HUGH COOK
HEROES OF THE THIRD MILLENNIUM
THE REELING FLICKER OF days slowed, steadied,
froze. A quick look around. The
time machine was sitting on grass. Beyond the grass:
buildings. It was,
recognizably, Central Park. Manhattan. With a huge sigh of relief -- so
far, no
nuclear war -- Jack Fabrax dismounted, clambering down onto the grass, lugging
the
heavy suitcase after him. God, what a weight! The time machine flickered and
dissolved. It
would return in precisely seventy-two hours.
There was a slight risk involved in sending
the time machine back to 1962.
Conceivably, Kevin Culdaneath would work out what had
happened. Conceivably,
Kevin would climb aboard the time machine and chase Jack into the
year 2003. But
Jack wanted to have the option of going back to 1962. In case things didn't
work
out as expected in this brave new world, the world of the Third Millennium.
Jack was
sweating profusely by the time he had manhandled the suitcase to the
street. He stood
there, watching for a taxi. But did they still have taxis in
the Third Millennium? And
would his greenbacks be valid currency? He had more
than half expected shiny flying
machines, the U.S. dollar replaced by the credit
or some such thing, and the people to be
walking round in fancy aerodynamic
robes, or nothing at all.
But, outwardly at least,
everything looked amazingly normal. The automobiles
were styled differently, but were
conceptually similar. And people still wore
pants, shirts, shoes. Jack himself was dressed
in a charcoal gray suit, a white
shirt, a conservative tie, and nobody looked at him twice.
A guy in a suit just
like his walked by, talking to someone using a two-way radio, a dandy
little
gadget small enough to fit easily into the palm of your hand.
"Taxi!"
Jack had it all
figured out. He would get the taxi to drive him round town. He
would chat with the cabby
and find out the latest.
The cab driver was a Negro. A really black Negro. Totally black --
an amazing
blackness which seemed to shimmer into blue. A woman. She had weird scars on her
face, patterned scars like a sergeant's chevrons. Someone cut her? Then why
didn't she have
plastic surgery?
"Empire State Building," said Jack.
"What?"
"Empire State! The building!"
No dice. The Negress asked a couple of questions, but her English was barely
intelligible.
She had to be drunk. Angrily, Jack got out of the cab, hauled his
suitcase out onto the
sidewalk, slammed the door. How could anyone possibly not
know the Empire State Building?
Could it have been demolished? Torn down? Lost
to memory? No, impossible.
Three taxis later,
Jack finally found a driver who spoke English. Sort of. The
cabby was from Afghanistan,
wherever the hell that was, and took him along
approximately familiar streets -- the city's
basic layout was still the same--
to the Empire State Building. Outside the building, there
were soldiers in
strange blotched uniforms who carried weapons which looked strangely
light, like
children's toys.
Despite having figured out that inflation would brutalize his
meager cash
reserves, Jack was shocked by the cab fare. He bought a paper, a copy of the
New
York Times, meaning to check first the date, second the news, and third the
stock market
prices. He really wanted to know -- and know fast -- just what his
stock certificates were
worth.
The date? Thursday 6 November 2003. The right date, then. The stock market?
Well, it
still existed. Against all the odds, the world had survived the threat
of nuclear war -- so
far -- and the stock market was still in operation.
However, Jack could find no listings
for his stocks. Okay then, maybe the
companies had changed their names. No problem. Work on
that later.
How about the news? Well, that was problematical. Sport was sport, that much
was
the same. Sport was still sport, food was still food, fashion was still fashion
and
crime was still crime.
But. Apart from that, the news was unintelligibly weird, full of
people and
places and words and countries he had never heard of. Al Gore, Newt Gingrich,
Nelson Mandela, Jason Race, Argan Vlastavich, Michael Jackson, Madonna and the
Artist
Formerly Known As Prince -- who were these people? And if there was some
guy "formerly
known" as Prince, why the hell not say who he was now?
And what was HIV? And the Internet?
And cyberspace? Ah, this makes sense. Ebola
fever-- a disease, evidently. Some kind of
plague. But --Bangladesh? A place,
evidently. A city? A country? And how about this?
African American. What's that?
Okay. The woman in the taxi. Straight out of Africa -- that
would explain that
total skin. An American straight out of Africa, an African American.
Then
he found an article he did understand. About Germany. Nazis in Germany had
demonstrated in
Berlin, had fought with the police, had desecrated Jewish
graves. Reading this, he went
cold. The hairs stood up on the back of his neck.
