by Alex Scarrow
They believe Bob is some warrior angel sent down by God. What do youexpect?
Finally, reaching Bob’s modest lean-to, he ducked under a flap of cloth and steppedinside. ‘I picked up some bread for you. I’m afraid it’s not that usualhigh-protein vomit-like gunk that you normally ingest back in the field office.’
‘I have consumed this food type before,’ said Bob, reaching for the offered loafof bread and biting off the end of it. After chewing on it for a moment, his saliva breakingit down, his on-board computer analysed the protein content.
He nodded. ‘This is adequate.’
Liam sat down on a wooden crate opposite. ‘You know, I thought I was going to be stuckin that camp forever. I thought I was going to die in there.’
He shuddered at the memories of those months inside, the faces of prisoners he’d grownto know well. Wallace, he wondered, what had become of him in the chaos? Did he survive themassacre? Had he escaped? Liam hoped so.
He slurped noisily on the soup. ‘I found myself wondering if I’d have been betteroff staying on the Titanic. Drowning to death would’ve beena lot quicker than starving to death, eh?’
‘Correct,’ announced Bob. ‘Death by oxygen denial takes approximately threeto five minutes.’
Nice. Soothing words.
Liam put down his spoon, reached out and patted one of Bob’s meaty shoulders. ‘Iknow this probably won’t mean much to you, since Foster says your mind is just a littlemachine filled with codes and programs and stuff. But… Isuppose… look, I just want to say thank you, Bob. Thanks for coming and gettingme.’
He saw some kind of expression flicker across the support unit’s rigid face. Was itsome sort of involuntary muscle twitch, or was it a smile? Whatever it was, it almost lookedconvincing.
They ate in silence for a while. Silence that is, except for Liam’s soup-slurping andthe grinding of Bob’s teeth — sounding not unlike the grating noise Liamremembered his Uncle Diarmid’s cows made as they chewed on their winter maize.
‘So you’re suggesting we stay here indefinitely until we get amessage?’
‘Negative.’
‘Just say “no”, Bob. It sounds more natural.’
‘No.’
‘Then how long for?’
‘We wait another seventy-eight hours, fifty-seven minutes.’
‘Uh?’ Seventy-eight hours and fifty-seven minutes seemed somewhat specific. ‘Bob, why exactly that long?’
‘By that time, I must have self-terminated.’
Liam dropped his spoon in the soup. ‘Excuse me? Self-terminate… what exactly does that mean?’
Bob stopped chewing on the bread and turned his cool grey eyes on him. ‘Basicoperational requirement: six-month lifespan in the field. If I fail to return from a missionafter six months, I must self-terminate. They know this. So they will not attempt to send meany messages after six months. If we are to receive a message it will occur beforethen.’
‘Six months? But… but you’re telling me you’re going to destroy yourself in… in… in…?’
‘Three days, six hours and fifty-seven minutes’ time,’ answered Bobhelpfully. ‘I must terminate by then.’
‘But why?’
‘To prevent my computer technology being used.’
Liam suddenly realized he felt something for the big automaton in front of him. A fondness?He knew it didn’t make any sense that he should care for what was basically ameat-and-muscle weapons platform with a personal organizer stored up top. Perhaps, in a way,it was because they were both new to this timeriding thing. Bothnew boys. Or maybe it was the thought of being alone in a world that should never have beenwithout Bob to watch over him, to protect him.
‘Bob, can’t you decide not to destroyyourself?’
‘Negative.’
‘What if I were to give you a direct order? As the mission operative, I’m incommand here, right?’
‘This is correct.’
‘So if I were to order you to cancel — ’
‘This protocol cannot be countermanded. It is firmware.’
‘Firmware?’
‘Built into the computer’s design. It cannot be overridden.’
Liam looked up at his expressionless face. ‘But that’s stupid!’
‘It is unavoidable.’
Liam looked down at his soup, growing cool in its bowl. ‘Doesn’t the thought ofdying, well… does it not scare you?’
‘Negative.’
