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Palleque had managed to rig a catalyser to fuse sand dug from the river bottom, and by using wooden moulds was producing building blocks and slabs. He was even managing to produce sheets of rough glass, and claimed he would soon be able to do better. His industriousness had helped greatly to eliminate the distrust many heliothants felt for him. Others were prospecting for ores which could be catalysed into pure metals. Still others hunted, while some were clearing the level ground lower down for the planting of crops, once seed suitable for that purpose was gathered.

‘Power generation within a month,’ promised Palleque, not taking his gaze off the float he had cast out into the deep pool they were sitting by.

‘You’re optimistic,’ Goron replied.

‘As soon as we obtain the required rare metals, I’ll be able to use the catalyser to produce photovoltaic cells—probably in sufficient number to tile the roofs of the houses we build.’

‘I thought you meant real power,’ said Goron.

Palleque turned to him. ‘About a year still before we can build generators and they’ll only be driven by steam, wind or water.’

‘So by then we should have a nice viable mini-civilization going here.’

‘You don’t sound very enthusiastic’

‘I am enthusiastic about that, but not about some of the other things I’ve been hearing—about our building a base for vorpal technology and eventually managing to go home.’

‘People need hope.’

‘Hope I don’t mind, but when that moves into the region of blind faith I start to get a little edgy. You know as well as I that, at the present rate of progress, it would probably take us a century to build the technological base for any useful form of time travel, by which time the building of such a base would have forced us so far down the probability slope we’d never possess the required power sources to travel anyway.’

‘There are other reasons for hope,’ said Silleck, who had just climbed up onto the same slab of rock.

‘And they would be?’ asked Goron, turning to regard her. He was worried about this woman, as he was about all the other interface technicians like her. All of them were turning quite strange, with their constant four-dimensional view of the world.

‘To learn that,’ said Silleck, ‘I suggest the both of you get off this slab quickly before you get crushed to death.’

Goron peered past her and saw how the other interface technicians were gathering some distance back, and that other heliothants were filtering down from the tent city to join them. Both Palleque and he hit the winders on their rods, then quickly followed the technician from the slab. When Silleck suggested something, it was best to do it quickly because you knew she was looking at the consequences of you not doing so.

‘What’s happening, Silleck?’ Goron asked.

‘We are finding we can feel and see things… deeper, further… and we have sensed this coming for some time. At first we couldn’t be sure, as there’s a lot of echoes and aftershocks disturbing interspace. But now we are sure—this is solid.’

Goron felt this explanation turbid at best, but turned his attention to the vacated rock slab, on which all the technicians were now concentrating. Silleck suddenly grinned and some of her fellows laughed out loud. That was the thing about the lot of them—you could never tell a joke in their presence, as they would always know the punchline before you said it. A minute after, a line of light speared down into the centre of the slab’s surface, and out of it folded a great domed house, its walls and roof cracked and flaking away to expose its vorpal superstructure. First, out of an arched entrance, emerged a large insectile robot that Goron instantly recognized, so he figured who was going to step out next. This second figure was closely guarded by a Roman soldier, who fingered the pommel of his gladius as he eyed the spectators.

‘I’ve found you at last, Engineer,’ said Aconite.

‘So you have,’ Goron replied.

Aconite looked around. ‘I have the means to transport those who want to go, back to New London. But I also have an alternative proposal.’

‘I’m listening,’ said Engineer Goron.

* * * *

While Polly gazed up at the aircars in the far distance over Maldon Island, Tack studied their surroundings.

The nettles were dead and dry in the cavity walls and the grass was brown and crunched underfoot. There had been a temporary over-flood, and crab carapaces were scattered like confetti on the grass. A U-gov clean-up team had been here to remove the corpses, and the carcass of the Ford Macrojet that Nandru had destroyed. The only evidence now of what had happened was the scorched vegetation and some shattered trees. Closing his eyes, Tack sensed the temporal web inside himself, located their position in time, and their position on the probability slope.

‘This is a week after the moment of our departure,’ he said. ‘Are you sure this is where we want to be?’

‘Aconite wanted us to establish a base in this time,’ Polly replied, her expression distant.

Tack turned to her. ‘Her idea of “this time” covers about a thousand years—she thinks on a different scale.’

‘Now is good enough,’ said Polly.

He watched her run her hand over her new tor. Their travel by tor was limited by dangers of which they were both now well aware. But still they could travel in time.

‘I don’t see what’s so great about this… now,’ Tack said.

‘It’s convenient,’ said Polly. ‘Nandru told me certain bank codes, and where to locate certain chipcards. And with fifty million euros available, establishing Aconite’s base won’t be so difficult.’

Tack nodded. When he first met her, she would have been ecstatic to be able to lay her hands on such a sum. Now she merely looked ruminative.

‘What is it?’ he asked.

She gestured at their surroundings. ‘It’s here. It’ll always be here: layers and layers of it, millions upon millions of years. We’re so small.’

‘That’s called perspective.’ Tack then nodded towards Maldon Island. ‘Let’s go.’