relied on the assistance of Chef, The Gunner, and his Knights, or Bertie Arundel, give too much attention to the details of rebuilding. It was not that Michael wanted the situation to remain as it was. He was just as anxious to stabilize and standardize the Order's rules and regulations. However, at the time he was much too busy dealing with the aftermath of the "Eighth Crusade", as Chef called it, and the demise of General Minh and his compatriot, Diem. No one expected that the sudden disappearance of five apparently "upstanding citizens" would go unnoticed. They all had friends and co-workers who would question their absence and sooner or later the police would be notified. Michael had planned for this and the only surprise was that no one seemed to know or care that the late and obviously unlamented Doctor Bradley-Smith had wandered off into the mist. The Canadian Armed Forces, with a letter of resignation from the doctor on file, seemingly had other fish to fry and never questioned the reasoning behind the resignation. The doctor's family was equally indifferent. They wanted no reminder of their homosexual son and had spurned him years before. A "faggot" son was an embarrassment in their tight-knit, conservative community and the less they heard of him the better. The police, on the other hand, were required to investigate the sudden disappearance of four seemingly well-respected, well-known members of the community. They had no choice, really, not with family and, in two cases, politicians asking questions. That they were essentially spinning their wheels, courtesy of Michael Chan and Cousin Tommy, the police never realized. The Missing Persons Bureau went through the motions. They searched the homes and offices of the missing men and discovered certain articles that hinted at a dark doings: photographs, bank statements showing large transfers to accounts overseas that seemed to no longer exist and, even more disturbing, evidence that little boys had shared the homes of the men. Each home searched showed signs of hasty departure. Dressers drawers gaped open and closets had been seemingly torn apart. Scattered about were rejected articles of clothing that could only be worn by boys . . . little boys. The detectives raised their eyebrows and their eyes scanned the photographs. In every house they found snapshots of the missing men with little boys, a variety of little boys. The Chief of Detectives opined that something stank to high heaven and the detectives dug a little deeper. Inquiries at the airport showed that each of the four men had departed the country. Their names appeared on four passenger lists. The check-in clerks recalled the names, and agreed that the photographs the police officers showed them certainly looked like the men in question. The detectives then went the next step, and queried the authorities in the destination countries. The police in Bangkok, in Rio de Janeiro, Hong Kong and Cairo confirmed that the men had passed through immigration control - alone. Where they went after they landed was anybody's guess and while they would "make the usual in inquiries", nobody seemed all that interested. After all, if a man wanted to hide in their countries, for whatever reason, and had the money to sustain him in the hiding, who were they to question? The police also accessed the men's bank records, which showed the transfer of their wealth (Joel had been busy) to foreign accounts, which could not be accessed by anyone, including the police, who had no authorization to do so. The niggling question of the boys, or at least the evidence that the men had kept boys, continued to haunt the detectives. The men had left Canada alone, so what had happened to the boys? No one seemed to know. Michael Chan added to the confusion of the police by arranging for carefully planted newspaper articles, mostly uncorroborated bits of gossip in the tabloids. The men were boy lovers, and every time the police turned around another can of worms opened. Eventually it was decided by all concerned that perhaps certain suspected facts should be left to moulder away in the Cold Case Lock-up. The police investigation was hindered by another set of crime investigations. With the death (or at least the disappearance) of Minh and Diem, all hell broke loose in Little Saigon. Minh, aided by Diem, had spread his tentacles wide, his interests including drugs, prostitution, gambling and loan sharking. Diem had owned two construction companies, and had interests in several other legitimate businesses. With the general out of the picture, everyone wanted a piece the action. Van Trang had been the first to make a grab for part of Minh's empire. The car containing the bodies of Ming and Diem had scarcely been stowed on board the waiting freighter when Trang appeared at the Dallas Street brothel. He announced that Minh had joined his ancestors and that he, Van Trang, was now the boss. The denizens of the brothel were indifferent to who called the shots. So long as they got their cut of the action who cared who sat in the office? Their indifference was buttressed when the hulking doorman took umbrage. He was a cousin of Diem's, and wanted no part of an ignorant, ill-educated Saigon Cowboy. Blood was blood and if anyone deserved to inherit the brothel, it was he. Trang did not argue the point. He drew his pistol and shot the man between the eyes. When the body was carted away Trang moved in. Trang did not last long. The Vancouver Vice Squad had had the place under surveillance for a month and the war that broke out in Little Saigon led them to raid the house. Van Trang was taken into custody and charged with keeping a common bawdy house and living off the avails of prostitution. He was incarcerated in the city jail where he unwisely spurned the advances of a large, very horny Aboriginal. Two trustees cleaned up the ensuing mess and the city buried Trang in an unmarked grave, between a Jane Doe who had died of a drug overdose outside of the Carnegie Library, and a derelict that had gone to glory thanks to a brain aneurism. Nobody missed any of them. With Minh dead, and so many people trying to fill his shoes, it was inevitable that the bodies began to pile up. The Italians, long a power in the drug trade, moved in. Another Vietnamese faction objected and the bullets flew. Yet another gang tried to take over Minh's loan sharking business, much to the anger of the original, as it were, owners. More bullets flew. Michael was busy with his own interests, not the least of which was furthering the Italians' scheme to counterfeit near perfect $100 notes. The Triads were interested, as expected, and Michael was working hard to keep them that way. He was also trying to placate the Soongs. Michael's rejection of their daughter had not set well with the Soongs, and they had lost face. That they knew that Michael knew that they had been in the K'ang affair up to their necks did not help the Soongs at all. Michael pointed out in stringent tones that they were lucky that face was all they lost. After all, they could hardly blame him for taking a dim view of their plot to eliminate him! With all his problems, Michael welcomed the war in Little Saigon. Not only did it deflect attention from him, and his business interests, for he had been very careful not to involve himself, it also took the heat off of the investigation of the missing men and boys. Well satisfied with the state of affairs, Michael devoted time to the Order. He was, along with Chef, not pleased at the confusion surrounding the Rule and the Investiture of the new Knights. Michael, who hated confusion and disorder, wanted to standardize the Rule and unknowingly walked into the middle of a religious war. ****** The history of the Order in the Holy land had been short lived and bloody. In accordance with the Gospel preached to them by St. John, they raised no great temples, and the Knights of the Order carried out their work quietly and discretely. The "Mother House", the first priory, was established in the coastal city of Acre in 1105, by three Knights. Their purpose was to guard the army of pilgrims that descended on Outremer (as the Kingdom of Jerusalem was called), and provide them with food, clothing, shelter and what medical assistance as existed at the time. The Order grew slowly and in 1110 purchased a small house in Latrun, on the road to Jerusalem. While Jerusalem had fallen to the Crusaders in 1099, the Knights of the Order had avoided the city. The Kingdom of Jerusalem was a morass of political intrigue, religious intolerance, and the Knights wanted no part of it. The Hospitallers, and the Templars, knowing the Order of St. John of the Cross of Acre for want it was, an order of homosexual knights, with no ambitions, and no religious protection, more or less left the Order alone. They ruled in Jerusalem and Outremer. As the Order never interfered in anything, and gave nominal allegiance to the King, no one objected when the Order decided to establish a small hospital in Jerusalem, to house pilgrims. True to their vocation, the Knights sought no great temple to house their Order and pilgrims. They found a small inn, located on a square surrounded by stone buildings as old as the inn and surrounded by the workshops of tinsmiths who supplied pots and pans to the poorest of the poor. The inn was located just inside the Bab al-Maghariba, the Dung Gate. Here they stayed, unnoticed until 1187. In 1187 Salah al-Din Yusuf ibn Ayyub, known to history as Saladin, invaded Outremer. The Order responded to the call of Guy de Lusignan, King of Jerusalem and followed him, and the True Cross, to the Horns of Hattin. Of the 23 knights, six pages and 70 footmen who marched out of Jerusalem, only four knights and one page survived the battle. They, together with the surviving Templars and Hospitallers, were executed. Saladin marched on Jerusalem and besieged it. The city, under the leadership of Balian of Ibelin, resisted from the 20th of September until the 2nd of October 1187, when Balian handed over the keys to the Tower of David to Saladin's envoys. Balian and all Christians were given 50 days to leave the city. As there were no Knights left in the city, the three squires who had been left behind, locked the gates to the Hospital of St. John of the Cross of Acre, and joined the column of refugees trekking to the coast. What they left behind no one knew for no one would ever enter the Hospital again. With the fall of Jerusalem, Latrun was abandoned and the Order confined to the Mother House in Acre, where it remained until 1291, when the Christians were forced from the city. The Knights took with them their archives, their Articles of Faith, and the only copy of the Rule of the Order. With Palestine lost, the Knights settled in Austria and enjoyed the patronage of the Imperial House of Hapsburg. The surviving Knights began to rebuild and priories were established in England, in France and in Prussia. The Knights avoided politics, avoided kings and emperors, and went about their work quietly. While the Order continued to exist, it did not grow. Homosexuality was anathema. Homosexual men avoided anything that might hint at their sexuality. Every nation on earth proscribed it. In England being found to be a homosexual brought prison sentences. In Germany, it brought death. Some of the priories were closed, others existed in near poverty. Even in the New World, where there had been so much hope, the Order was more or less moribund, the leadership commandeered by men more interested in slaking their lust and using the Order's funds for their own use than in furthering the aims of the Order, men who ignored the Rule of the Order, unless it could be used to gain their own ends. For more 685 years the Hospital at Jerusalem remained in Limbo. ****** As Chancellor, Michael Chan had inherited custodianship of the artefacts of the Order, the Collars, the mascots of the Lost Priories, a box containing what was purported to be a section of the True Cross and . . . chaos! The old Grand Master had been much more