‘I also see human track … is small, light, maybe girl,’ said White Bear, looking at Liam. ‘Your sister? She walk. Maybe eugenic need rest awhile,
‘Oh Jay-zus! Thank God … she’s alive!’
McManus slapped his shoulder. ‘There you are. Some jolly good news.’
‘So what now? We’re going in?’
McManus nodded. ‘Of course we’ll go in. This is the kind of thing my lads are used to doing — house-to- house, urban fighting. Not for the faint-hearted. It’s combat up close and not very pretty, I’m afraid.’
He shook his head. ‘Of course, if the Confederate army had the gumption to go in and clean this mess up earlier instead of ignoring the problem, we wouldn’t have so many eugenics to deal with now.’ He puffed his lips. ‘Pfft. Ruddy useless lot. Nothing more than poorly trained farmhands, fools and felons.’
‘So when?’
McManus turned to Liam. ‘When are we going in?’
Liam nodded.
‘I shall call in the regimental carrier first. A few things my chaps’re going to need.’ He turned away from Liam towards the rest of the mounted platoon, pulling down the communicator from his helmet.
‘Summon Sky God,’ said White Bear, grinning.
‘Excuse me?’
‘Big Bird … in sky. It come … make much snow.
‘Oh, right. You like the snow, do you?’
The Indian nodded vigorously.
Liam turned to look at the silent city, once upon a time a city called Baltimore. From this distance it didn’t look dead. Just peaceful. He could see tall buildings towards the middle of it, the chimneys of factories, the steeples of churches further out and the ordered rows of brick houses in the suburbs. A peaceful city slumbering in the midday sun.
He heard the thud of heavy feet approaching and turned to see Bob.
‘Anything?’
‘Negative,’ Bob rumbled. He’d gone to climb a nearby water tower in the hope that he had a better chance of sniffing something out. But still no messages from Maddy, not even a partial message, not even a single tachyon particle. Which could only mean one thing: she had her own problems to deal with.
CHAPTER 48
2001, New York
‘I presume you are referring to our divisional communications hub?’ said Wainwright.
Becks nodded. ‘Colonel Devereau has explained that the hub services communications between this section of your front line and your High Command back in Fredericksburg, Virginia.’
He cocked an eyebrow at Devereau. ‘It appears you have spies at work over here, Bill.’
‘We know where it is. Have done for some time. Just south of what used to be Times Square. We’ve seen the dish and the antennae. If our sky force was worth spit in a barrel, we’d have bombed it to rubble years ago.’
Wainwright got up and paced towards one wall of his office. A huge map all but covered the entire wall, pin heads protruded, notes were tacked to it and pen marks and scribbles identified troop deployments and defence concentrations all along the east side of Manhattan. In a war with some movement to it, that information would have been critical military intelligence. But for Devereau most of the information on the map was old news. Bunkers, pillboxes and trenches built many decades ago when both he and Wainwright were boys in shorts. Devereau knew as much about the deployment of Wainwright’s men as he did his own.
The Southern colonel tapped the map with a finger. ‘Here … as you say, just below what used to be called Times Square. Not so very far away from here.’
‘So?’ said Maddy. ‘Let’s go and get it.’
‘Not so far away … but the communications bunker is garrisoned by a detachment of British troops.’ He shrugged. ‘They don’t trust regular Confederate troops with guarding it — just a bunch of dumb ol’ corn-seed hicks … that’s how they see us.’
He turned to look at the map for a moment, then back to them. ‘That would mean taking it by force,
‘Negative,’ said Becks.
Wainwright looked at them, at the magazines open on the table, at the small glowing screen of the device the girl had called an ‘iPhone’. The evidence of another world was there. He was more than certain the North didn’t have this kind of technology, or the knowledge, the imagination, the ability to produce the images in those magazines. And he was doubly certain they could never have constructed such a device.
‘What you’re asking … is for me to carry out an act of treason.’
‘Being here, talking to you now, James, I too am guilty of treason,’ said Devereau. ‘We are both already guilty enough to face a firing squad.’
Wainwright nodded, accepting the point. ‘But this … taking that bunker, exchanging fire with British soldiers — ’ he bit his lip — ‘you do understand what that means?’
‘An act of mutiny … yes.’
The words had a sobering effect on both officers.
Maddy picked up on that. ‘Look … maybe there’s another way.’
‘Negative,’ said Becks again. ‘A radio communication transmission dish is the component we require. Modification would have to be made to — ’
Maddy raised her hand to hush her. ‘You guys’ll never face a firing squad, because as soon as we’re done fixing your dish to our technology we can change this world back.’
Devereau turned to her. ‘But, should this plan fail for whatever reason, then the consequences for our men as well as ourselves would be …
Wainwright sat down at his table. ‘Colonel Devereau and I being guilty of treason is one thing. We would both face our firing squads. But a
Devereau nodded slowly.
‘I can’t ask my men to do that.’
‘We could show them all what we just showed you,’ said Maddy.
‘No.’ He shook his head. ‘No. I fear not many of them would fully understand. And, not understanding, they would not dare risk facing charges of mutiny.’
There was a knock on the door to his room.
‘Enter.’
A young man’s face with a grey forage cap perched on a thatch of ginger-coloured hair looked round the door. ‘Sir?’
‘Yes, Corporal.’
‘You asked me to warn you when the British were coming … Well, they are, sir.’
‘Thank you, Lawrence. Instruct the men to prepare for an inspection.’
‘Yes, sir.’
The door closed behind him.
‘You’ll need to leave immediately,’ said Wainwright. ‘It should take them ten minutes to make their way down here. Best you’re long gone by then.’
‘Please!’ said Maddy. ‘Please … think about it!’