by Glenn Cooper
He mule-kicked one in the gut and caught the other one in the temple with the knife, then fell on the first one, stabbing him multiple times in the chest. He smelled the next attacker before he saw him, a small, particularly odiferous man, who lunged at him with a knife and missed when John shoulder-rolled away. John sprang to his feet and before the man could get his bearings, he stomped his face and felt it cave under his boot.
In the few seconds before engaging the next attacker he heard the satisfying sounds of musket stocks cracking against bone and figured that Antonio and Luca were holding their own. But Simon was having a harder time. In his peripheral vision John saw him being dragged into the woods on his back by two rovers, one on each leg.
John slashed at the throat of his closest adversary and launched himself at Simon’s abductors, tackling both of them with outstretched arms like a swooping bird of prey. Simon got to his feet and paused to watch in admiration as John stabbed and crushed the two rovers.
“Don’t you have anything better to do?” John shouted at Simon.
“Just checking to see if I’ve still got all my bits.”
There were only half a dozen uninjured rovers now. They yelled at each other and, to a man, ran away into the thicket, leaving their bloodied and battered brethren crawling and writhing in the dirt and grass.
“Everyone okay?” John asked, dropping to his haunches.
They all had bruises and Luca had a superficial cut on his leg but that was it.
“So, you think they would have eaten us?” John asked.
Luca said, “Well, not Antonio, since he is as tough as an old boot, but the rest of us? For sure.”
Antonio smiled and felt along his musket stock for cracks.
“Let’s get the hell out of here,” John said.
Antonio replied, “We may, as you say, get out of here, signore, but, alas, we cannot get out of Hell.”
With his banners flying across Gothenburg, King Henry, Cromwell, the Duke of Suffolk, and William the forger were rowed the short distance from their river anchorage to the city center. The palace of King Christian was only a short walk from the shore through a tangle of narrow streets which led to the large unpaved square in front of the red-brick royal home, grand in scale but austere in design. Along his route English soldiers were deployed every ten paces to protect the king’s party from assault but there was no trouble. The men of Gothenburg were beaten and the square was filled with maimed bodies.
The palace, which had the misfortune of being elevated on a manmade plateau and thus in the sights of the singing cannon, was holed along its river-facing façade, with piles of bricks scattered about and black smoke billowing from the damaged roof. Henry’s field commander, the Duke of Oxford, approached the king and bowed.
“The palace is taken, Your Majesty.”
“And the king?”
“Inside, in custody.”
“Well, bring him out, man. Do not keep me waiting.”
Oxford ran up the stone stairs to the wrecked palace and soon returned with a very old white-bearded man dressed in the simplest of robes, his bony wrists bound with rope.
“This? This is Christian?” Henry asked.
“It is, Your Majesty?” Oxford said.
“Does he speak our language?”
“He does not, but one of his courtiers does.”
Oxford had his men bring a young man, hands tied, through the pile of bodies. Henry spoke to Christian through him.
“Know that today you have been vanquished by Henry, king of Brittania,” he said.
Christian’s voice was raspy from breathing smoke. “Why attack us? We have not threatened you of late. We offer nothing strategic in our position. We have nothing you would want save our women.”
“We will have your women but they are not the reason for conquest. We will have your iron mines.”
Christian coughed and looked at Henry quizzically. “You have iron mines in your own lands. Surely you have not exhausted the metal.”
“Methinks yours is better. These cannon we have employed to vanquish you. This man, our forger, will smelt your iron and make many more of them, even better than our own. Did you not know that your ore was precious?”
“Nay, I did not.”
“Where is your best mine?”
“I will not say. Why make it easy for you?”
Henry asked the translator who hailed from the nineteenth century, “Do you know?”
“Will the knowledge save me?” he answered in English.
“It will.”
“Dannemora,” he answered.
When Christian heard the word, he cursed the man. Henry commanded Oxford to bring him to his knees.
“How far is this place?” Henry asked the courtier.
“One day by horse, to the east.”
“And are there forges near the mine?”
“The best in the Norselands.”
Henry ordered Oxford to arrange a troop of men to accompany the translator and his forger and put down the populace along the way. They were to take control of the mine and the forges and begin the production of bigger and better cannon. He huddled with Oxford and Cromwell, and then summoned the cooperative young man who drew for them a map of the Norselands in the dirt. It was decided. Twenty ships would be sent through the straits to the south to sail along the eastern coast to the closest point to the mines. Henry would wait for the ships to return with singing cannon and shot. He would move into the habitable parts of the palace and avail himself of the fair-haired Nordic women he had heard so much about. But first, he had a king’s job to do.
Christian was still on his knees, eyeing Henry venomously. Henry drew his heavy broadsword.
“Do you wish me to translate?” the courtier asked with a slight smile.
“Methinks you do not think well of your master,” Henry said.
“I will not lament his fate,” the man said. “He is exceedingly cruel.”
“Well then, sir, you shall serve me now. There is no need for my words to be spoken in his language. The old fox will know well enough the meaning of my English steel. A king should take a king.”