interested in arranging orgies for his cronies than he was in rebuilding the Order. The Keeper of the Common Treasure, Willoughby, was merrily embezzling money from the Order's bank accounts. The Hospitaller of the Order, Sir Thomas Hunter, had no hospitals to care for. He arranged for the caretakers in Acre to be paid and ignored the Hospital in Jerusalem. It was, after all, little more than a pile of broken rubble on a square claimed not only by the Jews, but also by the Arabs, and the Latin Primate. Why the first Knights had chosen a building in what became the Jewish Quarter was beyond Hunter's comprehension. Not that it mattered, the Hospital was lost and so far as Hunter was concerned that was that. If Hunter was disinterested, Bertie Arundel was not. He had made it his business to try to write a history of the Order - none was in existence and what he knew, or thought he knew - was based more on tradition and folklore than anything else. He had a few crumbling documents, letters, some transcripts of past Conclaves, and so forth, and precious little else! Bertie was a perspicacious man and a lawyer. He suspected that much of what he had was more wishful thinking than fact, written by men who, while they wrote of the times in which they lived, were not above embellishment. One had only at to look at the Bible to know that! Chef, who was aware of Bertie's labours, opined that at least he did not have to deal with Saint Paul, who had visions at the drop of a hat to prove that God approved of this or that, always in favour of the new Christian religion. Bertie researched as much as he could. He knew that much of the Order's archives had been lost during the war. He also knew that the only known true copy of the Rule had been "blitzed" when the Luftwaffe bombed London. Bertie also knew that he could not look to the original Hospital in Acre. While the building still stood, it was empty, the archives, furniture and artefacts removed in 1291 when the city fell to the Mameluks after a bloody siege. The small inn at Latrun was long since history, and no one had a clue where it had stood. That left the Hospital in Jerusalem. As a lawyer, Bertie had an analytical mind and believed in examining every aspect of a brief presented to him. Just as Michael Chan had had Joel delve into the past and present of the men he would destroy, Bertie spent many hours trying to determine exactly what had happened to the Hospital after the fall of the Old City in 1187. For Bertie it was the most frustrating experience in his life. His frustration came not from the location of the Hospital, for the location was well known. His anger and near-apoplexy came from the current citizens of the ancient, walled city themselves! Jerusalem was sacred to all three of the world's primary religions. To Jews it was the City of David, the site of their most sacred shrines. On Mount Moriah had stood Solomon's Temple, as the temple of Moses had stood before it, and that portion of the Western Wall of Temple Mount that they revered as the Wailing Wall. To Christians every stone within the Old City was sacred, for here the Son of God had walked, and died. The stones of the Via Dolorosa, the Way of the Cross, which actually lay in what was the Arab Quarter of the Old City, were objects of veneration for the Faithful. To the Arabs, who called the city "El Quds", Jerusalem was the third most important city in Islam, after Mecca and Medina, and the first prayer stop on the Haj. The Har ha-Bayit, the Dome of the Rock, dominated the Old City. Here, under the Golden Dome, was the massive stone that Burak, the winged steed, had stepped on when he carried Mohammed, accompanied by the Archangel Gabriel to Paradise to hear the word of Allah and the Prophets. Here also was the Al-Aqsa mosque, also revered in Islam. Over the centuries the Old City had been divided into four quarters, Jewish, Christian, Armenian and Arab. Each community guarded its privileges and prerogatives jealously and if any other community tried to encroach upon the territory of another it was, as Chef once put it, "Katy - Bar the Door!" and the fight was on. The most fractious of the communities were the Christians. They fought with the Jews, the Arabs, and themselves. The smallest of privileges was zealously guarded and even the honour of scrubbing a stone in the Church of the Holy Sepulchre had been the subject of a battle between monks of the Latin Rite and priests of the Coptic Church! The discovery of a Christian site in any of the Quarters was equally fought over. No one would defer to another religion and the Jews, and the Arabs, phlegmatically stayed well away from any of the fray. The Arabs and Jews had lived in more or less harmony for centuries. The Arabs considered the Jews "People of the Book" and deserving of respect. To the Jews, while they wanted no part of Islam per se, they were realistic enough to know that the Arabs were here to stay and it was much better to live in peace with them than fight them. Besides, they were the landlord, and space was so restricted in the Jewish Quarter nobody in his right mind wanted to upset the landlord. There was also the very real fact that the Jews had lived in much better conditions under Arab rule than they ever had under the Christians. Everything changed, however, in 1948. Palestine was partitioned by the United Nations and war broke out. The Jewish Quarter, the area of the Old City between the Street of the Chain and the Ha-Yehudim, the Street of the Jews, became a target for the guns of the Arab Legion and the thugs of the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem. Houses, yeshivas and ancient synagogues crumbled under the weight of the Arab Legion's artillery and, while the Haganah defenders objected, the Chief Rabbi surrendered and the people, escorted by the British Army, left the Quarter they had occupied for centuries. What the guns of the Arab Legion had not destroyed, the fellahin of the Grand Mufti completed. When the war ended the Arabs completed the destruction of the Quarter and barred Jews and Christians from entering. The banishment of the Jews of the Old City lasted for two decades. In 1968 came another war, and this time the Israelis were ready. They swept through the Old City, reclaiming their land and the Wailing Wall. While the war that had restored the Jewish Quarter to the Jewish people had ended after six days, the war to establish real ownership went on far longer. Bertie, with his contacts in the international law community, and his status as an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of Canada, made inquiries. Much to his disgust he found that not only were the Arabs claiming that they owned the land, the Latin Church, supported by the Orthodox Patriarch, had stuck in its oar. Both churches claimed that the area and buildings around Temple Mount had once housed convents and monasteries, and had not the Templars themselves once occupied the Mount (hence their names). This claim led to a riot, for the Arabs would not tolerate the "Crusaders" anywhere near the Dome or Al-Aqsa. The Orthodox Patriarch quickly withdrew any claims and announced a period of prayer and fasting, to seek Divine Guidance. The Latin Patriarch called for his legal advisors. The Israelis, busy with consolidating their victory, had no time for fractious Christians or obstreperous Arabs. They formed a Land Claims Committee, which would examine all claims. This got nowhere. The committee would entertain no claims on the land where the great synagogues, notably the Hurva and Nissan Bek had stood. Nor would they countenance claims on the innumerable yeshivas and below street level synagogues (Jews were forbidden to build any structure that might tower over a Moslem mosque or madrasah) that had dotted the Quarter. These were Jewish, and no argument. Adding to the confusion was the absence of documentation. Succeeding waves of conquerors had destroyed, rebuilt, and destroyed again. Written records, tax rolls and land transfer certificates were non-existent. The British, during their Mandate, had tried to bring order out of chaos. However, when they gave up the Mandate they shipped their records to London and stored the crates and boxes in Somerset House. There they lay until 1962, when a sudden a portion of the embankment protecting the building from the Thames gave way and flooded the cellars. Nothing was saved. Rather than enter the fray, Bertie had more or less given up. What eventually led to the discovery of a true copy of the Rule was the decision by the Israeli government to declare much of the area surrounding the site of the Jerusalem Hospital an archaeological dig. On hearing the news, Bertie wasted no time. He called his brother, Louis, who was a tenured professor at the University of British Columbia. Louis contacted the Dean of Archaeology, who was always looking for places to dig up. With a grant from the Arundels (and a fellowship from the Order), the hunt was on. The site was clearly identified, the rubble of destruction moved away and the site excavated. What was revealed was a large, oblong marble square covering the undercroft. The marble flooring was unmarked and looked as if it had been laid only the day before it was discovered. The archaeologists raised the first stones and discovered an underground chamber. Carefully, they lowered two Arab workers down, which resulted in screams and shouts. The workers scrambled up the rope ladders, chattered with their co-workers, and then the Arabs decamped. The chamber was obviously haunted, they claimed, the home of a Djin! Glaring at his fleeing workers, the Chief Archaeologist was lowered into the hole. What he discovered astounded him. The underground chamber was a chapel. There was a stone and marble altar, quite plain, on which were a gold crucifix and two silver candle holders. There were no pews or chairs, but there was an ancient, carved prie-deux. More importantly, along the walls were niches containing cedar boxes, each with a lock, and in perfect condition. More importantly, in front of the altar, was a bouquet of Hebron roses, as bright and fresh as if they had been placed there that morning. Shaking his head in awe, the Chief called to be hauled out and when back above ground hurried to call Louis Arundel. The Latin Primate, like all good primates, had his spies, who swiftly reported the discovery of a holy site, a miraculous site, an obviously Christian miraculous site. The Primate gathered up the skirts of his cassock, called for his Episcopal coach (actually an elderly Austin-Mini) and, trailed by monsignori and altar boys, hurried to the Dung Gate where he demanded immediate right of ownership. The ensuing row caused the usually disinterested tinsmiths to close their tiny shops and watch, placing wagers on who could yell the loudest, offer the most gratuitous insults, and mutter the most salacious slurs on the characters of the Primate and the Chief Archaeologist. It also brought the police, who promptly closed down the site and sent everyone packing. The matter was referred to the Ministry of Antiquities who ordered the site sealed until ownership could be established. Bertie Arundel knew what that meant! Once the bureaucrats became involved, and they were the same in every country on earth, one could expect years of litigation, government committees and ministers ad infinitum offering opinions. Bertie would have none of it! He turned to Michael Chan, who spoke with The Gunner, who called Aaron Goldschmidt, who said, "No problem." Aaron Mark II called Israel. His contact, while he wondered why one of Mossad's best agents wanted an archaeological site raided, arranged everything. In the middle of the night the residents of the square saw and heard strange doings but, being smart enough not see anything, returned to their beds. The Mossad was nothing if not thorough. Everything in the underground chapel was removed, included the flowers, which promptly withered and then crumbled into dust as it was handed up to a waiting worker. This gave everyone