TimeRiders 05 - Gates of Rome (13 page)

BOOK: TimeRiders 05 - Gates of Rome
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Sal was right, though. That was the annoying thing. Liam was right too; even their dumb support unit and the networked computers were right. They couldn’t just do nothing; couldn’t just sit on their hands and ride this one out.

‘Crud. I just wanted to … to wait and see, you know? See if someone else might step in and help out.’ She tried sounding hopeful. ‘Maybe even force Waldstein to come back and pay us a visit. You never know.’

The silence was deafening.

‘All right. OK … I get it. All right.’ She pushed her chair back with a squeak of complaint from castor wheels forced across the pitted concrete. ‘I suppose we better start getting organized, then.’

‘What are they?’

‘They’re called babel-buds,’ said Maddy. ‘According to the packet they came in, everyone in the future uses them all the time.’

Liam looked down at them. They looked like flesh-coloured Smarties with a dimple on one side. Maddy opened a small Ziploc plastic bag and dropped two of them in. ‘I checked them. They support seventy-six languages, Latin among them. Just pop them in your ears when you arrive. There’s a spare in case you lose one.’ She looked at his shaggy hair. ‘And since your ears are lost under that mop, no one’s going to see them anyway.’

Sal handed him another sealed plastic bag containing the woollen tunic, leggings and shoes from his trip to 1194. ‘I found some leather flip-flops and took the label off them. I think they’ll do.’

‘Thanks.’

‘I’ve got a location set up about seven miles outside Rome,’ said Maddy. ‘Remote. I’ve pinholed it and run a density probe.
It’s quiet, so you shouldn’t be observed arriving or leaving. See if you can thumb a lift in or steal some horses from somewhere … and then I guess the best thing would be to head into Rome and have a quick look around.’ She scanned through some printed-out notes. ‘It seems something or someone’s helped Caligula survive the assassination attempt that cut his reign short. I really don’t know where to suggest you should start looking, somewhere central, the government district, the forum or Senate or whatever the term is. Some place like that.’

‘Their version of Times Square,’ added Sal.

‘Right,’ Maddy nodded. ‘I’ve picked
AD
54. On the database of corrupted history we’re getting garbled data for that year. It’s in a state of flux. I think these might be a sequence of oscillating time ripples, like an interference pattern. It’s very unsettled. Obviously something major happens in that year. Let’s start from there and see where it takes us.’

Bob and Liam nodded.

‘So, like the Cabot trip, Liam. OK? Just go look and listen and see if there’s anything at all we can zero in on as a possible cause.’

‘Aye, will do.’

‘Return windows, as usual, are one hour, one day, one week.’

‘Well, don’t get all hissy with me if we miss the first two windows,’ said Liam. He looked at her. ‘Seven miles, you say? That’s a day’s walk there and a day’s walk back. Me an’ Bob won’t get to see much of Rome if we have to get back for –’

‘A week, then,’ she replied irritably. ‘If that’s what you want?’

‘Aye.’ He smiled. ‘It’ll be good to get a proper look around for once, rather than a flying visit.’

‘Up to you. Just be care–’ Maddy stopped.

She’d not noticed it before, but standing here at the base of the displacement tube, with the strip light fizzing away directly
above and casting an intense light down on his face, Liam’s eyes seemed lost in shadow. Ever so slightly sunken. The very first faint hint of Foster’s face in his younger features.

‘Mads?’

She shot a quick glance at Sal. She knew about Liam now.
Can she see it too? By this light, is she seeing what I’m seeing?

Liam cocked his head curiously and in the change of expression the vague resemblance to Foster’s face was all of a sudden gone. ‘Maddy? You all right?’

She nodded quickly. ‘Uh … fine. No, what I was going to say was, just … uh, just be careful.’

‘Of course I will. Always am.’ Liam grinned, turned and punched Bob’s bare shoulder. ‘Come on, then, fella. Time for the goldfish bowl.’

She looked at Bob, naked apart from shorts and clutching his own plastic bag of clothes. ‘Is your data-packet upload complete?’

He nodded. ‘I have first-century Latin and the correct timeline history from the database installed.’

‘Bring Liam back safe and sound, won’t you, Bob?’

‘Of course I will.
Liam tutus erit in manibus meis.

Maddy smiled. ‘Convincing as ever.’

