Father, Tjen and I sat in the smoking room. Father had gotten the good port out β as good as could be found these days β and Tjen was sniffing the amber liquid curiously. Father tugged on his mustache with one finger, his other hand resting against his knee to keep it from shaking from his persisting nerve damage.
"Foretelling the future is not as impossible as one might think," he said. "There's some fascinating papers coming out of the German Republics β this one by a fellow named Einstein β states that time is relative, not absolute. Tesla says that most of the Martians-"
Tjen coughed.
"Ah, please, forgive me," father said. "The Tripod Builders. Their power sources draw on energy that appears to emerge from the luminescent aether without any source."
"They call it the
t'kenth'ak
, I don't know if there is a translation your human tongue has." Tjen said, quietly as she took a sip from the port. The face she made was missed by father, as he was heaving himself to his feet and hobbling to the bookshelves that were his true pride and joy. He pulled down a dictionary of Martian languages by Abdul Haq.
"Haq was held captive by a Tripod research team during the Great War," Father said, noticing Tjen's curious look β her disgust having been smoothed away by an almost British level of manners, though I had noticed her quietly pouring her glass of port into mine. This left mine nearly overflowing and I had to hold it gingerly and sip around the ice clinking in the cup. "He made a study of their language while they...processed the other humans." Father coughed, using the bloodless word, rather than describing what we all knew had happened. He shook his head. "Let me see if he has... anything..."
As he flipped the pages, I got my port glass to merely half and was feeling the warm glow of it, nestling in my belly. I rubbed my hand along my smooth shaved face, feeling the beginning of stubble under my palms.
"Ah, here it is," Father said. "Haq writes the word 'kenth' means negation, nothing, absolute vacuum." He chuckled. "And here, I thought nature abhors a vacuum."
"This is all very interesting," I said, setting my glass down. "But I'm slightly more concerned not with the fact that she
can
tell the future, but rather, what she's
seen
." I looked at Tjen. She looked back at me with those astounding, blue within blue eyes. Then she tossed her hair. Her voice became flat.
"I do not wish to state my visions again."
I didn't want to hear them. Just the descriptions β the men and women in striped clothing, labeled like cattle, marched past stern faced men in field gray uniforms and helmets like coal miners. The vast tread-clad machines, pushing corpses by the hundreds, by the thousands, into mass graves, while men crawled spiderlike through the mounds, ripping gold from fillings with pliers. I shuddered convulsively.
"It reminds me of the Tripod Builders," father said. "To think humans might do that to their own kind. It..." He shook his head. "It is tragically not unthinkable."
"Father!" I exclaimed.
"What is such a vision but the slaughter of the red indians compressed to a few years, rather than a slow century?" Father asked, with that appalling calmness of his. He spread his hands. "The pogroms of Russia, the excesses of our own shattered Empire in India and elsewhere. The Tripods merely performed what we were already doing to ourselves with mechanical efficiency." He sighed. "If I believed in God, I would say that this was his way of showing us how to better consider ourselves." He sipped his port, looking grim.
"Well..." I clenched my jaw, then exploded. "Well, then, we can stop it! We can see the future, we have a name!"
"A single name of a man who we've never heard of. A German of some kind β meaning he could be anywhere from Delaware to the Moon." Father pointed out. "Though if you do begin on Siber See, at least it will be a relatively swift search."
I snorted.
"I could foretell once more-" Tjen started β causing my heart to skip, as her foretelling required her to, well, make love to me. But my excitement shattered with the sound of a window breaking in the second story of our flat. My brow furrowed and I sprang to the coat closet, flinging it open. There, I yanked the pistol from my coat, the heavy bore revolver that was designed to kill squids β to kill Tripod builders. Tjen followed me up the stairs, my father remaining behind, his aged limbs unable to carry him swiftly.
We came to my room, to find a brick resting on my bed. A note had been attached to it by a bit of twine. I stepped forward, half expecting it to explode. I frowned and undid the twine, then opened it. The note had been pounded out on a typewriter, so there was no chance of me identifying the handwriting. It had been creased and folded and even stained with sweat in some places β signs of hard use. The words were to the point...and utterly baffling.
REMAIN PERFECTLY SILENT.
I looked at Tjen. She looked just as mystified as me. But then, as I pocketed the note, another
crash
rang out. This from the front door. My father cried out: "What is going on here!?"
And I heard the thumping of footsteps and a drawling, Southern voice: "Why, Mr. Wells. I believe it's a book review."
"Uh, Mr. Sinclair, we're not here to review a book, we're looking for that Soomie girl, ain't we?" the familiar sound of that idiot goon β Torg, that had been his name β made my brow furrow.
I could almost
hear
Mr. Sinclair's clenched jaw as he responded to Torg, his voice genial and genteel. "God bless you, Torg. Why, I don't even know what I'd do without you."
"Uh, neither do I," Torg said, sounding honestly confused.
"Of course you don't," Mr. Sinclair said. By that point, I had gotten to the edge of the hallway leading to the narrow stairs that led to the lower level of the flat. I had moved silently, my heart in my throat every step of the way. Looking down, I saw that the foyer had two men β both of them nasty customers, wearing flat caps and rough jackets. One of them cradled a clunky, humming Tesla gun, the bulbous tip crackling with thin fibers of electricity. The other one simply had a club, which he twirled casually. They were both barring the door, while the shadows from the living room showed Torg, my father, and Mr. Sinclair β he was the tall, lean one. And he was holding a pistol, visible in silhouette.
Four men, all armed. I carefully undid the catch on the revolver and opened it as slowly and quietly as I could. It had two large bore shells in it that hadn't been fired. Built to punch through the rubbery skin of a Tripod builder, it was as ill suited to this kind of fight as I was. I had been in
brawls,
nothing as deadly serious as this.
"Are you from the Prussian General Staff?" my father sounded more curious than scared. "The Austrian Empire? Panslav?"
"Mr. Wells! You insult me!" Mr. Sinclair drawled. "But of course, you wouldn't recognize good white folks if they walked up and spat in your face, would you, niggerlover?"