Authors: Sean McMullen
âWe should mix with the crowd,' Emily whispered to her brother. âYou never know, perhaps BC will need us.'
âWe need to ask BC what to do,' suggested Daniel. âCome on, let's find her.'
Daniel told their parents that he was bored and wanted to look for his friends.
âVery well, but Emily must go with you, to remind you when to come back,' said Mr Lang. âIf you are late, your mother and I shall go in without you.'
They slipped into the crowd, trying not to look as if they were hurrying. After some minutes of searching they had not found BC, but they did encounter a lot more friends from their schools.
âOi, Dan Man, how go your prospects?' called a gangly youth wearing a straw boater hat.
Emily knew the speaker to be one of Daniel's classmates, but not one that he was especially friendly with.
âGood prospects for being bored, William,' replied Daniel.
âAh, so you don't have a pass to get inside?'
âThat's just the trouble, I do have a pass. I'll be there for everything.'
âThen you will not be bored.'
âI shall indeed. Hours of speeches, and people clapping only because they are relieved when the speakers finish.'
âWhat about when the snow starts to fall?'
âIt's May, and it's Melbourne,' laughed Daniel. â
You
have a better chance of passing algebra than Melbourne has of getting snow.'
âOh, but there will be snow, that's why I have my hat.'
âYou have your hat because you're daft, William. It's too hot for snow.'
âBut what about paper snow?'
âYou're still being daft. Snow is made out of ice crystals.'
âWell, I think that a couple of dozen bags on the ceiling full of shredded paper will produce what looks like snow.'
âHow did you find out about this?' asked Emily suddenly.
âDad's company is staging it. Firecrackers will burst dozens of bags of paper scrap on the ceiling, causing a snowstorm inside. Dad's workmen carried them up this morning. Nobody is meant to know, 'cause it's meant to be a special surprise.'
Emily took Daniel by the arm and dragged him out of earshot from the others.
âThey must be the bombs!' she hissed.
âBut look, people are starting to go in,' replied Daniel.
âI was right, the future cannot be changed!' whispered Emily in desperate frustration.
âDaniel, Daniel!' shouted a female voice.
Emily knew the voice. Judging from Daniel's reaction, he knew it too. Muriel Baker came rushing along the gravel path toward them, her hair brushed out and a blue beret on her head.
âDaniel, the Germans are here!' Muriel announced, taking Daniel's hands in hers. âLast night I followed them â oh, hullo Emily â last night I followed them on my bicycle. Their beards and noses are false. I saw them peeling their disguises off in an alleyway, and â'
âDaniel Lang, where and when did you meet this, this floozy?' demanded Emily.
âShe's not a floozy!' snapped Daniel.
âWe've been holding hands for a week,' added Muriel.
âYou're courting her?' Emily shrieked at Daniel.
âI didn't see you doing any spying, Emily Lang!' retorted Muriel.
âDaniel! How much did you tell her?' demanded Emily, so outraged that their mission to save the future was forgotten.
âSorry. I have to put my own plan of last resort into action,' cried Daniel, suddenly breaking away from them.
Muriel tried to run after Daniel, but Emily seized her by the arm. Daniel ran for three policemen who were standing beside a small service door in the side of the building.
âMuriel Baker, how dare you defile my brother's good name?' demanded Emily.
âLet me go!' cried Muriel, slapping Emily across the face. âThose three policemen are the
Germans
!'
Emily gasped and whirled around, but it was too late.
âConstables, you must get the people out of there!' Daniel shouted as he ran. âThe decorations that were put in the roof this morning, they're bombs; they're going to kill everyone!'
To Emily's astonishment, then horror, she saw the police surround Daniel, clamping a hand over his mouth and pinning his arms behind his back. All three of them looked furtive and fearful as they bundled Daniel through the small door beside them.
âNothing to worry about, ladies and gentlemen!' called one of the police as he pulled the door shut behind them. âJust a schoolboy prank.'
For some moments Emily and Muriel stood with their mouths open. Here was proof that the conspiracy was real; here was proof that bombs were in place. Here was also proof that at least the police, and possibly a lot more people, were involved. The idea that the police could not be trusted was all but unthinkable to Emily. She had been brought up to believe that you could always trust a policeman, so what could she do now?
âSilly cow, I tried to warn you but you wouldn't listen!' shouted Muriel.
