Spacetran 9

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In this chapter Beverly reluctantly returns to earth because mankind cannot make sense of the Anti-gravity science. She starts to realise that there may be hope for her returning as she learns that tolerance has moved a long, long way since her traumatic childhood. She also meets her only remaining older sister.

 


NEW SPACETRAN 9

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We warped out of a huge cumulus rain cloud to hide our radar image so we appeared without warning and had alighted on their rain-swept deck before they even realised we were in the vicinity. A startled lookout gaped at the unexpected arrival before screaming to theofficer on watch. Within moments dozens of armed sailors had swarmed onto the flight
deck and nervously surrounded the Albatross.

“Well at least these guys aren’t shooting.” Sighed Beverly.

“They’re European. They’re not so ‘gung-ho’ as us Americans.” I shrugged guiltily. “Look that guy seems to be the senior officer.”

Beverly took the large paper pad and identified herself. The officer smiled and acknowledged us then took out a notebook and invited us onto the deck.

“Shall we go?” I asked her.

“You go. See if there’re any traps. I’ll guard Albatross. They’ll know all about you as well. You’re famous.”

“OK. Here goes nothing.” I shrugged.

I could hardly blame Beverly for her caution. It would have been stupid to let Albatross fall into military hands. This time I wore a sensible ‘all-in-one’ overall to descend the ladder and eventually presented myself to the Spanish Captain. Like many Educated Spanish he spoke several languages perfectly. He was also well aware of The Cold Albatross. After three oceanic encounters all aircraft carrier commanders were fully alerted to any possible future visits.

“So you’ve returned to Earth again ma-am. An aircraft carrier once again.”

“Indeed captain.” I smiled admiring his courteous formal English

“And you’re honouring the Spanish this time. I admire your impartiality.”

“Thank you captain. I might add that yours is a particular honour if you’re agreeable.”

“Please explain.” He replied cautiously but courteously.

We had stepped out onto the bridge-wing and were looking down onto the Cold Albatross. Beverly was clearly visible in the cockpit window and the captain gave her a smart courteous bow before waving amicably. I nodded towards the Albatross and presented the deal.

“That lady is the builder of that craft. She is the genius who actually cracked time travel; a one Ms Beverly who I have finally persuaded to declare herself to you if you will agree absolutely to respect the integrity and privacy of her craft and make no attempt to impound it or imprison her.”

He hesitated for a moment then glanced questioningly.

“What are your plans?”

“My plans are simply to return to my home planet and carry on my life, hopefully with her as my companion. I’m not sure what her plans are. She says she simply wants to return to Earth and live a normal life. Truth to tell I think she’s worn out with Space travel.”

The captain frowned slightly, displaying his uncertainty then he reached for a file right at the end of a lower shelf on the bulkhead of his office.

“I’ve got a full dossier here containing all we know about you and that lady. Am I to presume she’s changed her mind about us humans?”

“I don’t think she’s gone that far. She still wants to keep you at arm’s length and she intends to continue travelling the stars, and the galaxies for that matter; it’s just that she needs a place to call home. Don’t interrogate her about it. Under that exquisitely beautiful exterior at the very core she’s a very frightened, uncertain, little child covered with a veneer of angry unrequited adulthood.”

“So what now. What d’you want me and my ship to do?”

I indicated that I wanted to chat outside on his personal promenade space where Beverly could see us negotiating. He opened his weatherproof door and we stepped out; it was still raining but Beverly looked up at us and smiled again. I sensed she felt uncertain when I was out of sight.

“Firstly agree not to harm her or the Albatross.”

“She’s committed no offence. I can agree to that.”

“Thank you captain. I assume I can take your word on that.”

He rankled slightly, obviously a bit offended and hurt at my expression of doubt.

“Miss Danby I am a Spanish Naval officer. My word is my Bond.” He protested.

“I’m sorry captain,” I apologised, “I’m feeling my way here and diplomacy was never my strong suit.”

“Apology accepted Miss Danby, we are all novices here.”

“Excellent captain, the only other thing is to caution your crew not to go poking around inside her. There are forces tied up in that craft that could destroy this planet and our heavenly neighbours.”

The captain’s eyes narrowed nervously.

“Are you saying there’s a bomb or something aboard?”

“Good gracious no! The warp drive is where the energy lies. If some dumb matelot started fiddling with any levers he could accidentally set the world on fire. The Albatross must be strictly guarded. I am quite sure that if you respect these requests Miss Beverly will reward you with a trip around the galaxy. There’s another gentleman who might also be so rewarded. He’s a colleague of yours in the British navy.”

“Ah yes. Admiral Rawlin. The man you took to Switzerland. I’ve met him on a couple of NATO exercises. I think his ships are in The Persian Gulf.”

“I think Miss Beverly would be wary of visiting the gulf. That’s a hotbed of trouble. Her craft is very vulnerable.” I lied. “Is there any way you have of contacting Captain Rawlin, - sorry, Admiral Rawlin?”

“Of course. We are both NATO aircraft carriers.”

