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Maelstrom
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THE INFINITY ENGINES SERIES
BOOK II
Andrew Hastie
Contents
MAELSTROM
1. Alone
2. Present
3. Similar
4. E
5. Dangerous Materials
6. Ascendancy
7. The Ministry
8. Interrogation
9. Typewriter
10. The Colonel
11. To the Palace
12. Elizabeth I
13. Colonel’s Study
14. Gunpowder
15. Founder
16. Dreadnought
17. 1066
18. Alchemist
19. The Breach
20. Alone
21. Reset
22. Mum
23. Caitlin
24. Recovery
25. Nemesis
26. The Mage
27. Skull of Daedalus
28. Chapter House
29. DDS
30. Moon Garden
31. Draconian Trials
32. Induction
33. Castillian Queen
34. Beach
35. Boat
36. The Island Of The Day Before
37. Tombwalk
38. Haast Eagles
39. Daedalans
40. Lessons
41. Vorpal Combat
42. Return of the Cat
43. Preparations
44. Derado
45. Trial II
46. Kaffa
47. Arrows
48. Da Recco
49. Diversion
50. The Maps
51. 1664
52. After
53. The Second Cut
54. Witch-hunt
55. Zenoscope
56. Skull Of Daedalus
57. Missing
58. Briefing
59. Cairo Stone
60. The Old Kingdom
61. Sacrifice
62. The Great Breach
63. Twelfth Legion
64. Singularity
65. Maelstrom
66. Josh
67. Daedalus
68. Observatory
69. Lost
70. Twenty Hours
71. Bad Experiment
72. Gods & Monsters
73. Time Loop
74. Nautilus
75. Eschaton
76. Battle
77. Grimoire
78. The Book
79. Exhibit
80. Illness
81. Founder
82. Bedlam
83. Caitlin
84. Torture
85. Da Recco
86. Dalton
87. Armageddon
88. Plan
89. 2000
90. Dad
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Copyright © Andrew Hastie 2018
Published by Here Be Dragons Limited.
The right of Andrew Hastie to be identified as the Author of the Work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Design and Patents Act 1988.
All rights reserved.
No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means without the prior written permission of the Author, nor be otherwise circulated in any form of binding or cover than that in which it is published and without a similar condition being imposed on the subsequent purchase.
All characters in this publication are fictitious and any resemblance to real persons, living or dead is purely coincidental.
5.3
To my beautiful wife and daughters, thank you for everything.
To my father, may you rest in peace.
A x
1
Alone
[Boju, Chu. Date: 9.494]
Josh knelt staring at the space where Caitlin should have been, his hands still clutching at the grass. He could smell her perfume lingering in the air, feel the warmth of her body on the flattened ground.
Instinctively, he hit the rewind on his tachyon, and the world around him spun back two minutes. It made no difference; she was still gone, and there was no stable trail to follow.
He couldn’t bring himself to leave that moment, even though his instincts were screaming to follow, to take action, to pursue the smallest trace of her — his heart told him to stay, to wait, just in case she came back.
The sound of Sun Tzu’s cavalry came thundering across the valley. It seemed louder than before; when she’d sat there eating noodles and telling him about how the battle played out. Josh struggled to remember what she’d said; he hadn’t been paying too much attention to the words, just the shape that her mouth made as she spoke them.
He waited, desperately hoping to be wrong. Seconds turned into minutes, and still there was no sign of her. A pall of smoke rose up the side of the valley bringing with it the metallic tang of cordite and gunpowder. Josh couldn’t remember if Caitlin said they used guns and right now he didn’t care — she was gone and he had no idea what to do next.
He could sense there had been some kind of temporal adjustment — a ‘repair’ as the colonel would’ve called it. It felt like he’d been disconnected from reality, like he’d changed channels on the TV and was watching some foreign movie without subtitles.
Josh tried to focus on the memories of the last few hours. They were becoming hazy and vague, even his carefully thought out dishes for the picnic were proving hard to remember. He looked down to where they’d been laid out on the blanket and realised that too had disappeared.
Down by the river the battle raged on. One of the mounted warriors caught sight of Josh and turned his horse towards him. The rider was clad in gold and red, his face hidden behind a demonic mask. The sun glinted off the plates of his armour as they bounced rhythmically against the horse’s flanks, his hand a blur as it whipped his mount into a charge.
Watching the horse thunder towards him through the long grass, Josh decided it was time to leave. He estimated the distance between them and began to count down under his breath.
‘Ten, nine, eight, seven...’