âDaniel, they just took him away!' gasped Emily. âThose police.'
âThey're not police!'
âBut they had uniforms.'
âGive me your measurements and some cloth, and I could turn
you
into a policeman!' shouted Muriel, stamping her foot.
âWe have to call the ⦠the â¦' Emily's voice trailed away hopelessly.
âPolice?' asked Muriel, who then twisted out of Emily's grip.
âWhatever can we do?' cried Emily.
âDaniel said you are some sort of leader,' said Muriel, pointing in the direction of the door. âWell he's a prisoner now. What are you going to do? Don't just stand there, lead!'
Just then the three police re-emerged from the door. Emily suddenly pulled herself together.
âMuriel, wait here, watch the policemen, but don't draw attention to yourself. I'll get help.'
Without another word Emily dashed away into the crowd. The stream of people entering the Exhibition Buildings had slowed to a trickle, and her parents were nowhere to be seen. Now Emily could not enter, even if she wanted to. After what had happened to Daniel, she knew there was no point in trying to raise the alarm about the bombs. Deciding that her only chance was to find BC, Emily began a desperate circumnavigation of the Exhibition Buildings, dodging bands, vendors and even a maypole. She saw plenty of her friends from school â then caught sight of BC.
âLiore!' shrieked Emily, and BC turned and strode towards her at once.
âThere are new decorations high on the walls, near the ceiling,' began BC as they met.
âI know. Daniel and I learned of them too, but when he tried to tell some policemen, they seized him and locked him away. They called to the crowd that it was a schoolboy prank, and, and he's been holding hands with
Muriel Baker
!'
âMuriel Baker?' asked BC. âIs she a conspirator?'
âNo, she's my classmate, and she's a year older than Daniel, and she's an
artist
!'
âPlease, no more, let me think,' said BC, her eyes now wide. âThe police, of course. The conspirators are not Germans!'
âI ⦠what? But â¦'
âLater. Show me the door. Oh, and do you have the pistol?'
âYes, but â'
âKeep it out of sight, but if you need to use it, flick the safety catch up, and squeeze the trigger, not the trigger guard. Remember to aim it. That's very important.'
They had to hurry right around to the other side of the Exhibition Buildings to reach the door. When they arrived, the three policemen were still there. Emily took BC to Muriel.
âLiore, this is Muriel, and she's, she's a
friend
of Daniel's. Muriel, this is
Miss
Liore.'
Muriel stared at BC, opened her mouth, and managed to say 'Miss?' before words failed her.
âWhat have the policemen done since I left?' asked Emily.
âNothing, they've just been standing near the door,' answered Muriel, finally wrenching her gaze away from BC.
âWait here,' said BC, who then walked straight for the policemen.
âBC, no, they will take you prisoner too!' pleaded Emily, starting after her.
âHe's really a girl?' asked Muriel, following them with her head on one side. âHe'd be a stunning boy.'
âMiss Liore certainly knows how to stun people,' said Emily grimly.
âGentlemen, I believe that you are trying to keep the bombs in the roof a secret,' declared BC cheerily to the police.
There was a brief, confused flurry as the police tried to restrain BC. Emily saw her right elbow strike a jaw, smash back into a nose, then her fist slam into a stomach. BC lifted her third victim onto her shoulder.
âSchoolboy prank,' Emily called cheerily to the astounded onlookers as she searched the coat pockets of the two other policemen, removing their papers.
âAre you absolutely positive he's a girl?' asked Muriel as she and Emily hurried through the door behind BC. âI mean, I don't know any girls who could do that.'
âDo you know any boys who could do that?' asked Emily.
They found themselves in a kind of servants' entrance. Having jammed the door's lock from inside, BC gave her entire attention to the policeman in her custody. First she removed his gun. He was making a titanic effort to draw breath after her punch to his stomach. BC twisted his arm behind his back, placed her knee against his spine, then twisted his wrist and gently pressed a point near his elbow. The man's mouth dropped open in a grimace of pain so intense that he could not even bring himself to scream.
âMy old karate teacher told me that girls do not like to damage people when they fight, yet they are quite happy to inflict extreme pain,' BC explained calmly to the man. âActually, I was his best student, and I am truly overjoyed to inflict the most intense and extreme pain imaginable upon traitors to the British Empire.'
BC pressed another point on the man's arm. He began to shudder uncontrollably.
