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Chapter no 9

The Ministry of Time

At the Ministry, Adela stared at me with wild eyes. She looked like her edges had been improperly 1lled in, and I realized it was the 1rst time Iโ€™d ever seen her without makeup. A palm-size clump of hair frizzed out from her head.

โ€œThereโ€™s a mole,โ€ she barked. โ€œAโ€”โ€

โ€œI thought it was Quentin. It was last time. Thatโ€™s why he was neutralized.โ€ โ€œNeutraโ€”โ€

โ€œYouโ€™re in danger, do you understand?โ€ she said, seizing my arms. I stared at her, hot with shock. Adrenaline slimed under my skin. I felt like overhandled putty.

โ€œIย knowย Iโ€™m in danger. The Brigadierโ€”โ€

โ€œSomeone inside the Ministry is feeding him information,โ€ she said. โ€œAnd I donโ€™t know who.โ€

I had a feeling like Iโ€™d always assumed I was a real girl but someone had Aicked me in the eye and it had produced no pain, only a glassy click: I was just a doll, with no more inner intelligence than a bottle of water.

โ€œHow do you know thereโ€™s a mole in the Ministry?โ€ I asked. Adela threw her hands up.

โ€œThere was a breach!โ€ she said. Iโ€™d never heard her talk in exclamation points before. It took a decade oP her. โ€œThe time-doorโ€™s location was leaked! And I still canโ€™t 1nd the Brigadier! Iโ€™ve looked everywhere he ought to be!โ€

We were looking at each other, neither with much of a grip on our expressions. Something was washing over Adelaโ€™s face. I thought, at 1rst, I was witnessing a rare example of high emotion, but the longer I looked, the more I

became convinced that the weird battlements of her chin and cheekbones were moving again. She looked viscous, recently shaken.

I stared, fascinated, at her expressionโ€™s bending scaPolding.

โ€œYou said the mole was Quentin โ€˜last time.โ€™ What did you mean?โ€

Adela combed her 1ngers through her hair. The big kink at the side of her head began to Aatten, in an oily, exhausted way.

โ€œOne day,โ€ she said, โ€œyou will have to stop asking stupid questions for the sake of conversational presenteeism. It endears you to no one. You know exactly what I meant.โ€

 

After my meeting with Adela, I went back to our wretched dripping Aat and sat in our miserable kitchen, trying to read a reportโ€”though really I just stared at the same page for twenty minutes. Graham was out on the motorbike, a permission that hadnโ€™t yet been rescinded. I heard him pull up in the forsaken courtyard that hid the entrance to the Aat, and then, a few minutes later, I heard the key in the door. He stumbled over the doorstep, and called my name in a strangled voice.

I was on my feet with my heart blistering with panic. He almost never used my name, my real name, not โ€œlittle catโ€ or โ€œmy bridge,โ€ but my name, which he pronounced right, which heโ€™d known from the beginning. I slammed into the hallway. He looked awful. His face was white and smeared with sweat.

โ€œSomething has happened to Maggie,โ€ he said.

 

Heโ€™d been feeling concerned, responsible, since our gallery trip. A good officer takes care of his crew. He had been out to visit her. When heโ€™d arrived at the door of the shrouded ex-shopfront that concealed their safe house, heโ€™d been puzzled by a line of darkness at the edge of it, like a pole of paint. A curious optical illusion. The door had been kicked in and left very, very slightly ajar, so that a single inch of the dark hallway beyond was visible. He walked in and called out for Margaret. His voice landed strangely in the penumbral air.

Heโ€™d found stairs. Heโ€™d gone up the stairs, which he would never normally do. Something felt rotten, shattered. In the bathroom, crazed with part- uprooted Aoor tiles, a 1lled bath. Ralph under the water. A semi-submersible thing that had once been Ralph. Eyes wide, unseeing. Already the face was beginning to bloat. He backed out, took the landing to the splintered door of the bedroom. He saw the 1gure on the bed. A dead woman. Strangled. For a few seconds, the chewy purple of her face made her features indistinguishable. Then he realized: not Margaret, but another woman. Ash blond and taller. Someone sheโ€™d been dating, illicitly kept in touch with. A now former lover. The room had been knocked about by unkind hands. Margaret herself was nowhere to be seen.

โ€œOh God,โ€ I croaked.

โ€œI know where she would have gone,โ€ he said. โ€œWhere?โ€

He told me there was a tunnel system, half-collapsed, near Greenhithe, in Rainham. Industrial estates had burrowed their foundations into it, the Thames had drowned a signi1cant portion of it, but his investigations over the past year, biking at the very edge of the boundary lines, had proven it was still there. It was in use when he was in the navy, he explained, when it was not so secret, but it appeared to be a secret now. He had always told Arthur and Margaret to go there if anything went wrong and he would come for them.

I was scratching at my throat, compulsively marking it with white lines of breaking skin. โ€œWhy did you tell them that?โ€ I babbled. โ€œWhat did you expect would go wrong? When did you plan this? Why didnโ€™t you tell me?โ€

He only answered the last question.

โ€œI assumed you would be with me,โ€ he replied. โ€œAnd that I would take care of you. We must go to Arthurโ€™s 1rst. He wonโ€™t know whatโ€™s happened. Then we will move to the tunnels.โ€

I wanted to say something, but I made a noise like a tin whistle being crushed underfoot.

โ€œPack,โ€ he said. โ€œWarm clothes. Waterproofs. Wear them if you can, to save space. We need water and emergency rations.โ€

โ€œRight. Okay. Okay. I can get access to Spartan supplies at the Ministry. Iโ€” yesโ€”if we take the bike I canโ€”โ€

โ€œBox hidden in the toilet cistern,โ€ he said.

