The Time Ships (25 page)

Read The Time Ships Online

Authors: Stephen Baxter

BOOK: The Time Ships
10.98Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
11
THE NEW WORLD ORDER

I
was returned to our lodging at about six. I came in calling halloos, and found the rest of my party in the smoking-room. The Morlock was still poring over his notes – he seemed to be trying to reconstruct the whole of this future science of Quantum Mechanics from his own imperfect memory – but he jumped up when I came in. ‘Did you find him? Gödel?’

‘I did.’ I smiled at him. ‘And – yes! – you were right.’ I glanced at Filby, but the poor old chap was dozing over a magazine, and could not hear us. ‘
I think Gödel has some Plattnerite
.’


Ah
.’ The Morlock’s face was as inexpressive as ever, but he thumped one fist into the other palm in a decidedly human gesture. ‘Then there is hope.’

Now Moses walked up to me; he handed me a glass of what proved to be whisky-and-water. I gulped at the drink gratefully, for the day had stayed as hot as in the morning.

Moses moved a little closer to me, and the three of us bent our heads together and spoke quietly. ‘I’ve come to a conclusion as well,’ Moses said.

‘Which is?’

‘That we must indeed get out of here – by any means possible!’

Moses told me the story of his day. Growing bored with his confinement, he had struck up conversations with our young soldier-guards. Some of these were
privates, but others were Officer-class; and all of those assigned to guard us and to other dudes in this scientific campus area were generally intelligent and well-educated. They seemed to have taken a liking to Moses, and had invited him to a nearby hostelry – the Queen’s Arms in Queen’s Gate Mews – and later they had taken rickshaws into the West End. Over several drinks, these young people had evidently enjoyed arguing through their ideas – and the concepts of their new Modern State – with this stranger from the past.

For my part I was pleased that Moses seemed to be shaking off his timidity, and was showing interest in the world in which we found ourselves. I listened to what he had to say with fascination.

‘These youngsters are all highly likeable,’ Moses said. ‘Competent – practical – clearly brave. But their views!’

The great concept of the future – Moses had learned – was to be
Planning
. When the Modern State was in place, as directed by a victorious Britain and her Allies, an Air and Sea Control would take effective possession of all the ports, coal mines, oil wells, power stations and mines. Similarly a Transport Control would take over the world’s shipyards and turn them away from warships to manufacturing steel cargo ships by the score. The Allied Supply Control would organize the production of iron, steel, rubber, metals, cotton, wool and vegetable substances. And the Food Control …

‘Well!’ Moses said. ‘You get the picture. It’s an end of Ownership, you see; all these resources will be owned by the new Allied World State. The resources of the world will be made to work together, at last, for the repair of the War-ravaged lands – and later, for the betterment of Humanity. All
Planned
, you see,
by an all-wise, all-knowing Fellowship – who, by the by, will elect themselves!’

‘Aside from that last, it doesn’t sound so bad,’ I mused.

‘Maybe – but this Planning isn’t to stop with the physical resources of the planet. It includes the
human
resources as well.

‘And that’s where the problems start. First of all there is
behaviour
.’ He looked at me. ‘These youngsters don’t look back with much favour on our times,’ he said. ‘We suffer from a “profound laxity of private conduct” – so I was informed! These new types have gone back the other way: towards a severe austerity – particularly regarding sexual excitement. Decent busy-ness! – that is the order of the day.’

I felt a twinge of nostalgia. ‘I suppose tins bodes ill for the future of the Empire, Leicester Square.’

‘Closed already! Demolished! – to make way for a
Railway Planning Office
.

‘And it goes on. In the
next
phase, things will get a little more active. We will see the painless destruction of the more “pitiful sorts of defectives” – these are not my words! – and also the sterilization of some types who would otherwise have transmitted tendencies that are, I quote, “plainly undesirable”.

‘In some parts of Britain, it seems, this cleansing process has already begun. They have a type of gas called Pabst’s Kinetogens …

‘Well. You can see that they are making a start here at directing Humanity’s racial heredity.’

‘Hum,’ I said. ‘I find myself with a deep distrust of such
normalizing
. Is it really so desirable that the future of the human species should be filtered through the “tolerance” of the Englishman of 1938? Should
his
long shadow stretch down, through all the millions of years to come?’

‘It’s all
Planning
, you see,’ Moses said. ‘And, they
say, the only alternative is a relapse through chaotic barbarism – to final extinction.’

‘Are men – modern men – capable of such epochal deeds?’

Moses said, ‘There will surely be bloodshed and conflict on a scale not yet envisaged – even by the standards of this dull, ghastly War – as the majority of the world resists the imposition of a flawed Plan by these Allied technocrats.’

I met Moses’s eyes, and I recognized there a certain righteous anger, an infuriation at the foolishness of mankind, which had informed my own, younger soul. I had always had a distrust of the advancement, willy-nilly, of civilization, for it seemed to me an unstable edifice which must one day collapse about the foolish heads of its makers; and this Modern State business seemed about the most extreme folly, short of actual War, I had heard in a while! It was as if I could see Moses’s thoughts in his grey eyes – he had thrown off his funk, and become a younger, more determined version of me – and I had not felt closer to him since we met.

