Chapter 2
The dining room was busy, but with a generous gratuity they were shown into a private area. Cynda sat facing the door.
“Paranoid?” Defoe suggested.
“Hell, yes,” she declared, plopping her hat on the table. “Aren’t you?”
“Sometimes.” He ordered tea and cake, his words brusque. Meanwhile, her delusion shambled across the table and parked himself next to a sugar bowl. He had a fascination with those for some reason.
“So what’s going on here?” she asked once the server puttered off.
Defoe held up a hand for silence, then opened his interface and positioned it on the table. “It’s set to dampen our conversation. You’d have to be standing on top of us to overhear us.” It was a clever trick. To a Victorian, it would look like he was just overly concerned about the time.
“More of Morrisey’s fancy software?”
“Exactly.” Nevertheless, he lowered his voice. “We are experiencing a power struggle between our time and the future. Now is the battleground.”
“Morrissey said now was very unstable.”
“Extremely, or Sergeant Keats wouldn’t be facing the noose.”
“I thought it was because I sidetracked him a few weeks ago so he didn’t catch Flaherty when he was supposed to.”
“I doubt it was completely your fault, though you may have contributed to the time aberration,” Defoe explained. “I’ve inadvertently altered timelines before, but nothing came of it. It always went back on track.”
“Morrisey thinks someone else had already stirred things up, and I just gave it a bit more oomph.”
“Very likely. You play God, and things happen.”
She opened her mouth to protest, but bit her tongue as the server approached with a tray. Defoe clicked the interface shut and moved it out of the way.
“There ya are, sir. Nice and hot. The cakes are fresh. I bake them myself,” she said.
“Thank you, madam.”
Cynda performed the honors, doling out their refreshments as Defoe opened the interface and replaced it on the table.
“Morrisey said things go very badly for the shifters up the time stream,” she ventured.
Defoe’s smile dimmed. “I’m surprised he told you that. Theo’s usually more discreet.” He grew pensive. “If he trusts you that much...” He nodded to himself, a decision made.
“I met my first Future in 1979. I’d gone there to see one of the old moving pictures, Time After Time.”
“I know that one. H.G. Wells chases Jack the Ripper to 1979 San Francisco to retrieve his time machine. It’s one my favorites.”
“All utter nonsense, of course,” Defoe replied. “Still, it was great fun listening to the audience discuss the possibility of time travel, little knowing that someone from nearly eight decades into the future was sitting among them.”
“I wish I’d done that,” Cynda said wistfully.
“I didn’t pay much attention to the man sitting to my right until we’d left the theater. As we reached the street, he said, “Not quite accurate, is it, Mr. Defoe?”
“That had to spook you,” Cynda said, grinning.
“It did. He said his name was Robert Anderson, and the news he brought was anything but good. He told me what happens to the Transitives once their secret is made public knowledge.” Defoe took a long sip of tea. “Needs brandy,” he grumbled.
“What year was he from?”
“2075. Apparently he and some of the other Futures felt it was time we knew what was coming.”
“Does Guv know this?”
He shook his head. “Anderson said laws are enacted to prevent shifters from passing the ability when they die, keeping them out of sensitive Government jobs.” He frowned. “In the future, Rovers can’t be shifters.”
She dropped her spoon on the table. “Why not?”
“It’s a safety issue, they say. If you can look like anyone, you could mess with history and no one will know.”
“But you’re a shifter,” she said, trying to get a handle on this. “You and Morrisey. You guys invented this technology, and then you’re not safe enough to be part of it?”
He shook his head. “According to Anderson, the Transitives begin to fight back in 2065, going underground. By 2083, another group takes advantage of our distraction and it all goes to hell. Our petty war makes us lose the most important battle: our future.”
“What happens?” she asks.
“He wouldn’t tell me.”
“But you said he was ’075. How would he know—”
“I think he got the word from a Future further up the time stream.”
Cynda huffed. “Great. Like a little bucket brigade of warnings trickling down to us.”
Defoe delivered a disgruntled look at her analogy. Fortunately, the server returned, checking on them. Once the woman was gone, beaming at another one of his compliments, Defoe opened his interface again.
Leaning back in the chair, he said, “Those ahead of us are becoming actively involved in whatever is going on here. I think this time period is critical for them in some way. We were both off-timed for a reason.”
“Why not just tell us Copeland was involved in Chris’ death?” she said, adding more sugar to her tea. “Why not just help us outright? It’s not like it’s going to get any more screwed up.”
Defoe arched an eyebrow as if she were being na?ve. “There’s far more at stake than just Chris’ murder. Some of the Futures want the Transitives’ secret to be revealed much earlier. They feel that if the world knew of them in the late nineteenth century, then the sanctions wouldn’t be put in place, or if they were, they’d be removed by the twenty-first century.”
“That’s overly optimistic.”
He issued a weary sigh. “Well, that’s not our problem. We need to find out what’s happening here, and what it has to do with the explosives. Did Morrisey tell you how the Transitives are organized?”
“Yes,” she said, cutting a piece of cake.
“What do you know, so I don’t have to repeat myself?”
Cynda set the knife aside, sad the food had to wait. It looked yummy. She closed her eyes and visualized the shifters’ organizational tree. It seemed to help if she saw something in her mind before trying to verbalize it.
“The Ascendant is the top dog,” she began. “He has eight killers at his command: the Lead Assassin and the Seven, who follow the Lead’s orders. The Lead is always a Virtual. There are the Twenty who report to the head guy and determine when it is time to replace him. Then there’s The Conclave, which is more for show than anything.”