He looked around once more, feeling the drum of the hooves tearing up the ground as the horse bore down on him.
‘Six, five, four, three...’
Josh opened his tachyon and dialled the coordinates for the colonel’s house, present day — it was the only other logical place for him to go now.
‘Two, one... ready or not,’ he muttered, flicking his middle finger at the warrior who was levelling a bow at him.
A second later an arrow ripped through the air where Josh should have been.
[>>]
2
Present
[London. Date: Present Day]
For a moment, Josh thought he’d travelled into the future; that all their talk of him being the ‘Paradox’ may have finally come true.
Except that the date on his tachyon told him it wasn’t.
He was in the present — at the frontier.
The colonel’s house was gone. The whole street, Churchill Avenue and the Gardens, had been obliterated, replaced by enormous old skyscrapers that rose up into a sickly, smog-filled sky, like rusting hulks of an abandoned civilisation.
Dirty rain stung his face, pouring down through the lattice of corroded pipes that ran between the old tower blocks. Standing in the garbage-strewn alleyway, in the semi-darkness of their permanent shadow, Josh knew that something had gone badly wrong with the continuum.
Above the decrepit towers and nicotine-coloured clouds, Josh caught tiny glimpses of blue sky. Bird-like dots circled back and forth through the lower layers of cloud where the skyscrapers punched holes through the smog. They flew erratically amongst a network of
distant walkways that stretched out between the buildings. Their movements were too unnatural to be birds, but Josh had no idea what kind of flying machines could do that — he wished he was up there.
A sudden noise brought him back down to earth. It was a feral sound, like a fox scavenging through bins, and it came from behind one of the many large metal pipes that burrowed into the ground around him.
Trying not to make a sound, Josh searched for something he could use as a weapon. The pockets of his travelling robes were empty except for the condoms, which he had optimistically acquired from an Antiquarian chemist, and there was nothing remotely useful in the sea of plastic crap that flowed around his feet.
The head of a large creature surfaced from a nearby pile of rubbish and hissed.
Josh tensed, feeling the adrenalin flood into his veins. It was huge, the largest cat he’d ever seen, or at least it had been once — its features were odd, distorted like the creature had been remade. The kind of thing the Animal Liberation types would rescue from a testing facility: half its scalp had been shaved, and there were steel bolts grafted onto the bare skull. He didn’t have the time to find out why. Whatever they’d done to Frankencat, it hadn’t improved the creature’s mood — the size of its fangs gave Josh all the motivation he needed to start looking for an escape route.
There wasn’t an obvious way out. Centuries of garbage had choked the alley, and wading through it made too much noise. It was obvious that no one came down to this level anymore. Josh wondered if the Churchill Avenue had ever existed.
There were more sounds from further down the alley — Frankencats like to hunt in packs.
Josh set his tachyon to the coordinates of the Chapter House and hit the button.
Nothing happened.
Frankencat licked his lips and moved out of the trash pile.
Josh tried the tachyon again — it was dead, and so was he.
‘Yo offenda! U got rads?’ shouted a voice from somewhere high above him.
‘No tags, on he,’ came an answer from another.
‘No chip. Swear tru?’
‘Tru as u, bro.’
‘Now double trouble. Drones be buzzin,’ warned a third.
Josh felt a sense of relief: he recognised gang slang — no matter how bizarre it sounded. He still fancied his chances with humans over re-engineered cats any day.
‘Any chance of some help?’ he shouted up to the unseen voices, trying not to sound too desperate.
A half-whispered argument broke out among the hidden gang members, too obscure and quiet for Josh to hear what they said. A minute later, something bounced across the garbage and landed between Josh and the prowling cat. It looked a lot like a pack of batteries wrapped around a battered old tin of dog food.
‘Run, no-tag, RUN!’ encouraged one of the voices.
Josh didn’t need to be told twice. As the cat leapt out to attack the package, he took off in the opposite direction.
He hadn’t gone more than a few metres when the bomb went off and an electrical discharge hit him squarely in the back. Every nerve in his body lit up as the static arced down his spine; then his legs gave way — as though someone had simply switched them off.
When Josh hit the floor, he couldn’t feel a thing — his whole body had gone numb.
The others laughed as they clambered down through the pipes.
‘Ha! No-tag runs like a crip!’
3
Similar
‘You find him where?’
‘12-240, down on the base.’
‘Scan?’
‘No tag. No, nothin — cep tique ticker.’
‘An jonny hats,’ another giggled.
