The Redemption of August
by Tom Purdom
This story copyright 2000 by Tom Purdom. This copy was created for
Jean Hardy's personal use. All other rights are reserved. Thank you for
honoring the copyright.
Published by Seattle Book Company,
www.seattlebook.com.
* * *
How can someone who is not a professional
man of letters make an unknown audience understand what it means to live under
the Germans? How can he convey the reality of Prussian despotism to people who
live in a society that has never been deformed by such a catastrophe -- people
who live in a world that has never been deformed by such a catastrophe?
You have never been forced to stare at the sewage the German communications
satellites pour into the living rooms of Europe. You have never been questioned
by a German GD man who makes you concentrate on every word he utters whiie he
speaks a human language with all the grace of someone who has spent his life
grunting and barking. You have never seen a classroom of French children
standing at attention while they sing -- in their own languages -- a "hymn" in
praise of the very man -- the German Kaiser himself -- who is the ultimate
symbol of their degradation.
I realize you may not
know what a "communications satellite" is. I am assuming no one will read this
for at least fifty years. If you happen to have opened the envelope before then,
I can only tell you that someday people will transmit images -- pictures that
move -- in the same way they now transmit radio and telephone messages. Every
home will have a device that can receive such pictures. In theory, every citizen
of the civilized world will be able to enjoy, inexpensively and conveniently,
every work of genius ever created for the stage. The plays of Racine. the operas
of Lully -- they will all, in theory, be at the disposal of the most isolated
farmer.
In the milieu in which I endured most of my
early life, however, there were few occasions on which the satellites
transmitted such treasures. Hour after hour, day after day, the minds of the
European people were distracted by cheap entertainments chosen by the fat-rumped
oafs who had spread Kultur across Europe at the point of a bayonet.
One of my uncles spent six years of his life in
prison because he had dared to resist our German "overseers" and the "friendly
government" that shined their Prussian boots. I myself was forced to live in
exile at the southern tip of Africa. From my twenty-third birthday until I was
almost forty -- through all the most vigorous years of my young manhood -- I was
cut off from my language... from the art, and music, and food and wine of my own
people... from all the familiar daily realities that feed the soul of the true
patriot.
* * *
My name is Alain Varess. I am writing this
in the year 1914 but I was born in Lyon in 1971. Only two months ago. I was
breathing the poisoned air of the ninth year of the twenty-first century. Anyone
who happens to read this during the next few years will be convinced I am a
lunatic. Fifty years from now -- when gigantic airplanes roar across the skies
and human beings routinely use electronic entertainment devices -- my story will
seem more believable. If Mr. "Greenway" is right, my readers may even be living
with communications satellites and electronic information systems by then. And
only a few years beyond that -- before the end of the century -- you will see
the beginning of the research that brought me -- and the man I had come to foil
-- on a journey through time itself.
I do not fully
understand the scientific discoveries that brought me here. I was only an
administrator -- an accountant -- at the observatory that employed me. I can
only tell you the principle I used had something to do with the immense gravity
fields that surround certain astronomical objects. One of the younger
astronomers at the observatory realized that time could be twisted in some
fashion and began to experiment with his ideas. He confided in a slightly older
colleague who had become something of a confidante, she told me about it, and
two years later I found myself standing near a rural road in France, with a coil
rising behind me and a portable electronic device controlling the forces
generated by the coil.
Even then the functionaries
of the Prussian autocracy almost destroyed all my hopes. They didn't know I was
about to vanish into the past, of course. They were pursuing me because they had
discovered I had entered my native country on a forged passport. Fifteen minutes
before I had planned to drive to the spot I had selected for my departure, a GD
and a blue-coated collaborator arrived at the house where I was staying. The
spray from a chemical self-defense device took care of the collaborator. A kick
in the appropriate target left the sausage-bottom writhing on the lawn. By the
time I turned out of the driveway, however, a helicopter -- a special kind of
airplane -- was shadowing my truck as I raced down the road. Thirty German
troops charged toward me as I stood in front of the coil, my hands clutching the
bars of a bicycle, and waited for the forces I had unleashed to take effect.