He took me in out of the rain and within minutes I was speaking to a familiar voice. After some brief exchanges the Spanish
Captain had agreed to go aboard Cold Albatross if it was required.

The next part was to be the biggest difficulty; persuading Beverly to trust a man. I returned to the Albatross and finally convinced her that the Spaniard was an honourable man of his word. Nevertheless she still freaked out when he respectfully poked his head through the cargo door and I had to virtually nurse her frail shivering body in my arms before he eventually made her acquaintance. As he courteously extended his hand I felt every muscle in her tiny frame lock up with fear. It was only now that I realised how badly she was messed up inside.

Fortunately the captain understood Beverly’s stress disorder relating to the proximity of males and he took no offence at her refusal to shake his hand. Beverly’s very demeanour and trembling body gave mute testimony to her paranoia. I motioned him to sit in the seat in the cargo bay and wait a short while as I gently nursed Beverly back to some form of coherent response. Then I gently placed her in the cockpit command seat and explained events.

“The Persian Gulf!” She squeaked. “That’s a war zone. There’ll be all sorts of Yanks, Ruskies, Brits, Iranians and God knows what else flying around loaded for bear.”

“Well then now’s the time to test that so called defence shield and the guns. Besides the British Aircraft Carrier is expecting us.”

“Well Gee thanks! I thought we could just go straight to Switzerland and declare ourselves to the commission. Besides they should just about have got anti-grav by now. I half expected them to meet us behind the moon.”

“Well maybe Earthmen are a bit thicker than amphs.”

“Look all I want to do is live a normal life, preferably with you in your cottage. Then every few weeks just warp away to visit my friends on other planets. I just want to retire to my plantation like George Washington did.”

“That’s not going to happen unless we co-operate with the authorities. The best way to do that is to get Admiral Rawlin to speak for us. He’s honest and I trust him.”

“Oh; so he’s been promoted then?”

“That’s not surprising is it? It’s been a few years since you were on his ship and things move on.”

“Why can’t they just trust us?”

“Do you trust them?” I countered.

“No! But I’ve got reason not to trust them.”

“Well some of them still believe you’re an alien. Just remember I did when I first met you.”

Beverly fell silent then slowly nodded her head as she accepted the inevitability. I motioned to the cargo bay door and asked her.

“Can the Spanish gentleman come into the cockpit now? I did promise him a ride?”

“I suppose so. You promise too much, this is all turning to rat shit.”

She turned to concentrate on her controls and ignored the captains’ second attempt to courteously extend the hand of friendship. I gently motioned to the man and tapped my skull discreetly to explain that Beverly was not yet a balanced person when it came to men. Then I indicated the observation divan under the cockpit window. Cautiously he sat on it and gazed expectantly out of the window as the horizon started to curve. Suddenly he let out a soft Spanish oath as he recognised the Tigris and Euphrates plus the Arabian Peninsula far below.

“My God! That’s thousands of miles in a few seconds.” He wagged his head disbelievingly.

“Now comes the hard part.” Muttered Beverly nervously as she fiddled with some newly installed controls and a blue tinted bubble enveloped the Albatross.

“Well the shield seems to work but it’s hard to see out. The shield distorts everything.” I observed as I peered myopically at the outline of Kharg Island.

“We’d better switch if off then until we get a definite hostile reaction.”

“You should have had some sort of radar fitted Beverly!” I scolded.

The Captain turned to gape stupidly.

“D’you mean you haven’t got radar?”

“I never saw a need for one.” Beverly declared. “Albatross was never meant for this sort of stuff. She’s a transgalactic, time warper not a bloody search and rescue helicopter.”

Even as she spoke a squadron of Iranian jet thundered past and the Spaniard winced with surprise.

“They’ve picked us up already. They’ll want us to land. We’re over their air-space.” He cautioned.

“Fuck their airspace.” Cursed Beverly. “I’m an Earth woman and this is bloody Earth! I’ll go anywhere I like on Earth and I’ll land anywhere I bloody well like.”

The captain and I exchanged amused glances. Beverly certainly had a very wide perspective. She twitched a lever and within moments we were over Bahrain. The captain gaped stupidly again before wagging his head and smiling. Below I recognised the familiar outline of a huge U.S. Nuclear aircraft carrier and I warned Beverly.

“Expect company again!”

“Before I had finished speaking the roar of jets crashed about us again and suddenly the sky was alive with planes of all nationalities.”

“I think you’ve disturbed the hive.” Grinned the captain.

“Come one, come all.” Shrugged Beverly as she engaged the shield and went lower to find the smaller British aircraft carrier. Within minutes we had acquired a veritable international armada of assorted jets who attached themselves to us until we located the smaller British ship with its distinctive turned up nose. A single pass identified the British Admiral Rawlin and he waved us down onto the deck.

The Spanish captain and I quickly disembarked to make the arrangements and within an hour Admiral Rawlin had joined us in the cockpit. I had cautioned him about Beverly’s dysfunctional neurotic personality so he simply nodded graciously and joined his colleague on the divan.