Germany! Not East Germany or West Germany
but just straight Germany.
In that moment of shock, a glimmering of understanding came to
him. He had not
arrived in the future at all. Instead, he had been precipitated into an
alternate
universe. In this alternate universe, there had been no Hitler, no
Holocaust, and Germany
had not been divided into two separate countries. In this
alternate universe, the terrors
of Fascism belonged not to the past but to the
present.
Not the future, but an alternate
universe. That was his thesis, and a second
article confirmed it. A dry, boring article
about an economic agreement between
Russia, Ukraine, and Belorussia which was being
negotiated in St. Petersburg.
Evidently, in this alternate universe the Union of Soviet
Socialist Republics
did not exist. There had never been a Lenin, so St. Petersburg had not
become
Leningrad. Presumably, there had never been a Second World War, either.
And, in this
alternate universe, his stock certificates were probably useless.
The companies -- no
listings for them on the stock exchange! probably did not
even exist. That meant he had no
resources but the metal in the suitcase. The
realization came as an appalling shock. He had
figured it out so nicely. A
little jump into the future, just forty-one years, enough time
for his enemies
to die and for his stocks to fatten up but not enough time for civilization
to
change out of recognition. But he had got it wrong.
"I need a cigarette," said Jack.
He
pulled out a cigarette and lit up. Then, feeling hungry, he walked into an
eatery, lugging
his suitcase with him.
As he walked into the eatery, all conversation stopped. People
looked at him,
and stared. Immediately, Jack realized something was wrong. Hideously wrong.
He
had made some dreadful mistake. He glanced down at his fly, half-convinced
everything
down there was hanging out in public. But, no, it was all in order.
He was a respectable
guy in a suit.
His first impulse was to run. But -- no! This was America, damn it. He was
an
American citizen, a citizen of the Free World, and there was no way he was going
to be
run off by a bunch of people staring at him. Besides, if something was
wrong, he had to
find out what.
So Jack walked up to the counter. Cleared his throat.
"Hamburger," he said.
"Gimme a hamburger. Yeah, and a coffee. Black."
The guy behind the counter turned to his
colleague. The two spoke together
briefly in a language which was, unmistakably, Russian.
Russian! What the hell
were a couple of Russians doing serving food here in New York?
"You
want ketchup on the burger?'
"Yeah."
Jack paid for his food, took it to a table, went back
for the suitcase, then sat
down to eat. As he did so, a woman got to her feet. She walked
toward him. A
very beautiful blonde, immaculately coifed. As she approached, he smelled her
perfume. Her eyes were an icy blue. She was an angelic vision of Nordic
perfection. Only
one thing was wrong. She was not smiling.
"Hi," said Jack, speaking without bothering to
remove the cigarette from his
lips.
Without a word, the woman reached out. She plucked the
cigarette from his lips.
Then stubbed it out on his hamburger.
"Hey!" said Jack,
half-rising.
Angrily, he grabbed her by the wrist. In response, with her free hand she
sprayed
him with something from a little aerosol can. He breathed red flame, and
his world
dissolved into a reeling whirl of agony. It was like when he had dived
into that pool, back
when he was a kid, and there had been too much chlorine in
the water. The same watering
pain in his eyes, only worse.
Slowly -- choking, gasping, lungs heaving -- Jack began to
recover. Then one of
the countermen approached him.
"Mister," said the counterman, in heavy
Russian-accented English. "You better
get out. If you come back, I'll call the cops."
"Sure,"
said Jack, grabbing his suitcase. "Sure. Sure. I'm going."
Out on the street, he put down
the suitcase and mopped his sweating brow. This
was crazy! Something had gone dreadfully
wrong back there but what? He reviewed
his own behavior. All utterly, totally normal. And
now, out in the street,
nobody was taking any notice of him, hut for a couple of
panhandlers -- a hell
of a lot of beggars on the street, now he thought about it. His
clothing, though
it came from 1962, was not significantly different from what conservative
business types were wearing here in 2003.
Jack took a good look at those people. A hell of
a lot of Asians on the street
-- tourists? Or what? And a lot of Mexican types, too, some
speaking Spanish as
they went by. Also: a muttering lunatic, a patently deranged man in
rags who was
talking to himself pretty loudly, gesticulating as he did so. Nobody called
the
cops to have the guy taken back to the nuthouse. Instead, everyone ignored the
mad
muttering lunatic, as if a dementing lunatic standing on the sidewalk in
broad daylight in
the middle of New York was the most natural thing in the
world.
