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
Our 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 was irritated: what fool would proceed into time equipped with nothing more than 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.”
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…
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 epaulets and his gasmask 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 marvelous 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 — “
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 epaulets 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.
[13]
The Shelling
I awoke to find Moses with his hands under my arm-pits, dragging me from beneath fallen bodies. My foot caught on something — I think it was a bicycle-frame — and I cried out; Moses gave me a moment to twist my foot free of the obstruction, and then he hauled me free.
“Are you all right?” He touched my forehead with his fingertips, and they came away bloody. He had lost his knapsack, I saw.
I felt dizzy, and a huge pain seemed to be hovering around my head, waiting to descend; I knew that when I lost this momentary numbness, I should suffer indeed. But there was no time. “Where’s Nebogipfel?”
“Here.”
The Morlock stood in the street, unharmed; he had lost his cap, though, and his goggles were starred by some flying fragment. His notes were scattered about, their file having burst, and Nebogipfel watched the pages blow away.
People had been scattered like skittles by the blast and concussion. All round us, they lay in awkward positions, with body on top of body, flung arm, twisted feet, open mouth, staring eyes, old men on top of young women, a child lying on a soldier’s back. There was much stirring and groaning, as people struggled to rise — I was reminded of nothing so much as a heap of insects, squirming over each other — and here and there I saw splashes of blood, dark against flesh and clothing.
“My God,” Moses said with feeling. “We have to help these people. Can you see—?”
“No,” I snapped at him. “We
“I can’t bear it,” Moses said. “I’ve never seen such sights.”
The Morlock came up to us now. “I fear there’s worse to see before we’re done with this century of yours,” he said grimly.
So we went on. We stumbled over a road surface become slippery with blood and excrement. We passed a boy, moaning and helpless, evidently with a shattered leg; despite my earlier admonitions, Moses and I were quite unable to resist his plaintive weeping and cries for help, and we bent to lift him from where he lay, close to the body of a milkman, and we sat him up against a wall. A woman emerged from the crowd, saw the child’s plight and came to him; she began to wipe his face with a handkerchief.
“Is she his mother?” Moses asked me.