pause, but they continued and nothing else was lost, including the Altar Stone, which eventually was revealed to contain a small portion of wood, a piece of the True Cross. Everything was bundled up and sent to Tel Aviv, where the boxes were loaded onto a cargo plane and shipped off to Canada. Bertie and Louis Arundel were delighted. The cedar boxes contained masses of perfectly preserved scripts rolls of vellum, each one relating the history of the Order in the Holy Land. One of the rolls of vellum was a true copy of the Order, written in flawless Latin. Louis engaged the services of two retired Latin scholars, who set to work, and by the end of 1990 the new priories had copies of the Codified Rule of the Order, which included Articles for a proper Bar of Justice. The site of the Jerusalem Hospital remained sealed as the law suits, claims, and counter claims made their way through the Israeli courts. As litigants ran out of money, died, or simply gave up, the only horse in the race remained the Latin Primate. As the site was obviously Christian, the Ministry of Antiquities awarded it to the Roman Catholic Church. The Primate, along in years, had traded his Austin-mini for an armoured Daimler (the Intifadah, one or the other of them made this a wise choice of vehicles). The Primate, accompanied by monsignori unto the ninth generation, and innumerable choir boys and acolytes, returned to the Dung Gate. Smiling, he tapped his crosier on the unbroken seal. Suddenly the earth shook and the marble slabs began shifting, rising and falling. Monsignori clutched acolytes to protect the boys, and the Primate fainted. The tinsmiths and their families, driven from their houses and shops, watched as the earth shifted and collapsed. When the earthquake ended it was found that the only damage had been to the archaeological dig. It had collapsed in on itself, and as far as the world was concerned whatever the crypt had contained was now lost forever. ****** Leaving his papers, The Phantom turned and looked out of the window. The wind had died down, and there was no more drifting snow. Thinking of the saga that had led to the writing of the Codified Rule, he smiled. Aaron Goldschmidt had never failed the Order, and while he remained true to his Jewish religion, had proven to be a true Knight. He lived, happily, in Israel, with his partner and lover, Aaron Edgar, whom everyone referred to as "Aaron Mark I", on a kibbutz, tending his olive trees and spoiling his adopted children. The Phantom had not seen either Aaron since the dedication of the Mast, which now topped the roof of Flagstaff House. The Mast had stood over the old Sea Cadet training establishment on Heron Spit from the time it was opened, and which The Gunner had purchased from Crown Assets for $25.00 when the site of HMCS Aurora had been sold to land developers. Making a note to invite the Aarons for a visit, and to talk about establishing a new Hospital in the Holy Land, The Phantom returned to his work. His eyes fell on the appeal on his desk and frowned. Just such an appeal, in 1992, had led, and The Phantom was convinced of it, to Chef's death. Of course it had also led to one of the last, and greatest, funerals ever held in Halifax, or the rest of the country for that matter. "Dear God," The Phantom thought, leaning back in his chair. "What a funeral that had been!" Chef must have been looking down and clapping his hands in glee, knowing that the Order had prevailed, and that the most pestiferous brat in existence had cocked a snook at the Prime Minister of Canada! ****** As Chef would have put it, The Phantom was as cranky as Harry with the Pride in dry dock for engine repair and the Escorts out of service for bottom scraping. The Phantom did not think that he was that bad, but he was in a grumpy mood nevertheless. Colin was still away, serving in HMCS Athabascan, not doing much of anything at all except transiting the Gulf of Arabia. The surgeons at RNH Haslar had done a great job in putting The Phantom's leg back together, but it still bothered him and he had months of rehabilitation to look forward to. He was still using crutches, which he had not yet quite mastered, and the damned things kept getting in the way. So it was that yes, The Phantom was in a cranky mood when he sat down in what had been the front parlour of the crumbling old farmhouse that was now doing double duty as the "Grand Priory" and headquarters of the Sovereign and Noble Order of the Cross of Saint John of Acre. Everything was covered in dust and the noise was near unbearable. Outside the construction machines growled and roared as the work on the new Hospital buildings went forward. There was so much noise that The Gunner had almost to shout to be heard. Why The Gunner had decided to hold a meeting of the Grand Council here, The Phantom could not understand. There was a perfectly good hotel in town, after all, complete with conference facilities, but The Gunner had insisted. The business of the Order went on, and a little inconvenience was to be expected. Slightly under the influence of the drugs the doctors prescribed for pain, The Phantom had not really been paying all that much attention when a thunderous bang interrupted the proceedings. Chef was off and running again! A meeting of the Grand Council covered many items, not the least of which was the candidacy of new Knights. The Gunner, as Grand Master, had continued Michael Chan's dream of rebuilding the Order. He had established new priories in England, in France and in Austria. He was also in the middle of negotiations to purchase suitable property in Germany. On the surface, things were going well, very well indeed. There were problems, however. Chef, as Proctor, had been travelling the world, or so it seemed, judging new candidates. Under normal circumstances his word was law when it came to accepting or rejecting any candidate Knight. He therefore did not react well to his orthodox approach being questioned. While The Phantom had been daydreaming, and wondering how Matt Green and Cory were doing, an argument of titanic proportions had developed. The Germans were being obstreperous, which was not surprising. They were even worse than the French! Always demanding and always trying to impress with their names, their titles and their general all-around arrogance. Chef, being Chef, was just as obstreperous, and as stubborn as a Clydesdale in the mud. Right was right and he was not about to pander to the prejudices of a clapped out count who was probably a Nazi anyway! Major Meinertzhagen, who was suffering from heat rash, begged to demure. While a German, the man was eminently qualified and had never been a Nazi. Chef growled in return and the war was on. Pete Sheppard and Alistair Chan, who were representing the ailing Michael Chan, metaphorically drew back their chairs. The Phantom looked around for a glass of water and his pill box. He wished that Cory were here or, more importantly, Ray Cornwallis, Chef's adopted son. But Cory was still in hospital in England, recovering from his wounds, and Ray was in Vancouver, half-way through his residency at Vancouver General. Ray always managed to calm the old man down, just as Randy and Joey always managed to wind the old man up! There was much pounding of the table as Chef and the Major emphasized a point and The Phantom found himself shaking his head. They were arguing over Article 24 of the Rule, something that The Phantom knew had been settled years before. One either complied with it, or one did not, in which case, one would be offered a Companionship. Chef himself had talked Michael Chan into allowing wavering candidates to become Companions, although if the truth be told, The Phantom had had a great deal to do with it. When Michael Chan had offered knighthood to all the Boys of Aurora, several of the boys had been found wanting. Sandro Signaransky and Nate Schoenmann were Jewish, although Sandro was not yet a true son of Abraham. He had not had his bris, although it was planned for later in the year 1976. Peter Race was perfectly acceptable, as was Ned Hadfield, a member of Michael Chan's security force. So was Jérémie Larôche. Except that they did not meet the requirements of Article 24. When Chef informed The Phantom that none of the boys could be knighted, The Phantom had threatened to leave the Order, threatened to refuse knighthood. As The Phantom had been and still was the catalyst, the central figure in the Tapestry that bound the Boys of Aurora together, Chef had compromised and offered Companionship, with Knighthood to follow if and when the boys (and Ned) decided to be circumcised. As Chef and the Major traded barbs, The Phantom looked at his old friend and mentor. For the first time The Phantom realized that Chef looked old. Of course, Chef was old, but he was also looked tired. His colour was bad, and he had lost weight, which was not surprising. Chef was simply juggling too many balls. He refused to admit to frailties of any kind, and never shirked what he thought was his duty. In addition to his work as Proctor, he had inherited the catering business of the Maestro, in Vancouver. With the focus of the Order now in Eastern Canada, he had also purchased a building in Ottawa and opened a restaurant in Ottawa where he taught Randy and Joey how to cook. He also taught them his imperious and stubborn attitudes. The restaurant, successful even before it opened its doors, catered to the movers and shakers, the rich, the famous, and the not so famous. These were, much to the regret of some, declarative terms, for if Chef did not think you were worthy of patronizing his dining rooms, you simply did not get in. Chef added to the exclusivity of the restaurant by opening a third floor dining room. Here only the elect of the elect, as determined by Chef, and Chef alone, were welcome, and no woman, no matter how exalted in government or the military, ever set foot, period, although Mrs. Arundel, Mrs. Randolph, and Mrs. Airlie and Sophie Nicholson, had been allowed to lunch there. Someone had once asked what would happen if the Queen had decided to call, but the question was never answered as Her Majesty never dined out at a restaurant. If Chef was as ill as he looked, no one knew. He kept his personal problems to himself, and never complained. The Phantom, engrossed in the argument, never noticed that Chef had suddenly turned pale and was as shocked and frightened as the others when Chef clutched his chest, moaning quietly, and lapsed into unconsciousness. Rushed to Arnprior Hospital, it was found that Chef had suffered a massive heart attack. When he had been stabilized he was taken by air ambulance to the University of Ottawa Health Institute. Here he lay, failing, for three days. While semi-conscious and medicated for the most part, Chef was aware of his surroundings, and determined to meet his Maker on his own terms. He didn't care a fig what the doctors - quacks, the whole of them - said. As The Gunner told Ray, who had rushed from Vancouver, Chef would die when he decided to die, and no argument. On the fourth day, Chef rallied. He was lucid, growled at the nurses, and refused medication for the pain the doctors insisted he had. Chef threw a bedpan at the Chief of Cardiology and called for his solicitor. They had matters to discuss. Chef's nominal solicitor was Cory Arundel. However, with Cory still in England, his brother, Todd, answered the call. Chef, being Chef, could not let the opportunity slip by to chastise one of his favourite boys. Todd was a fool, so he was, and Chef let him have it, a broadside, and no danger. Todd had been feuding with Cory. He had married a woman for all the wrong reasons, and Cory despised the woman. He had refused to stand as Todd's Chief Supporter, and had dragged both The Phantom and Matt off to a course with the U.S. Navy Seals immediately after the wedding ceremony (which Cory did not attend) ended. Cory, if it were possible, was even more stubborn than Chef, as stubborn as a Missouri mule with spavins and heaves, and refused to compromise. Chef