He loomed over Christian who turned his head and spit on Henry’s boot.
“Your blood will wash away your spittle,” Henry cried as he brought his blade down on the old man’s neck.
John finished his stretch of night driving and relinquished the wheel to Simon. At this point in the journey, the noise and the rattling were second nature. He made sure that at least one of the backseat passengers was awake and on lookout before he folded his arms and let his head rest upon his shoulder.
John was the first one out of the helicopter. The others followed, stooping to avoid the spinning rotors. To a man they reflexively squinted at the rotor wash despite their protective goggles. The Black Hawk lifted up and the dust settled, leaving them on the cool, hard plain in the darkness of a moonless desert night. They were two clicks away from the target, a solitary farmhouse glowing green through night-vision gear. Mike Entwistle and six men began a looping double-time march to establish a position behind the house. John took the remaining Green Berets and headed straight for it.
The house was small and rectangular with a low wall surrounding it. Daytime surveillance photos from a high-altitude drone flyover showed the house to be the same tawny color as the desert floor; it was, after all, made of the same mud and sand. It had a flat roof and three windows on each side. In the past, there had been irrigation and cultivation but whoever owned the farm was long gone and now there was no greenery and no crops. The only livestock were the few goats that roamed within the walls. The three windows visible to John had the same luminosity as the rest of the house. There were no lights or fires inside. Even the Taliban had to sleep. If all went well, they’d be back in the helo in twenty minutes with their tango in plastic cuffs and a bag over his head. Still, it would have been a heck of a lot easier and safer to incinerate everyone inside with a Predator strike. Hopefully
getting Fazal Toofan alive was worth the risk, but it wasn’t his call.
He heard Stankiewicz on his earpiece whispering to Tannenbaum. “Hey T-baum, how many Haji’s inside?”
“Fuck if I know. They come and go all the time. It’s like a Taliban Motel 6.”
“More like a roach motel.”
“Everyone, shut the fuck up,” John said into his mike. “Essentials only.”
Entwistle was making good progress. John saw six green men halfway to the house. Both squads would set up and do their final surveillance when they were about fifty yards from the front and back. If everything looked good they’d close in, breach, toss in flash-bangs and gas, smoke any hostiles, and get their guy.
When John was a hundred yards from the target he lost sight of the Entwistle squad as they circled to the far side. John and his men were spread out, at least ten yards from one another, with John at point about five yards ahead of the others. The distance from there to the wall was the length of a football field. In John’s high school days he could have run it in just over eleven seconds with full pads and helmet.
He paused his men with a hand signal. It was shy of their muster point but he didn’t like something. It was no more than an instinct but he always trusted himself. He hated being on this featureless terrain. There was no cover. The night was ridiculously quiet. The pucker factor was too damn high.
He saw the bright flash through his night scope before he heard the shot, a point of violent light coming from the top of the mud-brick wall.
Stankiewicz swore loudly and dropped to his knees.
Someone yelled, “Medic,” and Ben Knebel rushed over.
There were more flashes of light coming from the top of the wall.
“Engage!” John shouted, flopping on his belly and squeezing off a series of short bursts of automatic fire. “Engage!”
John felt a hand on his shoulder.
“Sorry to wake you,” Simon said. The car was stopped. Simon shut down the boiler.
“What’s going on?”
“Listen,” Simon said, pointing into the darkness. “It’s the sea. We’ve made it to the coast.”
Luca leaned over the seat. “We’re close to Italia. I tell you, I can almost smell it.”
19
The oxcart bumped along an uneven path for hour after hour. The driver had hitched his beast to the wagon at dawn and had rolled through the gate at Marksburg Castle, telling the guards he would return from Dusseldorf in a week’s time. Emily and JoJo tried to make themselves as comfortable as possible under the pile of rough sacks but every jolt ran straight to their bones. They had a small skin of water to keep their mouths moist but that was it for sustenance. And they were treated, every so often, to the driver’s mumbled self-lamentation, cursing a God who had abandoned him.
Emily peeked from under a sack. They were in a forest on a path barely wide enough for the cart. The ox relieved itself. The smell made her gag and JoJo stifled a giggle. Emily retreated under the sacks and shook her head in a sign that it still wasn’t a good place to escape. She wasn’t sure what she was looking for but the middle of a dense wood didn’t seem appealing. She wanted to get off the bone-rattler as quickly as possible, but every mile closer to Dusseldorf was a mile closer to Dartford.
As the day wore on she dozed lightly, awaking every time there was a particularly deep rut in the path, then nodding off again. Her thoughts and dreams weaved together into a semi-real, semi-fanciful tableau of her life, the cast of players running the gamut from childhood friends and university chums, to her parents, her sister, her niece and nephew, to her great mentor, Paul Loomis, to her colleagues at MAAC, to the loves of her life, and of course, to John Camp.
When she first began dating him, she had told her sister that he was going to be a project. He had a good deal of potential but that his flaws were going to take an awful lot of work. Her boyfriends, and even a fiancée who had chickened out before the wedding, had all been scientists. Some of them had been a great deal of fun, with interests beyond their professions, but John seemed to her, so all together different, it was almost as if he was from another planet.
