Day of the Predator - Alex Scarrow [136]
She did. It was a future she’d thought she was beginning to see in her lifetime. That big meeting in Copenhagen that was supposed to be the last best chance for the world to agree on how to stop global warming – it had failed miserably. She wondered whether historians from midway through the twenty-first century would point to that day as the very beginning of the end.
‘Well … that’s the future whether we like it or not, Liam. And it’s our job to fight to keep it that way.’
He nodded. ‘Hmm … but do you ever wonder, Maddy?’
‘Wonder what?’
He looked at her, with his bloodshot eye and thin shock of snow-white hair, and for a moment he looked both old and young at the same time. ‘Do you wonder whether that future, the one Foster told us all about, whether that’s the right future to fight for?’
‘I dunno. I suppose we just have to trust him that it is.’
The sun dipped behind the far horizon of trees, behind the thin lines of campfire smoke. From inside the arch they could hear the voices of the others: Sal helping the support unit … Becks … get ready.
‘She’s been given orders to kill them all, then destroy your camp. Burn everything so there’s nothing left behind to leave fossil traces. We’ll know if she’s successful –’ Maddy nodded out at the jungle – ‘when this all goes and we get New York back, and …’ She lowered her voice a little. ‘And the tricky situation we were stuck right in the middle of just before jungle-land arrived …’
‘Cartwright?’
She nodded.
‘So …’ He cocked a brow. ‘I’m presuming he, and the poor fella with the gun, are the chaps who found our message?’
‘Not exactly. It was found a lot, lot earlier. In the 1940s, apparently. But Cartwright runs this little government agency,’ she snorted, ‘an agency a bit like ours, I guess – small and secret. Its job for the last sixty years has been to be a custodian of your message. And to finally make contact with us in 2001.’
‘And he came knocking?’
‘Oh, he came knocking all right. Just before the last time wave, we had men with guns standing guard outside in the backstreet. In fact, they had several areas of the neighbourhood sealed up with roadblocks and soldiers and stuff. Helicopters overhead and everything. Quite a big deal. You’d have loved it.’
‘My fault.’ Liam looked guilty. ‘Sorry about that.’
She shook her head. ‘Don’t be. You had to send the message. There was no other way we would have found you.’
Sal was calling out for her. It was time.
‘Thing is, Liam,’ she said hurriedly, ‘we have to be ready to move, and move quickly. If Becks is successful … we’ll get all of that situation right back in our faces. We’ll be right where we were. So, I’m going to need to send you back to make sure they don’t get your message.’
‘Dinosaur times?’
‘Oh no. Not that far.’ She managed to stop herself saying because that would probably finish you off. ‘No … it’ll be the second of May 1941. You need to prevent some kids from finding a particular chunk of rock.’
He smiled. ‘And Cartwright and his agency will never have existed?’
She was ducking down under the shutter when she paused. ‘Well … his agency might not exist, or maybe it will, but it will be busy with some other secret it’s trying to keep from the American people.’
‘Right.’
‘When that time wave comes, Liam … we’ll need Cartwright standing outside when I turn on our time field. His life will be rewritten along with the rest of the corrected reality. He’ll have no memory of all of this.’
Liam bent down and looked under the shutter and into the archway. He could see Forby’s dark boots poking out of the end of the blanket they’d wrapped his body in.
‘And what about him?’
‘Forby? Not sure. If his body is outside the field I suppose he gets to live again, doing whatever job he was doing before Cartwright and his agency suddenly winked into existence. The point is … whatever that means for him and the old man, we won’t have a backstreet full of spooks with guns. We’ll be back to normal.’ She grinned up at him.