âActually, if one inflicts pain like this for long enough, the victim dies. As you may have noticed, the victim can no longer breathe because of the shock.'
BC now eased the pressure a little, and the man actually managed to close his mouth.
âFirstly, you are going to tell us where the boy that you seized some minutes ago has been hidden.'
The policeman attempted to struggle. This was a very serious mistake. BC twisted his arm a little further, and pressed a finger against his wrist. A patch of steaming water began to spread out from the area of his trousers. BC eased the pressure a little.
âSecond door, right,' the man wheezed. âBehind ⦠stack ⦠of cases.'
BC released the man, then took from her coat a thing that Emily recognised as part of her death beam weapon.
âThis is the converter of my plasma rifle. Without the rest it cannot be fired at maximum power.' She stared meaningfully at her prisoner. âBut it can still stop anything smaller than an elephant.'
She fired down into the flagstone floor. There was a brief squeak-like sound, followed by a sharp blast. A hole big enough to hold a large orange appeared in the bluestone. The policeman stared at it, all but paralysed with terror.
âNow, if I have to fire this thing at you, it will be at your stomach,' said BC with exaggerated gravity. âYou will take a long time to die, and it will be in extreme agony. Will you do as I say?'
Muriel fainted, but Emily caught her and eased her to the floor. The man nodded.
âThen move! Second door, right.'
Daniel was where the man had said, bound and gagged but otherwise unharmed. BC ordered the man to untie him.
As soon as Daniel caught sight of the haggard, terrified look on the policeman's face, he knew that BC would not be far behind. BC appeared, and ordered Daniel to be untied.
âThe decorations â¦' Daniel began as the gag came off his mouth.
âWe know, Daniel, good work,' said BC.
âThat policeman,' began Daniel again.
âHe is not a policeman, he just wears the uniform,' said BC. âNow then, I would advise you and Muriel to look the other way and cover your ears.'
BC seized the policeman and slammed him to the ground again.
âDaniel, you are still looking,' called BC. âSome people just don't care about losing their breakfast, do they,
Constable
? Now then, I know that you are part of an imperialist supremacist group, dedicated to keeping Australia as a collection of colonies in an empire run directly and centrally by Britain. Yes, I worked all that out for myself. The weakness about rewritten history is that it all looks so neat, tidy, and one-sided. German agents? Not likely. You idiots wanted a war to unite the British Empire, but you will get a war that loses Britain! What is your organisation's name?'
âThe ⦠Sons of Britannia.'
There was a soft snap from the man's arm, followed by a wheeze of pain. Daniel's stomach lurched.
âNow that was very, very silly of you. I already know the answer, you see? There is a nice man out in the bushes of the garden who has already helped me with some of my enquiries. Actually he is a rather nasty man, but no matter. I broke both of his elbows and one of his knees before he decided that â¦'
âLionhearts, the League of British Lionhearts,' wheezed the man.
âSee how easy it is? Now then, some more questions, and bear in mind that I already know some of the answers.'
âAnything, only â¦'
âStop, yes, I may stop soon. I find the idea of touching you offensive in the extreme, but one has to endure many hardships in the cause of patriotism. How are the bombs in the roof to be set off?'
âFuses ⦠will be lit.'
âCome now, you can do better than that. Short fuses would not give your men time to escape, and long fuses would generate so much smoke that they would be noticed.'
âIt's true! Those lighting hands ⦠not our men ⦠just hired help. They think it's just fireworks, they don't know. Half-minute fuses.'
With truly astounding speed, BC bound the man's hands behind his back, pulled him to his feet, looped a length of cord around a pipe that ran down the wall, and tied him to the pipe.
âLast question,' asked BC. âWhen are those bombs due to be set off?'
âAnother quarter-hour.'
BC gagged him.
âDanS2, Emily-DBC, to me!' she said as she made for the door. âWe can still save the day.'
BC had her hand on the door's latch as it burst open, knocking her down and sending her weapon from the future clattering away across the floor. The intruder charged through the door. BC lashed a leg out and tripped him, and he fired blindly but only managed to hit his fellow conspirator, who was tied to the pipe. There was a loud snap as the gunman's head hit the wall. Daniel caught sight of a third man, who was aiming a gun at BC.
âEmmy, fire!' shouted Daniel as he flung himself over the fallen BC.