wanted Todd and Cory to kiss and make up. No woman should ever come between brothers! Todd, who knew that he had made a mistake, was as stubborn as his brother, and while he was not rude, he reminded Chef that he was here in his professional capacity, and his personal business was his own, thank you. Chef knew that Todd was right, lapsed into petulant silence, and then they settled down to the business at hand: re-examining the provisions of Chef's will and adding codicils where needed. They talked for two hours and then called for the Charge Nurse and an orderly, who witnessed the changes in Chef's last testament. Satisfied with the disposition of his worldly goods, Chef settled back and entered into negotiations with God. While he had been raised a Catholic, Chef had issues with the Church, and hadn't been in a Catholic church in years, except for the odd funeral. He considered himself a free agent, and hoped that God would understand. Chef was also of the opinion that one religion was as good as any. While organized religion did not, in the main, attract him, Chef realized that he was dying and a man did want to tie up any loose ends, so to speak. So he called for Simon Keppel. ****** Simon really did not know what to expect. As one of the Boys of Aurora, Simon had known Chef from a very early age, and seen the man in his glory days. He knew that Chef never professed, one way or the other, any love for the Established Church, or any church. Still, as a priest, and knowing that Chef was a Christian, Simon gathered up his Book of Common Prayer, his holy oils, and his cassock. As Chef was not a communicant of the church Simon would not offer anointing unless the old man asked for it. He would pray with Chef, and pray for him, as he prayed for so many these days. Chef greeted Simon weakly. The old man was failing fast but determined to shuffle off this mortal coil when he was damned well ready to shuffle. As Simon draped his purple stole around his neck he was startled to hear Chef ask him to hear his confession. Simon quickly cleared the room and closed the door. The Seal of the Confessional, and the firmly closed door, guaranteed that whatever sins Chef admitted to would remain between him, Simon and God. No one would ever know what Chef confessed, or told Simon. The Gunner, who was waiting outside in the corridor with The Phantom, was frankly listening but all he could hear were indistinct sounds and then . . . Straightening, The Gunner chuckled and remarked to The Phantom that whatever it was that Chef wanted to say, it must have been a hell of a tale if the laughter that drifted into the corridor was any indication! ****** With his soul at rest, Chef settled back. He was ready now and wanted to say goodbye to his boys. They had bedevilled him, driven him to drink, caused his hair to turn white (according to him), and been the authors of no end of grief. On the distaff side, Chef admitted that he had done worse to the boys (he hadn't, but nobody was going to argue the point), but he had loved the boys beyond explanation. He wanted them with him when he was called home at last. So they gathered. Ray, who had flown east as soon as he learned of Chef's heart attack, was on Chef's right, holding his hand. He had haunted the hospital from the moment he arrived, pestering the doctors and trying not to weep. Kevin Berkeley, Ray's lover and best friend, stood beside, his hand on Ray's shoulder, offering what strength and comfort he could. Both he and Ray had loved Chef, their Papa Chef, and together they would see the old man on his way. Randy and Joey, who ran the restaurant in Chef's absence, joined the gathering. Both boys had found something they never thought they would have: pure, unabiding love, a love that transcended mere sex, and they had found it in the sick old cook. With them, standing four-square and as solid as a Martello tower, was Phil Thornton. Phil had loved the two young men since their days in Aurora. That they had frankly seduced, and taken advantage of him was of no importance. Phil had found his true loves and never wavered in his determination to protect them. Now his strong arms held Randy and Joey close, his strength helping them to keep their emotions, bubbling below the surface of their grief, in check. The other boys gathered from far flung points. Mark van Beck hurried from his coaching job in Seattle, joined by Tony Valpone, who wore the two and a half stripes of a Lieutenant Commander in the USN. Andy Berg - Major Berg, USMC - flew in from the Gulf, where he commanded a forward recon unit. For the first time in many years the "American Line" was together, save for Nathan Berman, who had died of AIDS, still mourned by his fellows. Kyle St. Vincent, Andy's lover, who had been visiting his people in Kingston, drove in and joined the Americans. Harry, owner of the Pride of the Fleet and the Escorts, arrived, having left his farm and growing young family in the care of his brothers. With him came Mike Sunderland and Phillip, called the Assistant, Adean. As more and more of the men arrived the room began to fill. Stuart MacDuff and Steve Lee came in, followed by Chris Hood and Jon Jackson. Tyler Benbow wangled leave from his ship, HMCS Terra Nova, which was still in the Gulf. He was joined by Val Orsini, who drove from Saskatoon to be in the room. As the day lengthened and dusk approached more of the boys entered. Sandro and Nate Schoenmann had flown out from British Columbia together. Sandro leaned heavily on Nate, for he was still reeling from Chad's death. "Too much, too much," Sandro murmured as he buried his face in his hands. Darkness settled over the city and the room grew quiet. Still more of the boys arrived. Rob Wemyss, together with his partner, Marc Worden, arrived from Toronto. Rob joined his brothers, while Marc went down to the hospital cafeteria where he joined Alistair and Arden Chan, and Logan Hartsfield. All four felt the impending loss of the old cook deeply, but as they were not Boys of Aurora, they all felt it would be presumptuous of them to be present when Chef said his goodbyes to his boys. Arden, who had come to love Chef, and looked to him for comfort and advice when one of life's downturns came calling, wept silently. They were joined, briefly, by Calvin Hobbes, who tried to comfort Arden, and wept with him, and then went up to the room to help Simon, as deacon. Nicholas Rodney appeared, alone. His relationship with André de Noailles had soured, and he had not chosen a new partner. As Nicholas stood, his eyes welling with tears, he felt a hand on his shoulder. He turned to see Brian Venables, still wearing his dessert camis, standing there. Nicholas started. "What . . . what are you doing here?" he whispered. "I thought you were still in Kuwait." "Somebody pulled strings," Brian whispered back. He looked toward Chef, who was breathing shallowly. "I'm not too late?" "No," replied Nicholas. He lowered his mouth to Brian's ear and asked, "What about Colin?" Brian shrugged. "Not my part ship," he said. He looked around the room, and then peered into the corridor. "Have you seen Logan?" Nicholas shook his head. "Haven't seen him." Before Brian could reply, there was a thumping from far down the corridor. Both Nicholas and Brian stepped outside to see what was going on. Their eyes widened as they saw Cory and Matt Greene, with Sean Anders wheeling Cory's chair. "How is he?" Cory demanded without preamble as they neared the room. "Still hanging in there," replied Nicholas as he listened to the faint beeping of the heart monitor. "He's waiting for everybody to come," said Cory, who had been close to Chef as a boy Sea Cadet, and as a man, and knew the man's strength of will. Chef would not die until all his boys were with him. He looked up at Nicholas. "Two Stokes and Thumper are here. They're parking their cars." Nicholas looked apprehensive. Two Strokes, who was now a constable with the Durham Regional Police, and Thumper, had been lovers once. They had drifted apart while in college, when Thumper had decided that he wasn't gay anymore and besides, he'd been seeing a girl, who was pregnant with his child. The breakdown of their relationship had been acrimonious. Cory saw the look on Nicholas's face. "Don't worry, they're our brothers, and part of the Tapestry. There will be no trouble," he said. Brian was not quite so sure, but he trusted Cory's judgement. He looked at Matt. "You guys wangle a flight? How in the hell did you get the doctors to release you?" Matt smiled for the first time since leaving England. "I'm buggered if I know. One minute I was lying in my bed being attended by a very handsome orderly, and the next I was in a transport plane along with Cory and Sean and a field gun and limber, not to mention a subaltern and six gunners of the King's Troop, Royal Horse Artillery to look after the damned thing!" Brian's face grew sad. "With a coffin board?" he asked Sean. Sean nodded. They all knew what that meant: Chef's funeral had been planned by Chef down to the last detail and the coffin board, mounted on the ceremonial field gun, would carry him to his grave, for Chef would have no hearses! "Operation Thunder," he whispered. Cory sighed and Matt started to cry softly. Thumper and Two Strokes came up. They both appeared calm, and regarded each other with guarded affection. Each still had feelings and fond remembrances of the other and there would be no trouble. ****** Chef continued to linger. He woke once, and asked if everyone was here. "Colin isn't," The Phantom said softly as he stroked the old man's cold brow. "You should sleep." "He'll be here," murmured Chef. "We'll wait." Then he winked at The Phantom. "Trust me, Phantom Darlin'. I have me ways, so I do." The Phantom smiled. There was still a spark of the old Chef left. "If you say so, then it's so," he said. "I do, and don't be doubtin' me, pestiferous brat!" replied Chef as he closed his eyes. ****** Toward 0300 Colin, looking as if he had just stepped out the shower, and dressed in his RNR blue uniform, appeared with Laurence Howard, who was impressive in his khaki, undress Royal Marines uniform. Both men looked a little haggard. "How?" The Phantom asked as Colin advanced to his side and kissed him on his cheek. "Well, let's just say that pressure from the highest quarters came to bear," replied Colin with a conspiratorial grin. He reached into inside pocket of his uniform jacket and withdrew a cream, red-crested envelope. "I was watching the Protecteur trying to keep station while we refuelled when I was piped to the bridge. The captain handed me a signal and told me to pack my bags at the rush. Then it was in a Herkie-Bird, and believe me, the only time I really worried was when I was in the damn thing, and off I went to Riyadh airport. From there I went to London where a certain Royal Marine and certain Kipper were waiting at the airport." He jerked his head toward Laurence, who was standing to one side, and then at Fred Fisher, who was hurrying along the corridor after seeing to their car and driver. "From London it was first class all the way. We were flying in a VC10, quite posh, with beds and a shower." Colin waved the envelope at The Phantom. "I'm on official business." The Phantom saw the red crest and started. "She knows?" "She does," replied Colin simply. "Fred brought this down from Balmoral." Then he leaned down and whispered, "I also have something for you." The Phantom's green eyes widened. "Me? What have I done now?" Colin smiled. "You'll have to wait." Miffed, The Phantom returned to stroking Chef's forehead. Chef's eyes opened. "Is it done with the whispering you are?" he asked grumpily. "I thought you were asleep," said The Phantom. "Not with you and that long bulky buffoon chattering like the magpies of Duncannon!" returned Chef. "Sorry. Can I get you anything?" The Phantom asked. "Me lips are that parched." "I'll get some ice." Colin saw a small bucket containing cracked ice on the table beside it. He handed it to The Phantom who gently rubbed the ice over Chef's lips. "Not