I gasped so abruptly I choked on my own spit. When Iโ€™d stopped coughing, I rasped: โ€œDid you plan this?โ€

โ€œI plannedย forย this. You told me you were in danger. And I wouldnโ€™t be much of an officer if I hadnโ€™t. Hurry. We only have the tank bags and the top box for storage, so be prudent.โ€

I moved in shock. I found the box in our cavernous Edwardian cistern, uprooting the valves as I dragged it out. It wouldnโ€™t matter, because if the Brigadier and Salese knew where Margaret lived, then they knew where we were. They probably had access to the microchip dataโ€”if not the live feed, then certainly the summary data reports. We wouldnโ€™t be coming back here.

If Graham had asked the expats to gather in one place, that made it easier for me to herd them into protective custody. I just had to be fastโ€”faster than the blue-light weapon, faster than the speed of information from a mole. Good God. I kicked the box of iron rations into my room so I could grab my gun. Holster, box, quick march to Grahamโ€™s bedroom. Adrenaline fuzzed all my edges.

He was loading a handgun. He had pulled the bottom drawer out of his bedside table, scattering its meager contents. I assumed it had been hidden beneath it.

โ€œWhy the fuck do you have that?โ€

He raised his eyebrows but didnโ€™t look over. I edged closer. โ€œJesus, Graham, itโ€™s Ministry-issue.โ€

โ€œYes.โ€

โ€œThe quartermastersโ€”โ€

โ€œDo not know that I have it,โ€ he said briskly.

He stamped his foot through the discarded drawer. The board at the bottom splintered, and I saw a Aash of dark blue. Passports. I was prepared to bet my emergency rations that they were under fake names.

I recalled the amount of time he had spent at the Ministry, charming people with his chatter and his questions. I thought about how well he played innocuous, how utterly opaque he could render his eyes. I remembered that he

didnโ€™t set oP alarms, he didnโ€™t register as a human presence when recorded by modern technology. I stared at him and I wondered if I knew him at all.

He met my eyes at last. He didnโ€™t say anything. But he did kiss me, quickly and urgently, which was something.

 

I spent the bike ride Aush against Graham, near tearful, rattling with an internal ticker tape of questions, ribboning through me in an abundance of disorder.

What had Simellia said to me?ย Iโ€™m being blocked by Arthurโ€™s own Wellness team. Ivan stood downโ€”what had become of him? Ralph dead. Ed โ€œremovedโ€ after Anne Spencerโ€”why hadnโ€™t I checked on him? I hadnโ€™t seen the Secretary in weeks. I worked exclusively, even conspiratorially, with Adela. Had the Secretary had an agreement with Defence? With the Brigadier? Was the โ€œmoleโ€ not a mole but a series of mole tunnels undermining the project, an anti-project, a 1nal lobby from Defence to collapse us and absorb us in the name of national security? Had I, in fact, backed the wrong institution? Nausea, panic, the crushed-velvet crump of a migraine.

Iโ€™d never been to the safe house (a former doctorโ€™s office, porcupined with scaPolding) that Arthur and Simellia shared, and I was in no state to take it in, except to note that the front door was slightly open and the lock was broken.

โ€œSimellia?โ€ I croaked, at the same time Graham called, โ€œArthur?โ€

Graham went ahead of me into the building, along a series of chemical- redolent, gray-carpeted corridors that gave on to hardly furnished rooms walled in chipboard. I saw a large mirror leaning against the wall, casting a bilious slanted reAection, piles and piles of books for which Simellia had not yet found a case. I imagined the blue-light weapon in every shadow and alcove. Kicking open another anonymous, pockmarked door, I mistook a Basquiat print, a coat stand, and a curtain for the Brigadier, my gun arm swinging round each time.

Upstairs, I heard a noise like a sudden downstroke on violin strings. It took me a few seconds to realize it was a human cry.

โ€œGraham?โ€

I ran up the stairs and went gun 1rst into the nearest room.

Graham was crouching down. The expression on his face was one Iโ€™ve never been able to forget.

Arthur was lying on the Aoor, his eyes clouded and open. His head was turned to one sideโ€”he was facing me as I entered the room. Blood and vomit pooled from his lips. It looked almost like a speech bubble on the carpet. The air had an acrid, sickly tang.

โ€œNoโ€”โ€

This canโ€™t be happening, I thought. I squeezed my eyes shut and opened them again. Graham was running his hand down Arthurโ€™s face, closing his eyes.

โ€œCareful, youโ€™ll startle him,โ€ย I wanted to say. โ€œIs heโ€”โ€

โ€œYes.โ€

โ€œOh my God.โ€

โ€œWe need to leave,โ€ said Graham Aatly. โ€œWait downstairs.โ€

I backed out of the room. I saw Graham lean down and press his forehead to Arthurโ€™s temple. Then I turned and walked back down the stairs, legs trembling. There was a table by the front door, stacked with umbrellas, Ayers, keys, small change, and other by-the-entrance ephemera. There was a small notebook, which I picked up and opened. I Aipped through it. Arthurโ€™s handwriting. I put it in my pocket.ย Iโ€™ll give it back to him later, I thought. I recognized the thought

as one of a person in shock, but I couldnโ€™t stop myself thinking it.

Behind me, Graham came quickly down the stairs. He was pushing Arthurโ€™s signet ring over one of his 1ngers. As I watched, he pulled his bike glove over it.

โ€œLetโ€™s ship out,โ€ he said. His voice was toneless and his eyes were dry.

 

The ride to the tunnels passed in a blur. We took the motorways, which were thundering and anonymous.ย This is what the road to hell is like, I thought. Not paved with good intentions, but tarmacked and screaming with vehicles driven by people who donโ€™t know and donโ€™t care that Arthur is dead.

Greenhithe, like a long gray throat, regurgitated us by the docks. We abandoned the motorbike and our helmets behind a warehouse, taking the bags.

โ€œItโ€™s not far,โ€ he told me. โ€œThe entrance is concealed by the marsh.โ€

I reached out and clasped his shoulder, to steady myself as much as anything. He turned and dragged me toward him, curling 1sts into my waterproof coat. He squeezed me so tightly that it hurt. I could feel him shaking, he who never moved without a perfect clarity of intent. The whole time, I was thinking:ย The microchips, the microchips. They found Arthur because of the microchips. Let me out of your arms: I need to think about what to do about the microchips.