* * *
There is no way anyone can tell you how it
feels to be relocated in time. I had planned to arrive in June of 1914, so I
could spend a month in Paris during its last summer as a free city, but it was
two weeks before I could begin to truly savor the experience. There were whole
days when I had to keep reminding myself that the people on the streets were
solid beings and I couldn't walk right through them. The first few times I ate
anything, I realized I didn't really believe the food could give my body any
nourishment.
I had planned to ride to Paris by
bicycle. I had even obtained a machine that had been built with the frame angles
and proportions that had been standard in the early part of the century. With
the bicycle and some bread and cheese. I could reach Paris without any currency.
In Paris. I would sell the twelve small diamonds I had with me and the money
problem would be solved.
It was a good plan, but of
course nothing ever works out exactly the way you planned. Only a German staff
officer could be foolish enough to believe he could foresee every eventuality.
Five miles after I started pedaling, the bicycle developed a puncture. I had
done very little bicycling in my own time and I discovered, after an hour of
struggle, that I didn't know how to use my repair kit. My custom-made machine
ended up hidden behind a bush.
Fortunately, I had
also decided to take an expensive harmonica with me, just in case I needed to
raise money before I reached Paris. Harmonicas hadn't changed much in
ninety-five years -- even the brand name was the same -- and I sold mine in the
next small town and bought a railroad ticket.
My
hasty departure had also meant that I had taken a few items that hadn't been
included in my original plans. I had been changing clothes when the German
troops had arrived and I had been forced to leave my 1914 trousers in my bag and
merely slip into my 1914 jacket. My wallet had still been tucked into the pocket
of my twenty-first century trousers, so I arrived in my new environment with
some plastic cards that twenty-first century people used for banking purposes
and an electronic calculating device -- a kind of adding machine that was about
the size and thickness of a calling card. I had also come through time with my
container of disorientation gas clipped to my shirt pocket.
So I lived in Paris, in luxury, in the last innocent
June of its history as the capital of a free republic. I ate in restaurants
where Germans were regarded as foreigners. I sat in cafés and watched the
comings and goings of the first truly free French men and women I had ever seen.
I made love to young women who had never primped and wiggled in the hope that
they might attract the touch of Teutonic paws. And on the last day of June -- as
the newspapers were still reporting the first reactions to Franz Ferdinand's
assassination -- I left for the Belgian border and my rendezvous with the
mysterious "Greenway."
* *
*
Three days later, I saw the man who had
brought me on this bizarre adventure riding away from the center of town on his
bicycle. I was returning to our mutual hotel after a visit to the railroad
station and I knew it was him because I had identified him the night before at
dinner. He was the only anglais in the town, he was the correct age, and
he claimed he was taking photographs for a book he was writing on the French
countryside, just as the Greenway I knew about had claimed.
It was now July 3. In a few days, according to my
information, he would leave the hotel and take up residence on the Dinar farm.
In less than thirty days, mobilization would be declared in France and Germany,
and General von Kluck's hordes would begin their advance through the neutral
soil of Belgium. The masterpiece of Prussian military morality -- the
"Schlieffen Plan" that they speak of with such pride -- would begin with German
troops crossing a border the apostles of Kultur had sworn to respect. The
huge masses under von Kluck's command would push back the weaker French and
British forces in front of them -- forces that were smaller than they might have
been because no one in Paris or London had believed the animals on the other
side of the Rhine would actually betray their oath and violate Belgian
neutrality. Von Kluck's hordes would swing across France in a great arc that
would take them behind Paris. and the French army would be surrounded less than
six weeks after the commencement of hostilities.
That had been the German vision, and von Kluck had
followed the plan to the letter and turned it into the reality that had
disfigured my entire life. Every horror that had blighted my existence -- every
second of the ninety-five years of shame and tyranny that had followed the
surrender of the French army in September of 1914 -- had been the direct result
of von Kiuck's relentless execution of the maneuver the German General Staff had
been planning for almost two decades.
There had been
a moment, however, when Von Kluck had considered a modification in Schlieffen's
scheme. Von Kluck has even admitted it in his memoirs. His men were tired. He
believed the French army had exhausted itself with its unsuccessful attacks
against the center of the German front. He did not know there were several
reserve divisions still posted in Paris.
