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“You'll come too, of course!”

Wilde took Burton's hand and shook it. “No, old friend. This is where we must say goodbye. I'm too old to go hurrying out into the depths of Africa.”

“But Quips! You'll be killed!”

“Yes. But thanks to the help you gave me when I was a boy, I have lived, Captain, and to live is the rarest thing in the world. Most people exist, that is all.”

“But-”

“I want to spend my last hours with the man I love.”

Burton put a hand to his friend's shoulder. “I'm glad you found happiness in this ugly world. What's his name?”

“Paul. He was a shopkeeper in his younger days-what people call a very ordinary man, but it happened that he brought to me extraordinary peace of mind and contentment.”

Burton smiled, and his eyes filled with tears. “I fear I may weep in front of you again, Quips.”

“The clock is ticking. Be off with you, man!”

Burton loosed an unsteady breath, opened the door, and stepped out into the hot mist of the Taboran night. He crossed to the motor-carriage where the three guards waited. One of them opened its door and gestured for him to enter.

“Captain!” Oscar Wilde called from the doorway.

The explorer turned.

“If the processes of time and history truly are subjective, do not be afraid of the past. If people tell you that it is irrevocable, do not believe them. The past, the present, and the future are but one moment. Time and space, succession and extension, are merely accidental conditions of thought. The imagination can transcend them.”

Oscar Wilde smiled and closed the door.

Dawn wasn't far off. Tabora was enveloped in steam. A great crowd of people milled through it, moving alongside the motor-carriage in an easterly direction.

“Are they trying to leave the city?” Burton asked.

“I suppose so,” one of the Tommies replied. “But to make it through Hell's Run, you either have to be in a very fast vehicle or crawling along on your own, keeping low and out of sight. A mob like this will never make it. They'll be slaughtered!”

“It's certain death if they stay,” one of the other men noted, “so it's worth taking the risk. I'm going to chance it, for sure.”

Burton watched in horror as shadowy forms occasionally emerged from the pall: people with fear in their eyes, carrying bags and bundles and children, looking hunted and desperate.

“Bismillah!” he muttered. “Nowhere to go, and very little chance of getting there. This is ghastly.”

With delays and diversions, the vehicle made slow progress, and the three soldiers became increasingly nervous.

“I'm sorry, sir. We didn't count on this.”

Screams and shouts came out of the cloud.

A line of steam spheres shot past.

Burton heard a gunshot.

The motor-carriage moved on.

Finally, they drew to a stop and the Tommies disembarked. The king's agent followed and was escorted to a door in the side of a warehouse. Stepping through, he entered a very expansive and well-lit space.

“Good! You made it!” Bertie Wells called.

The little war correspondent was standing beside one of two big harvestman machines. They were of the variety Burton had become familiar with here in the future-with a saddle on top of the carapace instead of a seat inside it-but they were slung rather lower to the ground than he'd seen in other models, with the middle joints of the legs rising high to either side of the body.

“Built for speed!” Wells a

“I assume we're to escape the city on these things?”

“Yes. We have to set off now while fortune favours us.”

“In what ma

Wells gri

“The lurchers? Why?”

“No one knows!”

Burton turned to his escort: “You men heard that?”

They nodded.



“So get going! Get out of the city. Africa's a big continent. Find a quiet valley, build a village, live off the land, stay out of trouble.”

“And learn to speak German,” one of the men said.

“Yes, that might be advisable.”

They saluted and hastily departed.

Burton joined his friend by the giant arachnids. There were bulging pa

“Follow me!” Wells called.

The two spiders clanked out of the warehouse and onto a wide thoroughfare. For half a mile, the machines scuttled along the road, weaving in and out between other vehicles, with crowds surging along to either side of them. Then they passed the last outlying building and Wells led the way off the road and onto the dusty sava

“We'll go eastward across country,” Wells said. “If we stay a little north of the exodus, we'll be closer to the German forces but free of the crowds.”

“What's your destination, Bertie?”

“My only objective is to get past the end of Hell's Run. After that, I don't know. Where do we have to go to get you home to 1863?”

“To the Mountains of the Moon.”

Wells shook his head. “We'll not get through the Blood Jungle. It's impassable.”

“Nevertheless.”

The war correspondent lifted his shoulders and let them drop. “Whatever you say. Onward!”

“Wait!” Burton snapped. He pointed to Wells's left, at the ground.

His friend looked down. “What the hell?” he uttered in astonishment.

A line of poppies was sprouting out of the hard earth.

Wells looked at Burton, a baffled expression on his face.

“It keeps happening,” the king's agent said. “They bloom right in front of me, in an instant.”

“It's impossible, Richard. How can they grow so fast? Have the Eugenicists made them?”

“Howis one thing, Bertie, but I'm more interested in why!”

They watched as the flowers opened, a long line of them, snaking unevenly into the haze.

“North,” Burton muttered. “Bertie, I want to follow them.”

“It will take us straight into the German trenches. If the Hun doesn't do for us, the lurchers will.”

“Maybe.”

Wells reached down and unclipped the sheath containing his rifle. He took his pistol from its holster, checked that it was fully loaded, then slipped it back into place. He looked at Burton, smiled, and, in his high-pitched squeaky voice, said, “Well then: in for a pe

The two harvestmen scurried northward, following the line of red flowers, and disappeared into the mist.

“What the devil are you playing at?” William Trounce roared. “You nearly gave me a bloody heart attack!”

Herbert Spencer lowered the pistol, which, when he'd pulled the trigger, had done nothing.

“Herbert! Explain yourself!” Burton demanded.

“I'm sorry, William,” Spencer said. “I didn't mean to scare you.”

“How in blue blazes can shooting at a man's head not scare him, you tin-headed dolt?”

“But I didn't shoot, an' that's the point.”

“Not for want of trying! I clearly saw you squeeze the trigger!”

“So did I,” Swinburne added. He'd drawn his own weapon and was pointing it uncertainly at the philosopher.

“Yus, an'-as I expected-nothin' bloomin' well happened, did it!”