 

The journey into the tunnels felt like a descent into a nightmare. Brine and rotting seaweed smells 1lled the air, which contrived to be both clammy and frigid. We had to wade through a Aooded room, holding the bags over our heads, before the passage sloped up again. We began to pick our way through neater, more carefully paved catacombs, ribbed with iron struts. I squinted at the walls, lit by the Aashlights we each clutched. As far as I could tell, these were utility tunnels for the dockyard.

We came out in a crude bunker, drier than the rest of the tunnel and divided by stone walls.

โ€œMaggie?โ€ whispered Graham. โ€œGray!โ€

Margaret burst from the ceiling. She had been hiding in a disused vent. She was covered with slime, and her eyes were wild. She fell, landing heavily, scrambled upright and threw herself into Grahamโ€™s arms. He swept her oP the Aoor, his face in her 1lth-thickened hair.

โ€œI Aed,โ€ Margaret sobbed. โ€œI abandoned herโ€”I Aedโ€”not knowingโ€”if youโ€™d comeโ€”โ€

โ€œOf course I would. I told you that I would.โ€ โ€œI wasโ€”soโ€”afraidโ€”โ€

I lurched toward them. My limbs felt like theyโ€™d been boiled for too long. Margaret saw me and cried out. She kicked free of Graham and embraced me ferociously. I kissed her forehead and spat the mud onto the Aoor.

When Margaret had got her sobbing under control, she twisted to look over my shoulder.

โ€œArthur?โ€ she asked.

I looked at Graham. He took a breath. His shoulders jumped. โ€œWe were too late,โ€ I said, so that he didnโ€™t have to. โ€œHeโ€™s gone.โ€

 

We didnโ€™t have long to grieve. Graham and I changed from our soaked clothes into fresh ones. He explained the layout of the room, such as he understood it. There were three entrances, one of which was underwater. The other two were the long catacomb walk that weโ€™d just come through, and a signi1cantly more damaged and dangerous crawl space, whose entrance was set into the hollow of a dual-carriageway bridge.

With narrative inevitability, we heard scuAing and grunting somewhere in the roof.

Margaret and I instinctively crouched. Graham straightened up and cocked one of the handguns.

There was a black square cut into the wall near the ceiling, on which Grahamโ€™s gun was now trained. Something appeared in and 1lled the square. It dropped to the Aoor, like a laid egg, at the same moment that Graham 1red. The gunshot echoed so loudly that Margaret and I both shrieked.

โ€œGodโ€™s blood, Commander, โ€™tis me!โ€

A gray canvas bagโ€”the eggโ€”lay beneath the square. Cardinghamโ€™s face appeared in the hole. He looked sick to his stomach.

โ€œYou!โ€ shouted Margaret. โ€œHow were you privy to this place?โ€ Cardingham clambered gracefully to the Aoor.

โ€œOur commander told me of it, iโ€™faith. Though I had much trial 1nding this den. How wouldst thou have me be? Killed, like the captain? Lower thy weapon, sir.โ€

โ€œHow did you know Arthur was dead?โ€ asked Graham.

โ€œMy bridge has been absent for too long. I hied to his dwelling, as I thought that Moorish woman wouldst know best where my keeper hid. I discovered his

body. Lower thy weapon.โ€

At last, Graham brought his arm down.

โ€œYou saw nobody else there? A tall man with dark gray hair and a military bearing? Goes by the rank of brigadierโ€”โ€

โ€œNay, sir. Thou thinkest this the work of professional men? May this not be a loverโ€™s revenge? Didst thou know he was a sodomite, Commander?โ€

Graham silently thumbed the safety catch and put the gun away. Then he said:

โ€œSixty-1veโ€™s friend was murdered too, probably accidentally and in her place. Two months ago the Brigadier and his companion attempted to kill my bridge and take me. Weโ€™re safe for now, but we must plan our escapeโ€”โ€

โ€œYouโ€™re not safe,โ€ I blurted out. They looked round at me.

โ€œYouโ€™re microchipped,โ€ I said. โ€œEr. There are tiny machines implanted in your backs, just under the skin. It doesnโ€™t matter that you donโ€™t show up on modern scanning equipment. Youโ€™re like the Invisible Man holding a Aaming torch. The Ministry know exactly where you are, all the time, and thereโ€™s someone feeding that info to the Brigadier.โ€

For a second or so, there was nothing but the renegade slap of the distant water on stone. I could almost feel the chill of his blood retreating from his face before Graham quietly asked me:

โ€œHow long have you known this?โ€

โ€œYou were all released to your bridges microchipped. So. I suppose. The whole time.โ€

Margaret and Cardingham just stared, dumbstruck, but Grahamโ€™s face twisted. His mouth convulsed with fury and contempt. He got it under control, but not before I felt its impact bruise me. He said to Cardingham, โ€œThomas, do you have a blade with you?โ€

โ€œI have a โ€˜1rst aid kit,โ€™ among the instruments of which is a scalpel, a curved needle, and a catgut. We are of accord, I wager.โ€

โ€œDo you know where the โ€˜microchipsโ€™ are?โ€ he asked me, without looking at me.

โ€œYes.โ€

โ€œYouโ€™ll cut mine out and sew up the wound. Iโ€™ll cut Lieutenant Cardinghamโ€™s, and youโ€™ll do Margaretโ€™s. Then Iโ€™m going to take them and drop them in the river. Thomas, give me the scalpel.โ€

 

He led me into an alcove on the left of the room, separated by a rotting wood door. It was dry and pitch-black. Some quirk of its construction stiAed noise, and when I spoke or moved, the shadows swallowed the sound.

He stripped to the waist, facing away from me, and knelt. I wedged a Aashlight into a crack in the wall and reached out. As soon as I touched him, he shuddered. I wondered if he was thinking, as I was thinking, of all the times my hand had lain here, on his naked back.

โ€œWhat did you want from me?โ€ he asked softly. โ€œWhat?โ€

โ€œWhy did you bring me back from the dead? Why did you come into my life like this?โ€

โ€œWeโ€”we saved you. I wanted to know you.โ€ His head tipped forward into his hands.