‘Bob, say “no”… not “negative”.’
‘No.’
‘You don’t have any strong feelings about… about terminating yourself?’
‘My consciousness is merely procedural code; my memories are stored on my internal harddrive. My body can be regrown from a single cell. I can be endlessly duplicated, LiamO’Connor. I have no concept of death. So I have no concept of fear.’
‘No fear,’ Liam snorted humourlessly. ‘Jay-zus, I wish Icould say that. I’ve spent the last few months spending every waking hour in fear.Afraid I might be picked on by a guard to be made an example of. Afraid they’d decide tofinish us all off. Afraid that — ’
‘I wish…’ rumbled Bob.
The words stopped Liam’s self-pitying ramble in its tracks. He set the spoon down inhis soup bowl and looked up to see the support unit’s eyes were glazed over, focused onsome far-off, unattainable desire.
Did he just say ‘I wish…’?
He remembered Foster saying the computer was linked to a small organic brain. Perhaps thattiny wrinkled part of Bob, that undeveloped nub of brain matter, was able to wish forsomething, to desire something, in an indefinable way?
‘Tell me,’ Liam said softly. ‘What… what do you wish for, Bob?’
‘I wish… I was… like you, Liam O’Connor.’
Liam cocked his head. ‘Like me? Jeez! Look at me. A weedy little runt. I’msixteen and I still don’t have any bristles I can shave. And the best I ever managed toachieve, before I was supposed to have died, was to become a ship’s steward. Just aflippin’ waiter. Great, huh?’
‘You were recruited because you have essential skills.’
‘Essential skills? You kidding? I can tidy a cabin, make a pot of tea and deliver itwithout spilling it on a napkin. Big deal.’
‘Your data records indicate you have a very high intelligence quotient, fast mentalreaction times and creative cognitive skills.’
‘Really?’
‘These things are listed in your personal profile records.’
‘What records?’
‘I have your complete profile on my hard drive. This includes WhiteStar Shipping’s personnel records, details on your family, your home town, your schoolreports — ’
‘You’ve got my school reports up there in yourhead?’
‘Affirmative.’ Bob’s eyes flickered momentarily, a sign that he wasretrieving data.
‘Liam O’Connor is quite clearly a clever lad,’Bob began reciting words Liam recognized as being penned by his old headmaster, FatherO’Herlihy, ‘perhaps one of the brightest in his academicyear. However, he is also prone to gazing out of the window, wool-gathering at the slightestopportunity and not applying himself as much as some of the other promising young boys inhis year. Liam is something of a loner; it seems he does rather enjoy his own company duringbreak times, not joining in — ’
Bob stopped dead. Frozen for a moment.
‘You all right there, Bob?’
‘One moment… one moment.’
The muscles in Bob’s face flickered and tensed, his eyes blinked rapidly as, inside hishead, every thought process came to a sudden grinding halt.
[Transmission particles detected]
His computer sifted the data coming in, sub-atomic particles winking into existence as if bymagic and passing through solid matter as if it was air. Enough tachyons were appearing in hisneural net — caught like flies in a web — for him to begin to decode some partialmessage fragments.
[… time cont… complete devastatio
n… low energy…for one on… as follows: Lat: 38°54′24…]
‘Bob? What’s up with you?’
‘One moment… one moment,’ he replied tonelessly.
More particles arriving, more fragments of message assembling. He waited until the passingwave of particles appeared to have finally ceased. Another minute in silence, waiting for a possible second wave of tachyons to be ensnared inside his head. But thereseemed to be nothing more now. The signal beam from the future had briefly passed this way andmoved on.
‘I have just received a weak signal from the field office,’ he announced.
‘What?’ Liam’s face lit up. ‘Just now?’
‘Affirmative.’
‘Oh… thank Mary-mother-of-Jay-zus they’ve found us! And they’re OK,right? Of course they are.’
Bob became unfrozen and took another bite out of his bread.
‘So don’t keep me in suspense, Bob. What’s the message?’