‘Nearly scav meat.’
Everyone laughed. Josh listened quietly: he’d identified at least five different voices since he’d woken a few minutes earlier. He still couldn’t move his legs. Whatever taser-bomb they’d used had knocked out his nervous system better than a night of tequila slammers.
‘He no scender,’ an older voice interrupted. ‘Not a shade, neither.’
The aroma of charring meat drifted into Josh’s nostrils, and his stomach growled. He was hungry, which meant he’d obviously been out for some time.
‘He wake,’ said a girl’s voice.
A boot was inserted roughly under Josh’s stomach and flipped him over. His eyes were clogged with dust and grit from laying face down on the floor and they watered as he struggled to blink away the grime, blurring the figures that sat around the fire in front of him.
As the feeling returned to his arms, he realised that they’d cable-tied his hands behind his back.
Josh’s head swam when he tried to sit upright. The air was heavy and filled with dust which caught in his throat and he coughed so hard it made it difficult to catch his breath.
‘Deadman’s rattle,’ hissed one of the group.
‘Oxy,’ instructed the older voice.
Someone held a mask over his nose and mouth, allowing Josh to take long, deep breaths of pure, sweet air until the coughing passed.
‘Two U’s,’ instructed the elder. ‘Max.’
They took the mask off and Josh’s vision cleared. He seemed to be inside some kind of abandoned tube tunnel, the walls were made of rusted metal sheets bolted together like a ship’s bulkhead. Over the fire, the charred remains of Frankencat rotated slowly on a spit. From the way the flames flickered Josh assumed there must be a steady flow of air running through the tunnel, and somewhere far off he thought he could hear the faint thrum of fans.
He was surrounded by a desperate gang of street kids, dressed in rags, their faces obscured by scarves and filter masks. Each of them held a home-made weapon out in front of them, their eyes wide with fear — some of them looked no older than eight or nine.
‘Why no tag?’ the elder voice asked from the shadows beyond the fire.
Josh’s mouth was parched, and the cough returned when he tried to speak.
‘LL, juice him.’
Someone placed a straw in Josh’s mouth, and he sucked down a warm, sugary liquid that reminded him of an old blackcurrant squash. It was awful, like a hundred years passed its sell-by date, but it was enough to loosen the dust in his throat.
‘What year is this?’ he asked hoarsely.
There was a sharp intake of breath from the gang, as though Josh had just cursed all their mothers.
‘Oldspeak,’ whispered some in disbelief.
One of the larger boys stepped forward, putting his blade across Josh’s neck and speaking in a slow staccato as if the words were a foreign language.
‘You. Tell. Us. Where. You. From. Or. I. Cut!’
The edge of the blade glowed with an electric blue halo and Josh felt the surge of current against his skin. It looked home-made, but it was deadly enough — he dropped the idea of fighting his way out.
The face of the boy holding the blade was half-covered by a filtration mask, but Josh saw enough to recognise the craziest set of eyebrows in South London.
‘Benny? Benny, it’s me, Josh!’
A tiny flicker of surprise flashed in the boy’s hard eyes, tempered by too many years of mistrust to be thrown off-guard by a stranger knowing his name.
‘How. U. Know. Me?’
The pressure of the blade on Josh’s neck increased. It was obvious that this version of Benny didn’t recognise him, but Josh gambled on the chance that the rest of his friends would’ve still hooked up in this timeline.
‘I know all of you! Dennis, Lilz, Shags. I’ve come to help you.’
There was another collective gasp, as if Josh had just performed some incredible magic trick. Some members of the group began slowly creeping closer towards him.
‘You. Help. Us.’ Benny spat as he took the knife away from Josh’s neck and turned towards the others. ‘No one. Help. We Shade. We help our own.’
‘Shade,’ intoned the rest of the group, putting their hands over their eyes.
Josh looked around, recognising the ne
arest ones. Dennis resembled a half-dead scarecrow, his long curly hair pulled back and threaded with all manner of ribbons, sweet wrappers and feathers. Lilz wore hardly anything at all, just a collage of plastic sheets which she’d made into a patchwork dress that only just covered her modesty, but allowed all of her many tattoos to show through.
Shags looked like he’d been in a war: his right arm was gone, and a metal device covered one side of his skull including his left eye, causing his head tilt to one side.
‘Stand him,’ commanded Lilz before Josh could ask what the hell happened — she seemed to be more senior in this reality.
Josh struggled to see who the owner of the older voice was. He guessed he was watching how this played out.