โ€œWell,โ€ he said. โ€œDid you satisfy your curiosity?โ€ โ€œGraham.โ€

โ€œFor a while, I really did believe that youโ€”What were you planning to do with me? Put me in a 1ling system, I suppose. Where you could keep me boxed up.โ€

โ€œI never wanted toโ€”โ€

โ€œYes, you did!โ€ he shouted. It was loud enough that it burred with echoes. He scrambled around to face me, enraged, eyes Aashing. โ€œYes, you did. You had a very clear idea of who I wasย supposedย to be. Youโ€™ve been going hammer and tongs to get me there.โ€

I was breathing fast and hard. It wasnโ€™t quite hyperventilating, but it wasnโ€™t far oP. โ€œThatโ€™s not fair,โ€ I said. โ€œI made you my life.โ€

โ€œAnd in the heat of your obsession,โ€ he said, โ€œdid it occur to you to remember that I am a person too?โ€

His color cooled. Whatever was burning in his eyes, he tamped it down. He turned away.

โ€œScalpel,โ€ he said. โ€œStop crying. You wonโ€™t be able to do it properly if you are crying.โ€

 

Margaret wept the whole way through her operation. When Iโ€™d sewn her up, she turned to face me and grabbed my wrist. Her skin was perfect and opalescent under the dirt of the tunnels. She held my chin and forced me to look into her eyes, still jeweled with tears.

โ€œMark me,โ€ she said, โ€œand never forget it.ย I forgive you.โ€

I bent and put my face in her neck, pulling herโ€”tiny and warm and tremblingโ€”into my arms. โ€œIโ€™m sorry,โ€ I said wetly to her throat. โ€œIโ€™m sorry, Iโ€™m sorry.โ€

 

Graham took the microchips out somewhere, with the intention of letting them Aoat downriver, I thinkโ€”heโ€™d stopped telling me what his plans were. On his return, he divided us into three-hour watches, to be taken at the furthest edge of the catacomb corridor. Cardingham went 1rst. Graham would follow him, then me, then, by morning, Margaret.

โ€œWhy canโ€™t we leave now?โ€ I asked tremulously.

โ€œTide,โ€ he said brusquely, without looking at me. โ€œUntil itโ€™s farther out, tomorrow morning, our escape channels are so limited that stirring would be suicide. At this moment thereโ€™s only one safe route we can take, along the river, and Iโ€™m sure theyโ€™re monitoring the banks.โ€

Margaret and I folded spare clothes under our heads for pillows and hunkered down under coats for blankets. We lay in each otherโ€™s arms, wakeful and anxious. Graham, in the side room, worked on something by Aashlightโ€” something to do with the passports. He hadnโ€™t looked at me since Iโ€™d cut the microchip from his back.

โ€œHow did they dispatch Arthur?โ€ Margaret whispered.

โ€œPoison, I think.โ€

โ€œDid he suPer overlong?โ€

I thought of the vomit, the blood. But Arthurโ€™s face had been glazed and loose. Perhaps it had been quick. Each time I thought about it, my body was 1lled with insectile chatter, a desperate urge to get up and shake and move and 1x the situation. But there was no 1xing to be done. Arthur was dead.

โ€œShould I eโ€™er 1nd this Brigadier,โ€ whispered Margaret, โ€œI will break him, bone by bone. Sixteen would have wanted me at peace, but I cannot obey it. He was as a brother to me. A man of marble where all others are of clay.โ€

She started to weep again, sluggish little tears like liquid mercury, her face barely moving. I touched one and watched it spread against her skin.

โ€œHe was a good person,โ€ I said.

Eventually I felt her twitching as her body succumbed to an uneasy sleep. I must have slept too because the room withdrew from me. I dreamed, inevitably, of Arthur. I dreamed in layers of dreams where I woke in the dream and he was there and I said, โ€œOh, thank God, I dreamed youโ€™d died,โ€ and Iโ€™d wake again in the dream, and know him dead, and wake again in the dream, and think him still alive. My consciousness split like chapped skin, worried to the point of blood.

I was woken by rough shaking. I came to with a belligerent yelp. โ€œYour watch,โ€ said Graham, above me.

I sat up in 1ts and starts, like a balloon animal inAating. Everything ached, especially my neck. I wasnโ€™t quite awake, and so I reacted to Grahamโ€™s presence as I would have done a day before. I Aopped against him and buried my face in his shoulder. He stiPened but otherwise didnโ€™t move.

โ€œHappy anniversary,โ€ I muttered. โ€œWhat?โ€

โ€œItโ€™s one year today. That you came here.โ€

He was still and silent for a moment longer. I breathed in the familiar scent of him, felt the familiar passage of his breath. Then he pushed me away.

โ€œYour watch,โ€ he repeated.

 

When Iโ€™d 1rst interviewed for the bridge role, Adela had said to me, โ€œYour mother was a refugee.โ€ But my mother never described herself as a refugee. It was a narrative imposition, along with โ€œstatelessโ€ and โ€œsurvivor.โ€

My sister and I grew up, as many children of immigrants do, half parented and half parenting. Our mother needed our help to navigate her new country. Her need pinched us in diPerent ways. My sister became invested in cataloging, in retelling and remembering, in what she called the truth. I became obsessed with control, which I suppose is another way of saying I wanted command of the narrative.

Graham hadnโ€™t been all wrong when he said Iโ€™d been trying to shape him. How could I resist it? He came to me as a story. Now Iโ€™d let the story slip out of my grip. Iโ€™d panicked, and heโ€™d had to look after me. Iโ€™d let slip something I shouldnโ€™t have and now he was angry at me. I should have taken charge of the situation, and instead here we were: hiding in a cellar and expecting to take on the Brigadier and the mole by ourselves. But someone had put a gun in my hands, a platform beneath my feet. Where was she, to add the 1nal underline?

 

In the catacomb corridor, swinging my pocket Aashlight, I turned on my phone. Six missed calls from Adela. I texted:

help

She responded within seconds.