“So Switzerland it is then Gentlemen.” I advised them.

The Spanish Captain forewarned his British counterpart and they both shook their heads in disbelief as the Alps appeared almost by magic. We swiftly recognised the huge ring of the CERNE project where the worlds’ scientists had decided to pool their research into gravity and we landed without incident or warning in the car park by the main research block.

‘The alien ship had finally landed!’

Blank stares of stunned disbelief gaped at us from a hundred windows before the doors started spewing out the massed concentrated knowledge of humanity.

I smiled inwardly as I calculated that if all the I.Q’s present in that car-park were added up they might not surpass the awesome total accumulated in my dysfunctional friends’ sad tortured brain. Payday had arrived.

The first thing I had to do was separate the few female scientists from the crowd and herd them into an acceptable reception committee.

A brief explanation sufficed and the crowd of disappointed men waited expectantly as the select group of women accompanied Beverly and me into the building. A ‘question and answer’ session quickly developed as insoluble questions were put to Beverly concerning gravity.

The group drifted into a large lecture theatre where she casually picked up some chalk and laid out her explanations on the board. Her handwriting conveyed her mood and fear. There were none of the wildly expansive flowing movements that I remembered of my favourite lecturers when I was at college. Beverly was tense and uncertain as she addressed the board. Her cramped arm rarely left her side and the writing appeared tight and constricted as she continually masked it accidentally with her tense little body. The twenty or so female heads were continually bobbing and twisting to follow her reasoning as the equations appeared on the blackboards. There were also frequent interruptions as some of the finest mathematical brains begged her to explain some inexplicable procedure. I had to stop and remind myself that Beverly had worked all this science out as a fourteen-year-old girl/boy hiding in a frozen cave. The whole exercise was way, way above my head but I think the gist of it was a four dimensional geometry and trigonometry applied to the atomic structure of an amalgam. The amalgam was then ‘drawn’ like an artificial fibre then twisted very precisely like a billion skeins of wool a specific number of times to in effect, create a solid ring like structure only with two plane continuous sides and no ends. The amalgam was then baked in a forge before being immersed into a molten metal casting to make an almost indestructible pad. After the application of a current a concentrated anti-grav field was generated and the existing gravity was reversed upon itself. The bigger or more numerous the pads, the more ‘lift’ or ‘thrust’ was generated.

In three-dimensional terms this is all but impossible to conceive. I must also add that in passing, Beverly had also created some new and original mathematical tools to solve the equations and extrapolate the four dimensional mathematical results to create a physical three-dimensional facsimile. Just as Isaac Newton had invented Calculus to solve some of his problems so had Beverly invented a new maths. It hadn’t yet even got a name.

As I sat silent in my seat I could hear mutterings of amazement growing to a dull shocked rumble amongst the audience. The unexpected noise seemed to surprise Beverly and suddenly she tensed then spun round white with fear. The whole audience fell silent as they quickly recognised her distress. I cautiously approached her trembling form and gently put my arm around her.

“What’s wrong?” I whispered as the audience continued to stare curiously.

“Nothing!” She squeaked as the tension flowed away just as quickly as it had arrived. “Nothing, it was just De-ja-vue.”

“Go on. What d’you mean?”

“I tried to explain all this before; when I was twelve. They screeched and howled then; and now I thought they were going to do it again. Last time they tried to have me put away.”

“That was then Beverly. This is now. They are not condemning you. The evidence of your work is hovering inexplicably above the car park. This time they have to believe you. Try and put it behind you.” I replied trying to reassure her.

She smiled then grinned affectionately before grabbing me tightly and kissing me passionately. The auditorium remained deathly silent as the scientists realised we were ‘lesbian lovers’. As Beverly clung to me, I glanced over her golden hair as my eyes scanned the audience nervously as I tried to convey silently that Beverly was having one of ‘her turns’. Sympathetic smiles and nods came back from the audience and I relaxed with a sigh. Beverly sensed my relief but she ignored them as her eyes closed and her hands burrowed under my blouse.

Fortunately my blouse and jacket combined to make a fairly opaque material so nothing was visible under my suit jacket. She clung to me and groped my breasts like a nursing child for nearly a minute as I tried to signal to the audience to ignore the outburst. Shocked expressions gaped back at me. Then she let go as suddenly as she had grabbed me and swung round to resume her calculations. I was shocked by her sudden changes of behaviour.

The stupefied scientists took this as a signal to return to normality and after a few nervous questions the session returned to its previous lively exchange.

Eventually, after a whole and intense afternoon of chalk and talk, Beverly rubbed her aching shoulder and hitched her bum up onto the desk.

“That’s it. Follow that and you’ll have anti-grav.” She sighed.

The audience erupted into violent clapping and shouting until one older, more sober individual brought some order.

“Well we can’t thank you enough. Would you like to stay and help us build a craft?”

Beverly shook her head determinedly.

“Sorry. No. I’ve a lot of living to catch up on.”