She watched Liam ease himself into the tube, with a
whoop
at the cold water that echoed round the archway. Bob joined him a moment later, treading water beside Liam. As energy began to surge into the rack of circuitry beside the perspex tube, Sal joined her.

‘Now I know why you always look so sad when you’re sending Liam back,’ she said quietly.

‘Yes.’ Maddy nodded. ‘Now you know.’

The hum of kinetic energy rose in volume and pitch as Maddy counted down the last two minutes.

Because every time I do this to Liam … I’m gradually killing him.

The archway boomed with the release of energy and the flex of perspex suddenly relieved of the weight and pressure of thirty gallons of water.

CHAPTER 24
AD 54, Italy

Liam looked around as he finished dressing. Maddy had managed to find a perfectly discreet location for them. A small grove of olive trees nestled at the bottom of a narrow valley. A brook meandered through boulders and across a shallow bed of pebbles. A quite pleasant patch of wilderness.

They worked in silence burying their bags in the parched, ruddy, clay-like soil beneath one of the olive trees as the rhythmic trill of cicadas whistled at them from the dry grass all around.

Done, they worked their way up out of the valley, clambering up a slope of coarse grass and hawthorn bushes. Liam was mopping sweat from his face with the back of his hand by the time they reached the top and stood beside a dusty, hard-baked track winding down a slope.

Liam took in the broad, sedentary horizon. In the far distance a ribbon of peaks, the Apennine mountains; before him a patchwork of pastures and fields rolling over gently sloping hills and dotted here and there with pastel-coloured villas with clay-tile roofs that shimmered in the heat of the midday sun.

‘The city of Rome is seven miles east of our current position,’ said Bob. ‘I suggest we acquire transport and make our way there to gather intelligence.’

‘Transport?’ Liam looked around. ‘I think
we’re
the transport.’

Bob scanned the horizon.

‘We’re probably going to have to walk, so.’

‘Negative. This is a trade route into Rome. We will encounter transport.’ Bob narrowed his eyes and studied the dusty track carefully. ‘Look.’

Liam followed his gaze and this time saw a distant curl of dust kicked up from the track.

Bob flexed his fists and played out an unnervingly wide rictus of a smile on his lips. ‘Show time,’ he grunted merrily.

Five minutes later, they were in possession of their own horse-drawn cart laden with amphoras of wine and were leaving behind them, at the side of the track, a portly old Greek tradesman shouting a stream of unintelligible obscenities, shaking his fist furiously at them. The babel-bud in Liam’s ear calmly translated for him in soothing feminine tones.

<
Your father is a dog with a hygiene problem. Your mother has low moral values …
>

‘I’m sorry!’ Liam called out guiltily.

The bud whispered in his ear. <
Me paenitet.
>


Me … paenitet!
’ he called out.

Bob nodded approvingly as he cajoled the horses in front of them to break into a weary trot. ‘You are using the translator. Very good.’

‘Maybe we should leave him something to drink? You know, it’s hot and …’

‘As you wish.’ Bob reached a thick arm over the driver’s seat into the back of the cart and lifted up a large clay amphora stoppered with a plug of wax. Liquid sloshed around inside as he swung it out over the side and tossed it gently on to the twisted, brittle branches and needles of a squat Aleppo pine tree by the side of the track.

The Greek’s cursing receded, eventually lost beneath the
sound of the cart’s creaking wheels and the
clop-clop
of hooves on sun-baked dirt.

Liam settled back in his seat and sighed contentedly in the warmth of the sun. ‘So this is Ancient Rome, then?’

‘Affirmative.’

‘Another place I can tick off me Must-Go-And-See List.’

Bob turned to look at him. ‘You have a list of places to –?’

‘Just a figure of speech, Bob.’

‘I understand.’

‘Well now, you might as well tell me all the important bits of information Maddy shoved into your head there.’

‘Were you not listening during her briefing?’

Liam shrugged. ‘I was … but there was a lot of it, and she said it all a bit too quickly. And I was trying to undress at the same time, so …’

Bob sighed. ‘The year is
AD
54. In
correct
history this would be towards the end of the reign of Emperor Claudius. The emperor who is supposed to have succeeded Caligula after his four-year reign and his assassination. Instead,
altered
history records that this year the Emperor Gaius Julius Caesar Augustus Germanicus –’

‘Caligula?’