Where are you?

dockside service tunnels rainham can u track phone?

Accept phone call when it arrives do not speak do not move even a foot

In 1ve minutes a track call came through. I accepted it and waited. I even held my phone in the air to get a better signal, although experience had taught me this

was a futile gesture.

I have location

Weapons? Any sign of Brig?

2 guns w 47 no brig

what should i do low battery

I can get them into protective custody. Will send a SWAT team. Meet me here. NO FURTHER CONTACT mole still loose donโ€™t know if theyโ€™re tracking

She sent me a locationโ€”about half an hourโ€™s walk away, right by the river. Probably the microchips Graham had disposed of were tracked that far down the water.

I pulled Arthurโ€™s notebook from my coat pocket. There was a tiny gold pen in the spine. I held the Aashlight in my teeth and wrote:

I know what this looks like, but please donโ€™t be afraid. Iโ€™ve gone to get help.

I tore the page out and left it on the Aoor, held in place and lit by my Aashlight. Then, using my phoneโ€™s light, I made my way to meet Adela.

 

I began my trek across the marshes in the thin, frost-tipped light of predawn, but the sun soon leaked into the air. The birds went wild for it. Iโ€™d never realized how psychotic the dawn chorus soundedโ€”its scrabbling high notes, its melismas of desperation. Then again, Iโ€™d never been that exhausted or frightened.

Adela was standing in the debris-strewn mud at the bottom of a stone staircase streaked rot brown with rusted metal posts. The Thames churned behind her.

I was all the way down the stairs and at Adelaโ€™s side before I realized that the Brigadier and Salese were also there, and the Brigadier was pointing the blue- light weapon at Adela.

โ€œOh,โ€ I said.

โ€œโ€˜Ohโ€™ indeed,โ€ said Adela dryly.

โ€œYou will not move,โ€ said the Brigadier, โ€œor I will shoot.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m wearing a reAector,โ€ said Adela. โ€œGood for at least 1ve shots. How much power do you have left in that thing? I know you emptied half the battery on Eighteen-forty-sevenโ€™s attempted capture. And you havenโ€™t managed to get back to your era to recharge.โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t need to shoot you,โ€ replied the Brigadier. โ€œI will shoot her, and that will be the end of both of you.โ€

โ€œWrong again,โ€ said Adela. โ€œSheโ€™s already on a diPerent timeline. She told Eighteen-forty-seven about the Holocaust instead of 9/11, and I think itโ€™s sent him down a diPerent path. The linkโ€™s broken.โ€

โ€œWhy would shooting me kill you anyway?โ€ I asked. I didnโ€™t mean to blurt it out. It was just that I was so frightened I could feel my heart in my bowels. Cold sweat was dripping down my rib cage, tickling me unpleasantly.

Adela sighed. โ€œI knew I was naive when I was a young woman,โ€ she said. โ€œBut I didnโ€™t realize I wasย thisย naive.โ€

โ€œYouโ€™re one,โ€ barked Salese. โ€œFuture self and past self.โ€

I was too intent on the weapon to turn to Adela, but I said, โ€œYouโ€™re me?โ€ โ€œDonโ€™t parrot. Yes. Iโ€™m amazed you hadnโ€™t worked that out already. Iโ€™m

from, letโ€™s see, twenty-odd years in your future. These two are from the twenty- two hundreds.โ€

There was blood in my nose and in the back of my throat. In my panic, my body was putting beats in all the wrong places. โ€œArthurโ€™s dead,โ€ I said, just to stop her talking.

Adelaโ€™s face dropped horribly for a momentโ€”a truly incredible sight on her mobile features. Then she arrested its slide and pinned a blank expression in place.

โ€œArthur Reginald-Smyth. Yes. And Margaret Kemble.โ€ โ€œMaggieโ€™s alive,โ€ I said.

This time her face opened, and she didnโ€™t stop it. โ€œSheโ€™s alive?โ€ Adela croaked.

โ€œThis timelineโ€™s Ministry being less efficient than the original,โ€ the Brigadier broke in. I realized the hand holding the weapon was trembling slightly. The more I looked, the more I noted signs of exhaustion, sickness, and 1lth about the futurists. Whatever mission had brought them here, it wasnโ€™t going to plan.

Adela was gawping at the Brigadier. โ€œLessย efficient?โ€ she said. โ€œYou didnโ€™t kill Sixteen-sixty-1ve this timeโ€”the Ministry saved her.โ€

Salese gawped back. โ€œWeย didnโ€™t kill her?โ€

โ€œYes,โ€ said Adela. โ€œYou murdered my friends. Last time it was Arthur and Maggie, both. But this time round, you only got one.โ€

โ€œNo. You types nulled. We breathed a paper.โ€

โ€œThere are declassi1ed records,โ€ the Brigadier translated, โ€œthat show the Ministry had the noncombatant expats killed once they realized the door only supported a limited number of people.โ€

I did gold1sh faces for a few seconds, then managed to say to Adela, โ€œThe Ministry killed them? Did you do this? Did you know about this?โ€

But she was staring back at me, shivering oddly. โ€œArthurโ€™s the name of my son,โ€ she said.

โ€œWhat?โ€

โ€œArthur John Gore.โ€

I was about to say something cravenly stupid, such as,ย Iโ€™m not even sure if I want children, when Adela stepped forward and stabbed Salese in the throat.

The impact wasnโ€™t smooth. A greenish screen 1zzled and Aickered over Saleseโ€™s bodyโ€”some kind of shield. But Adela grunted and pushed past its vivid static, driving the knife home. I hadnโ€™t seen the knife appear, but now it was center stage. Blood sprayed, hit the casing of green, dripped lushly down the inside. Salese gagged, eyes rolling back. This all took less than three seconds.