With these words she grabbed me again and kissed me passionately before releasing me and asking for a cup of coffee. As one the women gathered around her to shake her hand and congratulate her on her discoveries. I went to fetch a pot of coffee and was ‘way-laid’ as I sought out the dining hall. It was the ‘older sober lady’ again.

“Miss Danby.” She called.

“Call me Ruby.” I replied.

“OK then Ruby. It’s Beverly. It’s just that she still hasn’t explained space warps and time travel.”

“And I doubt that she ever will.” I finished abruptly.

“It’s all in that big ring around the Albatross, isn’t it?”

“Absolutely. And she ain’t telling. Be thankful for what you’ve got.”

“It would be nice to meet other life forms from other planets.”

“They’re not ‘Life forms’ madam. They’re people. Beverly and I prefer to call them people.” I chastened her.

“But they’re not human.” She challenged.

“Of course they’re not bloody human! But they’re still intelligent and still ‘people’.”

“You’ve got a strange anthropomorphic perspective. It’s not a very scientific view considering you’re a graduate biologist yourself.”

“Don't try and patronise me! Mine's a perspective born of intergalactic travel, what's your perspective..” I finished condescendingly. “If you ever get to meet other ‘life forms’ as you so clinically describe them then you might just change that cold scientific view you call ‘a perspective’.”

I sensed her dehumanised nature and suddenly recalled Beverly’s nightmare childhood.

This woman would have been exactly the sort of ghoul who would have carried out the frankensteinian experiments on the children like Beverly in care.’ I silently gave thanks to God that she was a physicist and not a doctor.
I felt a wave of nausea engulf me and turned away as the tray of coffee trembled in my hand. Down the corridor I found a happy Beverly surrounded by the other scientists who were excitedly exploring her ‘permanent make-up’. Mathematics and Physics had been temporarily put aside.

Real girls, doing real girl things.’ I observed with relief.

After the encounter with the ‘Bitch of CERN’, I was glad to find myself amongst real girls again, girls furthermore, who were not put off by my relationship with Beverly. They were probably sympathetic anyway after possibly having received enough stick at school and university for choosing the ‘boy’ subjects of physics and maths.

Later Beverly and I invited them into the Albatross where they showed equal interest in both Beverly’s cabin and the drive systems. Once again they made several half-hearted efforts to persuade Beverly to reveal a little bit about space warps and time travel but she remained tight-lipped. Eventually she told them that the maths for Anti-grav was nothing compared with the maths for time and space warps. As they listened, the mathematicians eyed her enviously but not for her stunning looks, no; this time it was for her brain.

I grinned inwardly when I considered that most women would have only envied her for her looks. As a transvestite Beverly would have found the latter more rewarding. Eventually the girls and the naval officers who had stayed behind to guard the Albatross, made their farewells and started to leave in ‘dribs and drabs’ until only Beverly, and I remained with one particularly attracvtive girl.

As a confirmed lesbian I quickly picked up the vibrations. The girl was ‘up for it’. I caught Beverly’s eye and she wagged her head slightly. She had too many hang-ups to even contemplate a ‘ménage-a-trois’ and I ended up having to discreetly advise the girl that we were a devoted ‘couple’. She sighed, smiled and made her excuses without acrimony.

That night Beverly and I discussed our relationship and how we would go about legalising our union. We returned to the CERN centre and surfed the net until we found a suitable location for a discreet secret wedding. Strangely it was the city of Manchester in England and we discreetly departed that night by car to avoid too many curious eyes. On route, Beverly changed her appearance and by the time we reached Manchester the old Beverly had virtually disappeared.

The gay Anglican priest we had chosen specialised in same sex unions but she was amused and delighted when we revealed our true sexes.

“You realise that this makes it completely legal don’t you?” She grinned. “It won’t just be a civil partnership blessed by a priest. You can really, actually marry.”

“I’ll have to locate my birth certificate.” Mumbled Beverly.

“Have you any idea where you were registered.” The priest asked.

“No.”

“Then I suggest the central registry in London. If you can remember your family name and your date of birth you’ll soon find it.” The priest observed.

There was a long silent pause as the priest and I studied Beverly. She was obviously distressed about something then finally she spoke.

“I never had a birthday.” Replied Beverly softly. “The family wouldn’t celebrate it because it was the day our mother died. The day I caused her death.”

“That’s a horrible thing to say!” Gasped the shocked priest.

“It’s true though. If I hadn’t been borne she-“

At this she fell silent and I just managed to catch her before she slumped out of her seat.

The priest wagged her head and watched as I laid Beverly out on the settee. It was obvious that Beverly’s childhood memories were too overpowering. All her life she must have ‘shut stuff out’ but now after the priest’s request she had been confronted with a need for real information coming from a brutal childhood reality. The effort had overwhelmed her. After making sure she was comfortable the priest called me into her study.

“We’ll have to find her birth certificate. I’m used to stuff like this and I know which strings to pull. Since coming out, I’ve learned an awful lot about care victims and abuse. I’m involved with several organisations concerning childhood abuse. Give me a couple of days.”