Only after the fact did she realize why she’d earned herself a frown. His alter ego, Livingston, was a member of The Conclave.
“Did Theo discover who was the Ascendant at this point in history?” he inquired.
She shook her head. “He’s working on it. He said something about going to some special archive collection.”
“That sounds right. A lot of the Transitives’ history is not in electronic form. How about the membership of the Twenty?”
Cynda dug the pendant out from under her bodice, pulling it over her head. Clicking it open, she pressed her thumb against the picture of her parents. Nothing happened.
“Index finger on the back,” her delusion called out from near the cake. He was holding a small piece between two legs.
Thanks.
Once the device had acknowledged that she had legitimate access, the photo vanished and the dial lit up.
“Morrisey’s doing,” she explained in response to Defoe’s mystified expression. “He gave me a database of images so I can look through them every night and refresh my mind.”
“He’s known for those sorts of gadgets,” her companion observed with a smirk. “Sort of like Q in the old James Bond movies.”
“Who?”
He grimaced. “Never mind. It was before your time.”
She put the pendant near her mouth. “List Twenty,” she murmured.
Names began marching across the tiny screen. “Let’s see. We’ve got a Jackson, Marshall, Hyde-Smith, McClelland, Winston, Rivers, and Baron-Reid. That’s all he could—”
“Do you have a full name for Winston?” he asked, his voice suddenly brittle.
“Sure.” She addressed the device. “List particulars for Winston.” The screen lit up, filling with information. “Adelaide Winston, age twenty-eight. Born—”
Defoe’s cup slammed down onto the saucer, his eyes distant. He wiped his mouth with a napkin.
Whoa. I hit a nerve.
“You know something about her?” Cynda ventured.
“It appears she’s one of the Twenty,” he replied brusquely, as if that were the only answer. His eyes snapped back to hers. “What do you intend to do next?”
“Try to get back to the middle of October, I guess.”
“Don’t bother. I suspect you won’t be allowed.”
Her mouth dropped open. “But that screws up everything I planned!”
“So?” he chided. “You’re a Rover. Think on your feet for a change.”
Jerk. He’d been cranky ever since she mentioned the Winston woman.
“Well, maybe I can call in a few favors. Flaherty has to come forward and save Keats.”
Defoe snorted. “You’re a fool if you think he’ll do that.”
That did it. No one called her a fool, even the Father of Time Travel.
“So what are you going to do, then?”
He closed his interface and tossed money on the table, not bothering to answer. “Let’s get out of here.”
Right before they made their transfers, Cynda dug out the business card from the hotel. “I’m at the Arundel at Victoria Embankment.” He didn’t write any of it down. That she envied. As she started to say goodbye, he triggered his interface and was gone.
“He’s a piece of work,” her delusion said.
“Yeah, he is.”
The moment the transfer stabilized, she checked the interface. November fourth, the day she’d checked into the hotel. She made a beeline toward the closest newspaper boy, exasperated she had to use newsprint as a means to verify the date. Both the paper and the technology agreed. At least that was a start.
“Time for Plan B,” she muttered. Whatever the hell that is.
~??~??~??~
So many times he’d been in this room awaiting Adelaide’s arrival, always with a mixture of elation and heady desire. Tonight was different. She had never mentioned she was a member of the Twenty, never indicated she had a loyalty to anyone but herself. Likewise, he’d only shown her Malachi Livingston’s form, not his real one. More than once he’d wanted to bare his soul, tell her he was really Harter Defoe, a man from the future. He’d never been able to take that leap of faith.
Neither of them had been totally honest, and that made it worse.
The door opened and she hurried into the room. Adelaide never hurried in any fashion.
“Malachi?” When he did not offer his hand in their special greeting, she halted abruptly. “Is it truly you?”
Only then did he take her hand and make the sign in her palm. She returned it.
“Thank heavens,” Adelaide said. “No one has heard from you in over a week. I was so worried.”
“I was indisposed,” he responded coolly, stepping back.
“Even your assistant, William, was concerned about you, as well. He came calling the other day to ask after you. Where have you been?”
“Recuperating—someone tried to kill me.”
Horror filled her face. “He said he’d—”
Defoe held his tongue, forcing her to speak.
Adelaide regained her composure. “Only this morning, I learned that the Ascendant has ordered your death, for no apparent reason. I urged the Lead Assassin to slow the process so I might have time to warn you.”
“I was injured almost a week ago,” Defoe informed her with a frown.
Confusion clouded her face. “That does not follow with what he told me.”
Defoe didn’t bother to explain he had enemies in two different centuries. “Since when does the Lead Assassin speak so openly about murder?”
Adelaide sank into a nearby chair with an agitated rustle of silk. “I pray that you will forgive me for what I am about to tell you.”
She was afraid. Of me, or her master?
“I am a member of the Twenty, Malachi. I am the Intermediary between that body and the Ascendant. I do not readily reveal that fact to anyone. The longer I have known you, the more I’ve come to realize you’re an honorable man, and now I regret not having shared that confidence earlier.”
She sounds so sincere.
“Once this crisis is over, I intend to resign from the Twenty and go to Paris. I have already found someone to purchase the house and the furniture.” She looked directly at him, pleading in her voice. “I intend to start over, Malachi. I sincerely pray you will join me.”
He pushed aside her offer. “What crisis?”
She paused for a moment, struggling with the change that had come over him. “The Ascendant is playing us, one and all,” she explained. “If we do not have a satisfactory answer out of him by mid-week, he will be replaced. The Lead Assassin is in agreement with me on this point. We cannot risk exposure.”