In that time, Iโ€™d thrown myself at the Brigadier with my brain all gray. He was a big man but hollow with it. Heโ€™d been hungry for some time, I could feel that in the baggy give of his Aesh when my knuckles connected. He wasnโ€™t afraid of pain. I kicked his shins and heard a crack, and I punched his mouth and felt a tooth turn in his livid gum, and he took it all grimly, without breaking attention. He had his hand on my hand, and my hand was wrestling his for the blue-light

weapon. Then he turned his head, just for a moment, and he must have seen what had become of Salese, because his grip unAexed. I wrenched. When I was done, I was holding the blue-light weapon, two of my 1ngers appeared to be dislocated, and the Brigadier was backing away.

โ€œYou killed Sal,โ€ he said. His voice was raw. To my horror, there were tears tracking down his face.

At Adelaโ€™s feet, the corpse that had been Salese bled out onto the sand, turning it not red, as Iโ€™d expected, but a color that was closer to black.

 

The Brigadier ran. I lifted the blue-light weapon. It was very like a gun, or what a gun might dream about becoming. I understood, instinctively, the sight and the trigger. So I 1red.

There was a brief cyan Aicker, then the weapon made exactly the same noise a vacuum cleaner makes when you turn it oP. After that it was completely unresponsive, which is just as well really, because my brain caught up with what Iโ€™d just done and tried to do and I threw up.

When I straightened, Adela was looking at me sympathetically. โ€œI used to puke every time. You get used to it.โ€

โ€œWhy did youโ€”โ€

โ€œReAectors are designed to screen the wearer from plasma bullets. They werenโ€™t designed with metal knives in mind.โ€

She reached out and, without ceremony, snapped my dislocated 1ngers back into place. The birds sang over my screaming.

 

We walked back toward the hideout. I stared at her, and she stared at the way ahead. She looked like her organs had been removed and placed in cold storage; worse, like it had happened when she was on her way to what she thought was a birthday party.

Eventually, she said: โ€œYou want to ask me about the future.โ€ โ€œWell. Yes.โ€

โ€œWhat do you want to know?โ€ โ€œWhatโ€™s it like?โ€

โ€œWhat an anodyne question. The United Kingdom has been at war with the Tiger Territories for about a decade. Mai almost got deported right at the beginning. The Ministry stepped in though. Sheโ€™s dead now. Mai and Dad are both dead. Did you want to know how they died?โ€

โ€œNo,โ€ I said, shocked. โ€œWhy would you tell me that?โ€

โ€œIโ€™m still processing. It wasnโ€™t that long ago. If thatโ€™s any comfort.โ€ โ€œJesus fuckingโ€”What are the Tiger Territories?โ€

โ€œStupid media nickname, I shouldnโ€™t have used it. Countries that used to have tigers, more or less. China, India, Thailand, Cambodia, Vietnam, Nepal. Couple of others. They want us toppled. US and Brazil are on our side. Russiaโ€™s in the middle of a civil warโ€”they started using chemical weapons in the early 2030s without rationalizing what it would do to crops. Tigers are extinct.โ€

โ€œAnd where did you say the Brigadier and Salese come from?โ€

โ€œFurther ahead. The twenty-two hundreds. We believe they made the time- door. Apparently the planet is not in a good way, climate-wise, so theyโ€™re trying to change history. Targeted assassinations, mainly, a bit of intelligence gathering. I donโ€™t think they have the resources or infrastructure for much else. They got stuck here when we seized the door.โ€

We walked in silence. Iโ€™d become so hot and tearful that my personal radius had expanded several inches from my body.

โ€œWhy โ€˜Adela?โ€™โ€ I asked her.

โ€œIt was really close to the top of the baby name book, and I was in a hurry,โ€ she said.

โ€œAh. Did you really lose your eye in Beirut in 2006?โ€ โ€œNo. Battambang, 2039.โ€

โ€œAnd yourโ€”face?โ€

Another grim hiccup. โ€œAh. It turns out time-travelย doesย come with side ePects. Even your body forgets your โ€˜herenessโ€™ and โ€˜thereness,โ€™ if you do it often enough. We thought it would be a tactical advantage, but I suppose the same claim was made for crop-destroying chemical weapons. You were right when you called my surgery reconstructive. I would venture to call it life-saving. Failure to

correct for โ€˜herenessโ€™ shifting was how we lost Agent Cardingham, back in โ€™thirty-four. Poor man. I never liked him but that was a dreadful way to go.โ€

โ€œAnd you said that. Well. We haveโ€”orโ€”you have a son?โ€ โ€œYes.โ€

โ€œWithโ€”?โ€

โ€œYes.โ€

We rejoined the road. Two sets of boot heels thudded martially on the tarmac. The manic scrubland loomed around us.

โ€œWe married not long after all this happened the 1rst time round,โ€ Adela said. โ€œAfter theโ€”funerals. It wasโ€”hard. Graham put Arthurโ€™s ring on my 1nger. That wasโ€”too much. I gave up wearing it. I think he understood, but it wasโ€”difficult. I really thought I might be able to spare you all that, if I got the mole this time.โ€

โ€œWhat about all the stuP you said about not changing history?โ€

โ€œPeople arenโ€™t history,โ€ said Adela scornfully. โ€œGood grief, why didnโ€™t I listen to anything anyone told me when I was young? As long as the Ministry rises to power, then history happened the way we said it did.โ€

โ€œAnd, your, uh, ourโ€”?โ€

โ€œArthur was born a year later. Heโ€™s a teenager now.โ€

That threw me oP. When Iโ€™d heard โ€œmy son,โ€ Iโ€™d imagined him in mystical termsโ€”a pink-cheeked, wide-eyed kid of three or so, radiating his innocence like a plutonium rod. To know that Arthur Gore was a person, with opinions and articulated thoughts, was unnerving.