Von Kluck
had been fully prepared to shorten the arc and swing in front of Paris --
where he could have been hit in the flank by the reserves the commander of the
Paris sector still had under his command. He had avoided this blunder (as you
can see if you read his memoirs with care) only because he had received an
urgent radio message -- uncoded -- in which the German high command had warned
him of the reserves and unequivocally ordered him to proceed with the original
plan.
But who had sent that message? The message on
which the entire success of Schlieffen's plan had, in the end, depended? In the
late 1940s, a small group of American academics had devoted large portions of
their careers to that question. The leaders of the "Germanic Pan-European
Hegemony" had never officially admitted it, but the testimony of several German
staff officers had indicated that no one in German headquarters had ever
transmitted such a message. In 1996. while I was browsing through a pile of
second-hand books in Johannesburg, I came across a volume that had been written
by a writer named Raymonde François Martinel who lived in the American city of
Philadelphia and called himself L'Exile. It was entitled The Conspiracies of
August and in its pages Martinel built a massive theory around the findings of a
much more famous writer, Madeline Lescaut, who had investigated certain puzzling
events that had taken place on a farm near the Belgian border. An Englishman
named Greenway had rented a room there in the month of July 1914. When the
German advance began, he told the Dinars daughter he was a British agent. He had
a radio with him and he claimed he was supposed to transmit information on
German troop movements. The daughter and her brother hid him when the Germans
searched the farm for weapons. At one point, the brother tried to leave the
house with a shotgun, so he could join some friends who were hoping to fire a
few honest volleys at the German columns. "Greenway" became afraid the boy would
attract attention to the farm. He threatened the boy with a knife and retrieved
the gun in a confrontation in which he stabbed the young man in the thigh. The
wound became infected. The boy lost his leg a few weeks later. Years after, when
he heard about the controversy over the radio message, he wrote Madame Lescaut.
By the time she got around to visiting his village, he had died of alcoholism
and she had to piece the story together by interviewing his acquaintances.
To Raymonde the Exile, the story proved that Mr.
Greenway was the primary reason he was scraping out a living in a foreign city.
Greenway had been a German spy, Raymonde asserted. He had somehow learned, from
agents in Paris, of the forces still poised there. He had taken it upon himself
to issue an order in the name of his superiors.
It
was an entertaining, well-written book. I enjoyed the evening I devoted to it.
There were many reasons, however, why the behavior of the "spy" made little
sense to me. Could any German ever treat his chain of command so cavalierly? And
then, years later, I discovered it might be possible to travel in time...
I have often been criticized for my "impetuosity,"
and it has, in fact, sometimes gotten me into trouble. Still, I had almost been
arrested because I had decided to delay my departure by fifteen minutes and
carefully reinspect my preparations. Now, seeing Greenway ride away on his
bicycle, I grabbed a machine that had been left in front of the hotel. I had
already managed to glance through his door and determine that he had a large
trunk in his room. My trip to the train station had eliminated the possibility
he had checked a package with the attendant.
For
half an hour after we left the town, I followed him along the paved white road
that passed by neat French farmhouses and well-kept fields -- a French
countryside that had not been disfigured by hordes of automobiles, blocks of
"country homes," and the other blessings of German "technical and economic
progress." Eventually he turned onto a dirt side road and I stopped him in an
isolated spot where we were alone with the wind that blew across the wheat
fields on both sides of the road.
His eyes widened
when I pointed my revolver at him. His hands shot up in the air with such
alacrity I almost started laughing. I thought he would hand over his keys as
soon as I demanded them but instead he started arguing with me. There was
nothing in his trunk of any value, he insisted.
You
must remember that my assault on the GD man and his French valet had been the
first serious act of violence I had ever participated in. I had assumed Greenway
would follow my instructions as soon as he saw the front of my revolver. It had
never occurred to me he would stand there arguing with me.
I could have simply killed him, of course. I had
already decided I was willing to go to the guillotine. For now, though. I merely
wanted access to his radio.
I thought about knocking
him out with the revolver and realized I didn't know where to hit him or how
hard. Instead, I tried to silence his babbling by telling him the one thing that
would convince him I was willing to pull the trigger.
