The Doomsday Code tr-3

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The Doomsday Code tr-3 Page 20

by Alex Scarrow


  A moment later Adam and Maddy were standing either side of her, staring at the grainy image of a gravestone on the monitor.

  ‘Look, see?’ she said, pointing at the image. ‘There’s definitely more stuff carved on there now.’

  Maddy leaned forward. It was easier to detect the faint, worn grooves in the old stonework, now that they’d manipulated the image to a much higher contrast.

  ‘Yup … that’s new, all right.’ She grabbed a pen from the desk and her notepad, and the sheet of paper with Adam’s pigpen cipher scrawled on it. ‘OK, then, let’s work out what we’ve got.’

  The three of them peered closely at the screen. Despite the sharper image, this time the grooves appeared to be shallower, as if a different tool had been used. In some places worn away until almost nothing but a guess could be made.

  ‘Hmmm,’ Maddy murmured, chewing on her pen.

  Adam grabbed another pen and began scribbling down the symbols that were clear enough to be certain of. A minute later there was some semblance of a sentence emerging on paper:

  ‘I can’t make that out,’ said Maddy. ‘What does it say?’

  ‘Oh, come on, it’s really easy,’ said Sal. ‘Revolt stopped. Ready for return. Await instructions.’

  Adam quickly inserted the missing letters. They fitted the gaps perfectly. He looked at her and grinned. ‘Outstanding.’

  Maddy continued chewing on the end of her pen. ‘But nothing’s changed out there. Or maybe it has and we can’t see it yet cos it’s dark. Thing is, that sure isn’t New York out there still.’ Stating the obvious of course, but she didn’t care. ‘Things still aren’tright.’

  › Maddy.

  ‘What is it, Bob?’

  › Some of the data on my system has changed.

  ‘What? How’s that possible? The preservation field’s on, isn’t it?’

  › Affirmative. However, the time ripple was significant enough to cause a temporary voltage dip. The preservation field was down for several seconds.

  Sal looked at Maddy. ‘Shadd-yah! Does that mean it has affected us?’

  ‘I dunno.’ She looked Sal up and down. ‘You don’t look any different. What about me?’

  She flickered a smile. ‘You still look like a geeky geek.’

  ‘Thanks.’ She turned to Adam. ‘You OK, Adam?’

  But he was staring at her wide-eyed. His mouth hung open.

  ‘Adam?’

  ‘Good God!’ he slowly gasped. ‘Whoareyou people?Where … am … I?’

  Maddy turned to Sal, wondering what kind of a mess they were in now, when Adam finally cracked a wide grin. ‘Just kidding.’

  She cursed under her breath and shot him pistol eyes. ‘That’s not even close to being funny, you moron!’

  Computer-Bob’s cursor skittered across the screen.

  › 17 of the 37 history-book pages you scanned have changed file size.

  Adam looked down at the library books they’d stolen a little earlier, stacked on the end of the desk. ‘If their contents changed, the page layouts may be changed and it would affect the size of the digital files a little.’

  Maddy nodded. ‘Bob, what about the summing-up document you put together? The potted history?’

  › That has also changed.

  ‘Put it up on screen. Lemme see it.’

  The document appeared beside his dialogue box.

  › Identifying text sequences that have changed.

  Bob began highlighting all the parts of the text that had been altered. Which was to say, most of it.

  Adam began to read snippets of it aloud. ‘… 1194, King Richard returns from the Third Crusade … reclaims his kingdom from his younger brother, John … the siege of Nottingham, John surrenders and begs for King Richard’s mercy. King Richard executes his brother for high treason … has him hung, drawn and quartered …’

  Adam shook his head. ‘That’s still wrong. The correct version is that Richard forgives him, lets him live.’

  ‘You sure?’ asked Maddy.

  ‘Of course I’m sure! You never heard of King John?’

  She shrugged. ‘I guess I saw a Disney cartoon once with a King John in it. But then he was, like, a fox or a lion or something, so I didn’t take it too seriously.’

  Sal had been reading ahead. ‘There’s no mention of this peasant rebellion of the north any more.’

  The other two read on.

  ‘Liam said he’d stopped the rebellion in his message,’ she added. ‘But … if you look what it says there, England’s still going to end up disappearing.’