‘Well, then,’ I said, ‘the matter is decided. I don’t think any of us can tolerate such a future.’ Moses shook his head – Nebogipfel appeared to acquiesce – and, for my part, I renewed my resolve to put an end to this time-travelling business once and for all. ‘We must escape. But how –’

And then, even before I could finish framing the question, the house shook.

I was hurled down, nearly catching my head on the desk. There was a rumble – a deep boom, like the slamming of a door, deep inside the earth. The lamps flickered, but did not die. All around me there were cries – poor Filby whimpered – and I heard the tinkle of glass, the clatter of falling furniture.

The building seemed to settle. Coughing, for an
inordinate quantity of dust had been raised, I struggled to my feet. ‘Is everyone all right? Moses? Morlock?’

Moses had already turned to help Nebogipfel. The Morlock seemed unhurt, but he’d got himself caught under a fallen bookcase.

I let them be and looked for Filby. The old chap had been lucky; he’d not even been thrown out of his chair. But now he stood up and made his way to the window, which was cracked clean across.

I reached him and put my arms around his bowed shoulders. ‘Filby, my dear chap – come away.’

But he ignored me. His rheumy eyes streaming with water, and his face caked with dust, he raised a crooked finger to the window. ‘
Look
.’

I leaned closer to the glass, cupping my hand against the reflection of the electric lamps. The Babble Machine Aldis lamps had died, as had many of the street-lamps. I saw people running, distraught – an abandoned bicycle – a soldier with his mask over his face, firing shots into the air … and there, a little further in the distance, was a shaft of brilliant light, a vertical slice of scudding dust-motes; it picked out a cross-section of streets, houses, a corner of Hyde Park. People stood in its glare, blinking like owls, their hands before their faces.

The shaft of brilliancy was daylight. The Dome was breached.

12
THE GERMAN ASSAULT ON LONDON

O
ur street door was hanging from its hinges, evidently shaken open by the concussion. There was no sign of the soldiers who had been guarding us – not even of the faithful Puttick. Outside in the Terrace, we heard the clatter of running footsteps, screams and angry shouts, the shrill of whistles, and we could smell dust, smoke and cordite. That fragment of June daylight, bright and sharp, hung over everything; the people of carapaced London blinked like disturbed owls, baffled and terrified.

Moses clapped me on the shoulder. ‘This chaos won’t last long; now’s our chance.’

‘Very well. I’ll fetch Nebogipfel and Filby; you collect some supplies from the house –’

‘Supplies? What supplies?’

I felt impatient and irritated: what fool would proceed into time equipped with nothing more man a house-coat and slippers? ‘Oh – candles. And matches! As many as you can find. Any fashion of a weapon – a kitchen knife will do if there’s nothing better.’
What else – what else
? ‘Camphor, if we have it. Underwear! – fill your pockets with the stuff …’

He nodded. ‘I understand. I’ll pack a satchel.’ He turned from the door and made for the kitchen.

I hurried back to the smoking room. Nebogipfel had donned his schoolboy’s cap; he had gathered up
his notes and was slipping them into a cardboard file. Filby – poor old devil! – was down on his knees beneath the window-frame; he had his bony knees tucked up against his concave chest, and his hands were up before his face, like a boxer’s guard.

I knelt before him. ‘Filby. Filby, old chap –’ I reached out to him but he flinched from me. ‘You must come with us. It’s not safe here.’

‘Safe? And will it be safer with you? Eh? You …
conjurer
. You
quack
.’ His eyes, flooded with tears from the dust, were bright, like windows, and he hurled those words at me as if they were the vilest insults imaginable. ‘I remember you – when you scared the life out of all of us with that damned ghost trick of yours, that Christmas-time. Well, I’ll not be fooled again!’

I restrained myself from shaking him. ‘Oh, have some sense, man! Time travel is no trick – and certainly this desperate War of yours isn’t!’

There was a touch on my shoulder. It was Nebogipfel; his pale fingers seemed to glow in the fragments of daylight from the window. ‘We cannot help him,’ he said gently.

Filby had dropped his head into his trembling, liver-spotted hands now, and I was convinced he could no longer hear me.

‘But we can’t leave him like this!’

‘What will you do – restore him to 1891? The 1891 you remember doesn’t even exist any more – except across some unreachable Dimension.’

Now Moses burst into the smoking room, a small, crammed knapsack in his hand; he had donned his epaulettes and his gas mask was at his waist. ‘I’m ready,’ he gasped. Nebogipfel and I did not respond immediately, and Moses glanced from one to the other of us. ‘What is it? What are you waiting for?’

I reached out and squeezed Filby’s shoulder. At
least he did not resist, and I took this as a last shred of friendly contact between us.

That was the last I saw of him.

We looked out into the street. This had been a comparatively quiet part of London, to my memory; but today people poured through the Queen’s Gate Terrace, running, stumbling, bumping up against each other. Men and women had simply decanted from their homes and work-places. Most of them had their heads hidden by gas masks, but where I could see faces, I read pain, misery and fear.

