Violent violins. Organ music. Stephen in a deep leather burgundy hide wing chair with dimpled buttons. He is reading. He looks up.
- Stephen
-
Hello, I'm Gelliant Gutfright, your host on The Seventh Dimension. Tonight's story is called "The Red Hat of Patferrick". I must add a warning. The BBC do not advise that you watch the unfolding of this dark tale if you are in any way of an erotic disposition.
He walks towards an office set.
Office life. Ha! It seems so ordinary, doesn't it? So mundane. What is the worst that can happen in an ordinary publisher's office? Susie loses the Tippex. Carol forgets to fax that contract to Stuttgart. The wrong manuscript is DHL-ed to San Francisco. Nothing sinister about a modern office. Is there? Is there? Or is there? Jonathan Hadey. A nice guy. One of the world's good scouts. Governor of his local primary school. Rotarian. Chief High Coven Priest of the Amersham and District Satanic Abuse Club. An ordinary, decent British guy. Every day is much like the day before for publisher Jonathan Hadey. Except today. Except April the twenty-ninth of October. Oh yes, except for today ...Camera has been zooming in on Hugh, and Stephen's last few words are over. The telephone on Hugh's desk rings.
- Stephen
- (Over) Louise is out of the office, flirting with Ted from marketing while she makes Jonathan's mid-morning coffee. He might as well answer the telephone himself for once.
- Hugh
- Hello?
- Voice
- (Telephone distort) I want to speak to Jonathan Hadey.
- Hugh
- This is him ... he ... him. I mean ...
- Voice
- You have the Red Hat of Patferrick.
- Hugh
- The what?
- Voice
- Don't play games, Mr Hadey. You have just seven hours to return it to it's rightful owner.
- Hugh
- Shall I put you through to marketing?
Phone click. Dialling tone.
Hugh stares into the phone. Puts it down slowly.
Louise enters with a coffee.
- Louise
- Sorry I took my time, Mr Hadey, but Ted from marketing was licking my breasts. Who was that?
- Hugh
- I don't know. A wrong number probably ... except they asked for me. Something about a hat.
- Louise
- (Slightly guilty, suspicious) A hat?
- Hugh
- Yes, a hat from Portmerrick or something.
- Louise
- Not ... Patferrick?
- Hugh
- Yes! That's it! The hat of Patferrick.
- Louise
- (Terrified, but trying to hide it) Did they say what ... what ... colour?
- Hugh
- The red hat I think they said.
- Louise
-
(Screams) No! Not red! Please God not red. No, no, no, no!
She runs to the open window behind Hugh's desk and throws herself out.
Hugh rushes to the window and looks down.
- Hugh
- My God, Louise ... oh sweet Jesus heaven, Louise why ...
- Louise
- (Off) I can't explain Mr Hadey.
- Hugh
- But for the Lord's sake girl. Whatever it is, you can't stay down there.
- Louise
- If you don't mind Mr Hadey I will. For the time being.
- Hugh
-
But ...
Hugh is interrupted by a voice off behind him. It is the voice of Gerald Dandridge, his boss.
- Dandridge
- Hadey!
- Hugh
- (Spinning round) Mr Dandridge!
- Dandridge
- Can't have my editorial directors staring out of the window all day. Not got enough work to do?
- Hugh
- No, sir it's not that ... it's ...
- Dandridge
- Well, man ... speak up.
- Hugh
- I'm afraid Louise is ... behaving rather oddly.
- Dandridge
- Probably her time of the curse or whatever they call it. Give her the day off.
- Hugh
- Yes, that's probably it. Got rather upset about some sort of Hat. The Pink Hat of ...
- Dandridge
- (Gasping in fright and astonishment) Pink hat? Did you say pink hat?
- Hugh
- (Surprised) Well ...
- Dandridge
- The hat of ... the Pink Hat of where, man?
- Hugh
- Well it was some phone call ...
- Dandridge
- (Grasping Hugh's collar) In the name of mercy, Jonathan! THE PINK HAT OF WHERE?
- Hugh
- Well, I think he said Patferrick ... does that sound right?
- Dandridge
- (Instantly relieved and relaxed) Patferrick? Oh that's all right. The Pink Hat of Patferrick. Fine, my boy. Fine.
- Hugh
- Well come to think of it, it was red, the Red Hat of Patferrick, he said.
- Dandridge
-
(Hugely loud scream) No! Oh suffering hell, NO!!!! The Red Hat of Patferrick!!
Dandridge runs to the window and jumps out.
- Hugh
-
Sir! Mr Dandridge?
Pause.
Mr Dandridge? Sir?
- Dandridge
- (After a pause. Hissed whisper) Go away!
- Hugh
- But what are you ...
- Louise
- Please, Mr Hadey. Just leave us alone.
- Dandridge
- Buzz off.
- Hugh
-
Oh. Right.
Hugh backs away from the window, scratching his chin and very puzzled. The telephone rings very loudly in his ear.
(Answering it) Hello? ... Police? ... Yes, what is it? My wife ... what kind of accident? Oh my God ... squashed! In heaven's name, what by? A hat? A hat? What kind of hat? Sort of maroony, burgundy-ish crimson. Damn it man, you mean red. If it's red say so. A red hat ... from the dust on the brim it could only come from one place, you say? Don't tell me, I already know. Patferrick. My God, it was the Red Hat of Patferrick.He drops the telephone and buries his head in his arms.
Louise enters with a coffee and shakes him on the shoulder.
- Louise
- Wake up, Mr Hadey. It's your coffee.
- Hugh
- What ... I ... the pat ... the hat ... the redferrick of hatpat ... I ... oh.
- Louise
- Dreaming again, Mr Hadey. I don't know.
- Hugh
- But it was so ... so real. (Laughing) What's the matter with me? I think I need a holiday.
- Louise
- Oh there's a man on his way up to see you. Says he's bringing "The Red Hat of ..." somewhere or other.
- Hugh
- NO!!! Oh my Christing hell-god no! The red hat of where? Speak, girl.
- Louise
- Well Pat-something, I think he said.
- Hugh
-
Oh God, no. The Red Hat of Patferrick! No.
Hugh runs and jumps out of the window. Louise clutches her cheeks and screams.
Enter Stephen as Gelliant Gutfright. A bundle of papers under his arm.
- Stephen
- Something wrong, my dear?
- Louise
- It's Mr Hadey, he just ... twenty-three floors up and he just ... oh! (She shudders)
- Stephen
- Ah. Well. I had better take The Red Hat of Patferrick somewhere else, hadn't I?
- Louise
- The Red Hat ... that's why Mr Hadey jumped. What is it?
- Stephen
- Oh just a manuscript of a story my dear. A wholly improbable tale. It concerns a young publisher who has a dream about a hat, and when he awakes ... but it is (turns and stares into the camera) nothing but fancy. It could never really happen. Could it? Could it? Or could it? Perhaps it could. Or could it? Goodnight.
​
Vox Pop
- Stephen
- I've found that young people are no longer enticed into church simply on the promise of guitars and a little folk music. We have to move with the times. We've started showing leather and bondage films in St Barnabas's and the results have been very good. We were packed last Sunday. Mostly Young Conservatives, but it's a start.