"Blue Flu"
RATING: G.
SPOILERS: Set early in the Third Season so
Ray isn’t the Ray you think he is, he’s the other Ray that everyone is calling
Ray, okay?
FEEDBACK: I’m always eager to hear your
views so contact me and let me know at tanyajoy74@hotmail.com
DISCLAIMER: All due South characters
belong to Paul Haggis and Alliance Communications Corporation Production. I
make no money of this and am just doing it for the love of the show.
* * * * * * * *
"Whaddaya
mean he won’t confess?" Lieutenant Welsh slathered a generous dollop of
mustard on his rye roll before contemplating the array of food before him.
"In case it’s escaped your limited attention," he waved a slice of
tomato in the vague direction of Detective Vecchio.
"Your case is very circumstantial. Without a full confession your guy’s gonna walk."
Two men stood before the
Lieutenant’s desk. One was ramrod straight and gazed intently past Welsh’s left
shoulder. Dressed in the traditional red uniform of a Canadian Mountie it was the ever polite – and if you asked his
partner ever annoying – Constable Benton Fraser of the Royal Canadian Mounted
Police. To one side stood, to the casual observer, his exact
opposite. Slouching to attention and staring intently at the floor in
the vague hope it would open up and swallow him whole was Detective Ray Vecchio, not the real Ray Vecchio
of course. He was undercover somewhere having the time of his life. No, this
was Stanley Raymond Kowalski, a man who openly flirted with the department’s
dress code wearing dirty jeans and a rumpled tee shirt. He ran a hand through
his spiky dark blonde hair and thought, once again, just why it was he had
agreed to give up his life and identity to become someone else, especially this
particular someone.
"Well detective?"
Welsh broke through his thoughts.
"You should have let
me have a crack at him, Lieutenant, instead of Huey and Dewey."
"After your last bungled attempt at an interrogation?" Welsh
snorted as he continued sorting through his lunch. "We want to build a
case not smash it to pieces with a harassment suit."
"I honestly thought he
would crack," Ray said. "When Fraser mentioned the mud that linked
him to the robbery he turned green. Now that’s the action of a guilty
man."
"Actually,"
"A
what, now?"
Ray turned to
"You know, a hypochondriac." Welsh said. "A person who
over exaggerates."
"I believe, sir,"
"I knew that,"
Welsh said.
"Ah, of course you
did, Lieutenant."
"Yeah, butt
kisser." Ray muttered under his breath.
"Something you’d like
to share?" Welsh continued to stack various pieces of meat into his roll.
"Well, I just think
it’s a bit of a stretch to get all that just from a bit of mud, even for super Mountie over here."
"No that was the other
Ray, I just think you’re gross and weird."
"Well be that as it
may, Ray, Donald Biggins is a hypochondriac."
"And you can tell that
just by some stinking mud?"
"That
and his use of gloves."
"Its winter," Ray
threw his hands up in the air as if asking the heavens to witness the idiot
Canadian he was lumped with. "Hello?"
"Ah, but he insists in
wearing them indoors. Then there is the meticulous way he wipes everything
clean with a sterilised cloth before touching things."
"Okay, I’ll give you
that he’s a clean freak but that still don’t make him a hyper-whatsis."
"All right, did you
see his extreme reaction when he walked past Francesca and she sneezed on
him?"
"I saw that,"
Welsh said.
"I thought that was
everyone’s reaction to Frannie?" Ray said.
"Assuming for the
moment that the Constable, here, is correct," Lieutenant Welsh said as he
cut the roll in half. "How can that help us?"
"I honestly don’t
know, sir."
"Oh." Welsh bit
into his lunch.
Ray stood there staring out
into space as various thoughts ran through his head. ‘Persistent
anxiety about health’ . . . ‘inventing illnesses’ . . . ‘Frannie
has a cold.’
"I have an idea!"
Ray said out of the blue.
Welsh almost choked on his
roll. This was a first, one of his detectives working something out before the Mountie.
Ray stepped forward and
picked up one half of Walsh’s lunch. "Can I borrow this?"