โ€œWhatโ€™s he like?โ€

โ€œOh, he hates us. As teenagers do. Heโ€™s a gobby little shit,โ€ she added, and I noted the pride in her voice. โ€œOf course, itโ€™s not easy being a twenty-1rst-century teen with a Victorian patriarch for a father.โ€

โ€œIs he a patriarch?โ€

โ€œHeโ€™s not as bad as he could be. But he has very high expectations and requires that they are met. And he expects obedience with good cheer. Filial devotion and all that. Honor. Achievement.โ€

โ€œHeโ€™s an Asian mother.โ€ โ€œHa. Yes.โ€

Adela checked the futuristic weapon, which she had wordlessly taken from me. โ€œI miss Mai,โ€ she said quietly. โ€œYou should spend as much time with her as you can. Dad too.โ€

โ€œI will. Um. Does ourโ€”does your husband know youโ€™re here?โ€ โ€œWho do you think ordered this mission?โ€

I stopped short in the road. Adela turned to me.

โ€œThatโ€™s why the Brigadier was hereโ€”for me, and for him, as early in our timelines as possible. I understand that, in their era, the Ministry and the British government as a whole are considered culpable for whatย theirย Britain looks like. I suppose we invested in weapons and manufacturing that were not what you probably still call โ€˜carbon neutral.โ€™ Charming term. It fell out of fashionโ€”will fall out of fashion. Anyway, the situation was desperate. Youโ€™re not long oP your 1rst resource war. Or the 1rst Special Branch Coast Guard. Graham was closely involved in that. He 1nally made post-captain,โ€ she added, with a phantom smile.

โ€œWhat the hell is a Special Branch of the Coast Guard?โ€

โ€œDefensive patrols. The migrants, you know. Boats. There were too many.

They started trying to enter by force.โ€

I stared at her. She shrugged tiredly and said, โ€œI was worried when you said you hadnโ€™t told Graham about 9/11, because in my timeline, that immediately converted him to the Ministry. Highly trained mercenaries attacking civilians. The necessity of belligerent tactics to prevent another attack. Neo-Crusades following the collapse of the empire. And so on. You were right about the way he reacted. I remember him bringing up the Aden expedition. Though Iโ€™m sure heโ€™d deny it was โ€˜racist,โ€™ you know heโ€™s funny about that word. The Ministry promoted him quickly. Much quicker than they promoted you. Heโ€™sย good. He was in the 1eld for a few years but he was fast-tracked into leadership. Heโ€™sโ€” how can I put this?โ€”extremelyย senior.โ€

โ€œBut why did he send you?โ€

โ€œI insisted. I knew this mission better than anyone.โ€ โ€œButย why?โ€

She looked me up and down. Her expression was a bit squishy. Not with her usual facial strangeness. I think it was nostalgia.

โ€œWhen you are my age,โ€ she said, โ€œyou will realize just how green you were. I had to make sure this all happened the right way. Most things donโ€™t happen. Mostly the universe is parking space.โ€

โ€œButโ€”โ€

โ€œThe world is at war. We are running out ofย everything, and everyone thinks theyโ€™re owed whatโ€™s left. But as long as the Ministry exists, as long as the Ministryย comes to existย in the shape it does in my era, then we have the technological advantage. That isnโ€™t nothing, having weapons other people donโ€™t, the kinds of soldiers other people donโ€™t. Some other countries get left behind, but thatโ€™s how progress works. You really didnโ€™t pay attention to anything thatโ€™s ever been said about history, did you?โ€

I said, โ€œDid you kill Quentin?โ€

She lifted her thumb to her mouth and bit the edge of the skin. โ€œTechnically,โ€ she said, โ€œwe both did. Since you are me.โ€

โ€œI thought the Brigadier did it. Someone with my access credentials shut oP the CCTVโ€”โ€

โ€œYou are aware we have the same 1ngerprints.โ€ โ€œOh. Right. But why did you do it?โ€

โ€œBecause last time, Quentin was the mole, and I thought that he was the reason Maggie and Arthur wereโ€”were murdered. And heย didย pass information about the Ministry to the Brigadier and Salese. That was extremely fucking inconvenient. You canโ€™t imagine what Britain looks like in my era. Coming back here was a shock. Itโ€™s so decadent. Like stepping into Rome before the barbarians sacked it. I seem to remember the boomers had a real hard-on for food rationing as an ideological exercise when we were your age. Let me assure you that no one enjoys food rationing.โ€

โ€œYou didnโ€™t know the Ministry had Maggie and Arthur killed?โ€ โ€œNo. None of us did. Well. I wonder. Graham is so senior now.โ€ โ€œDo you think he knows?โ€

โ€œHmm. There was a period when things were bad between us. Lasted a few years. Dad was very sick, and Mai was struggling to care for him, and Arthur was having a lot of trouble at school, and our workloads wereโ€ฆ Anyway. We wereโ€ฆ distant. I assumed he was having an aPair.โ€

โ€œYou didnโ€™t ask?โ€

โ€œWe tried to put those years behind us. Besides, when have you ever known Graham to answer a direct question?โ€

Her voice was strained when she said this, but I remember the way aPection luminesced under her skin.ย I still love him, I thought.ย Even after everything that happens, at least I still love him. I asked her, โ€œAre you happy?โ€

Adela considered this. โ€œNo.โ€ โ€œOh.โ€

โ€œNot being in the middle of a war makes you happy. Not grieving. Not being so profoundly fucking loathed by your son. Not having to kill people for your salary. Speaking of whichโ€”โ€

โ€œYou arenโ€™t going to kill Graham!โ€

โ€œNo, Iโ€™m not going to kill him. I love him.โ€ โ€œIโ€”โ€

โ€œYou hardly know him. Itโ€™s going to be two years before you even see him cry.โ€

โ€œHe cries?โ€

Adelaโ€™s mouth quirked at that. She fell into an agitated reverie. I felt her pulling away from the moment as the tide pulls from the shoreโ€”I mean I could feel the suck of it as her attention retreated to some inaccessible socket of โ€œelsewhere.โ€ It was horrible. Her โ€œtherenessโ€ at work against her, I assumeโ€”or two decades of regret, piling up with such force it changed the shape of her thoughts. I wondered how it felt, realizing the version of history sheโ€™d lived for years was a lie. Because of the choice she made next, I never got to experience it myself.

โ€œHere,โ€ she said.