"Give me the keys, monsieur. I don't want to kill
you if I can avoid it but don't try to convince yourself I won't. It's the
surest way I can make certain General von Kluck never receives your famous
message. I've given up my whole life to keep you from making that transmission.
If I have to go to the guillotine to stop you, I will."
He shut up as soon as he understood. Then his whole
face lit up with excitement -- the same excitement I have seen, now and then, on
the faces of scientific researchers who have hit on some new idea that catches
their fancy The babbling started again and I realized, as I listened to that
flow of anglified French, that he had again forgotten about the gun. All he
could think of was the fact that I was a time traveler, too. That, and the fact
that my presence indicated he had "succeeded."
My
voice erupted from me in a bellow that was, I suspect, also a cry of pain. "GIVE
ME YOUR KEYS. And give me the knife on your ankle. too. I know about that also."
This time he got himself under control. He handed me
the knife. He gave me the keys. He took off his tie and let me bind his wrists
to the frame of his bicycle. But all the while he went on talking, endlessly
talking, trying to convince me he and I should "exchange information about our
alternative histories," trying to persuade me I should support his lunatic
assault on the destiny of civilization.
I slashed
both his tires with his own knife and left him still mouthing words at me as I
rode away. There was a moment, as I turned onto the paved road, when I actually
threw back my head and laughed in triumph.
Had
anyone in the whole history of the French people ever done anything that could
be compared to this? Everything the so-called "Englishman" had said made it
clear that all my hypotheses had been correct. He had indeed come here to
transmit the mysterious radio message that had forced General von Kluck to
ignore the considerations that were telling him he should modify the Schlieffen
Plan. And he had made the journey -- every sentence he had uttered had proved
it! -- because he came from a society in which von Kluck had followed his
natural instincts, the Schlieffen Plan had failed, and France had eventually
struggled through to victory! I had lived my entire life in a world in which the
source of every calamity had been a conspirator who had arrogantly altered the
natural course of history.
* *
*
The maid was
working in Greenway's room when I got back to the hotel. I had to hide in my own
room until she finished. I knew I had found the radio when I dug through the
things in Greenway's trunk and found a metal box in the bottom right hand
corner. When I tried to pull the box out of the trunk, however, I discovered it
had been welded to the bottom. I searched desperately for the lock and cursed
when I realized the meaning of the four brass disks on the left side of the box.
The disks appeared to be buttons, but they were actually an electronic device.
Greenway had secured the box with an electronic combination lock disguised as a
mechanical contrivance.
Once again I managed to
control my infamous impetuosity. I checked the corridor before I left the room.
I walked calmly and carefully through the hotel café and maintained my pace and
demeanor as I proceeded from the hotel to a store only a hundred meters away. I
purchased a sturdy long-handled ax and had it neatly wrapped before I carried it
back to his room and locked the door behind me.
This
time it was I who found myself facing a gun. There had been another knife, it
seemed -- a folding knife which wasn't mentioned in Madame Lescaut's account. He
bad cut himself free and managed to beg a ride on a passing truck.
I was confident he wouldn't shoot me. He was
obviously not interested in any action that might attract serious notice. I put
down the ax when he told me to and once again had to listen while he ranted at
me.
I had been assuming he was a German agent who
had been transported to the past by German conspirators who were trying to
rectify the mistakes of their generals. Now it occurred to me he might actually
be a megalomaniac who believed he could singlehandedly legislate the destiny of
the entire human race. According to him, the entire twentieth century had been a
series of unmitigated disasters -- and every nightmare in his catalogue had
taken place merely because the German barbarians had failed in their attempt to
conquer France. In the future he came from, the Schlieffen Plan had indeed
failed because von Kluck had modified his original orders. The war, he claimed,
had turned into a "stalemate" in which millions of men had died in frontal
attacks against fixed positions that stretched across the entire map of Europe.
After that there had been a second war which had been even worse than the first.
There had been massacres and revolutions, and eventually -- as a direct result
of the failure of the Schlieffen Plan and the outbreak of the second German
attempt to conquer Europe -- the development of "superbombs" that could destroy
entire cities. He was here, I was to believe, because the entire human race
would be wiped out if he didn't make sure Kaiser Wilhelm's hoodlums became the
masters of Europe.