as good as a drop of the creature, I'm thinking, Chef," he said with a sad smile. "Aye, but now is not the time," replied Chef. He turned his head and looked at Ray. "Darlin' boy, crank me up." Ray looked at his Papa Chef. "But . . . do you think you should?" "Raymond, it is time to haul down the commissioning pennant. I won't be doin' it lyin' flat on me back!" Ray did as Chef commanded. The old man looked around the room. "There are some missing," he said presently. "Everybody's here," said Ray, wondering who Chef was talking about. They were all here, all save one. Chef shook his head slowly. "No. There are others that I wish to be here. Fetch them!" Rob, who was closest to the door left, and returned shortly with Logan, Alistair, Arden and Marc. When Chef saw them standing in the doorway he smiled and nodded his head. He sighed deeply. "When I was young, I never thought of death. I was invincible and immortal. Sadly, age has taught me something quite different." A smile formed on Chef's lips. "Once, when Stevie Darlin' and I were having a bit of the this and the that, I told him that when my time came I would go out kicking and screaming, and causing as much upset and turmoil as I could." He chuckled a dry, low laugh. "Of course, he was in his cups at the time so I doubt he remembers." The Gunner shook his head. He was crying softly now. "I remember, Chef," he whispered. "Ah, Stevie, it's surprisin' me, so you are!" responded Chef. Then he sobered slightly. "But now is not the time for the reminiscences. Soon I will cross the bar, so there will be no leprechauns, or besoms - although that Charge Nurse is always coming in here and sticking sharp objects in me tired old carcass!" Chef had not lost his touch. He regarded the assembled Knights and Companions, and the others, his boys. "We've had a good commission, so we have," he said, "but now it's time for me to be off to the breaker's yard. I've had a good life, a long life and I don't regret much." He turned to The Phantom. "I would not have really taken a shot at your bare pink bottom, Phantom," he said. The Phantom remembered the Abandon Ship Exercise back in Aurora, and Chef, who was supposed to be doing life guard duty for the swimming cadets, had armed himself with an elephant gun - fortunately unloaded, although Chef did not know it at the time. "I know you wouldn't have," replied The Phantom. "Ray," Chef said, looking at his son. "I never really would have spanked you with me spoon." Ray, weeping openly, nodded his head. "I know, Papa Chef." "I love you, lad," murmured Chef. Then he looked around again. "Randy, Joey, Calvin, Simon!" he called. The four men came forward. Chef smiled slowly. "I don't regret being hard on you. You were the youngest, and influenced by evil spirits . . ." His eyes drifted to Cory and Todd, ". . . who were not as evil as they let on, although faith, their taste in pants fair set me to reaching for me spoon!" The Twins, in their younger days, were infamous for their taste in wildly coloured underpants. "There was none to match you," Chef said, "although if me memory is still with me, that scallywag Mal, came close." He paused to catch his breath. "I wonder what happened to him." "I saw him last Levee Day," said Rob. "He's married and doing well. He remembers you fondly." "As I do him," responded Chef. "He could have been one of the brotherhood but it was not to be. He was not woven into the Tapestry." The Phantom felt Chef squeeze his hand. Both knew that there had been others, but as Chef had said, it was not to be. The Phantom noticed that the annoying beep of the heart monitor seemed to be slowing. Chef's eyes clouded as he murmured, "Phantom darlin', there's something that's been bothering me." He saw the concerned look on The Phantom's face and smiled slowly. "It's been on me conscience and it is time to make amends." He raised his head and saw the two faces he wanted to see. "Peter darlin', come closer." Peter Race and Eion Reilly had taken the first flights out, Peter from Halifax, and Eion from New York, where he now lived. They were determined to be with Chef at the end and had shared a cab to the hospital directly from the airport. Chef motioned again and both Peter and Eion moved to stand beside his bed. "Peter darlin', I know that you've always felt that somehow I thought you a lesser being for bein' a Companion and all . . ." he began. "I didn't, Chef, on my honour, I didn't," whispered Peter. "I was happy to be . . ." Chef shook his head and the heart monitor beeped loudly. "It was a Knight I should have made you!" Chef growled. He looked at Eion. "And himself, as well." Eion, close to tears, shook his head. He had remained content to be a Companion, not quite ready to "Profess". His brief liaison with Peter back in the Toronto Hospital had led him to others, none of them lasting longer than three or for months. He knew that he could not lie to Chef, and knew the true nature of his character. "My decision, Chef." He started to weep. "I was wrong." "No matter," replied Chef gently. He winked at Peter. "How is the wound? Healing well?" Peter could not help but smile at Chef referring to the aftermath of a minor procedure as a "wound". "It's healing well, Chef, no problems." Chef motioned for Peter to come closer. "Don't tell the Twins!" he cautioned. "They'll want a grand unveiling, so they will!" He sank back and nodded. "You'll be for Knighthood then," he asked. "Yes, and Eion," replied Peter. "It is time." "Aye, so it is." Chef regarded Peter and said, "You were a good lad, and you're a good man. I've a special job for you, my son." He turned his head and looked at The Gunner. "Stevie darlin' will tell you, so he will." Chef took another deep breath. "Ah, lads, sure goodbye is the saddest word in the English language." He looked at them all. "We had enough of the goodbyes, I'm thinking. But we always met again." A small tear rolled down Chef's cheek. "But the time is come, lads. So . . ." Chef paused, gathering his strength. "My time is near. I want you all to think on this: Life is a storm, my young friends. You will bask in the sunlight one moment, and be shattered on the rocks the next. What makes you a man is what you do when that storm comes. You must look into that storm and shout as you did in so many times, as I did many times: `Do your worst, for I will do mine!' Then the fates will know you as I know you: as the Boy's of Aurora! As Knights! As Companions! As men!" Chef began coughing and the machines began to blink and the Charge Nurse pushed her way into the room. Ray and The Phantom placed their arms behind Chef's back and raised him, helping him to breathe easier. The nurse moved to place an oxygen mask over Chef's face but he waved her way. "No! Not yet, woman!" Chef eyes were closed now, but he was aware of what he was doing. "I have loved you all, as my sons, as my brothers. Keep that love, boys, keep that love. Always remember that it is written: `And above all things have fervent charity among yourselves: for charity shall cover the multitude of sins.' Keep that charity, that love, always; that is my legacy to you." Chef sank back. He breathed a long, low, heavy sigh, and whispered one final word: Ray. ****** Outside of the hospital, after saying their final goodbyes to Chef, The Phantom, Colin, and The Gunner waited for their cars. The Phantom, while in pain, had refused the offer of a wheelchair and stood, looking grumpy, beside Colin. "So, what happens now?" asked Colin. The Gunner reached into his jacket pocket for his cigarettes, offered them around - both Colin and The Phantom declined - and, after lighting up, said, "Everything is arranged. Chef planned his funeral down to the last detail. He also called in every favour he was owed, and from what he told me he was owed quite a few, to make sure that his wishes and instructions are followed to the letter." He puffed nervously. "All we have to do is show up." "Where is the funeral being held?" asked The Phantom, wondering why The Gunner was so twitchy. "Halifax," replied The Gunner. "Not a problem," said The Phantom, "unless Air Canada's fleet's been grounded." He regarded The Gunner a moment and then asked, "Are you going to tell me what's bugging your ass?" Chuckling, The Gunner replied, "Spoken like a true sailor!" He took a deep breath and said, "Chef was very specific about what he wanted. The Order can and will ensure that some of the things are done. However . . ." "However what?" asked Colin. "Well, some of the arrangements have to be approved by DND. We have to ask politely for a 100-man guard, and a gun carriage's crew." "You forgot the band," said The Phantom, who had a good idea exactly how Chef wanted to go to glory. "Chef didn't," replied The Gunner with a grin. "The Royal Marine Band, Portsmouth Division is all arranged. Edouard Lotbiniere is accompanying the Booties." "Wow!" The Phantom's green eyes sparkled. "Chef sure wants to go out in style." Nodding, The Gunner continued, "He also wants everyone to wear the old style uniforms, and the White Ensign on his box." "Oy!" exclaimed The Phantom. "The generals won't like that!" "No, they won't," agreed The Gunner. "But the Vice-Chief for Naval Affairs is a friend. He's on line." "So?" asked Colin. "So the Minister is not, and he's a stubborn twit and agrees with the so-called Canadianization of the forces." "That's bullshit," snapped The Phantom. "All he did for the Navy was hand us an American style uniform and tell us to like it or lump it! Not to mention he kept the bloody Army rank badges!" The Phantom was on a roll. "Army badges for sailors! Well, Mister High and Mighty Minister of Defence can fuck himself and the horse he rode in on! If Chef wants proper uniforms I'll raise such hell . . . I'll call every paper in town! I'll call the Legion, Dominion Command, by God . . ." "I'll handle it!" interrupted The Gunner sharply. "I'm meeting with the Minister tomorrow - sorry, today, really." Colin coughed delicately. "I think Phantom should go with you. You may have to put a muzzle and a lead on him but . . ." He reached into his jacket and withdrew an envelope. "This might help." The Gunner looked and said, "It's addressed to Phantom." "Yes, it is," agreed Colin with a smile. "Open it anyway. You should tell him." Looking wary, The Gunner opened the envelope and pulled out a heavy bond letter. The Phantom could see that it was a hand-written note, the lettering in a firm, bold hand. He had seen that hand before! "Hell and sheeit! Is that from who I think it is?" Colin nodded. "There's a galley proof in there as well." The Gunner read the letter, his eyes growing wider and wider. Then he read the galley proof. He looked at Colin and asked, "When?" "The London Gazette, today." "Well I will be buggered with a large barge pole!" exclaimed The Gunner. The Phantom, his ire rising, reached out for the letter. "What's it say? Come on!" Clearing his throat, The Gunner quoted from the galley proof: "Her Majesty the Queen is graciously pleased to award the Victoria Cross to Lieutenant P.A.T. Lascelles, RNR, A-de-C, for gallantry in action whilst serving with elements of the Royal Marine Commandoes and the Special Air Service in Iraq." He handed the galley proof to The Phantom. "There's more but you can read it yourself." He handed the letter to The Phantom as well. "You seem to have a friend in higher places than I ever imagined." "That's because he's cute," said Colin, grinning. "Especially when he's angry." He looked at The Phantom and said, "Cory and Matt Greene as well, although they don't get personal letters of congratulation." "Holy fuck! A hat trick!" exclaimed The Gunner. The Phantom read the letter again. "What time is your appointment with the fool?" The Gunner told him and The Phantom said, "Pick us up. We're going with you." "Who exactly is `we', if I may be so bold?" asked Colin. A determined look came into The Phantom's eyes and a determined, dangerous smile formed on his lips. "You, Custos Principum, Cory, Matt, and me!" he said. Colin raised his eyes toward the