Grove nodded curtly. He sat behind his desk, and absently waved them to sit on their bench. He said, “Suppose I put aside for the moment the most likely possibility, which is that you are some sort of spies for Russia or her allies, sent on some destabilization mission. Perhaps you even engineered the loss of contact we are suffering … As I say, let’s put that aside. You say you’re on temporary assignment from the British army. You’re here to keep the peace. Well, so am I, I suppose. Tell me how flapping about in that whirling contraption achieves that.” He was brisk, but visibly uncertain.
Bisesa took a deep breath. Briefly she sketched the geopolitical situation: the standoff of the great powers over the region’s oil, the complex local tensions. Grove seemed to follow this, even if most of it seemed unfamiliar, and at times he showed great surprise. “Russia an
“Let me tell you how
Bisesa found this impossible to take in. She was reduced to repeating his words. “The
“It seems,” Grove said, “we are here to wage different wars, Lieutenant Dutt.”
But Abdikadir was nodding. “Captain Grove—you have had trouble with your communications in the last few hours?”
Grove paused, evidently deciding what to tell him. “Very well—yes. We lost both the telegraph link, and even the heliograph stations from about noon. Haven’t heard a peep since, and we still don’t know what’s going on. And you?”
Abdikadir sighed. “The time scale is a little different. We lost our radio communications just before the crash—a few hours ago.”
“
Bisesa said in a rush, “A hot war.” She had been brooding on this possibility since the crash; despite the terror of those moments, and the shock of what had followed, she hadn’t been able to get it out of her head. She said to Abdikadir, “An electromagnetic pulse—what else could knock out both civilian and military comms, simultaneously? The strange lights we saw in the sky—the weather, the sudden winds—”
“But we saw no contrails,” Abdikadir said calmly. “Come to think of it, I haven’t noticed a single contrail since the crash.”
“Once again,” Grove said with irritation, “I have not the first idea what you’re talking about.”
“I mean,” Bisesa said, “I fear a nuclear war has broken out. And that’s what’s stranded us all. It’s happened before in this area, after all. It’s only seventeen years since Lahore was destroyed by the Indian strike.”
Grove stared at her. “Destroyed, you say?”
She frowned. “Utterly. You must know it was.”
Grove stood, went to the door, and gave an order to the private waiting there. After a couple of minutes the bustling young civilian called “Ruddy” came to the door, slightly breathless, evidently summoned by Grove. The other civilian, the young man called Josh who had helped Abdikadir get Casey out of the downed chopper, came pushing his way into the room too.
Grove raised his eyebrows. “I should have expected you to sneak in, Mr. White. But you have your job to do, I suppose. You!” Peremptorily he pointed at Ruddy. “When were you last in Lahore?”
Ruddy thought briefly. “Three—four weeks ago, I believe.”
“Can you describe the place as you saw it then?”
Ruddy seemed puzzled by the request, but he complied: “An old walled city—two hundred thousand and odd Punjabis, and a few thousand Europeans and mixed race—lots of Mughal monuments—since the Mutiny it’s become a center of administration, as well as the platform for military expeditions to see off the Russkie threat. I don’t know what you want me to tell you, sir.”
“Just this. Has Lahore been destroyed? Was it, in fact, devastated seventeen years ago?”
Ruddy guffawed. “Scarcely. My father worked there. He built a house on the Mozang Road!”
Grove snapped at Bisesa, “Why are you lying?”
Foolishly Bisesa felt like crying.
Abdikadir said to her softly, “You don’t see the pattern yet.”
“What pattern?”
He closed his eyes. “I don’t blame you. I don’t want to see it myself.” He faced the British. “You know, Captain, the strangest thing of all that happened today was the sun.” He described the sudden shift of the sun across the sky. “One minute noon, the next—late afternoon. As if the machinery of time had come off its cogs.” He glanced at the grandfather clock; its faded face showed the time was a little before seven o’clock. He asked Grove, “Is that correct?”