Even if he was a German agent, he
was giving me many reasons to think he was not a trained professional agent. He
talked like many of the scientists and scholars I had known. He was a slight,
somewhat bony man with a protruding stomach. He was holding his gun as if it
were a harmless piece of pipe.
"What did you do in
your own time?" I asked.
He looked startled -- as if
he couldn't understand why I would ask a personal question -- and then told me
he was a physicist. At some place near London, he maintained. He had worked with
collision accelerators -- a concept I was familiar with -- and experimented with
some elementary particles I had never heard of called "quarks." He had worked
out the whole concept of time travel all by himself, he asserted, and embarked
on his journey through time entirely on his own, in total secrecy, because he
felt it was his duty to save the world from the horrors that would befall it if
the Schlieffen Plan failed. He had always been interested in history, he claimed
(an odd enthusiasm. for a physicist), and he had conceived his whole mad scheme
merely because he had always felt von Kluck's decision to modify the Schlieffen
Plan had been one of the turning points of twentieth century history.
Some of the things he said about scientific matters
sounded like phrases from the conversations I had heard in the cafeteria at the
observatory. But did that really make any difference? Couldn't a group of German
conspirators have used a real physicist as an agent? They couldn't have known he
would have to deal with someone like me, after all.
My face must have flashed him a warning. He stepped
back and took a two-handed aim at my leg.
"Don't
think I won't shoot. I caught you in this room with my trunk open. There's
nothing wrong with any of my papers. I'd like to avoid attracting attention if I
can. But don't think I won't wound you enough to keep you out of my way for a
few weeks."
I raised my hands and backed out of the
room. That night I heard a commotion in the hall and heard him supervising two
men who were moving his things out of the hotel.
*
* *
The first
letter was delivered four days later. It was a shock to realize the boy who
brought it was Léon Dinar -- the young man who would lose his leg in a few
weeks. He was obviously a stolid fellow but he was puzzled about the whole
business. It wasn't hard to use his curiosity to get him talking. Greenway had
arrived earlier than he had originally arranged and had been locked in his room
ever since. He had told Monsieur Dinar he wanted to observe the day-to-day
workings of the farm. Now he claimed he was working on his book and couldn't be
interrupted.
Léon didn't mind the bicycle ride into
town because he had a "friend" who lived there. He was still young enough, under
all that muscle, that it wasn't hard to guess the sex of the friend. I made sure
I gave him the kind of tip that would buy him a lengthy dalliance at the local
sweet shop and told him I would have a reply for him the next evening, if he was
willing to make another trip into town.
The letter
itself was a recapitulation of Greenway's rantings, organized with more care and
fleshed out with more detail. Once again I had to hear about the masses of young
men who were mowed down by the machine guns as they came out of the trenches,
the great city-destroying bombs and the threat they created for civilization....
It was a narrative that was so detailed and even
logical that I would have been a fool if I hadn't realized it had to have some
relation to a factual record. There was one detail, in fact, which was so
monstrous it was hard to believe anyone -- least of all a German agent -- could
have invented it. During the second war, he asserted, the Prussian automatons
had given their allegiance to a tyrant who had followed the perverted instincts
of the German soul to their logical conclusion and used the technological
advances of modern society to systematically gas and burn millions of people.
I pondered that section of his letter for almost an
hour after I first read it. Could any German agent have said that about his own
people?
But how could I possibly believe his claim
that the allied generals had wasted the manpower of their countries in the
massive frontal attacks he dwelled on with such relish? I could believe the
German generals could have done that. The English might have behaved that way,
too. But the generals of my own nation? With their tradition of military dash
and brilliance? My own father had followed the progress of the Japanese armies
as they had advanced across China behind armored cars and dive-bombing airplanes
later in the century. Was I supposed to believe European generals couldn't think
of that, too? During a war that was supposed to have lasted several years?
It didn't matter. Even if every word he wrote was
true, how could it matter? One fact remained. Even if he happened to be telling
the literal, unadorned truth -- and I did not believe he was -- wouldn't all the
French soldiers who died in the battles described in his letter have wanted a
world in which civilization and justice eventually triumphed? Wasn't it better
to die fighting than to live through the century of shame and barbarism he had
brought upon the nation that was the very soul and tutor of Europe?