heavens. "Here we go again!" ****** The Minister of National Defence was in a snit. He'd been having snits quite often these days. It was bad enough that he had to put up with the backstabbing and sneers of the party backbencher's, and the indifference of the Prime Minister's Office flunkies, but he also had to put up with the antics of the generals and admirals. Sometimes he felt that he was the only adult at a Mad Hatter's tea party held in a facility for the juvenile criminally insane! Growling, the Minister shook his head. They were their own worst enemies, of course. They were always squabbling amongst themselves, playing games of one-upmanship, or whispering innuendoes and leaking rumours about this or that supposedly fellow officer. The minister had long since learned that there was no honour among thieves or generals, and they were always ready to pat a chap on the back before they plunged the knife in! What made matters worse, the generals and admirals that infested NDHQ, quite literally unto the ninth generation, never hesitated to blame someone else - usually the Minister - for their shortcomings! Now they were pointing fingers at him! The generals were getting flack from the media, and the public, over Canada's weak response to NATO's call for troops in support of Desert Storm! Was it his fault that the Canadian Armed Forces was barely capable mounting a Corporal's Guard? Was it his fault that the Militia was understrength, undertrained and woefully equipped? Was it his fault that morale in the Forces had been at rock bottom when he took office? The Minister, who believed himself to be an honest man, was willing to admit that he was partially to blame. For years he had aided and abetted the previous Prime Minister, the rat-faced motherfucker, in gutting the military, which he loathed. The Minister had stood by and watched as regiments were disbanded, the Navy reduced to a shadow that did little except day sail, when the engines worked, and saw the Air Force reduced to a few training squadrons and helicopters, which hardly ever worked! The present Prime Minister, who had basked in the close friendship of Ronald Reagan, and was on good terms with George H. W. Bush, had heeded the calls of the NATO allies, and the subtle prodding of the President of the United States, and at least increased spending - but not enough. The PM had authorised `Distinctive Environmental Uniforms', giving the Navy back a blue suit, and the Air Force their blue/grey uniforms. Unfortunately it was not enough and while morale did go up, the cost of refitting and reequipping the Forces was prohibitive, and more often than not requests for funds were put on a back burner. When war came, the Minister had consulted with the generals and admirals. While they talked and offered suggestions, they all knew that Canada could do very little. What annoyed the Minister was that these very generals and admirals had spent much of their careers feathering their own nests, always agreeing with the government's policies, always nodding their heads like a bobble doll, and never opening their smug, arrogant mouths! Canada had more general officers than the Mexican army, and not one of them had a set of balls! In the end the Minister had managed to scrape together some troops, although the sneering whispers of the Allies was hard to bear. The French, the bloody French who never did anything unless it would gain them power, or a blow job, had put 15,000 boots on the ground! Canada managed a squadron of F-18s, a field hospital, and one company from the Royal Canadian Regiment to guard it. The Navy managed to scrape the bottoms of two destroyers and a supply ship, and sent them off to patrol the Gulf of Arabia, where they never fired a shot in anger. What galled the Minister was that while they had managed to find the men and the equipment, there was no way to get them there! He had been forced, literally, to beg a ride for the human element from the U.S. Army, and charter a ship to carry their equipment because Canada had no sea transport worthy of the name! Now, instead of trying to rectify the shortcomings revealed, or of planning a Rapid Deployment Force, the generals were bickering and whining about medals! Well, actually two medals. Canada had always followed the British manner, and rarely awarded a medal or a decoration, and only to the most deserving of servicemen and women. What had set the flag officers to clucking and pecking like chickens when the fox comes around was a decoration the Sultan of Kuwait had announced would be given to the liberators of his country. It was to be of gold, pure gold, and was being designed by Spinks and Sons, in London. The generals were upset because the Sultan had decreed that the medal would only be awarded to those who had actually been "In Country", which meant that all the generals and colonels, admirals and commanders who had stayed back in Canada and formed a "Special Operations Group" to "monitor the Canadian Forces in Iraq", and why they needed a staff of 1,000 to monitor perhaps 1,500 combatants escaped the Minister, and never saw action, unless counting arguing amongst themselves was "action", were in a pet. There never was an officer, of any rank, who let an opportunity for another piece of tin to add to their collection. To be denied a prestigious decoration was not to be allowed, especially when Junior Ranks (the bulk of the Canadian Forces in country) would be recipient's of the Sultan's gratitude! Then there was Canada's own contribution to the medal stakes. Awarding such a medal was proper, and the Minister had no objection. Even the PM was for it. The generals were for it! Everybody was for it except the Minister. He had been through it before and knew that every bugger and his brother, anyone who had had the merest hint of a connection with the Ops Group, from the Chief of the Defence Staff to the little man who cleaned the toilets in the bathroom next to the Ops Room, would be lining up with their hands out! Which meant that those who had actually been there would feel slighted? The newspapers, already looking for a head to roll, would sneer and write unflattering op/ed pieces. The Legion would stick in its oar and every retired admiral and general would growl and roar. As the Minister studied the preliminary recommendations from the PMO - someone in NDHQ had been telling tales out of school, it seemed - he realized that he could not defy the Prime Minister too much. He could not do much about the Kuwaiti medal. To do so would lead to an international incident. What he could do was order that yes, the men who had been in country could receive the decoration, but not wear it, except as a miniature on their mess kits. This was against policy to be sure, for Trudeau, in his madness, had decreed that no Canadian could accept or wear a foreign decoration, although he actually meant a British decoration. Well, fuck Trudeau, and the horse he rode in on. As for the Canadian medal, the Minister could hardly refuse to authorize it. However, he could make sure that just by looking at it everyone would know if the wearer had actually been in country, or lolling in comfort back in Ottawa. The fighters would wear an oak leaf cluster on the ribbon and the desk wallahs could suck wind. He made his notations on the situation papers and sat back. He reflected on the shape of things to come. He was on his way out. He knew, as sure as he was sitting in his opulently appointed office. The Prime Minister was in trouble. The Airbus scandal was bubbling to the surface again, after having been halted by political pressure. The failure of the "Meech Lake Accord" had damaged the PM's credibility. The Quebeckers were also up to their old tricks as well. All of which meant that heads, innocent and not so innocent, would roll. The PM needed to mend fences in Quebec, which meant a cabinet position for an ungrateful Frog and the Minister knew that only a high profile post would do. The Minister was an astute politician, and a man who had friends. He knew that he was in the PM's crosshairs, and he knew that his successor was already standing in the wings. There would be a cabinet shuffle soon. Until then, life, and the business of the ministry would go on. He leaned over his intercom and spoke. "Please send the gentlemen in." ****** As the Minister's secretary rose and opened the door to his office, Colin leaned and murmured in The Phantom's ear, "You know you catch more flies with honey than with vinegar." The Phantom gave his partner a baleful look. "Which means?" "I know you," replied Colin. "Please, behave!" The Phantom sniffed. "I shall be the morals of decorum!" he said haughtily. Colin started. "God, that sounds like something Chef would say!" "He said it often," returned The Phantom. "Of course he was usually over-medicated when he said it." Then he looked Colin up and down. "He also used to expound on tighty-whiteys being `bulwarks of morality'." A slow grin crossed The Phantom's face. "Not that they did you much good!" ****** After the Vice-Chief made the introductions, the Minister sat back and regarded his guests. He knew the look: ex-service, probably Navy as they were with the VCDS for Naval Affairs. The Minister was well aware of the rivalry that still existed between the services and doubted that an Army or Air Force type would interest himself in anything Naval. In a way, the Minister was pleased with the rivalry, pleased that the Liberal politicians, particularly the arrogant Trudeau and the obnoxious Hellyer, had not quite managed to do what they had set out to do: effectively gut their country's armed forces. The minister, when he had been a lowly back bencher, had warned that one could not replace a substance with a vacuum. His warnings had gone unheeded, and the across the board elimination of identifying uniforms, of the old traditions, had resulted in a loss of personnel, loss of faith, loss of morale. Unification, combined with the cost-cutting and refusal to upgrade equipment, had resulted in a force that had little value and was useless save for responding to domestic natural disasters. The Forces were very good at that, but as for launching an offensive operation, forget it. Add in the government's zealous adherence to Pearson's bankrupt "Peace Keepers" policy, which had resulted in nothing but useless deaths and international disdain. The forces were a shell, and the Minister knew it, a sham and only a faithful few had managed to keep the fires of patriotism alive. The Permanent Force was undermanned, and officered by men whose only ambition was to make their nests as comfortable as possible. They spent much of their time telling each other what good little boys they were, shuffling papers and warily looking over their shoulders lest a hand reach out and plunge a dagger in their backs or give them a wedgie! The Militia and Naval Reserves were as bad. There was not a full company of soldiers in any of the regiments, or a full ship's complement in any of the Reserve Divisions. Both organizations were underfunded and under equipped, and the Minister had not noticed vast numbers of potential sailors or soldiers beating down the doors anywhere. Not that the Minister was all that anxious to accept such potential recruits. Most of them were interested only in the pay, which while low, added up, especially when they were almost guaranteed three months employment in the summer training months. What disturbed the Minister was that most of the Militia and Reserves were not all that anxious to put themselves in harm's way. His predecessor had commissioned a survey to determine just who would, or would not serve in a shooting war. He was unpleasantly surprised that something on the lines of 48% would not take up arms, no matter who or what the enemy was. Sighing inwardly, the Minister was fully aware of the rot that had set in. Morale, always low, was, if possible, lower, despite the recent contribution to Allied coalition that had defeated Sadam Hussein and, if he was right, and the Minister thought he