  Adam resumed skimming the document. ‘… 1195, King Richard announces the Fourth Crusade.’ He looked at the girls. ‘Well, there was certainly no fourth crusade. That’s new.’ He resumed. ‘The Fourth Crusade is championed by King Richard, his goal again to retake Jerusalem. This time round there is little support for it, despite a Papal Bull being issued.’

  ‘What’s one of those?’ asked Sal.

  ‘The Pope basically announcing God says it’s a cool idea.’

  ‘King Richard raises ruinous taxes, and incurs crippling debts to fund the crusade and, in 1196, leaves England for the last time … 1197, King Richard and eleven thousand knights and men-at-arms are massacred by Saladin’s army at the Battle of Al Karak. With no successor in England, and the country bankrupt, anarchy ensues … 1199, King Philip II of France invades … and so on.’ Adam shook his head. ‘Same result still.’

  ‘England gets gobbled up by France,’ said Sal.

  ‘This fourth crusade didn’t happen, you say?’

  ‘No. In normal history, when Richard failed to take Jerusalem during the Third Crusade, that was pretty much the end of the wars in the Holy Land. All the Christian kingdoms just sort of lost the appetite to fight for it. None of them could afford another crusade anyway. Fact is, in normal history, when Richard returned home he turned his attention to rebuilding his kingdom, reclaiming territories he’d lost to the French in Normandy. That became his sole focus for the last six years of his life, getting back the lands he’d lost while he’d been on his holy war.’

  Maddy pursed her lips. ‘Hmmm … something’s changed his focus.’

  ‘Focus?’ Adam shook his head. ‘More like obsession. I mean, what’s going on there? He ruins his country, he bankrupts himself and he launches what looks like a suicidal last crusade. Why?’

  ‘He went mad?’ said Sal.

  ‘Some historians say he was already a bit loopy.’

  ‘Something new, then,’ said Maddy. ‘Maybe something that Liam’s caused? Maybe something to do with the Voynich Manuscript?’ She took off her glasses and rubbed her eyes. ‘If there’s some other time traveller back there … then perhaps something they’ve done?’

  The others looked at her silently. There were no answers. Only questions.

  ‘OK … all right, here’s what we do. We send back another data package of this new version of history and ask Liam if they’ve got any ideas at all what’s suddenly eating Richard that he wants to go back to Jerusalem again.’ She put her glasses back on. ‘Meantime, we’ve still got the scheduled six-month return window if they want to use that, or, if they want to come back any earlier, they’ll need to send us a time-stamp.’

  CHAPTER 48

  1194, Sherwood Forest, Nottinghamshire

  ‘So … the pig says back to the farmer, “If ye sees what I seen yer wife’s up to, ye’d ’ave a curly tail too!”’ Eddie’s ruddy face crumpled like an old rug on a smooth polished floor. The other soldiers behind him, those within earshot, cackled along with him like a bunch of fishwives, their voices echoing off into the forest either side of the track.

  Liam looked at the captain of his escort. ‘Sorry, Eddie, I’m not sure I get it.’

  ‘Well, sire … See, the pig’s been watchin’ the farmer’s — ’

  Behind Eddie, one of the soldiers suddenly lurched forward. He dropped his shield and started clawing with both hands at his throat.

&nbs
p; ‘What’s …? Whuh?’

  Then Liam saw a bright spurt of crimson gushing from the young man’s flapping mouth, and for the first time noticed the stub of a crossbow bolt protruding from the front of his throat.

  Eddie responded far more quickly. ‘FORM UP!’ His parade-ground voice filled the forest trail just as another dozen projectiles whistled through the air towards them. Two arrows thudded into the horse’s flank either side of Liam’s right thigh. The horse reared up and he rolled backwards over the beast’s rump to land heavily on the hard mud track. The horse bolted, leaving a wake of dust behind it.

  Liam was winded, lying on his back gazing up at a rich blue summer’s sky punctuated by blurred slithers of movement — arrows and bolts passing overhead. He struggled to get a breath in him and then eventually, suspecting he’d spent the better part of a minute on his back, he hefted himself dizzily up on to his elbows.