*
* *
I sent him the best answers I could --
anything that would keep him writing. Léon went back and forth between us every
day for a week. Eventually I advised Léon that the man residing in his father's
house was a spy who had been planted by the Germans because they believed the
assassination of the Austrian Archduke would soon lead to war. I myself, I
asserted, was a government agent who was attempting to amass conclusive proof of
Greenway's identity.
One night I bicycled back to
the farm with Léon and slipped off my bicycle long before Greenway could have
seen me coming up the road. I worked my way through the fields behind the house
and joined Léon at the back door. Greenway always opened the door to his room
when Léon came back from the town with a message, the boy had told me. The two
of us could easily take such a small man by surprise and force our way in.
The door to Greenway's room creaked open as I was
creeping up the stairs behind Léon's big back. The "Englishman" had apparently
seen Léon leave his bike in front of the house and wondered why it had taken him
so long to bring his latest message.
This time I was
the one who drew his revolver. Greenway hesitated, with one hand on the door,
and I pushed my way around Léon and scrambled toward him.
He kicked at me and we grappled like lunatics at the
top of the stairs. Once I caught a maddening, tantalizing glimpse of his trunk
as I swayed in front of his door.
A blinding pain
shot up my leg. My grip on his wrists loosened and he kicked me again and
slipped free. The door slammed. I heard the bolt slide into place.
I turned around, still bent over with anguish, and
saw Léon looking up at me with a smile on his over-sized face. The oaf had
actually thought the whole thing was amusing! I bellowed at him, and then
realized his sister was standing at the bottom of the stairs. Her parents
crowded in behind her and I straightened up, in spite of the pain, and tried to
concoct an explanation that would satisfy minds that had not been dulled by
three generations of Teutonic occupation.
* *
*
Naturally,
Greenway now tried to convince Léon's sister he was a British agent, just as he
had in Madame Lescaut's account. He even showed Estelle the radio and some
credentials he had managed to counterfeit. Léon continued to bring me letters,
but he was obviously confused.
But Greenway knew, as
well as I did, that I could end all his dreams merely by saying a few words to
the right German officers when the gray-coated hordes eventually tramped past
the Dinars' house. Estelle might be able to hide him and his radio from the
standard German search for shotguns and sporting rifles -- but could she hide
him from searchers who had been informed that they should look for a British
agent and a hidden wireless? The thought of cooperating with the Prussian
sadists might make me cringe, but it was, ironically, the simplest way to assure
their ultimate defeat.
So now his letters began to
dwell on a new suggestion. Why shouldn't he and I join forces and try to
approach the leaders of the world? We already had his radio, he argued, as proof
we came from a more advanced era. Between us, we could put together
"predictions" of the next few weeks that would provide even more proof. He had
become a wealthy man in England, he maintained, by taking advantage of the
British passion for betting on sporting events. His contacts might not get him
to the prime minister, but they could easily lead to a meeting with the
"adventurous, imaginative politician" who was currently First Lord of the
Admiralty.
I probably would have rejected the idea
out of hand if he hadn't suggested we contact Winston Churchill. The only other
name he could suggest was the novelist H.G. Wells -- a man who had spent the
next thirty years hailing the German conquerors for their "unification of
Europe"! The First Lord of the Admiralty, on the other hand, had been one of my
heroes since I had been a child. He alone, of all British politicians, had
recognized that no British government could accept a conquest which had been
based on the violation of Belgian neutrality. He alone, for the rest of his
life, had steadfastly stood by the French people.
I
could even imagine Churchill might believe our story. His love of bold ideas was
legendary. And I had, of course, a piece of evidence that would throw the most
determined skeptic into turmoil. A politician with a limited knowledge of
technical matters might not understand why Greenway's radio was significantly
different from a contemporary wireless. My calculator would seem like a miracle
to anyone who watched it multiply two numbers.
And
wouldn't it be better, assuming Churchill listened to us, if we could save
France from defeat and help her avoid the trials of a protracted war, too?