Some weird sights, then.
But. There were still guys who looked just like Jack
Fabrax. White guys in suits. Yet,
somehow, the locals had picked him as
abnormal, aberrant in a truly intolerable way. Why.*
The only thing he could
think of...maybe they thought he was queer. Yeah. That was
possible. Maybe, in
this brave new world, only sexually abnormal people wore business
suits. That
thought made Jack truly uncomfortable. He wished there was someone he could
ask,
someone who could explain it all to him.
But--time enough to figure it out later. Right
now: business. Money was a
priority. The suitcase was full of gold, and now it was time to
start changing
that gold to cash. Then he could start looking for information. And, if
necessary,
for a new set of clothes.
Inside of half an hour--phone, phone book, taxi--Jack found his
way to a pawn
shop. Showed just one gold wedding ring.
"You got some ID?"
A routine question.
Low key, bored. But it riveted him.
Shocked him rigid.
"Yeah, yeah...hang on...must've left
it in the car .... "
And he backed out. Still reeling. Identity -- he'd never even thought
of the
problem. Why not? Because it was totally insoluble.
Outside, a guy was hanging
around, muttering stuff to passersby. Strange stuff.
"You want jash, amies, soft? You want
jubes, man?"
Desperate enough to chance anything, Jack moved closer. He wanted to kind of
inconspicuously drift closer, but that was impossible because of the weight of
the
suitcase. It was killing him. He was one red mass of flushed sweat.
"What you want, man?"
"What've you got?" said Jack, cautiously.
"Anything, man."
"How about a gun?" said Jack, too
nervous to ask for what he really wanted.
"Sure, man. Get you a Glock, get you anything."
A Glock? Might be anything. A Third Millennium ray gun. A death ray
super-blaster.
Annihilate a tank at half a mile with its zap-ray. The alien name
carried with it the
authentic thrill of the new. But, no, he didn't really want
a gun, not right now.
"Come on,
man. What you want?"
"ID," said Jack, unable to conceal his nervousness.
"Five hundred
bucks. Get you a green card, driver's license, social security
number."
"Five hundred!" he
said. His shock was genuine, unconcealable. Five hundred
would clean him out. Hard on the
heels of shock came anger. "Five hundred! You
gotta be kidding!"
"Okay, okay! Chill, man,
chill!"
They settled on $250. Maybe too high -- Jack got the impression he was getting
the
wrong end of the bargain. And he did not like, no, not one little bit, the
visit to the
grimy back room where they took his photo and produced the
documents. But. He got out
alive. Complete with ID. And the ID he had purchased
was good enough, at least for the
pawnbroker.
Five pawn shops later--slow and cautious does it--Jack was feeling better. All
going to plan. He had done it. He had worked his big swindle back in 1962 and he
had got
away clean, escaping in the mad professor's time machine. Okay, so maybe
his stock
certificates were useless--if the newspaper stock market listings
could be trusted, the
tobacco companies in which he had so astutely invested
simply did not exist in this
alternate universe. But gold was still gold, money
was still money, money could evidently
buy anything, and he was going to be rich
enough to start over.
Only problem now -- he was
right out of cigarettes. But, okay, there was a
barber shop just across the road. Jack
crossed the street, went inside. Looked
for the cigarettes. And saw them, okay. Gray
pasteboard packets with no brand
names. Just the bare unadorned label CIGARETTES in black
and a message in red
saying THESE THINGS KILL YOU.
"Two packets," said Jack, gesturing.
"See
your paper?"
"What?"
"You know. Your paper."
"No," said Jack. "I don't understand. I just
want some cigarettes, okay?"
"Okay, you want the cigarettes, I need to see your paper."
"My
what?"
"Your paper, man! Your prescription!"
"Prescription?" said Jack, bewildered.
"You are
a registered addict, right? Right? Hey, you -- I'm talking to you! You
an addict, or what?
You a cop?"
"No," said Jack. "I'm not a cop."
"Then get outta here. You don't get out, I'm
calling the cops, right now."
Back on the sidewalk, Jack started to figure it out. In this
alternate universe,
smoking was quasi-illegal. Or was it? He wavered between belief and
disbelief.
Maybe it was, maybe it wasn't. Maybe there was just something weird about that
particular barber shop, that particular guy.
"Face facts," said Jack. "You just don't
know."
Okay, then. It was time to do some serious research. Go to the library -- that
was
it. In this alternate universe, the Empire State Building was in the same
place, so the
library should be in the same place too.