His eyelids fluttered. ‘Message from field office: timecontamination in present. Result is complete devastation. Very low energy. Unsure of windowsize. Perhaps for one only. No second chance. Time-stamp as follows: Lat:38°54′24.35"N — Long: 77°2′33.94"W — Time 23.50, 03-03-57.’
Liam stared at Bob. ‘I… I’m not sure I understood much of that. Didyou?’
Bob nodded. ‘Their timeline has experienced a significant shift resulting in muchdestruction. As a result, their external power feed has become compromised.’
Liam’s eyes widened. ‘So what does that mean? Their time machine doesn’twork?’
‘Incorrect. It works, but they have a limited supply of power.’
‘Window for one only… That means…?’
‘That means they have only enough power to return one of us,’ Bob answered.‘That must be you.’
Liam shook his head. ‘Surely they can get us both backsomehow? If they fiddle around with their dials or something.’
‘Negative. Body mass affects the energy required for timeriding. You are very small,requiring much less energy than myself.’
Liam sat in silence for a moment, then finally shook his head.‘I… I can’t just leave you here on your own to… to terminate yourself,Bob. I just — ’
‘That is an illogical assessment.’
‘Surely something can be done to boost the energy their end, or lighten the load ourend? Something, surely?’
‘There is something that needs to be done,’ said Bob. ‘The data on thistimeline is stored in my hard drive and must be transported back with you.’
‘Uh… I’m not sure I like the sound of that.’ Liam swallowednervously. ‘Does that mean what I think it means?’
‘You will have to break open my cranium and remove the soft tissue inside, including myorganic brain, to access the computer. Disconnecting the computer and removing it will requireme to provide detailed instructions before you do this in order to prevent you from triggeringthe self-termination firmware as you extract the computer.’
‘Ugh… no… I’m not sure I can do that, Bob. Really… I’m-’
‘You have no choice. It is a mission requirement.’
Liam shook his head, already feeling sick at the thought of hacking open Bob’s head.‘So… so when would I have to perform this operation?’
‘The extraction window is set for twenty-five hours’ time.’
‘And where is it?’
Bob blinked, retrieving data. ‘The co-ordinates are for a street called JeffersonPlace, in the city of Washington DC. It is approximately one mile from the location of ouroriginal arrival window.’
Liam’s eyes widened further. ‘A mile from the White House? But that’s justcrazy! That whole area is going to be thick with soldiers and those buzzing air-jetthingies.’
‘We must make for this location within the time left. Once there youmust extract the computer from my cranium, or alternatively remove my head and take that withyou.’
‘Cut your head off?’ Liam blanched, his face turning sickly pale. ‘Ican’t do that, Bob. I’m… I’ve never been good with blood and ickystuff. I’ll faint… I’m telling you, I’ll keel over and faint, so Iwill. And then I’ll miss this window and we’ll both bein a fix.’
He looked down at the tepid remains of lumpy soup in his bowl and put it to one side, nolonger feeling hungry. ‘Is there really no other way?’
‘If you were smaller. If I was smaller. If the extraction window was opened geographically closer to the field office. If the extraction windowwas not so far back in time. These factors all affect the total energy required.’
Bob looked at him with his calm grey eyes. For some reason Bob tried out one of those pitifulsmiles he’d picked up from Sal. As far as Liam was concerned, that didn’t helpmatters. Didn’t help at all. It made him look strangely vulnerable, like an oversizedtoddler.
‘You will need to acquire a bone saw or blade with a serrated edge to remove myhead,’ Bob continued. ‘Also, you may need to acquire a power drill with-’
‘Jay-zus Christ!’ Liam blurted suddenly. ‘Enough! I need some air — think I’m going to puke!’
CHAPTER 65
1957, woods outside Baltimore
Liam stood outside breathing deeply, sucking in the cold air until the sensation ofnausea began to ease. He took a few steps through the undergrowth away from Bob’sshelter, trying to clear his mind of what needed to be done.