She left and I sat beside the comatose Beverly until she started to recover.

Using the priests’ advice and directions, Beverly and I booked into a hotel in the gay village. That night we went ‘exploring’ and she was amazed at the freedom accorded to our kind. She was like a child let loose in a chocolate factory as we cruised the bars and clubs.

It was nearly a week before the priest returned with a satisfied smile and an older woman in tow. She had phoned me in advance and warned me. Then she introduced me briefly before making our excuses and separating again. As we drove into Manchester the priest explained.

“It’s Beverly’s older sister.”

“Phew! I gasped. I don’t think Beverly would countenance anything to do with her family. This is dangerous ground!”

“Think of it as therapy.” Argued the priest.

“Your reverend. I don’t know if you’ve studied Beverly’s’ background. The last thing she needs is therapy, or therapists, or psychiatrists or anything. All she wants is be a legal entity and married to me. She knows her own mind believe me.”

“Well will you try? This woman has come all the way from Devon and she says Beverly was born as Bernard Holst in Shropshire in 1946. Here’s the extract from the registry in Shrewsbury.”

The priest had obviously been working hard and I felt I owed it to her to approach Beverly about the woman claiming to be her sister. It seemed incongruous that an old lady in her sixties could be the sibling of such a pretty young thing as Beverly. Time travel certainly did strange things. I returned to the hotel to find Beverly chatting happily to a pair of very passable she-males in the restaurant. It was her first independent foray into the village life but she seemed to be taking to it like a duck to water. ‘There was hope for her yet.’ I joined them and exchanged friendly polite introductions.
Beverly had already ‘declared’ herself and they were enchanted with her appearance. They were also amazed and glad for her having found a suitable partner in me and they begged to attend the wedding.

“You’ll need at least two witnesses. They chirped.”

I was a bit wary of any publicity but Beverly seemed to be getting bolder by the day as she immersed herself in the balmy social waters of the village. After sharing lunch an agreement was finally reached and I informed Beverly about the appearance of her sister. Strangely she was not as paranoid as I first thought.

“What does she look like?” Asked Beverly.

I described Beverly’s third oldest sister who was her nearest living sibling. Her other siblings were dead. This remaining sister was a headmistress of a major public school and had remained a spinster all her life. Beverly pulled a wry smile as she considered meeting her.

“She’s probably intelligent enough to realise she was damaged as well by the family set-up. Maybe she was right not to get married.”

“She seems a friendly educated woman and she desperately wants’ to see you.”

“Everybody wants’ to see me Ruby. If they found out I was in Manchester the village would be overrun with reporters. Where’s she staying?”

I mentioned the name of a small hotel outside Manchester and she shrugged uncertainly.

“I don’t suppose it’ll do any harm to go and look at her. She’d never recognise me as her younger brother anyway. Come on let’s do it now. I’m curious.”

“She’s got a couple of photographs of you as a young boy. She says you’ll recognise them and that’ll prove who she is.”

“Right, we’ll book a couple of rooms there by phone and arrive as residents.” Suggested Beverly. “Then we can arrive separately a few minutes apart.”

With the plan set up I booked in around fourish and settled at a table in the lounge to enjoy an afternoon coffee. Behind my tinted glasses and wig I spotted Beverly’s sister busy on a mobile phone. I did not need to look for Beverly’s arrival. Throughout the lounge heads turned as she trotted up the steps. Male eyes hungrily followed her to reception and I sighed to myself as she disappeared into the lift. Her older sister had also noticed the beautiful young lady arrive but had not the faintest idea who she was. I smiled to myself and continued reading my paper until Beverly returned. She took the table next to me and exchanged a brief discreet glance of recognition before motioning towards her sister. By prearrangement I stood up and walked across the lounge to reveal myself.

“Miss Holst. Miss Angela Holst?”

“The lady stood and offered me a seat as she recognised me again.”

“Ms Danby. It’s nice to meet you again. I didn’t recognise you with your sunglasses on. Have you any word on my brother?”

“Well Yes. But you must prepare yourself for big changes.”

“How so?”

“Your brother is in the hotel as we speak.”

“The lady’s face paled slightly as she peered around expectantly.”

“Where?”

“He’s looking at you. He’s still not sure whether he wants’ to meet you.”

“Oh please! Don’t play games. Where is he?”

“It’s no game Miss Holst. Your brother is a very changed person and a very damaged one. His nightmare childhood left him seriously wounded; mentally that is.”

Once again her face paled as a flash of fear flickered through her eyes.

“He’s not dangerous is he?”

“Oh no. He’s definitely not dangerous. But I think you should be forewarned.”

“Why?”

“Cast your mind back. Why was your brother put into care?”

Her features clouded slightly as she tried to reject the memories.

“He was a- a- transve-.”

“A transvestite.” I finished for her softly.”

“Y- yes.” She whispered glancing nervously around.

“It seems a bit cruel by today’s standards doesn’t it. To tear a child out of its family and dump it into a home for maladjusted children just for wanting to wear his sister’s clothes.”