  Through a cloud of dust he could see his men, shields raised above their heads as they clustered around him, squatting down in a protective circle. The peace of the forest was lost in the deafening rattle of arrow tips clattering off their shields.

  ‘It’s an ambush!’ Liam struggled to gasp as he pulled himself on to his hands and knees.

  Eddie looked back over his shoulder and nodded. ‘Worked that out, sire!’

  Over the rim of shields, Liam could see their attackers now: flitting dabs of olive and brown rags among the trees and bracken. Impossible to guess how many of them but far more than his escort of twelve, he figured.

  He cursed himself for not having Bob come along with them yesterday. But he’d been far more concerned that the rest of the column, laden with wagons of food and several bags of coins, made its way back to Nottingham Castle without incident.

  Too cocky, by half.

  He’d made the mistake of believing the bandits had fully moved on from Sherwood Forest. That he’d done a better job of shooing them off than he apparently had. If he’d only just taken Bob with him … even just another ten or twenty men?

  You idiot.

  One of Eddie’s lads grunted deeply and rolled flat on his back, an arrow through one eye. One of his legs twitched and drummed against the hard-baked mud as he went into shock.

  ‘Sire!’ barked Eddie. ‘We should keep moving!’ He nodded up the forest track, the way they’d been heading. He was right. They’d been well on the way home. Another two hours … and the forest gave way to open fields across a rolling hill down to Nottingham. If they kept in tight formation, kept their shields up, kept moving, they’d have a better chance than they would staying put here.

  ‘Right … yes!’ Liam nodded.

  Eddie barked at his men, ordering them to tighten up closer together. ‘With me now!’ he yelled, and began to step forward. The other men followed suit, with Liam huddled in the middle, pulling the thick velvet cloak round his neck, as if it had any chance of stopping an arrow.

  They began to make painfully slow progress along the forest track, little more than a shuffle that kicked dust into the air and filled their eyes and mouths with grit.

  Another man went down, howling in agony and clutching at an arrow shaft through his shin.

  ‘This is no good!’ shouted Liam. ‘We’re not going to get very far!’

  He saw Eddie nodding under the shadow of his shield, its thin metal peppered with gashes and dents through which rays of sunlight streamed.

  ‘We could make a break for it, sire!’

  Liam chanced a quick look up the trail. Some of their attackers had spread across the track, a thin line of men in rags casually stringing arrows and firing opportunistically their way. More than a dozen up ahead, but none of them armoured, none of them equipped for close combat.

  Eddie and his remaining nine could probably take them, break through, and then after that it would be every man for himself: drop shields, drop swords and just run for it.

  ‘All right,’ Liam nodded, his mouth dry. ‘Yeah … L-let’s do that, then.’

  Eddie cleared his throat and spat. ‘Men! On my word … we charge down the archers ahead! Clear?’

  Several heads nodded. A mixture of young and old faces. Some of them he knew had seen a fight before, most of them hadn’t; they were little more than farm workers who’d been taught how to bear a shield, swing a sword and march in a straight line.

  ‘Make ready!’

  Liam felt naked, no chain mail, nor shield or sword. He unclipped the robe from his neck and let it fall to the ground. It was only going to slow him down. He pulled a ceremonial knife from the belt round his waist. An ornate dagger with a beautifully decorated haft and a pointlessly blunt and useless blade. Still, it felt better than having nothing in his hands.

  ‘Sire?’ Eddie nudged him gently. ‘Ready?’

  He nodded, working his tongue round his mouth, trying to find some spittle in there.

  The hell I am.

  He saw Eddie doing the same and realized in that moment that he wasn’t the only one scared out of his wits. ‘On my word we rush them,’ Eddie’s voice rasped, ‘and make as much noise as ye can, lads. We’ll scare the devil out of them.’

  A couple of the older faces grinned at that.

  ‘Right, then …’ Eddie took a lungful of air. ‘AT ’EM!’

  Without hesitation, the men he’d been drilling these last few months, uneducated field hands that he’d managed to build a bond with, surged forward as one, a defiant roar coming from every mouth.

  Liam found himself sprinting forward, shoulder to shoulder with them, his own screaming voice filling his ears.