Past the slender sapling trunks and low fir tree branches he could see the flickering lightof the campfire in the middle of the clearing. Around it huddled most of Bob’s littlearmy, nearly a hundred after that last raid. He wondered how betrayed and angry all those menwere going to be when he had to announce that Bob was leaving with him; that they had othermore important matters to attend to.
Men don’t give up their gods or leaders lightly.
He imagined the scene was going to be nasty. Their eyes would be upon him, suspicious andaccusing, wondering what poison he must have dripped into their leader’s ear. But therewas no time to delay if Bob’s decoding of that message was right. Washingtonwasn’t so far away from here. Just over an hour of driving. But there’dundoubtedly be roadblocks and guarded perimeters to figure their way through, once theyreached the city.
Why’d they have to pick a place so close to the WhiteHouse?
He wondered how on earth they came to the conclusion that that was such a good idea. But thenit occurred to him that Foster, Maddy and Sal could have no idea where theymight be. So they were making a simple logical assumption — that they’d remainedin the vicinity.
That’s one hell of a big assumption.
A lot could have happened in six months; they could have ended up on the other side of thecountry in that time. Or even the other side of the world.
He shook his head. It was crazy and stupid that he and Bob couldn’t communicate back.Not for the first time he cursed this insane time-travel technology. Just when you thoughtyou’d managed to get your head round it, it just seemed to get even morecomplicated.
So, they had a time and a place now. At least that was something. Heading for the middle ofenemy-occupied Washington DC sounded like suicidal foolishness… but it wasn’t asif they had a choice.
‘Oh well,’ he muttered to himself. He was sure Bob would enjoy himself cutting aswathe through the bad guys. It’s what he did best.
The sooner they got a move on the better, left these woods behind… and Bob’s loyal band of worshippers.
Liam decided they’d be best setting off at first light. With a nationwide curfew inplace, they’d look far more suspicious if they were stopped at a checkpoint travellingaround at night than they would during the day.
Meantime, Liam decided, he’d better figure out a way for Bob to extract himselfpolitely from his devoted followers. He had visions of those men lynching him for luring theirmessiah away from them.
CHAPTER 66
2001, New York
Day 5? (since the power went)
So now we’re waitin
g. Waiting for the time machine to store up enough of acharge for us to try opening a window.
There’s no way we’ll know if they got the message we sent. No way of knowinguntil we open the window in Washington. If they got it, then they should step through andappear right in front of us. If they didn’t… then we’ll be wasting ourenergy for nothing.
Everything’s off in here. All the lights, everything.
Maddy suggested we should put the ‘field bubble’ back on so that we’dflip back in forty-eight hours’ time. If those creatures outside haven’t managedto find us by then… we’d be safe from them. Because whatever progress they madein finding out where we’re hiding would be lost when we ‘reset’. ButFoster said it would drain too much power from charging up the displacement machine. He saidthat’s the only thing that matters right now — getting that thing chargedup.
Jahulla… I’d rather have the bubble on, and have to wait a little longer. Everylittle noise outside makes me jump out of my skin.
‘How much longer, do you reckon?’ asked Maddy.
Foster studied the row of winking lights on the machinery’s chargedisplay. ‘I’d guess, four or five more hours.’
‘That long?’
‘Four or five more hours… we open the window and they should pop into existenceright here.’ He smiled encouragingly at her. ‘Simple as that.’
Although it’s not as simple as that… is it?
Foster really wasn’t certain the thudding generator in the back room was going to havestored up enough of a charge for them to produce a window big enough for even Liam. So manyfactors to consider: the distance from here, the size of the window, the mass of the personsbeing sent — all variables that affected how much energy would be needed. Whilethey’d been tapped into New York’s electricity grid, these weren’tconsiderations that normally had to be taken into account, but now running on what meagreenergy they’d managed to generate… every variable was an important factor to weighup. And getting Liam and Bob home wasn’t the only window they needed power for — there was also sending them back to where they needed to go to fix this problem once and forall. Foster had to be sure to conserve enough of a charge to be able to do that too.