Without waiting for a reply
he spun on his heel, almost knocking Fraser over, and left the office.
"Fraser go and tell
Huey to stall for time, I’ll be there in a minute." Ray snatched up Frannie’s box of tissues on the way despite her wheezing
protests. "Oh and tell him to just go with whatever I say in there,
okay?"
The two parted ways,
Entering the men’s room Ray
peeked under the stall doors to make sure he was alone. Placing the Kleenex box
on a nearby shelf he carefully put the food on top of it. Pulling out a handful
of tissues he ran them under the tap until they were sopping wet then after
wringing them out and, adding a few more dry tissues to the mix, he placed the
lot gingerly into his right jean pocket. Taking up the roll he opened it up and
poked around, stealing a few pieces of pastrami and sausage as he went, until
he found what he was looking for – the onion!
Squeezing the vegetable
between his fingers Ray stared at himself in the mirror. Okay, so I’m not
the best looking guy on the planet but I have some good qualities, right? So
why the hell am I stuck here with the poster boy for
moral righteousness as a partner? Halting that line of thought before it
went too far Ray looked down at his fingers.
"The things I do for a
confession," he said to himself.
With the slightest of
hesitation Ray reached up and dabbed at his right eye. Instantly it started
stinging as the onion juices did their work.
"Son
of a –!"
Ray hopped about blinking rapidly. "Damn!"
Realising that he would
probably lose any resolve if he didn’t act soon Ray poked at his other eye.
"Ow, ow." He staggered backward dropping the
onion ball.
After a few minutes of
tears he looked into the mirror. Facing him was a bleary red-eyed Ray. So far
so good, now what else could he do?
"Nose, nose, gotta do something with the nose."
He pinched it a few times
then, in a burst of inspiration, he rubbed it briskly against the sleeve of his
tee shirt. See, there was a perfectly good reason for saving money on fabric
softener! The end result was a nose not quite as red as his eyes but getting there.
Last but not least Ray practiced
a few deep hacking coughs then shadow boxed with himself
in the mirror for a few minutes, just to get into the mood.
"You are one mean lean
coughing machine," he told his reflection, picking up the tissue box and
roll. "Ladies and germs, its show time!"
~~~~~~*~~~~~~
Three men sat in
interrogation room one. They had been sitting there for almost an hour going
round and round the same questions. The detectives would ask something and the
prisoner would refuse to answer.
There was a polite knock on
the door and Constable Fraser entered. Walking over to Huey he leant forward
and whispered in the detective’s ear.
"What?!" Huey turned and looked at Fraser.
The Mountie
just shrugged and went to stand in the corner of the room.
"What?" Dewey
asked.
"Nothing," Huey
turned back to the prisoner. "Now where were we? Ah yes, it would behove
you to confess, Donald, I can call you Donald?" The smoothly dressed Jack
Huey smiled at Biggins.
"Yeah, my partner here
likes to have an informal relationship in all his interrogations."
Detective Dewey added.
"Indeed," Huey
peered intently at Biggins clothes. "That is a
smart suit, where do you shop?"
"I refuse to say
anything. Besides, I know my rights I deserve a phone call." Donald Biggins looked about the room. "You know for a public
building this isn’t very clean."
"Whatever!" Dewey
waved a dismissive hand. "Confess already and you can go visit a nice
clean cell."
The door opened again and a
more than normal dishevelled Ray stumbled his way in.
"Oh man," he was saying. "The things you drag me outta my bed for. Don’t you guys know I’m sick?!"
"Uh," Huey looked
from Ray to Dewey. "What are you doing here?" he said like he was
reciting from a script.
Ray waved his tissue box
about the room. "Doing here?" he said. "Why I’m here to do your
job of getting a confession from this guy."
With that statement he
strode over to the table taking a big bite from the roll. Halfway there he
began to cough spraying the three men at the table with bits of food.
Biggins gave a horrified choking squeal and
tried unsuccessfully to push his chair backwards.