was, the two men before him dressed in sombre suits, were typical products of his ministry's ineffective efforts. They were disillusioned officers, tired of the politics, the in-fighting, the total lack of purpose . . . the list went on. Although the Minister did not know it, what he thought was true. The Phantom, fed up with doing nothing as a Reserve Naval Officer, had taken advantage of his status as a Honourary ADC and rank in the RNR and used Edouard Lotbiniere's influence to train in England, gaining experience and expertise. That it had led to his serving in the Gulf War, and a wound that was still healing, bothered The Phantom not at all. He was justifiably proud of his service, and the shared hardships with Matt and Cory. The Gunner's retirement had been less prosaic and much more selfish. Just as The Phantom had been disillusioned, which was a polite way of saying he was pissed off, The Gunner had resigned his commission upon being elected as Grand Master of the Order. He had realized that as a naval officer he was doing nothing more than spinning wheels, trapped in a system that did not look upon smart, intuitive young officers kindly. His being commissioned from the ranks had not helped at all. It had, in fact, been detrimental. The Old Guard, ever on the lookout for rivals, slapped down "Mustangs" as they were called south of the border quickly and effectively. Coming up through the hawse pipe was no recommendation, and while it looked good to the Lower Deck, the Wardroom turned its collective back, The Gunner was not "one of them", was too independent minded, too well-connected, and not afraid of using his connections, to suit the Captain Blimps. The politics of the Services, particularly in the huge NDHQ, was mind-boggling and deadly. No one trusted anyone, and even friendship was dangerous. One never knew when a so-called friend would turn into an enemy. Far too many up and coming officers thought nothing of destroying a career if it would benefit his own. The Gunner had left the service without regrets. He was now doing something constructive, and beneficial. He had turned the dirty little secrets of many of his former colleagues to the Order's benefit, just as he had blatantly milked his contacts for everything they had, to gain something for the Order. He stared at the Minister, wondering if the man knew what was coming if he refused to give Chef what he wanted. The Gunner was no fool and had long ago learned that there was no honour amongst thieves or politicians. Long ago Michael Chan had told The Gunner that using an enemy's peccadilloes and sins to gain an end was no sin. Michael had taught The Gunner well. Chef would have his funeral, and no one, not the Minister, not the Prime Minister, nor all the generals and admirals in their posh office suites overlooking Colonel By Drive could prevent it. ****** The Minister studied the sheet of paper the VCDS had passed to him. The list was comprehensive, and even costed, down to the last estimated penny. The Minister's eyes grew wide as he read the total figure. "I never knew a funeral could be so . . . expensive!" The Gunner shrugged. "That is only an estimate." He shrugged expansively. "We are prepared to cover all costs, without exception." The offer was generous. The Minister knew far too well that any military operation, from a funeral to an invasion, the initial "estimates" in men, material and money never balanced with the actual costs. The Minister thought of the "butcher's bill" for the Canadian contribution to the Gulf War. What had been budgeted bore little resemblance to the actual cost. "Six hundred men, give or take?" the Minister said, pointing to the lists of participants. The VCDS nodded. "A traditional funeral is very labour intensive," he said. The Minister's ears perked up. "Traditional? What does that mean?" The Gunner interjected. "The deceased, Chef that is, was nothing if not traditional and . . ." Abruptly the Minister held up his hand. "Chef? You mean the man who owned the restaurant downtown?" "Yes," replied The Gunner. He knew what was coming and dreaded the consequences. The Minister scowled. "That old bastard! He went and died on me!" The Phantom looked questioningly at The Gunner, who gave the VCDS a quizzical look. Noting the exchange, the Minister laughed softly. "For years Chef wouldn't let me see the inside of his place, except at Christmas, and then I had to be a guest of someone he thought suitable to dine in his restaurant! Then he allowed me to lunch there! Can you imagine, the Minister of National Defence, allowed to lunch there!" The Gunner looked embarrassed as he replied, "I am afraid that Chef had a very low opinion of politicians of all stripes." "It wasn't personal," The Phantom hastened to add. The Minister laughed delightedly. "Chef was an astute man, and I don't question his judgement of politicians at all!" "You don't?" asked The Phantom, frankly surprised. "Of course not," said the Minister easily. "Most of them are liars and interested in keeping their seats and feathering their little nests." He regarded the funeral list again. "Traditional, eh? How traditional?" The Gunner looked at the VCDS, who nodded. "All participants will wear the traditional naval uniform." It was the Minister's turn to look surprised. "How . . .?" The VCDS spoke quickly. "This . . . operation, if you will, has been in the planning stages for ten years. Chef supervised and wrote every aspect of it. He resolutely refused to recognize the changes brought on by `Unification' and was determined that when the time came he was going out in a blaze of glory." "Not to mention causing infinite inconvenience to everyone," said The Gunner with a smile. "He planned his funeral and made arrangements to have uniforms available. Some are from England, some from New Zealand and Australia. The caisson is from England, as is the Royal Marine Band." Once again The Gunner shrugged. "To many, Chef was a dippy old man, but he was also a shrewd planner. He knew what he wanted and I intend to see that he gets it all." The Minister thought a moment. Then he looked directly at the VCDS. "You approve?" The VCDS nodded. "And the Chief" the Minister asked, referring to the Chief of the Defence Staff, the highest ranking officer in the CAF. "He is at the moment, probably, yelling at his tailor to finish his uniform." The Minister looked wryly at the VCDS. "I'm almost afraid to ask what uniform." "Full regimentals, including a new sword," replied the VCDS. "Red serge, gold braid and all." Shaking his head, the Minister muttered, "The PM will be pissed." "The Prime Minister is not the Commander in Chief," offered The Gunner. "The Governor General is." He smiled slyly. "You are aware that there is a proper uniform for Governors General?" he asked. "You're kidding!" "Smelling of moth balls, to be sure," The Gunner said with a grin. Then he sobered. "I am aware that the PM might object." He nodded to the VCDS, who slid another piece of paper across the Minister's desk. "This might persuade the PM that it would not be in his best interests to oppose this funeral," the VCDS said. He pointed to the piece of paper. "That will be announced in the London Gazette today." As the Minister read the paper his eyebrows rose. "Three?" Then he regarded The Phantom. "You?" "One of them, but yes, Minister," The Phantom replied without any emotion. "Arundel? That name is familiar," the Minister said as he read the other two names in the citations. "Cory Arundel is a son of Albert Arundel," offered The Gunner. The Minister knew who Albert Arundel was. He nodded. "Will Associate Justice Arundel be attending the funeral?" he asked. "Along with his wife, his brother Louis, his other son, Todd and his nephew, Gabriel Izard-Arundel" answered The Gunner. He did not add that Joe Hobbes, Gabe's partner for life, would also be in attendance. There were some things that the Minister had no need to know, so there were. Politically, it did not bode well to piss off an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court. "I suppose there will be other, shall we say, very important people attending?" the Minister asked. "Invitations have gone out to many people, some in high places, many in low," returned The Gunner. "Chef had many friends." "From the sound of it, I'm sure he did," returned the Minister dryly. He scratched the side of his nose reflectively. "There is, however, still the Prime Minister." The Gunner leaned forward and asked, "Do you really think that you owe him your loyalty?" he said as he drew an envelope from his pocket. He handed it to the Minister without comment. Inside the envelope was piece of paper bearing the letterhead of the Prime Minister's Office. On the piece of paper was typed a date, and a name. The Gunner watched as the Minister's choler rose. He watched as the Minister's eyes turned flinty and his fist crumpled the piece of paper. "So much for party loyalty," he opined. The Minister nodded. Then he asked, "This is supposed to be secret - not unexpected - but secret. How did you . . .?" "I have my ways," replied The Gunner firmly. His tone suggested that just how he had managed to learn not only the date of the Minister's removal from office, but also the name of his successor, not be looked at too closely. The Minister sighed. Years of loyal service to the party, years of politicking and boot licking lesser men, and this was his reward. "Am I to be given a new portfolio?" he asked The Gunner. "No." The Minister reacted quickly. He signed the original operations order for Chef's funeral. As he scrawled his signature the VCDS asked quietly, "What of the Prime Minister?" "Bugger him!" exclaimed the Minister. Then he looked at The Gunner. "Is he invited?" The Gunner shook his head. "One of the things about planning your own funeral is that you get to say who's invited and who is not." He chuckled. "You at least got to eat lunch in Chef's establishment. The Prime Minister couldn't have got in the service entrance, unless he came to wash the dishes or fry the chicken!" Laughing, the Minister asked, "Swords and medals?" ****** "Swords and medals," thought The Phantom. Chef had had them, and much more. For pomp, panoply and ceremony there were few comparisons to a military funeral, with his horses and uniforms, flags and bands. The only comparison that The Phantom had was Michael Chan's funeral. When Michael succumbed to prostate cancer his adopted son and heir, Alistair, had pulled out all the stops and buried his dearest friend with all the pomp that Chinese culture and tradition demanded. To do less would have meant a loss of face for Alistair, and demean the memory of the man many called the Last True Viceroy". There were contrasts, of course. The Gunner's funeral had been one. While Chef's plans had run to nearly 100 single-spaced typed pages, The Gunner's wishes were limited to a hand written single page of instructions. When he died quietly in his sleep, in London, from a heart attack, he was returned to Toronto and his low-keyed funeral held in the same small chapel where his aunt's funeral had been held. The chapel held barely 100 mourners, and in accordance with The Gunner's wishes, only the Boys of Aurora, and selected guests attended. Amongst them were Ace Grimes and Lester Menkes. As The Gunner had prophesied, his relationship with Ace had faded. Ace remained loyal, however, to the Order, and was active in the administration not only of the Hospital in Toronto, but also the Hospice. He and Lester had drifted together, and lived together. Lester, for his part, welcomed Ace's presence. He too had suffered the loss of a lover when Ames Cale had broken off their relationship and returned to being what he essentially was, a good cop and a loving father and husband. While Lester knew that he and Ace were not in love with each other, they did care for each other and, as Lester put it, at the end of the day living with Ace was much better than living with a cat! Unlike Michael, who occupied an ornate, much decorated marble mausoleum in the Arnprior