Two gunshots sounded almost simultaneously, a sharp pop, and a much louder blast. Something tugged at Daniel's upper arm, and he felt a sting. There was the sound of something hitting the floor.
âDanS2, status?' demanded BC, rolling Daniel off.
âMy arm,' began Daniel.
âGraze, non-lethal, grab hold, apply pressure. Emily-DBC, eyes, shut! DanS2, escort her outside.'
Daniel discovered Muriel in the corridor, sitting on the floor and shaking her head to clear it. He propped Emily against the wall and tried to lift Muriel, while still clutching his bleeding arm.
âFainted, I fainted,' said Muriel. âWhat happened?'
âI shot someone,' Emily whispered.
âI got shot,' said Daniel.
âYou shot my Daniel, you stupid cow?' cried Muriel.
âI killed a man,' said Emily, ignoring her.
âNot me,' mumbled Daniel.
âYou need a bandage,' said Muriel as she began to rip a strip of cloth from her petticoat.
The thought of being bandaged by a strip of Muriel's petticoat was somehow so erotic that it made Daniel's head spin. Dropping to his knees, he eased his coat off. There was a deep, ominous humming from within the stores room.
âAm I allowed to know what is going on yet?' asked Muriel as she began to bandage Daniel's arm.
âSome really bad people have put bombs in the roof, and they plan to blow up the Exhibition Buildings when parliament's opening,' said Daniel. âWe're trying to stop them.'
The issues raised by those two sentences were far more than Muriel could assimilate at short notice, so she seemed to grasp for a sensible conclusion instead.
âI ⦠but we are inside the Exhibition Buildings, and parliament is about to open.'
âYes.'
âAnd you have not stopped them yet?'
âNot yet, no â¦'
âShould we not get outside?'
Just then BC came out of the room, holding her plasma weapon. She pulled the door shut behind her.
âWhat happened?' asked Daniel.
âOne was shot by the fool who smashed in the door, and the one who did the shooting stumbled into the wall and broke his neck. The third â¦'
âWould it help if I said it was an accident?' asked Emily guiltily.
âMiss Emily, next time you want to distract someone with a gunshot, fire into the ceiling.'
âI thought policemen might have armoured coats, like your uniform.'
âOnly in a hundred years from now.'
Muriel tied off Daniel's bandage.
âWill the third chap be all right?' asked Daniel.
âNot without a heart. I put my weapon on thermal disruption and turned it on the bodies. There is only ash and steam in there now.'
BC then bent something in the latch of the outer door and locked it again.
âYou, Muriel Baker,' said BC, taking out one of the dead men's guns. âIf you stand with Daniel, then you are under my command. Take this pistol. If anyone forces that outer door, shoot them.'
âShoot them?' asked Muriel, shrinking away from her against Daniel. âI could never kill anyone.'
âThen aim for the stomach,' advised BC.
âThat means they stay alive,' said Daniel.
âSometimes,' said BC. âStand here, guard the door.'
âYou mean I have to stay inside?' asked Muriel, taking the gun from BC by the barrel.
âHold it by the handle,' said Daniel, reversing the gun for her.
âThe trigger's the thing inside the loop,' added Emily.
âQuickly, up those steps, they lead to an access platform,' said BC.
âDaniel, I'm only staying inside because I love you!' Muriel called after them.
âI killed a man,' whispered Emily as they ran, her eyes still wide with shock.
âYou may have to do it again,' said BC, handing the plasma gun to her. âLook after this.'
âShe loves me!' panted Daniel, as much to annoy Emily as to affirm his first romance.
The access platform was already occupied by five nattily dressed men, who were innocent bystanders in the wrong place at the wrong time. BC's foot swept the feet out from under the first man so fast that he fell and struck the back of his head. He was still falling when the tip of her boot struck the second man in the jaw, instantly dropping him into unconsciousness. At this stage she seemed to leap into the air, spin in a flat circle, and land the heel of her boot against the third man's temple. By now the fourth man had made the mind-numbingly stupid mistake of trying to seize BC. She promptly smashed her forehead down on the bridge of his nose. The fifth man tried to flee.
âI would not try to leave,' warned Emily, pointing both of her guns at the man.
âThat shiny one really, really hurts,' added Daniel.
As the man hesitated, BC stepped up behind him, spun him about, and struck his chin with her elbow. With efficient, disciplined fingers, BC attached a small telescope to her gun, then scanned the upper walls.