There seemed to be children everywhere, mostly in drab school uniforms, with their small, shaped gas masks; for the schools had evidently been closed up. The children wandered about the street, crying for their parents; I considered the agony of a mother searching for a child in the huge, teeming ant-hill which London had become, and my imagination recoiled.

Some people carried the paraphernalia of the working day – briefcases and handbags, familiar and useless – and others had already gathered up bundles of household belongings, and bore them in bulging suitcases or wrapped up in curtains and sheets. We saw one thin, intense man stumbling along with an immense dresser, packed no doubt with valuables, balanced on the handlebars and saddle of a bicycle. The wheel of his cycle bumped against backs and legs. ‘Go on! Go on!’ he cried, to those ahead of him.

There was no evidence of authority or control. If there were policemen, or soldiers, they must have been overwhelmed – or had torn off their insignia and joined the rush. I saw a man in the uniform of the Salvation Army; he stood on a step and bawled: ‘Eternity! Eternity!’

Moses pointed. ‘Look – the Dome is breached to the east, towards Stepney. So much for the impregnability of this marvellous Roof!’

I saw that he was right. It looked as if a great Bomb had punched an immense hole in the concrete shell, close to the eastern horizon. Above that main wound, the Dome had cracked like an eggshell, and a great irregular ribbon of blue sky was visible, almost all the way up to the Dome’s zenith above me. I could see that the damage hadn’t settled yet, for bits of masonry – some the size of houses – were raining down, all over that part of the city, and I knew that the damage and loss of life on the ground must be vast.

In the distance – to the north, I thought – I heard a sequence of dull booms, like the footsteps of a giant. All around us the air was rent by the wail of sirens – ‘
ulla, ulla, ulla
’ – and by the immense groans of the broken Dome above us.

I imagined looking down from the Dome, on a London transformed in moments from a fearful but functioning city to a bowl of chaos and terror. Every road leading west, south or north, away from the Dome breach, would be stippled black with streaming refugees, with each dot in that stippling representing a human being, a mote of physical suffering and misery: each one a lost child, a bereft spouse or parent.

Moses had to shout over the cacophony of the street. ‘That confounded Dome is going to come down on us all, any minute!’

‘I know. We must get to Imperial College. Come on – use your shoulders! Nebogipfel, help us if you can.’

We stepped to the middle of the crowded street. We had to go eastwards, against the flow of the crowd. Nebogipfel, evidently dazzled by the daylight, was almost knocked down by a running, moon-faced man
in a business suit and epaulettes who shook his fist at the Morlock. After that, Moses and I kept the Morlock between us, each with a skinny arm clamped in one fist. I collided with a cyclist, almost knocking him off his vehicle; he screamed at me, incoherent, and swung a bony punch, which I ducked; then he wobbled on into the press of people behind me, his tie draped over his shoulder. Now there came a fat woman who stumbled backwards up the street, lugging a rolled-up carpet behind her; her skirt had ridden up over her knees, and her calves were streaked with dust. Every few feet, some other refugee would stand on her carpet, or a cyclist’s wheel would run over it, and the woman would stumble; she wore her mask, and I could see tears pooling behind those goggles as she struggled with the unreasonable, unmanageable mass that was so important to her.

Where I could see a human face it didn’t seem so bad, for I could feel a shard of fellow feeling for this red-eyed clerk, or that tired shopgirl; but, with the gas masks, and in that patchy, shadowed illumination, the crowd was rendered anonymous and insectile; it was as if I had once more been transported away from the earth to some remote planet of nightmares.

Now there came a new sound – a thin, shrill monotone, which pierced the air. It seemed to me it came from that breach to the east. The crowds around us seemed to pause in their scrambling past each other, as if listening. Moses and I looked at each other, baffled as to the meaning of this new, menacing development.

Then the whistling stopped.

In the silence that followed, a single voice set up a call: ‘Shell! That’s a bloomin’ shell –’

Now I knew what those distant giant’s footsteps to
the north had signified: it was the landing of an artillery barrage.

The pause broke. The panic erupted around us, more frantic than ever. I reached over Nebogipfel and grabbed at Moses’s shoulders; without ceremony I wrestled him, and the Morlock, to the ground, and a layer of people stumbled around us, covering us with warm, squirming flesh. In that last moment, as limbs battered against my face, I could hear the thin voice of that Salvation Army man, still shrieking out his call: ‘E-ternity! E-ternity!’

And then there was a flash, bright even under that heap of flesh, and a surge of motion through the earth. I was lifted up – my head cracked against another man’s – and then I was cast to the ground, for the moment insensible.

Other books

The Game of Love and Death by Martha Brockenbrough
Vice by Lou Dubose
The Crow Trap by Ann Cleeves
The Bluest Blood by Gillian Roberts
The Happiest Season by Rosemarie Naramore
Bowdrie's Law (Ss) (1983) by L'amour, Louis
If You Love Me by Anna Kristell