‘Correct – commonly known as Caligula – celebrates his seventeenth year in power. It is also his last year. At some point during this year he is supposed to have ascended to Heaven to take his place as God.’

‘You’re kidding.’

Bob carried on. ‘It appears that Caligula has adopted certain tenets of a relatively obscure belief system imported from Judaea.’

‘What’s that?’

Bob looked at him. ‘You do not know this?’

Liam shrugged. ‘No, I …’ Then he realized. ‘You’re talking about
Christianity
?’

‘Correct. Caligula overwrites the Greek and Roman polytheist – many gods – belief system with the idea of one true God. This he has stolen from Christianity. Also the Roman interpretation of the afterlife, Elysium, is replaced with the Christian depiction of Heaven.’

‘Cheeky devil!’

‘Caligula has adopted this faith completely and then rewritten it with himself in the role of son of God.’

Liam half laughed at the man’s gall. ‘So, what really happens to Caligula, then?’

‘This is unclear. The data I have indicates that in this year Caligula does in fact disappear. Historians and writers of this time record he vanished, some believing he really was the son of God and actually did rise to Heaven to become deified. Others thought that he might have become mentally unstable and killed himself in some way, but his death was hushed up and his body secretly disposed of.’

‘Right.’ Liam settled himself in the back of the cart among several bales of reeds cushioning the clay amphoras, wine sloshing in containers all around him. Almost comfortable. He looked up at the cloudless blue sky, the rocking of the cart quite soothing. He recalled some of Maddy’s hasty briefing, her gabbling ten to the dozen as he stumbled around behind the curtains trying to get undressed for the displacement tube:

‘… but it seems that history noticeably changes from
AD
37 onwards. There’s some Roman poet, essay-writer dude called Asinius, who describes what sounds to me a lot like a contamination event.’ Through the curtain he heard Maddy flicking quickly across printed pages. ‘Ah, yeah, here it is … During the feast and celebrations of Minerva, the skies above
those gathered in the amphitheatre opened and vast chariots descended to the city, from which stepped messengers of the gods, made to look as mortal men.’

‘You think those were time travellers?’

‘Duh.’ He heard her snort. ‘Well, obviously. They certainly weren’t gods. Or messengers of the gods even.’

More rustling of papers. ‘Since we had that third small ripple a few minutes ago, there’ve been more data changes. It’s like this contamination is scaling up gradually.’ They’d all taken a look outside after the last one. From a distance Manhattan still looked the same, the same skyline, skyscrapers, aeroplanes in the sky, traffic rumbling over the bridge above. But Liam suspected Sal would find a million little differences in Times Square.

‘Now we’ve got varying accounts of Caligula’s reign, and not a great deal more about these messengers, though. It’s as if they’ve been purged from history rather clumsily. Or edited out somehow. Which I think makes them pretty damned suspicious, eh?’

Liam had his shoes and socks off and was trying on the flip-flops Sal had got for him.

‘Uhh … but generally it seems the same sort of account of Caligula’s reign. Over the next seventeen years it’s not a good period for Rome. Caligula seems to neglect his job as ruler; there are food shortages, water shortages. He gets really unpopular with the people, although, oddly … it seems Caligula’s version of a one-god religion catches on. This all goes on until he vanishes mysteriously – supposedly going to Heaven. He’s succeeded by an Emperor Lepidus, who encourages Caligula’s take on Christianity. The trident of Neptune becomes the symbol of the faith and the faith later becomes known as Julianity, after his family name Julii. In 345 it becomes known as the Holy Church Juliani.’

Liam emerged from behind the curtains wearing his tunic and flip-flops. Maddy was studying a clipboard of printouts.

‘How do I look?’

‘Like an idiot as usual.’ She smiled, looked back down at her notes. ‘So … I’m going to send you back to
AD
54, the year in which he’s supposed to have blasted off to Heaven. There’s no month given, but there’s a suggestion it’s sometime in the late summer months because there’s a reference to poor harvests and stuff. So, Liam … we’ll make that year our first port of call, OK?’

‘Aye.’

‘Liam!’

He jerked awake. ‘Whuh?!’

He realized he’d dozed off and left a damp patch of drool down his own shoulder. The warm sun and the gentle rocking of the cart had seduced him into slumber like some dewy-eyed old codger sitting on a porch in summer.

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