Liam nodded. ‘Y-yes.’
Foster patted his hand. ‘Relax, Liam. You’ll do just fine.’ He looked atthe support unit treading water. ‘And you must trust Bob. In that silicon brain of hisis everything you’ll need for this quick trip. He’s going to be your walkingencyclopedia… aren’t you, Bob?’
‘
‘English for now please, Bob.’
Bob nodded sternly. ‘I have all the required data, Mr Foster.’
‘Good.’
Liam looked up at the old man. ‘I… I’ve got to admit I’m a littlescared.’
‘I know,’ he replied softly. ‘First time alone is always a bitdaunting.’ He smiled. ‘I’ve been there before myself. You’ll befine.’
With a little effort Liam managed a cavalier grin.
‘Just go there, lad, look around, see what you can see… and come back to the samespot a couple of hours later.’
‘What if we’re late?’
‘If you miss that window, we’ll open the window again exactly an hour later, forjust a few minutes. If you miss that, then we open it exactly twenty-four hours later.That’s the standard missed-rendezvous procedure. Don’t worry, Bob knows all aboutthat and will keep you on schedule.’
‘But if we miss all the windows?’
‘Just make sure you don’t.’
Liam swallowed anxiously. ‘But… but if we do miss every one of themwindows… is there not a way to arrange another one?’
‘If it comes to that, there is a way for us to talk to you, but it’s one-wayonly. You’ll not be able to talk to us.’ He patted Liam on the arm. ‘Justmake sure you stick to the schedule.’
‘I… I’ll try me best, Mr Foster, so I will.’
‘I know you will, lad.’
Foster got to his feet and took the steps down the side of the cylinder on to the concretefloor of the arch. ‘OK, Madelaine, begin the launch procedure.’
‘Launching in one minute.’
The displacement machinery attached to the water tube began to hum deeply.
Sal stepped forward, staring at their foggy outlines inside the tube. ‘Good luck,Liam!’ she called out. ‘Be careful!’
He let go of the side with one hand and quickly waved. ‘I’ll be all right there,Sal. Don’t you worry about me now.’
The lights in the arch dimmed and flickered as power diverted to the tube.
‘Forty seconds to go until launch!’ announced Maddy.
‘Remember, Liam,’ shouted Foster as the hum grew more intense,‘you’re just going for a
‘Right you are!’ cried Liam, his voice rattling nervously.
‘Thirty seconds, fellas!’
Liam’s legs kicked in the water, sending cascades of bubbles up the tube. The hum ofthe generator increased in volume and pitch.
‘Twenty seconds!’ Maddy called out, her voice almost lost in the deafening whirof charging-up machinery.
‘OK, Liam,’ shouted Foster, ‘time to let go and go under!’
Liam nodded, sucking in one deep breath after another.
‘Fifteen seconds!’
‘Come on, lad… you’ve got to let go!’
Liam nodded, still sucking and blowing air, hyperventilating, his legs thrashing in the waterbeneath him.
‘Ten seconds!’
‘Come on, Liam, you’ve got to let go now!’
Taking one last gasp of air, he did so, quickly sinking under the water. Through the scuffedand foggy plastic, Foster, Maddy and Sal watched him flail in panic as he sank slowly to thebottom. Bob ducked down effortlessly beside him… and touchingly — so Sal thought- reached out and held Liam’s hand.
It seemed to calm him, just a little.
‘Three… two… one…’
With a
CHAPTER 35
1956, Washington DC
They landed amid a small copse of mature cedar trees with a heavy, wet splash.
‘Arghh!’ yelped Liam. ‘I hate that goldfish-bowl thing!’
‘Information: the device is called a displacement cylinder,’ said Bob, crouchingbeside him, already alert and assessing their surroundings.
Liam picked himself up and squatted beside the support unit amid the foliage. Beyond thelow-hanging branches, out on the well-trimmed acre of lawn in front of the White House, hecould see soldiers gathering.
‘Who are they?’
Bob’s eyes slowly panned across the scene in front of them. ‘The insignia anduniforms indicate that they are a mixture of American marines, rangers and airborne,’ hereplied. ‘Recommendation: we must have clothes.’
‘Yes, clothes would be really nice.’
Bob stood up and announced, ‘I shall acquire clothes,’ before disappearingthrough the trees and foliage.
Liam continued watching the soldiers. They looked like they had already seen some fighting;many were wounded, some being dragged by their colleagues. All of them looked exhausted andbattle-shocked; their grimy faces had defeat written across them.
He noticed a large olive-green vehicle with tracks instead of wheels, and aturret with what appeared to be a long, slender barrel protruding from it. It lurched acrossthe grass amid a plume of dark smoke. It looked dented and scorched as if it too had seen someaction. The vehicle reversed across the lawn, kicking up divots of soil and leaving deeptracks in its wake, backing up against a large white building — the White House.
To his untrained eye this looked very much like the ragged assemblage of some kind of a laststand around the building — perhaps it was all that was left of the United Statesarmy.
‘Blimey,’ he muttered.
He heard a deep rumble coming from above and glanced up through the leafy branches. The skywas overcast, thick with grey low-hanging clouds that promised an imminent downpour. Therumbling was deep, so powerful he could feel it vibrate against his chest. It was coming fromsomewhere
The American soldiers, like him, were watching the sky anxiously — all eyes trainedupwards, waiting for something to appear.
Liam craned his neck to get a better view.
Behind him he heard a heavy footfall and turned to see Bob holding out clothes and boots.‘The owner of these clothes is dead,’ he explained without any trace of emotion.‘He will not be needing them.’
Liam took them and looked at the damp stains of blood. ‘You didn’t kill someoneto get these clothes for me, did you?’
Bob shook his head. ‘No killing was required.’
Liam grimaced at the thought of stepping into another man’s clothes. On the other hand,standing undressed in the middle of a war zone struck him as the worse alternative. He pulledthem on as quickly as he could.