He was raw and masculine, an untamed soul who simultaneously attracted and scared her away, trapping her in an emotional no-man’s land. They came from different worlds, had different vocabularies, completely different interests, but despite this, she had never been so obsessed with a man. The physical part of the relationship was exhilarating, but she was convinced there was more to it, that the two of them together formed one complete organism. One complete brain, one complete body, a perfect amalgam of masculinity and femininity, a fulsome blend of action and thought.
And yet, he was definitely a project.
He drank too much, way too much. He had an emotional closet stuffed with baggage and she could tell by his restless, sometimes violently disturbed sleep that there were demons lurking he wouldn’t talk about. And if past was prologue, then his history of one-night stands and wrecked relationships was going to bring her grief at some point. She supposed that point had come when she walked in on him together with the long-legged Darlene. Now, so far away from him that the distance couldn’t be calculated in rational units of time or space, she wished she had given him another chance, at least the opportunity to explain himself and try to convince her he still loved her.
Where was he now? What was he thinking? What was he doing? Was he pounding the table in rage? Did he hold Henry Quint responsible? Was he pushing the lab to find a way to get her back? Or had he stuffed the memory of her into his emotional closet and moved on?
She gasped with air hunger and realized a hand was across her mouth.
“Shhh,” JoJo whispered.
“What?” she whispered back.
“You were talking in your sleep.”
“What was I saying?”
“Where are you, where are you—shit like that.”
“I was dreaming.”
“About who?”
“A man.”
“I have those dreams too.”
The driver stopped several times during the day to urinate but he seemed to always do it too near the cart for them to even think about jumping out. In the late afternoon, JoJo was so hungry she broke down and bit into a raw turnip she found in one of the sacks but Emily declined the offer to share. Finally there was a light at the end of the tunnel when the driver informed his ox that they were almost there.
She peeked out again. They were in a wood near a stream. If they waited until they were in the city their chances of being caught by the driver unhitching his wagon or by a passerby was too great, so she whispered to JoJo that they should think about jumping off.
They readied themselves. The cart was going slowly and Emily slipped off the back first, darting behind a bush when she was clear. JoJo followed a few yards later and the two of them huddled until they could no longer see or hear the cart.
Emily reckoned there were only a couple of hours before nightfall. She didn’t relish the idea of trekking through this wood at night so they would need to find shelter and food before setting off in the morning. Her plan was bare-bones simple and lacking in crucial detail: head due west until they reached the coast. From there, somehow she would need to find a boat to take her to the east coast of Brittania and then, make it south to Dartford where she prayed there would be a portal back to her time and place.
The permanent cloud cover meant she couldn’t get her bearings using the sun. Instead she fell back on her childhood time in a Girl Guide troop and checked the trees for moss. It wasn’t a slam-dunk, perhaps because the sun never shone here, but there seemed to be a predominance favoring one side.
“That’s north,” she declared with a feigned confidence, “so that way’s west.”
The stream was meandering in a presumed westerly direction so they followed it. The water was clear and cool and eminently drinkable and fish shimmered by. They talked about stopping to try and catch one by hand or with a pointed
stick but it began to drizzle and they decided to keep going. Emily quickly gathered a pile of dry moss and twigs and put them inside her shirt. The opposite bank of the stream had a limestone ledge and Emily kept her eyes peeled for some kind of outcrop to give them protection from the elements. The rain came down more steadily and their clothes were soon soaked. The light began to fade and they openly fretted about the hard, wet night ahead. She bent over again when she spied a good piece of flint, then a piece of limestone.
With the light almost gone, Emily pointed and said triumphantly, “There!” at a black void in the limestone. It was the mouth of a cave.
They made their way through the knee-deep water to the opposite bank and cautiously entered. It was completely dark inside, and several degrees cooler, but it was dry. It seemed there was some depth to the cave but neither of them was keen to blindly explore.
“Do you think there are bears?” JoJo asked.
“God, I hope not. Let’s see if I can’t make us a nice fire.”
“I know, I know, Girl Guides,” JoJo said with a smirk.
“Why don’t you make yourself useful and pick up some driftwood along the bank? The drier the better.”
Emily stooped and made a small mound of shredded moss and twigs on the ground and started striking the flint and limestone against one another, unintentionally knapping off flakes rather than making decent sparks. The flakes had razor-sharp edges so if they ever managed to catch a fish, they’d be able to clean it. She adjusted the angle of strike and produced a better spark, and then another and another until a trickle of smoke rose from the tinder. She gently blew at it until it caught. Squealing in delight, she added more kindling and when JoJo came back with an armful of wood she laughed and said she never doubted Emily’s chances. The damp driftwood took some time to catch but before long they had a hot fire going and they busied themselves drying out their clothes and shoes as best as possible.
JoJo proudly produced her turnip with a few bite marks and put it into the fire. Minutes later they divided it with a flake and ate, what Emily claimed to be, the best spud she’d ever had.