She fell into a thoughtful silence as realisation flickered in her eyes.

“He hasn’t forgiven us has he?”

“I’m afraid not, and now the boot’s on the other foot.”

“Why?”

“You want to see him, but he’s not particularly bothered to want to see you.”

She frowned slightly as she recognised her own filial needs. As she approached old age and with all her older siblings passed on she was feeling lonely. There were a few nephews and nieces but nobody who might consider her care in her dotage. Once again she peered around hoping to catch sight of some vaguely recognisable man in his fifties. Then she wagged her head defeated.

“You won’t recognise him.” I cautioned her. “Never in a million years will you recognise him."

As I spoke Beverly accepted a tray of tea and biscuits for three then she nodded imperceptibly to me. It was our pre-arranged signal. I stood up and motioned courteously to Miss Holst.

“If you’ll follow me ma-am, I’ll introduce you to your long lost brother.”

She gave the lounge one last uncertain sweep before easing herself to her feet and motioning me forward.
We crossed the few feet to Beverly’s table together then I gently pulled back a chair. Beverly stood courteously in respect for age. Miss Holst stared at me uncomprehendingly.

“What’s going on?”

“Miss Holst, may I introduce your brother, a onetime Bernard Holst now known as Miss Beverly.”

“She stared uncomprehendingly at Beverly then glared at me.”

“Young ladies, don’t play games with me. I’ll call the police. If you think this is some sort of sting or set-up to con an old lady I can assure you I am fully compos-mentis.”

Beverly’s lips tightened viciously as she whispered.

“This is no joke Lolo.”

Miss Holst’s anger evaporated instantly as she recognised Beverly’s private childhood name for his older sister. The colour drained from her face as she slumped into the chair I was still proffering.

“Where did you learn that? Where is he? What have you done with my brother?”

“I am your brother Lolo!” Hissed Beverly.

“Let me see the photos and I’ll tell you where they were taken. If you remember there’s virtually no photos of me. I was the pariah, remember!”

Nervously Miss Angela Holst extracted the two creased and worn pictures from her handbag and held them out for Beverly to see. Beverly snatched the first one and took less than a second to identify the characters.

"That was taken at a picnic in Chirk Castle grounds on your tenth birthday. That’s you, that’s William, that’s Rosalind, that’s father, and those are our two cousins Hazel and Lesley. You’ll notice I wasn’t in the picture cos I’d wandered off. We were all caught in terrible thunderstorm soon after that was taken and I got a beating for getting wet. Let me see the other one."

Miss Holst released the second one as the dreadful realisation bore into her skull. Beverly nodded her head wearily.

“My God! You’ve actually got a picture of me. That’s your friend Jackie Harris’s pony with you and me sitting on its back. She’s holding the bridle. I was put away soon after that. They discovered me with a pair of her knickers on under my trousers. You saw me stealing them off their clothesline behind the barn and you told Jacky’s mother. Everybody said it was the last straw. I never got the chance to thank you for dropping me in the shit. Thanks.”

“That’s not fair.” Whispered the older woman.

“What is fair? Nothing’s fair. Is this fair?” Snarled Beverly as she played her ace card and deftly removed her prosthesis.

Her older sister gasped with shock and horror as the twitching fingers caused the hand to wobble obscenely and creep across the table. I had never seen it remain active after separation before and it looked for the entire world like some giant, loathsome, disfigured insect.

It was obvious that Beverly’s prosthesis was more advanced than the ones that my company made and they were considered a marvel of bioengineering. A few disgusting droplets of blood leaked from the micro-tubes to add a final satanic touch. The elderly woman went white with shock and Beverly realised she might have crossed the line of decency. Hastily she snatched the hand back and ‘clicked’ it back onto her wrist. Nobody else had seen the cameo.

“I can’t forgive you Lolo. It’s no use trying.”

Her sister looked up through tearstained eyes.

“Are you the girl from the space ship?”

“What if I am?”

“But you were a boy. You were my brother. Where did it all go wrong?”

“I was a boy. Life moves on. I’ve moved on.”

Her elderly eyes scanned Beverly’s delightful female form and she shook her head disbelievingly.

“How could you so deform the body that God gave you?”

“God! God! If there is a god then he or she gave me the wrong body. So much for divine infallibility.” Laughed Beverly hollowly.

“So you’ve had the complete op then?”

“What I’ve had is no concern of yours. Any relationship I had with you and that family died over fifty years ago.”

“How have you managed to stay so young looking?”

“You wouldn’t understand and I’m not bothering to explain. Just trust me I was your brother- once.”

Beverly stood up suddenly and stared down angrily at her sister.

“You stay with her if you want Ruby. I’m going back to the village.”

The woman seized my wrist in a desperate attempt to salvage any hopes of reconciliation. It was no use. I motioned to Beverly but she had already stalked off to reception to reserve a taxicab. I was left holding the can as it were and I ordered a second pot of coffee.

“I’d prefer tea.” Sobbed Lolo.