  The thin line of archers, twenty yards ahead of them, regarded them with comically round eyes. He saw a couple of them fumble to string and then drop their arrows in panic. Others fired hasty and ill-judged shots that whistled too high over them. But then as the gap quickly closed, he saw one, then several, then the rest, take the first faltering steps backwards which swiftly turned into a full-scale rout.

  ‘GO ON! RUN, YE COWARDS!’ screamed Eddie, a wide manic grin stretched across his face.

  Ahead of them, the archers pelted down the forest trail like startled rabbits. Liam chanced a glance over his shoulder and saw more of them emerging from the woods behind them, loosing off arrows their way, many of them falling short.

  We’re gonna do it, he found himself thinking, for the first time daring to wear a defiant grin on his own face.

  But then, on to the trail ahead, a tall figure emerged.

  CHAPTER 49

  1194, Sherwood Forest, Nottinghamshire

  It stood calmly in their way as the bandit archers streamed past. Seven feet tall, a giant swathed in dark robes and a cowl that hid his face in deep shadow.

  The sight of the figure caused their charge to falter, and Liam heard the men curse under their breath.

  ‘The Hood!’ yelled one of the younger soldiers. ‘God help us, it’s the Hood!’ He dropped his sword and shield.

  ‘’Tis but a man in old cloth!’ Eddie snarled angrily. ‘Pick up yer weapon!’ But the young boy was already gone, scrambling off the trail, through brambles and ferns, and very soon lost from sight.

  Their charge was halted now. Just ten nervous men standing in a forest trail, cowering beneath shields. The occasional arrow coming from behind, and the solitary hooded figure ahead of them, blocking their way.

  Eddie turned to his men. ‘Come on, ye fools!’ But Liam could hear even in his voice a wavering uncertainty. It might just be a mortal man … but it was still a huge mortal man, and in his hands he held a broadsword that glinted sunlight as it swung casually back and forth.

  The figure suddenly began to stride towards them. The way it moved — long, even, regular strides, arms calmly down by the sides, no sense of flinching or cowering — reminded Liam of Bob. Reminded him of the economical and purposeful way he moved. A memory flashed through his mind, a memory that seemed to come from another lifetime: Bob calmly moving through a prison camp, executing every guard in his way,
a pulse rifle blazing in each hand.

  Liam reached for the discarded sword and shield. Fumbling and dropping the sword nervously so that he had to pick it up again.

  ‘Just run!’ he hissed at Eddie and the other men, suddenly certain he knew what was approaching them. ‘You can’t beat this thing! Just do your best to get past it!’

  Several of the men took Liam’s word for it, dropped their shields and swords and ran for the treeline either side of the track. But Eddie and four others remained, bunching up close together around Liam, presenting a shield wall to the figure.

  ‘Run, sire!’ shouted Eddie over his shoulder. ‘We’ll hold him!’

  The hooded figure suddenly broke into a run and covered the last ten yards in a silent sprint. He collided with Eddie and his men, bowling them backwards. A roundhouse sweep of his broadsword lopped one of the men’s arms off at the elbow, sending it spinning into the air, hand still clasped round the sword-hilt.

  One of the other men thrust his blade at the side of the Hooded Man. The black cloak collapsed inwards, and Liam heard a clunk as the blade met something hard beneath.

  The hooded figure reached with a gloved hand for the blade and snapped it with a sharp twist, tossing the broken metal off into the woods. It cocked its head for a moment, studying the man holding nothing but the broken hilt of his sword in his hands … and Liam would swear blind later that he saw the figure wag its finger at the man before picking him up by the throat and hurling him like nothing more than a bundle of twigs off into the trees.

  Its head turned back and beneath the shadow of the hood Liam sensed its gaze was locked specifically on him.

  Eddie’s remaining two men broke and ran, leaving him alone in the middle of the trail beside Liam. The hooded figure strode past Eddie as if he simply wasn’t there.

  ‘Sire! Run!’

  Liam realized the thing had fixed on him for some reason. He did as Eddie said, dropped the shield and sword he’d picked up and backed quickly away towards the treeline. He saw Eddie lunge with his sword at the hooded figure’s back, ramming it hard into the space between its shoulder-blades.

 

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