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The giant serpent rose up out of the sea, the great loop of its body curving up into hazy night, then its eyeless head and awful vertical maw turned and slammed down on the edge of the galley. Tacitus was again knocked off his feet. Struggling up and stumbling to an inner guard rope, he looked down and saw that the monster had taken out the side of the ship and was now feasting on the slaves. The inner parts of its mouth revolving like some engine, it drew them in, screaming, by their chains. There was no question that the ship would go down, so perhaps this was the battle he was being called to. He drew his gladius and leapt down into the chaos. Knocking aside those begging him in pidgin Latin to release them, and grabbing at him in desperation, he made his way to the horror that was chewing on the ship. He raised his weapon and drove it into a wall of flesh. Once, twice, but seemingly to no effect. Then a tentacle snapped out of darkness beside him and knocked him past a revolving hell of teeth and out into the storm. He struck a scaled flank that lacerated his legs as he fell past it, and then he was down into the sea, still clutching his gladius. He could not swim and he prepared himself for death, relaxed for it. And something took him away from the storm, into some nether hell, then out into bright sunlight.

Tacitus fell face first onto a soft surface, coughed and gasped as he fought for breath, then hauled himself upright and turned, ready to attack the figures that loomed over him. Then, in the presence of gods, he went down on his knees, his blood leaking into briny sand.

‘So this is the torbearer,’ said the tall golden woman in her strange white clothing. Tacitus did not understand the words then, but the time would come when he did.

The man, who had to be Apollo, said bitterly, ‘The galley went down—that was always a matter of historical record. The beast didn’t cause any paradox it couldn’t sustain by eating everyone on board.’

The man now reached down, grabbed Tacitus by the shoulder, and with infinite ease, hauled him to his feet. In the Roman’s native Latin he said, ‘You will help us to better understand that thing on your arm, before it takes you on your way again.’

‘Thank you, Lord… for saving me,’ Tacitus replied, bowing his head.

‘You may yet wish it otherwise,’ the woman told him.

Tacitus did wish it otherwise when these beautiful violent people learnt all they could from him with their strange questions and stranger engines. And when they then paralysed him and probed him and tried to take the god’s vambrace from his arm. Evidently failing in this endeavour, they freed him, handed back his sword, and told him to enjoy his journey to hell. It was a journey he could never have imagined—the time he spent with them being a comparatively harmless interlude—and throughout it he came to understand what the woman really meant.

12

Two Heliothane on Station Seventeen:

‘The Engineer wouldn’t let me see the recording from the internal security system—all we managed to get out before some sort of temporal barrier shut off all communication with the facility.’

‘Brother, I want to know.’

‘Goron’s been otherwise occupied, trying to push his project, so I managed to break into the system…’

‘What happened?’

‘Cowl’s creature killed Astolere.’

‘That can’t be… the amniotic tank was supposed to vent onto the surface of Callisto, where the beast would have died.’

‘That didn’t happen.’

‘Then the creature must be destroyed.’

‘There’s more than that.’

‘Show me.’

‘What is that?’

‘Some kind of feeding mouth that can be extruded from the main body. It wasn’t there before.’

‘That glass should have been able to withstand any force the creature could exert.’

‘Yeah, does that include displacing parts of its molecular structure through time so that those parts aren’t even in the same location?’

‘Scan shows this?’

‘Damned right it does.’

‘Cowl does not try to help her.’

‘No, he just allows it to consume our sister. She was the brightest and best of us all, and though she was there to supervise the shutdown, she was perhaps, excepting the failed preterhuman, Cowl’s greatest advocate.’

‘Then Cowl must die.’

Engineer Goron gazed fondly upon the Jurassic, where giants were demolishing a forest to fill their titanic ever-hungry stomachs. Even with the damping fields of Sauros operating, it was possible to feel the vibration of their gargantuan progress—what palaeontologists of Tack’s time gave the overblown term ‘dino-perturbation’. This herd of camarosaurs, though impressive, was nothing to what he yet had a good chance of seeing, for he had arranged for Sauros to come out in this specific locale: where brachiosaurs roamed. He could also have aimed to bring them out twenty million years later, in the time of the seismosaurs, but conditions had been optimum for this time and place, and he doubted he would have got that one past Vetross. Goron also hoped that when Tack returned there would be a chance for the twenty-second-century primitive to view these creatures along with him, as Tack, stupid in ways Goron could not even conceive, seemed to possess an appreciative awe of these giants that Goron’s fellows did not.

‘What is it, Vetross?’ He’d spied her edging towards him. ‘More calculations for me to check? More energy measures for me to approve? I appointed you as my second for a good reason, you know.’

‘It’s coming,’ Vetross replied.

Goron turned towards her and read the fear in her expression. This moment had been inevitable as soon as they had begun the push. Cowl would not countenance them getting close, without attacking. And attacking meant only one thing.

‘On our time?’

‘Ten hours. It’s pushing up the slope towards our Carboniferous, otherwise it would not retain the energy to bring enough of itself to bear. We’ve got travellers located back every fifty million years. Canolus slowed it with a neutron warhead quarter-slope relative to our Silurian, but while he recovered ground, it got him in transit.’

‘Canolus always tended to be premature. What about Thote?’

‘Mid-Devonian. Took out a small percentage of its mass with a displacement sphere. Damaged his mantisal, however, and now we can’t locate him.’

Suddenly Goron felt very tired, but that was unsurprising considering he had been working non-stop for three centuries. ‘Get every weapon you can online, and send all non-essential personnel back through the tunnel. I want field walls projected out to one kilometre in every direction and displacement generators, set for proximity activation, scattered randomly in between. And if there’s anything I haven’t thought of, I want you to think of it.’

‘Every direction?’ asked Vetross.

‘Damned right. The rock underneath us won’t stop it—it would just need to go out of phase either physically or temporally.’

Vetross watched him hesitantly.

‘Have I missed anything?’

‘I don’t think so.’

‘Then why are you still here?’

‘Because you are needed now, Engineer Goron. People are frightened.’