I looked down. She was holding a palm-size tablet and a memory card. I attempted to take them with my dominant, recently damaged hand. She shook her head, and I took it with the other.

โ€œMinistry passcodes,โ€ she said. โ€œFor this project.โ€ โ€œWhy are you giving me these?โ€

She dragged her hand through her brittle bottle-blond hair, and the black roots Aashed up with a wanton, impossible pride.

โ€œBecause Iโ€™ve been a company woman all my life and look where itโ€™s got me. The Ministry had Arthur and Maggie killed. No one ever told me.ย Heย didnโ€™t tell me. If Iโ€™d knownโ€”โ€

I said, โ€œMaggieโ€™s still alive.โ€

Another origami of emotion creased her face. โ€œOh, Maggie,โ€ she murmured. โ€œCan you go back again and save Arthur?โ€

I thought I might get anotherย Youโ€™re a stupid girl, but Adela just looked sad. โ€œTime,โ€ she said, โ€œis a limited resource. Like all of our resources. You only get to experience your life once. And you can travel through time, a little, though itโ€™s like smoking cigarettes: the more you do it, the greater risk youโ€™re at from death by its ePects. And yes, you can go back and change the details, a little, but thereโ€™s a limit to how often. Every time you dig a new pathway into time, you exhaust a little more of it, and if we go back too often and mine too deeply in the same place, again and again, pulling history from the same coal seam, it will collapse. It will obliterate us, like a black hole. You have to get itย right.โ€

โ€œWhatโ€”good griefโ€”what is right? In this context? Adela?โ€

โ€œI should get the surviving expats. Iโ€™ll keep them safe. The Defence SWAT team are on their way, with heat scanners and infrared goggles, emergency protocols being what they are, so I can at least stay ahead of them and their tracking techniques. But you need to go to the Ministry, with those passcodes, and you need to end this project. Iโ€™m one half of Controlโ€”I do still have that authority. If weโ€™re going to get it right, then weโ€™re going to have to ensure I amย allย of Control, and for that, the project needs to be wiped.โ€

โ€œIf I leave now, Graham will think I betrayed them.โ€

โ€œIโ€™ll explain. Iโ€™ll bring them to you, to the safe house, and we can plan next moves. Just trust me. Weโ€™ll get it right this time.โ€

She smiled suddenly, the 1rst real smile Iโ€™d ever seen on her face. I saw myself in her thenโ€”her mouth, her cheeks, her eyes.

โ€œHe is wonderful, isnโ€™t he?โ€ she said. โ€œIโ€™d forgotten how handsome he was when we 1rst met. And how happy. Itโ€™s been a long time since Iโ€™ve seen him as happy as I saw him that day in the shooting gallery. Iโ€™ve missed him so much. You have no idea.โ€

โ€œHands in the air, please,โ€ said a clear, calm voice.

I whirled around. There was no one to be seen. The dense emerald vegetation of the scrubland surrounded the road. He could have been hiding anywhere. His voice carried strangely.

โ€œEasy, little cat,โ€ Graham said, his voice still calm. โ€œYou have some explaining to do. Madam, put your hands in the air. We have you in our sights.โ€

โ€œPlugged thine ears, sir,โ€ I heard Cardingham snarl. โ€œRefused my counsel and now seeโ€”these whores do conspire. Thou rolled iโ€™bed with death.โ€

โ€œShut up, Thomas.โ€

โ€œCommander Gore and Lieutenant Cardingham,โ€ said Adela, scanning the scrub. โ€œRest assured that we mean you no harm.โ€

โ€œI suppose this depends on your interpretation of harm,โ€ said Graham from his hiding place, quite pleasantly. โ€œPerhaps you donโ€™t intend to kill us. But to survey a man, to rob him of his freedom and use him like a toolโ€”would you not consider this harmful?โ€

Adela leaned toward me. โ€œIf I were you, I would run before the SWAT team gets here,โ€ she whispered. โ€œThings are going to get veryย crowded, very quickly.โ€

I look back on this moment, and I do wonder: Should I have done something else? Stayed? Argued? Pleaded? Thrown myself toward the sound of his voice, onto his mercy? Would it have changed anything?

As I ran, a gunshot rang out. The bullet passed close enough that I heard its whistling song. And I thought, that wasnโ€™t Graham. It wasnโ€™t Graham who just tried to shoot me. It canโ€™t have been Graham. Because if it was Graham, he wouldnโ€™t have missed.

10

The people he instinctively thinks of as his captors lead him down a corridor. Through disoriented trial and error, he’s learned that the bulges beneath their short jackets conceal guns. Itโ€™s been a challenging few weeks.

โ€œYou were in the Discovery Service, right?โ€ one of the white-robed attendants had said. โ€œThink of this as a mission of discovery.โ€

So, he reframes this strange new world as a task he can either excel at or fail.

At the end of the corridor is a door. Beyond the door lies a room. Inside the room waits the officer who will be his โ€œbridgeโ€ to the future.

As he steps in, he notices a small ghostly figure shifting on the carpet. Black hair. Brown skin, bright and clean. The sweeping arc of her dark lashes. The indescribable hue of her lips. She looks at him. He canโ€™t meet her gaze. His eyes drop away, his blood running thin and acidic through his veins. Does everyone see her? The room is so still, he can’t be sure. Maybe she only appears to him.

There is a man he assumes to be the officer, and he tries to focus on that face. But the little ghost steps forward.

โ€œCommander Gore?โ€
โ€œYes.โ€
โ€œIโ€™m your bridge.โ€

Laterโ€”he will have many days, weeks, and months of “later”โ€”heโ€™ll realize the resemblance to the Inuit woman is faint, more a product of guilt and imagination. Her hair isnโ€™t as lustrous, her skin is lighter, her face more feline. Her eyes are shaped differently. Sheโ€™s several inches taller and leaner too. Still, still.

As Lieutenant Irving once said, Godโ€™s ways are not our ways. His methods can be mysterious. But His intentions, He carves into the flesh.

*God gave me to you, little cat. It is His will that I am yours. In His infinite mercy, He has offered me redemption.*

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