I changed the order then rummaged through my bag for the precious tape machine and laid it on the table. She listened in deathly silence as the tape revealed her brother’s childhood torment and then she remained staring at the table for several minutes before speaking again.

“How did he- I mean she, lose her hand?”

I explained but even my narrative left me slightly sickened by the story.

“The paedophiles used to frighten the vulnerable children by making them lie down on a railway line going past the children’s home. Beverly’s transvestism was a wonderful obvious excuse to bully and she was also small and vulnerable. They took great delight in making her lie down on the track in her frocks as they heard the train coming.

They were mostly slow moving good trains and the children had time to jump out of the way. Then a new warden arrived from the army. He introduced a new variant from his time in training with a special regiment. Apparently they rejected him as unsuitable because he was deemed to be a bully. It’s ironic and typical that the army recognised his failings and personality disorders but social services and the home office didn’t. He brought his knowledge and his cruelty out of the army to the children’s home where the kids were sitting ducks.

Beverly was the first victim - and the last.

They handcuffed her to the rail so that she couldn’t escape from the train and she would have to lie between the rails with her arm under the rail so that the locomotive wheels would run over the handcuff chain and cut her free by separating her hands.
Unfortunately it was the end of the academic term for a large public school that existed in a town further down the track. The train that appeared wasn’t the regular old Puffing-Billy with a few freight wagons but an excursion taking the whole school on an outing. Suddenly a huge express locomotive with a dozen coaches came thundering down the track. Beverly was ten years old and terrified. Inevitably she panicked and forgot what she had to do. The train cut her hand off.

The police found a ten-year-old boy wandering in the country lane in a blood saturated frock trying to squeeze the stump to stem the bleeding. He had the other hand still hanging from the handcuffs in her teeth. He thought it could be sown back on.”

Lolo went deathly white and gulped her tea as the shock took hold. Eventually she whispered.

“But surely the perpetrators-?”

“Where never brought to book. Strings were pulled in very high places. Paedophile judges were blackmailed, senior perverts in the cabinet were corrupted and arms were twisted left right and centre to cover the incident up. Children were being taken from there and other homes all the time. Some were murdered by paedophiles; some were used for unlicensed medical experiments that left them permanently damaged. What difference was one more maimed little transvestite pervert? Another dustbin kid.

Believe me Beverly has nothing to thank you for. It was your reporting her for the clothesline incident that finished it for her. Did you ever see her again after she was put away?"

“No.”

“Did you know she absconded just before her twelfth birthday?”

“No.”

“Did you know she lived as a beggar and prostitute on the streets of Liverpool for nearly two years?”

“No.”

“Did you know she was captured stealing vegetables to eat raw from a field and kept like an animal in a remote barn to be prostituted out to paedophiles by a rich land-owner?”

“No.”

“You don’t know much about her do you- and you’re her only living sister.”

“But I was only a child myself.”

“You’re five or six years older than her. She was nine when they put her away. You didn’t see her for years while all the time she was incacerated at that ghastly home. That would have made you seventeen or even eighteen when she disappeared. Weren’t you curious? Didn’t you wonder where your little brother had got to? Didn’t anybody ask any questions?”

She stared dumbly at the floor, obviously embarrassed at having her insensitivity exposed. My anger swelled up as I continued my attack.

“Don’t you read the newspapers? Didn’t you realise that the paedophile scandal that destroyed the government last year revolved around your own brother? You must have realised from the dates and the names. It was splashed across the headlines for days.”

I hammered out the questions as my anger boiled inside me. It sickened me to think that a person as uncaring as this should be deemed fit to run a large public school. Unable to face her anymore, I found myself mirroring Beverly’s anger and turned to swivel angrily on my heel. The last I saw was a weeping old maid being approached by the waiter to ask if she was feeling all right.

“My God!” I cursed silently as I watched the waiter comfort the old witch. “It was sickening to think how appearances could deceive.”


I had to walk away.

‘You were right Beverly!’ I conceded to myself. ‘They must have been absolute bastards!’

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Comments

Sickening!!

No wonder Beverly is commpletely traumatized! And many people do not realize what the bullying is doing to the victims. And they are truly victims! And all because this persons are different than the norm.

Beverly, I hope writing this story was cathartic for you. The abuse is so gruesome that it has to be real, because it is to hair-raising to be fiction.

Hugs,
Jessica

Yes the incidents are real but they did not all happen to me.

Whilst my own trauma's were pretty gruesome (Correction, - bloody gruesome) other stuff happened elsewhere and was told to me as a kid on the streets by other escapees from other care systems and intitutions.

I met Peter,the kid without a hand and I thought he had commited suicide a few years later (or so I was led to believe!) However I learned a few years later when I was in my early twenties that he was probably murdered in a very suspicious house fire in Brighton the gay capitol of England. He was overdosed with heroine and my informant told me that Peter never took heroine.
My informant believed it was to stop him giving evidence at a trial in North Wales and I have no cause to disbelieve this.