Hospital chapel, as did Chef, whose tomb was much more sombre, The Gunner had been cremated and the ashes carried to Halifax by The Phantom where, after a short voyage in HMCS Huron, they had been scattered over the dark waters of the Atlantic, returned to the sea he so loved. ****** Sometimes, when the night was still, and the wind ceased to blow, the sounds came to The Phantom. At times he heard again the measured tread of marching men as the cortege wound its way through the North End of Halifax. At other times he heard the slow, mournful notes of Chopin soaring over the heads of the crowd that lined the narrow streets as the procession passed by. Oft times he heard again the soft jangling of horse tackle as the Halifax Mounted Unit, which had led the procession turned from Windsor Street, through the gates of Fairview Cemetery, and down Last Post Drive to the grave site. At the memory of the horses The Phantom always smiled. Chef had arranged, how no one ever knew, for horse-drawn carriages to carry the "Lady Mourners" as the Order of Service called them, from the church to the cemetery. There had been a royal-maroon coloured town coach, and a pair of curved-front Clarences, each drawn by a pair of Cleveland Bays. The coaches were provided as Chef had strictly enjoined that no woman would march in his funeral cortege! The coachmen wore black livery, as did the ladies, Mrs. Arundel, Mrs. Randolph Mrs. Airlie. Sophie Nicholson, looking far younger than her years, also wore black, a lace creation that she had picked up on the fly in Paris on her way back from the south of France, where she had been when the news of Chef's death had come. The ladies were handed into their respective carriages, Mary and Mabell by Blake Randolph, resplendent in the full dress uniform of his regiment, the Seaforth Highlanders. Todd, in his naval uniform, helped his mother join Sophie in the town coach. Then he and Blake joined Sophie's husband, James Edgar and her adopted sons, Aaron Edgar and Eugen Arenburg, in the second rank of marching mourners. Memories of that day always seemed filled with flowers. Chef had, in his later years, become an avid gardener and his flat and restaurant were filled with fresh-cut flowers. He would have been chuffed at the floral arrangements, wreaths and arrangements of roses, carnations, and seasonal blooms in the church, and his chest would have filled with pride had he seen the three arrangements adorning the Altar, which bearing a discrete white card with just a name, each arrangement composed of the finest blooms the gardens and glasshouses of Windsor had to offer. The Phantom had not marched in the procession. Nor had Cory or Matt, the only Boys of Aurora who had not formed ranks behind the caisson, drawn by sailors in their traditional blue uniforms - and blue caps! Although he had steeled himself for the walk, Colin and The Gunner had threatened dismemberment if The Phantom so much as took one step forward. His leg was still not healed, and the risk of infection was still great. Cory, weak and as badly wounded as The Phantom, was unable to walk at all, and Matt, while not wounded, would not leave him, nor would Sean Anders. Frustrated, The Phantom watched as Chef's old-fashioned, "toe-pincher" coffin was carried from the church by eight bearers - retired Chiefs resplendent in gold buttons and shined medals. In the pockets of each bearer, and the pockets of the Petty Officer who carried the bearer's hats, and the Chief G.I., was a gold sovereign, an inducement not to drop or jostle the coffin. There had been no music as the coffin was off-loaded from the caisson, or when it was replaced. This too was traditional and unlike American funerals, no hymns were ever played as an old sailor or soldier began his last journey. Silence reigned on the Halifax Parade (which the church fronted) and the mourners filed from the church. The silence was broken first by the command for the funeral procession to march off, and then by the mournful tolling of the funeral bell that hung in the octagonal spire of the church. Chef was followed to his first resting place by his boys. Behind the last rank of the sailors of the gun carriage's crew marched Peter Race, dressed in the dark blue uniform of an RCNR Lieutenant, and carrying the only flag that Chef recognized other than the White Ensign: the old, Red Ensign, the flag he had been born under, and was determined would be buried under. Behind Peter, Fred Fisher, his dress uniform of a Lieutenant Commander much more ornate in that he wore gold epaulettes and gold aiguillettes of an AdeC to the Queen. He carried Chef's medals and decorations on a small, crimson pillow. Flanking the caisson, four on each side, were the Escorts, and here Chef had designated that only Companions of the Order would march, Eion Reilly, Nate Schoenmann, Logan Hartsfield, and Ned Hadfield amongst them. Behind Fred came the mourners, neatly formed in ranks, six men to a rank, with the senior Knights in the first. The original Boys of Aurora were followed by the Knights, including Pete Sheppard and Alistair Chan, Jake Guildenhall, Alex Grinchsten, Terry Hsiang and Cousin Ray Chung, the Viceroy of Montreal, and Ginger, who called himself the "relic" of the Maestro, and was Chef's partner in the catering business in Vancouver. Here too marched the men who called themselves "The Fifty", the group of ex-Servicemen who had replaced the treacherous Chinese guards that had betrayed Michael Chan, the men who had willingly joined the Crusade, Ty Ravenel, Rusty Smith, Vince Demarco, Dino Antonelli, and Dave Edge amongst them. With them marched "The Warrior Knights of the Priory of Upper Canada", once known as "The Gunner's Rangers": Teddy Vian, Shane Kingscote, Max Hainey, Gil Stephenson, Sam North, and Jeff MacDuff. Behind them, in a group, came the Litany of the Saints. They were sombrely dressed and together again for the first time since they had left Aurora. They had not forgotten Chef, or the lessons he had taught them of honour, and integrity. David Tomkens, who had fallen on hard times, marched with them as well. His legs were gangrenous from diabetes, and he leaned on two stout walking sticks, but he was determined to walk with Chef wherever the old man led him. Behind the Litany came the marching unit of HMCS Stadacona, 100 young, strong men in the traditional blue uniforms and white caps of the Navy Chef knew and loved. No one but The Phantom knew that their presence there was the result of a first class dust up between him and the Prime Minister. ****** The Minister of National Defence could not keep the news of the funeral from the Prime Minister. It was in the Ottawa and Halifax papers, after all, and Chef had been a well known character in both cities. The Prime Minister, when he read of the military's participation, had called the Minister, demanding an explanation and ordered a cessation of all plans for the Navy to be a part of Chef's funeral. It seemed that Chef had barred the man from his restaurant and the Prime Minister had not forgotten. He owed Chef nothing and the old boot could go to his grave in a tumbrel as far as he was concerned. The Minister argued in vain, and then tried to contact The Gunner, who was in Halifax arranging Chef's temporary interment in a chapel of rest. Unable to reach The Gunner, the Minister then rang The Phantom, who listened, and then took action. Gaining access to the Prime Minister was child's play. The word of The Phantom's new honour was common knowledge, and the PM was anxious to meet a true "War Hero". It made for good press and would please the old vets, most of whom voted conservative. Little did the man know what was in store. No one except The Phantom and the Prime Minister ever knew what transpired behind closed doors, and indeed the PM denied their meeting ever took place. However, there were witnesses, at least in the form of secretaries listening at keyholes. There had been shouting, and muffled growls, and one aide swore he heard his country's leader being firmly told to go and fuck himself and the horse he rode in on. The Phantom would only admit that he was privy to many secrets, several of which he shared with the Prime Minister. The Phantom would only say that he had had a chat with the man and at the end of the day Chef had had his 100-man Guard, which was all that was important. ****** The Phantom had not seen the crowd that such a procession always attracted. He, Cory, Matt and Sean had been hustled into a back Cadillac limousine and, by back streets, carried to the cemetery. While he waited for the cortege, The Phantom, with Matt, walked into the cemetery, past the "Titanic" graves, to a small, plain, Chapel of Rest. Here Chef would rest until he could be carried to whatever tomb had been made for him in the yet to be built chapel of the Hospital in Arnprior. Chef wanted to be with his boys, and until he could be with them he would stay a while with Hal Simmonds, whose grave lay under a nearby towering, now ancient tree. On the grave was a fresh bouquet of red roses. Hal Simmonds' last resting place was a small piece of serenity. Chef would rest near Hal. His temporary resting place would always be adorned with the flowers he loved, and on the anniversary of his death a group of men, some old, some young, would gather, and raise a tot of Pusser Rum to him. Chef would have been pleased. ****** The sound of a deep, echoing bell broke the quiet of The Phantom's office. He turned and looked out the window, although he did not expect to see anything. He knew, however that the sound of the Doomsday Bell told the students that it was 2230, time for bed. Wickedly, The Phantom wondered if the boys actually called it the Doomsday Bell, or if they had, in the perverse way of schoolboys, named it something else. He remembered what had happened back in Aurora when the Last Post sounded and the lights turned out. If he knew teenage boys, and what they did in the dark of night, and The Phantom thought he did, he had no doubt that the tolling bell had been renamed to something like "The Wanking Bell". He had no time, however, to dwell on the doings of boys in the night, for the door to his office opened and Randy appeared. He was carrying The Phantom's winter overcoat, hat, and gloves. Whenever he was in residence The Phantom walked the grounds of the Hospital. Except for Christmas Eve. He never walked on that night, for the memories were too hurtful. ****** As he left Flagstaff House, with Randy's whispered admonition to keep bundled up following him, The Phantom started walking up the Long Walk, toward the main building. In the houses that lined both sides of the central playing fields lights twinkled and blinked off as the masters and boys retired for the night. Overhead the moon shone, lighting his way. His footsteps crunched on the snow-covered path. Behind him he could hear his footsteps echoed. He never went anywhere without his detective, a man hand-picked by Phil Thornton. For the past two years it had been Damian Porter, a tall, slim, dark-haired man who never smiled. The Phantom knew of Damian's past, of his involvement with Paul Greene, and his later sterling service with Special Branch. Damian never put a false step forward. He had learned his craft, first with Rick Maslen, and later with Phil Thornton. His brief infatuation with Little Big Man, which had begun in a brothel in Toronto three decades earlier, was never mentioned. As he walked on, The Phantom saw the lights of the Christmas trees that seemed to fill every window fronting on the Long Walk. With each tree his melancholy returned. Memories of a decorated tree, a decorated house, a decorated street, filled his thoughts. ****** Christmas, 1981. For The Phantom, life was good. He had spent the summer training on board a destroyer, earning his Watch Keeping Certificate. He had aced his mid-terms and, more importantly, his relationship with Colin Arnott was firm and committed. Colin was back home for the holidays. His parents and siblings did not know that he and The Phantom s