Only -- it wasn't.
Well. The steps were there. And
the lions. But the rest of it was a bomb crater,
roped off with yellow plastic tape. Jack
stood there staring, stunned.
"What you looking at?"
Realizing his mouth was open, Jack
closed it. Blinked. Focused on the stranger
who had addressed him. A girl. Well, sort of.
Pretty weird-looking girl. A
blonde with a bunch of rings in her nose and a ring through
her eyebrow and a
semi-pornographic tattoo of a big-breasted mermaid writhing up the side
of her
neck.
"Hi," said Jack, weakly.
"Yeah," she said. "Hi."
Then she laughed, as if he had
said something outrageously funny, and stuck out
her tongue at him. With shock, Jack saw
there was cold white metal riveted right
through her tongue. Sick, sick, sick! Really
psycho stuff! A pretty girl, and
she had stuck something right through her tongue.
Then
something clicked. Suddenly, Jack understood. The dementing lunatic he had
seen talking --
almost shouting -- on the street. The incomprehensible,
disoriented cab drivers, who
scarcely seemed to know Broadway from Fifth Avenue.
The insane Nordic woman with the
staring blue eyes who had stubbed out his
cigarette on his hamburger. The guy at the barber
shop who -- bizarrely -- had
demanded a prescription when he asked to buy cigarettes.
It all
made sense. All the data hung together. Given one simple insight -- given
one simple thesis
-- Jack was suddenly able to organize a thousand different
pieces of data into one simple,
internally consistent picture. Now he had a
simple Explanation of Everything. New York had
been converted into one big
lunatic asylum. Obviously.
"Ah," said Jack.
Ah. Eureka. I have
it. Now I understand! That was why nobody had called the cops
to take away the dementing
lunatic. The guy did not have to be taken to the
asylum because he was already in the
asylum, together with the madwoman with the
staring eyes who had tried to gas Jack with her
Third Millennium aerosol weapon
-- his eyes were still sore and smarting -- and this psycho
kid with the
mutilated tongue. That, doubtlessly, explained why armed soldiers were
guarding
the Empire State Building. The building was, presumably, the administrative
headquarters
of the lunatic asylum -- a place to which the inmates were
forbidden access.
"Want some
cancer?" said the girl.
"Some what?" said Jack.
"You smoke."
"I do?"
"Your hands. Your teeth."
Jack's fingers were, in a way which was not uncommon in 1962, stained with
nicotine. His
teeth likewise.
"You selling cigarettes?" said Jack.
"Twenty bucks. One packet."
Even
allowing for inflation, that was an incredible price.
But Jack was down to his last
cigarette.
"Deal," he said, producing a twenty.
In response, the girl dipped her hand into
her crotch --
Her crotch!
Jack reeled. She was wearing a man's jeans. Yes. He was not
hallucinating it. A
man's jeans, with the zip going right up the front, following the line
of her,
her--
The twenty was gone, snatched away, and the cigarettes were in Jack's hand. He
dropped them. He felt sick. A pretty girl, and she was dressed in this sick,
totally
obscene lesbian fashion. And Jack had a clear contrasting vision of his
lost sweetheart,
the adorable Amy Zebrolooda, whose pants had little zips on the
side, little zips which,
consonant with feminine modesty, made no obvious
reference to her, her --
"You don't want
them?"
The girl stooped, reached down for the cigarettes. Jack stepped on them, keeping
them
safe. Despite their provenance, he was going to keep them. He needed his
nicotine.
"Okay
then," said the girl,
And she was gone, retreating down the street. After fifty yards, she
turned, and
made a rude sign. Yes. More evidence. He was trapped in a lunatic asylum, that
was for sure.
"Spare me one?"
A man's voice. Who?
Turning, Jack saw a bearded man who looked
as if he was dressed for a hunting
trip.
"Sure," said Jack, relieved by the normality of the
encounter, the normality of
someone trying to bum a cigarette off him.
Jack opened the
packet and the stranger took a cigarette. Jack lit it for him
with his gold lighter.
"You're
a brave man," said the bearded guy.
"It's a free country," said Jack.
"Is it?"
"Well," said
Jack, considering. "It should be."
"Yeah," said the bearded guy.
"You hunt?" said Jack.
"Sure
thing," said the bearded guy.
"Me too," said Jack, establishing common social ground,
disowning his charcoal
gray suit. "Sarnac Lakes, ever heard of them?"
"Sure," said the
bearded guy. "Up near Mt. Marcy."