I had now read over a dozen of Greenway's lengthy
letters and I was no longer so certain he was the tool of a monstrous conspiracy
some Teutonic fanatics had hatched in a future society in which von Kluck's
march had met with the fate it deserved. He had told me many things about
himself in his letters and some of them did, indeed, indicate that he might very
well be the person he asserted he was -- a lonely man who had brooded over the
state of the world in the isolation of his study. He was even a bird-watcher --
the traditional diversion of the solitary Englishman. According to one of his
letters, he had decided to leave his own time -- which was apparently sometime
in the early 1980s -- because one of the world leaders of the era -- an American
president! if I understood him -- was leading his country into a military
buildup that would, Greenway had decided, "inevitably end in a war that would
destroy civilization." His career as a scientist, he claimed, had been
"mediocre." He had always known, he said, that if he ever discovered anything
important, it would be by sheer accident. He had kept his discoveries to himself
-- and made the journey on his own initiative-because he had believed this was
his opportunity to finally do something significant for the world.
It was a picture that fitted my own observations of
scientists. Many men in those occupations turn to politics when they realize
they will never be the Pasteurs or the Curies they dreamed of being. Many of
them find it easy to convince themselves that their superior knowledge of
science must be accompanied by a superior understanding of political questions.
I paced the floor of my room. Greenway's letters
became more and more agitated. On the 27th of July -- six days before the first
German boots would tramp into Belgium -- I agreed to meet him the next evening.
* * *
I was supposed to get off my bicycle a
hundred yards from the house and let him see me. Then -- when he was sure I
couldn't slip into the house while he was out of his room -- he would come down
and we would meet on the road and discuss our next move.
Instead, he was waiting for me behind a hedge when I
got off the bike at the appointed place. Again, I found myself looking at his
revolver.
I had realized he might do something like
this and I had deliberately left my jacket at the hotel and bicycled in my vest.
I raised my hands as soon as he revealed himself and twisted from side to side
so he could see I couldn't possibly have a gun.
"I'm
unarmed," I said. "I want you to understand that. I'm no threat."
His voice sounded choked and raspy -- as if he
hadn't talked to anyone in several days. "I just want the calculator, Alain.
Just give me that and then you can go."
I shrugged.
"It's what I came to do."
"It's the only way I can
be sure it will get to the right people. I can't stay here while you're running
around loose and I can't assume you've had a change of heart. I still want you
to join me later -- after I've made the initial contacts."
I shrugged again. "The calculator is in my vest
pocket. What do you want me to do with it?"
"Lay it
on the ground. Then step back three steps. And don't think I won't shoot. Once
I've got that thing in my hands, it won't matter if I cripple you for life."
I took the calculator out of my vest and counted off
three steps after I laid it down. He frowned at me, not completely convinced I
was harmless, and stepped forward with his eves fixed on my face.
There was a moment when his gaze wavered. He was
bending over the calculator and he had apparently yielded to the impulse to
press the buttons and satisfy himself it really worked.
I had been afraid he would realize one of the "pens"
in my vest pocket was twice as thick as it should be, but apparently they still
didn't have disorientation gases in the society he had come from. He looked up
as I stepped toward him but he still wasn't prepared to shoot. The tight stream
of liquid leaped out of the generator and formed a cloud in front of his face. I
slipped to one side -- just in case he fired -- and he sat down and stared at me
with the same stupid look I had seen on the face of the GD man.
Estelle was working in the kitchen but this time I
could forget legalities. She slumped to the floor in her turn and I grabbed the
small hatchet her family kept near the rear door.
Greenway had fortified his bedroom door with a
spring-loaded lock after my last visit but by now I was berserk. The hatchet
smashed against wood and metal. More blows knocked the lock off his chest. I
raised the hatchet above my head and the blade fell on the metal box and its
Satanic contents.
I had considered the possibility
he might buy a replacement for his radio and then realized it was a pointless
concern. He needed a portable, easily concealed, battery-powered instrument that
could send a strong message across fifty kilometers. Nothing like that existed
in the milieu we were living in. Every blow of my ax destroyed components that
would not be replaceable for at least fifty years.
He was already standing in the yard when I raced
outside, but what did it matter? I had his gun in my belt. I had the calculator.
His radio was in ruins. I pointed the gas device at him and he raised his hands
in front of his face and stepped back.