"Oh man, I’m sorry,"
Ray said around some pastrami and tomato as he pulled out the wad of sodden
tissues from his pocket and tried to pat down Biggins.
"Let me get that for you."
"Get back! Get
back!!" Biggins flailed his arms around
frantically, trying to ward off Ray without actually touching him.
"Hey, its okay," Ray said, then sneezed. "I only got the
flu, at least that’s what the doc told me. Although I’m not sure," he
looked over at Fraser. "My buddy and I arrested this guy last week he
looked pretty sick and he had these great big boils under his arms, right
guys?"
Ray looked over at Huey and
Dewey who, after a moment’s hesitation started to nod vigorously.
"Boils?" Biggins face turned greyish yellow. "What kind of
boils?"
"Big huge, honking
boils," Ray held his hands about an inch apart. "Right
Fraser?"
Benton Fraser swallowed
once then nodded. "Why, yes, Ray." He said in a rather stilted way.
"That would be correct."
"Didn’t that guy, like
die?" Ray asked.
"Die?!" Biggins threw himself out of his chair and rushed to the
far corner of the room. He pulled out a large white handkerchief and held it up
to his face. He pointed one shaking hand at Ray. "You’re a plague
carrier!"
"What?!" Huey shouted as he jumped to his
feet and moved away from Ray, quickly followed by Dewey.
"Oh no, I’m sure that
can’t be the case,"
"But that woman
outside," Biggins said. "She was
sick!"
"Who
Frannie?" Ray asked around a bout of hacking coughs.
"But she was fine a few hours ago."
"Hey, now that you
mention it," Dewey said. "I am feeling a bit ill, myself."
"Yeah,
yeah." Huey
added. "Is it getting hot in here or is it just me?"
"Oh
no, no!" Biggins tried unsuccessfully to push his way through the
wall and into the next room. "I have to get out of here!"
"How
‘bout you, Fraser?" Ray asked. "How you feelin’?"
"Why I’m feeling quite
well –" he caught Ray’s glare and gave a feeble cough. "Actually
since you pointed it out . . ."
"All
of you?!" Biggins began beating on the walls and screaming. "Get
me out of here! Someone please get me out of here!"
"No can do," Ray
said. "By now everyone must have it. You’re only way out of here is to
confess so we can move you to another precinct."
"Yes! Yes! I confess,
I confess. I did it! I did everything, now please get
me out of here!"
Huey whipped out a pen and
fresh piece of paper. "Would you care to put that down in writing?"
~~~~~~*~~~~~~
"Let me get this
straight," Welsh was saying afterwards. "Constable Fraser lied?"
"No sir!"
"You were fudging the
truth there, Fraser," Ray said. "What do you call it?"
"Acting."
"Acting?"
Fraser nodded.
"Indeed, I was playing a part. In this case a part of a Canadian worried
for his friend’s health."
"Right," Ray drew
the word out. "Whatever, buddy."
"It’s not the first
time I’ve strode the boards, so to speak. Why, I once performed the entire play
of Hamlet all by myself."
"Really?" Welsh said.
"Indeed, well I had to
there was only myself and my grandparents present and someone
had to be in the audience."
"You are so
weird!" Ray stated. "Is he always this weird?" he asked Welsh.
"’Fraid so."
"Wow,
tough being Canadian, huh?"
"Not at all,
Ray."
"Shut up,
Fraser."
"Understood."
"Speaking of
food," Welsh said. "You owe me a sandwich, Detective."
"Yeah, but we caught
the bad guy. He confessed!"
"You still owe me my
lunch."
"Couldn’t you charge
it to the precinct? I mean it did help in the solving of a felony?"
Welsh pointed to the door. "Dino’s Deli on
"Fine." Ray’s shoulders slumped and he
started for the door.
"And you’d better go
with him, Constable," Welsh said. "Just to make sure he gets there in
one piece."
"Yes, sir, Dief could use the exercise."
"Whatever." Lieutenant
Welsh waved the pair away.
As the door closed he
sneezed violently.