Jack got the impression that he had bridged the sartorial
gap which separated
them. They had established common ground. They were both hunters,
woodsmen,
smokers of tobacco.
"So," said Jack, gesturing at the bombed-out ruins of the
library, "when did
this happen?"
"Where you from?" said the bearded man.
"Me?" said Jack. He
wavered, poised on the edge of fiction. Then decided to risk
the truth. He needed to find
out what was going on in this alternate universe.
And fast. "I'm...I'm from the past. Kind
of. An alternate universe. I'm from
1962."
"That so?"
"Yeah. I, uh...came in a time machine."
"Aliens help you?"
"Aliens?" said Jack, startled. "No. There was this guy, Angus Void. Mad
professor type. He built this, this...time machine."
"You sure you not with the aliens?"
"I'm sure."
The bearded man looked around, as if checking for hidden observers.
"Name's
Vance," he said. "I'm with the militia."
"The militia?" said Jack.
"Not here," said Vance.
"You come with me."
They ended up in a place in Brooklyn, where the streets were full of
people
speaking Russian. Vance explained the site had been carefully chosen -- "Last
place
anyone would look for us." Once they were safe in the hideout, up above a
karaoke bar
(whatever karaoke was), Jack told his story.
Jack expected resistance. Skepticism. But, to
his surprise, Vance accepted the
entire story without a single objection, as if time
travelers from the past were
no big surprise. Vance seemed to have B how to put it? -- a
special capacity for
belief. A special capacity to filter information and, automatically,
to know
what was true and what was not.
With relief -- just to confess was a relief, and to
confess and be believed was
a double relief -- Jack told everything. How he fell in love
with Amy
Zebrolooda, the mad professor's beautiful female assistant. How he lost Amy to
Kevin
Culdaneath, his slick and very rich rival. How he took revenge by conning
Kevin, swindling
him out of millions. The bulk of the money went into tobacco
stocks, and some he converted
to gold. Then he stole the professor's time
machine and fled into the future.
"Or so I
thought," said Jack. "But something's out of whack. This place is
strange beyond
comprehension, I need someone to explain, I need to know what's
going on."
"Okay then," said
Vance. "You've come to the right guy."
Then Vance explained.
In this universe, America was
ruled by a totalitarian federal government which
had a lock grip on newspapers and
television. The government had been
infiltrated by space aliens, and was using a
much-dreaded fleet of black
helicopters to organize mass abductions of unsuspecting
citizens. Once the
aliens got hold of the citizens, they were subjected to unspeakable
medical
practices, including torture and brainwashing.
The aliens' long-term strategy was to
use the resources of the federal
government to break the will of the people to resist, and
to take away their
weapons--assault rifles, machine guns, flame throwers, shoulder-launched
rockets, all confiscated, in outright defiance of the Constitution. Once
America's strength
had been broken by a combination of brainwashing and
disarmament, the alien invasion fleet
currently waiting out in the Oort Cloud
would land openly, and the conquest would proceed.
At first, Jack found this stuff hard to believe. It was B well, from the
perspective of a
nice, normal guy from 1962, it was wacky. No other word for it.
Like old-fashioned science
fiction from back in the 1950s, the 1940s, whenever.
"You don't believe me, huh?" said
Vance.
"I didn't say that," said Jack.
"Jack," said Vance, dropping his voice to a
conspiratorial whisper. "You know
what a computer is?"
"Sure," said Jack. "A, a, you know.
Adding machine. Well--thinking machine,
that's more like it. IBM. In my world, we got this
company, IBM."
"Yeah, IBM, okay, we got IBM too. Jack, let me show you something."
Then
Vance took Jack into the secret back room and showed him the computer,
which was like a TV
screen hooked up to a special kind of typewriter.
"You can use this," said Vance. "Over the
telephone. Talk to other people. The
Internet, that's what we call it. Federal government,
they got the newspapers,
the TV. But we've got the Internet."
It was a simple concept, and
Jack got the hang of it inside of five minutes. The
computers talked to each other, and
there was no way the federal government
could stop it, there were just too many machines,
too many telephone lines.
"They got a bunch of new laws," said Vance. "Arrest us, switch us
off, shut us
down, throw us in jail. But, bottom line is, they can't stop us."
It took
another five minutes for Jack to learn how to actually use the Internet.
Then Vance gave
him a list of Internet addresses and left him to it.
For two days solid, Jack hid out in
Brooklyn, chain-smoking black market
cigarettes and burrowing deeper and deeper into the
revelations of the Internet.