I almost
laughed when I looked back and saw him following me on his own bicycle. He was
almost fifteen years older than I, after all. Then I realized he was gaining on
me. I had already ridden out to the farm. I had put all my strength into the
work I had done with the ax. I had been in a state of agitation from the moment
he pulled his pistol on me.
I took the revolver out
of my belt and managed to dump the bullets onto the road as I pedaled. Then I
waved the gun itself at him and hurled it into a wheat field. This was not the
time to shoot someone. There was only one more thing I could do for France --
and I intended to do it.
I had hoped he might stop
and try to retrieve the gun but he kept coming. His face was so inflamed he
looked like he had been lying on a beach. I bent over the handlebars as if I was
sprinting through the last mile of the Tour de France and managed to put some
extra meters between us. Then my breath ran out and he closed the distance I had
gained and cut my lead by another meter.
It was, in
retrospect. a mixture of the grandiose and the comic that only a Gallic mind
could truly appreciate. It was one of the decisive moments in European history.
The fate of every man and woman born in the twentieth century hung on the
outcome -- and the entire scene consisted of two breathless middle-aged men
frantically pedaling bicycles along a rural road!
I
could have handed him the calculator, of course. I could even understand why he
might have decided he couldn't trust me. But suppose I did give it to him -- and
then discovered he really was, after all, a German time traveler who had been
sent here to reverse the natural course of history? Even if he really was the
solitary megalomaniac he claimed to be -- suppose he took his story to the
leaders of Europe and only the Germans believed him? Hadn't he already proved,
by the very scheme that had brought him here, that he was a brooding fanatic who
would help the Prussian hordes crush Europe beneath their boots if he believed
that was the only way he could achieve his aims?
Two
or three farm trucks lumbered past us. A salesman's automobile puttered by in
the opposite direction. I veered around a horse-drawn wagon loaded with produce
and a moment later my frenzied pursuer rolled past the horse's head.
I realized he was going to catch up with me anyway
and decided to slow down in the hope the presence of the wagon driver might help
him get his rage under control. He reached out to grab my shoulder as he pulled
abreast and I veered toward the edge of the road as I pulled the gas device out
of my pocket.
The bicycle slid out from under me. I
fell toward Greenway and we collapsed in a tangle of limbs and machinery. Tubing
pressed painfully against my back. He managed to roll onto me and I covered my
face and neck with my arms when I saw his fists falling toward me.
His fists pounded on my chest as if he was trying to
stun me by stopping my heart. The horse neighed somewhere above me. I felt a
little stabbing pain in my rib cage -- as if a sharp corner had been pushed into
my skin -- and almost smiled when I understood the irony of the situation.
*
* *
I have no idea where Greenway is now. He
may, at this very moment, be sitting in some room -- in England? in Germany? --
staring helplessly at the useless, bent object he himself mangled in his rage.
Today is August 6 -- Liège Day, the Day of Ultimate
Horror, the day when the Kaiser's arrogant henchmen committed the crime that
every honorable spirit will remember from now until the end of time. Only a few
hours ago, when the city of Liège ignored a German ultimatum and refused to
surrender, a German zeppelin flew over the city and killed nine defenseless
civilians by dropping bombs from the air. Every year of my life, from the time I
was a few years old, I commemorated August 6 with all the ceremonies I was
permitted to attend. As a boy in France. I was a part of that irrepressible
minority who attended secret memorial services and wore mourning clothes to
school. In the years of my exile, I always participated in the silent march
through the streets of Johannesburg that my fellow expatriates organized as an
annual reminder of the nightmares that lurk in the German soul. This time, I
shall honor the Martyred Nine by reporting for induction in the army of the
French Republic. It took most of my last cash to arrange a proper set of
identification papers, but I'm certain no one will look too closely at the
results.
All around me brave young men are singing
as they march toward the frontier, their faces alive with the belief they are
fighting the greatest evil the world has ever known. With them it is only belief
-- the intuition of minds that have not been clouded by the Teutonic fog that
lay across the nation I was raised in. This time, there shall be someone
marching in their ranks who fights from knowledge -- someone who has actually
seen the horrors of the world they and their descendants will live in, if they
let themselves be defeated.
August will never again
be remembered as a month in which evil won its greatest victory. August 6 will
never again be a day that mankind must remember with shame and anguish.
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