âThose bomb packets are all over the place,' she exclaimed softly. âAnd smoke. There is smoke!'
âThe fuses are already lit!' hissed Daniel.
âIt's too late!' exclaimed BC. âBack, hurry!'
âMy parents!' exclaimed Daniel.
âNothing can save them. Run!'
They dashed back down the stairs, and bolted along the corridor to where Muriel was still waiting.
â⦠twenty-five, twenty-six, won't make it,' cried BC, 'twenty-eight, twenty-nine ⦠Down. Lie flat!'
The four of them flung themselves on the flagstones. They waited, flat on the floor. Daniel grasped for Muriel's hand.
âThirty-five, thirty-six,' counted BC.
âMuriel, I love you too,' said Daniel.
âFor goodness sake,' muttered Emily between clenched teeth.
âForty-one, forty-two,' said BC, then she stopped counting and looked up.
âDid he not say half-minute fuses?' asked Daniel.
âHe did indeed,' said BC, getting to her feet and striding back up the corridor. The others followed, including Muriel.
Daniel saw that BC had her coat unbuttoned, and was holding her hand over a spreading red patch at her stomach. Back at the platform, they found that one of the five men had just returned to his senses. BC trained her gun between his eyes.
âIt would be an awfully good idea to stay quiet and lie still,' said Emily, hurrying up with her own pistol.
BC struck the man unconscious again, then scanned the packages high on the walls with her telescopic sights.
âThe fuses have burned down and gone out,' she observed. âThe bombs have not gone off.'
For some moments they stood in silence. Somewhere in the distance, they could hear the Duke of Cornwall and York declaring the parliament to be open.
âOh, Daniel, how romantic,' squealed Muriel. âThank you for getting me in here to actually see it happen.'
âThey never reached this part of the ceremony!' said BC above the noise of the cheering that followed. âHistory
has
changed. We should leave, quickly and quietly.'
Before they went outside again, Muriel ripped more of her petticoat off and bound the cloth over BC's bandages. BC re-buttoned her coat. Out in the grounds again, they watched the dignitaries and guests that had come so near to death streaming out to continue the day's celebrations. Bands were playing and people were still cheering.
âOver there, those four worried-looking men near the door,' said BC. âDo you think they are wondering where their friends dressed as policemen have gone?'
âI'd rather not ask,' said Daniel. âTwo of them look a bit like the Germans, with their disguises off.'
âTry to remember their faces,' said BC.
âI killed a man,' said Emily.
âEmily!' hissed BC softly. âTake hold of your nerve. All warriors feel guilt after a battle. It is only natural. You are still breathing, but those who stood against you are dead. You wonder why you survived and they did not, and you feel guilty about it. I feel it too, but put it out of your mind for now. And you, Daniel, you have faced death three times in the past quarter-hour, and now shock and terror are catching up with you. I can see it in your eyes, and in the way your hands are starting to shake. We need to leave here so that I can counsel you.'
âCounsel us?' he asked.
âTalk you out of the shock that both of you have entered. I suggest that we walk to the railway station; we can talk in private that way. Emily, find your parents, tell them Daniel caught his arm on a projecting nail, tearing his coat and cutting himself.'
âI'll go with her. I'll say I saw it all,' declared Muriel, as she helped Daniel back into his coat.
âVery good,' said BC. âDaniel, stay with me.'
âMother and Father will be furious because we did not go in with them,' said Daniel, staring after Muriel and Emily as they hurried off into the crowd.
âI imagine the bombs would have annoyed them a lot more,' replied BC.
âYou are bleeding again,' said Daniel. âWhat shall we do?'
âSome stitches tore a little with all the action, and blood seeped through the tears,' she said, unbuttoning her coat to check the bleeding. âIt is no worse than a nosebleed, and Muriel's extra bandaging will hold for now.'
âNo worse than a nosebleed?' exclaimed Daniel.
âKeep your voice down, we cannot afford to draw attention to ourselves.'
âOi, Muriel's waving. I do believe she has seen Mother and Father.'
With that, BC buttoned her jacket and led the way forward. Daniel noted at once that his parents looked rather grim.
âAh, Mr and Mrs Lang, I do apologise!' BC declared as they approached the Langs. âI thought that Emily, Daniel, and Muriel would like to see the ceremony from a special viewing platform, but you had gone inside before I could get word to you.'