Alien landings. Alien spaceships hiding behind comets.
Supposed American
senators who were actually aliens in disguise. The miracle of recovered
memory,
which had allowed a defiant human spirit to fight back against the invaders.
Recipes
for helping you determine if you yourself had actually been an alien at
some stage of your
personal evolution.
In the closed, claustrophobic confines of the hideout, the constant
reiteration
of the hideous truth was overwhelming. It was all there. Anatomical drawings of
aliens. Diagrams of alien space ships. Recordings, covertly made, of
interrogations in
which aliens grilled captured citizens. The secret plans used
to brief the crews of the
black helicopters. The federal government's protocols
for the planned establishment of the
concentration camps. The secret Russian
bases, complete with Russian tanks, which had
already been built on American
soil with the connivance of the American government.
The
vision of New York as one big lunatic asylum had already been forgotten.
Instead, Jack was
in the grip of a much more persuasive, much better documented
Explanation of Everything. An
essentially simple, internally consistent picture
which gave him a hard grip on the
confused, fragmented and at times totally
bizarre reality he had encountered on the
streets.
Overwhelmed by the impact of the Internet, Jack forgot all about checking out
the
history of tobacco stocks or inquiring into the rise of the Nazis in
Germany. His attention
was entirely given over to the authoritative,
immaculately presented, intensely detailed
accounts of horror brought to him by
the Internet.
In the face of this horror, the militias
were fighting back. The militias were
secret armies consisting of people like Vance. Having
begun their campaign of
armed resistance by blowing up federal buildings and assassinating
federal
officials, they were now moving into a new phase of freedom fighting, escalating
their campaign by targeting foreign embassies, nuclear power stations, airports,
subway
trains and prominent public buildings of any description.
"So," said Vance, at last. "What
do you think?"
"I'll level with you," said Jack.
"Yeah?"
"It's like this," said Jack, taking
a big breath. "I can't handle it. I've got
to go back. I'll be in big trouble, but it's
better than this."
"Hey," said Vance. "It's your life. I won't stand in your way."
And so,
seventy-two hours after his arrival, Jack was standing there on the
grass of Central Park,
waiting for the time machine to return. Vance was there
too, together with a couple of his
militia buddies, all three of them equipped
with absurdly small cameras with which to film
the scene.
On schedule, the time machine shimmered into existence. Only there was something
wrong. The machine arrived in a cloud of dust and smoke, and from it there
breathed a
dreadful stench of burnt hair and roasted flesh. The thing in the
driving seat grimaced at
Jack, its seared face one mass of burns.
"Jack," said the thing.
It was Kevin. Kevin
Culdaneath. Kevin -- his rival, the man who had stolen Amy's
heart.
"Kevin," said Jack.
"What happened?"
"They nuked us," said Kevin. "Nuclear war, Jack. Nuclear war."
And then he
said no more, because he was dead. In the ensuing silence, Jack
heard crackling flames, and
realized the time machine was well alight. It was
burning. No way to put out the flames. No
way to build another one. The designer
of the time machine, Angus Void, was undoubtedly
dead.
Back in the world which Jack had come from, the world of 1969., the conflict
between
the monolithic tyranny of the Soviet bloc and the Free World had
proceeded to its
inevitable conclusion: a nuclear exchange which must, surely,
have reduced the world to
ruin. And Jack was stuck here, forever, stuck in an
alternate universe in which New York
had been taken over by people from Russia,
Mexico, and the heart of Africa, in which space
aliens had subverted the
Constitution of the United States of America and a tyrannous
federal government
had set out to crush the rights of the people, making cigarette smokers
into
abhorred criminals and forcing free speech to retreat to the Internet.
"Hey!" said a
cop, arriving at the run. "What happened?"
"No idea," said Vance. "We just got here."
"Get
anything on video?" said the cop, glancing at the little cameras.
"No," said Vance. "We
were too late."
Then, as a growing crowd began to gather, Vance and his buddies discreetly
retreated, taking Jack with them.
"Well?" said Vance. "What you want to do?"
It was an easy
question to answer. Back in the world Jack had come from, the
lost world of 1962, the Free
World had been prepared to risk nuclear war to defy
the Soviet Union. In this alternate
universe--freedom, free speech,
Constitutional rights were surely still worth fighting for.
To Jack, his destiny
was plain. It was to join the militia: the heroes of the Third
Millennium.
"Me?" said Jack. "I'm with you."
And they took it from there.