I will never know and several other kids I knew when young have disappeared in suspicious circumstances. That's how it is with kids in care, most die from drug overdoses usually in their late twenties and thirties but some had stories that could well have preciptated their murders in later life to 'shut them up'

I have drawn in parts from the well of other people's misery and I must be held guilty if I have hi-jacked their stories.
Peter however is dead so I believe my exposing his amputation is a worthy act.

There is no requittal for kids such as us. It all happened to me long before 1965 when borstals were part of HMP and abusers enjoyed crown immunity.

I'm 64 now and the bastards who abused me are either dead or very, very old. I can't even remmeber names any more and I have learned from other more reliable instances that memories rarely serve me well. I've even misplaced lakes and mountains recently in my returns to old haunts I fled to in my twenties when seeking succour from isolation and loneliness.

By surviving and talking about these things I hope I am doing the right thing!

Thanks for your interest,
Beverly.

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Spacetran 9

Beverly is a survivor who has found a few friends, I hope that she can find more friends.

    Stanman
May Your Light Forever Shine
    Stanman
May Your Light Forever Shine

Not this severe

My own treatment was in no wise as severe as Beverly's; I can't even imagine. I've been asked a few times to do my Autobio, but each time, I have to stop to avoid things I do not wish to discuss.

So, it must be oh so much harder for Bev to face and relive all this.

I can't even imagine. I'd have died long before this.

Much Peace.

Gwendolyn

Child abuse.

It goes much deeper than that, - and much higher.
I have been on 'Survivors of abuse' Marches in London where famous names were mentioned not once, not twice not even three times but several times and often by several or more different people. At such rallies we took note of escorting police officers numbers then discovered that the numbers did not exist in the Metropolitcan police force.

Who where these men who were not policmen?!!!

Names mentioned at different rallies in different years included members of Edward Heath's cabinet, Margaret Thatcher's Cabinets, Tony Blair's cabinets and Gordon Brown's Cabinet but neither the British Press nor the BBC has ever properly investigated these obscenities.

The problem is that the witnesses are deemed to be unreliable drug addicts, or sociopaths or inadequates (in fact they are drug addicts, inadequates and sociopaths because that's what the abuse made them!) and even the most mediocre lawyers could make mince-meat of them in the witness boxes.

(Could you remember the date and time that Lord X fucked you in a large private house somewhere near Chester in 1959? I couldn't and I still cant remember the date time or exact location but that's what the courts want. Such detail is long lost in the turmoil of years of bitter memories that is if you haven't shut it out!)

The Bryn Estyn inquiry proved that! One witness walked out of the Bryn Estyn court room and straight to a tree where he hung himself the same afternoon. One person attended his funeral, a girl called Penny Mellor! An activist who was later sent to prison herself for trying to expose these abuses!
As I have said on many occasions, these abusers were high ranking cabinet members but they are 'bomb-proof' from any kind of judicial action, why, the judges are also in it up to their necks.

Recently some residual human remains were discovered in a disused children's home in Jersey in the Channel Islands. Many children who had been sent there from various social service organisation around Britain (including Birmingham social services) had complained of sexual abuse.
When police investigated the site they found children's milk teeth in a rubbish heap in a cellar. (In a cellar!!!?) What was worse is that the milk teeth still had bone corona around the roots, evidence that the teeth had been forcibly extracted and not dropped out naturally at age six. The whole incident was then 'allowed to die a death' and little more was done. The police declared they could not find enough evidence to proceed.

Every body who's been in care and sexually abused knows that if your milk teeth are forcibly torn out at aged three or more often four, then your adult teeth don't grow until you're about six and a half or even seven. The abusers can then force you to perform unwilling fellatillo and you don't even have teeth to bite the offending penis. The young child is therefore helpless to even try to defend themselves even if it meant a beating or worse and even if they had teeth and could bite. The child is helpless for upwards of 2 to 3 years. (Give us the child, you can have the man!!!!)

Yeah. I don't trust Judges. I don't trust doctors, I certainly don't trust lawyers and I wouldn't trust a social worker as far as I could bury it!

Would you believe some of the people questioned about the teeth said that the children took their own teeth down to the cellar to plant for the tooth fairies.

Yeah. A four-year-old going down to a cellar at the dead of night to bury a tooth. Pull the other one but don't pull my teeth!

Later on some bright spark of a police pathologist declared that the skull gragment had been a piece of coconut. Who would believe that but neither the British Press nor the BBC has ever properly tackled the politicians about this.

Now of course, the catholic priests are in the frame and the pope is implicated in not having acted to stop it.

Speaking from years of activism and despair, my entrenched cynicism tells me in no uncertain terms that the main players in British paedophile rings will never be brought to book. They know too much and they have too much power!

Beverly.

Glad I'm out of it now. They can't sack me cos I'm retired and I'm growing old disgracefully. They can't blackmail me cos I'm out and I don't bloody care. That's the only therapy I will ever truck with from now to my death. Clubbing and wild parties but no childrten, strictly no children!!! Leave that to the governments and churches, the ministers, judges and priests.

Beverly!!!

Sorry! Now my slip is really showing.

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