The horror of that prospect held each of them silent for a moment. Aubrey imagined Holmland troops marching up the streets of Lutetia, the people cowed, the alliance in tatters. With Gallia taken, Albion's strongest ally on the Continent would be gone. What would stand between Albion and invasion then?
George scowled. âPunching through the Low Countries and through north-east Gallia at the same time is a masterstroke,' he said.
âI think the Marchmainers will have something to say once the Holmlanders get through the Low Countries,' Aubrey said.
Saltin straightened at the mention of his home region. âThey shall not pass. Marchmaine may have little love for Lutetia, but we are Gallians all the same.'
âAnd what about the people of Divodorum?' Aubrey asked.
âIt is bad,' Saltin admitted. He pointed through the glass of the door at the battered ornithopter. âWe have few craft available. We sent one out yesterday, in the afternoon, to see what is happening.' He shook his head and growled with displeasure. âOur pilot was nearly killed. His craft was struck by magically enhanced shells.'
âWas he badly hurt?' Aubrey asked, and he knew he'd never be able to read an account of a battle again without wondering about the reality behind bald statements like âmore than three thousand wounded'.
âHe won't fly again.' Saltin's declaration was careful, but his face made it clear that this, to an airman, was the fate to which death was a preferred option. He sighed. âBut he reported that our forces have halted the Holmland advance â for now. They have had heavy casualties, and desperately need reinforcements, but they have dug in and are holding.'
âReinforcements,' Aubrey repeated.
âThey are coming. High Command has sent a division. It arrives today. By train.'
Aubrey had visions of his remote sensing team standing forlorn on the platform in Lutetia, watching as a train pulled out, packed full of soldiers. âA special troop express?'
âIt is the quickest way to get here in numbers.'
âI know of three people who also need to get here. How would I be able to find out if they're on the train?'
âThey won't be. All available trains are bringing troops this way. No room for visitors.'
âThese aren't visitors. They're essential.'
Saltin considered this. âYou are suggesting that these people are part of your mission here?'
âThey're joining us for the next phase.'
Saltin held up a hand. âDo not tell me. With this, the less I know, the better.' He paced about the office for a moment, frowning. âThe telegraph lines are still open. I can find out from the stationmaster in Lutetia.'
âI'd appreciate it, Saltin.' Aubrey rose. âAnd what about you? What are your plans?'
Saltin shrugged. His smile was small and weary, and even his moustache looked the worse for wear. âDivodorum will resist and I must do my part to help.'
âBut you'll be ready to fall back when the time comes.'
âIf we need to. If we can.' Major Saltin straightened his jacket, then frowned at the grease still on the back of one hand. âI have found that it's difficult to know when the time comes. I am sure that many a soldier's last thoughts have been, “I wish I'd left yesterday.”'
Cycling back to their base, Aubrey realised what had changed dramatically in Divodorum.
âNo children, George,' he called as they swooped along the nearly deserted Haussman Street.
âWhat?' George angled around a dog that was standing in the middle of the road and looking mournful.
âFamilies have fled. Women and children, at least.'
The city had the feeling of a place with no heart, a place waiting to be put out of its misery. The artillery bombardment in the hills sounded like giant footsteps in the distance, impossible to ignore.
Aubrey cycled on, grimly.
The factory was deserted when they arrived. For a moment, Aubrey stopped dead, looking around the emptiness, unwilling to think the worst, but finding it was presenting itself insistently, like a least favourite uncle at a family reunion.
George flapped a slip of mauve paper at him. âThey've gone to the woods above the station. They want us to join them for lunch.'
Relief was one of the best feelings of all, Aubrey concluded. âShouldn't we be rationing our food?'
âIf we eat our way through the stores I've put down, that'll mean we've been trapped here for a year. Which would suggest we'd have problems other than food to worry about.'
They found Caroline and Sophie on the grassy knoll overlooking the station, the place Aubrey had first surveyed Divodorum. A blanket was spread out and the two girls were chatting innocently enough, if one overlooked the field glasses sitting on top of the picnic hamper.
George picked them up. âHard to explain these, what, if a suspicious Gallian police officer happens by?'
âGeorge, George,' Sophie said. She rummaged in a knapsack and found a slim book. She opened it to show colour plates. âWe are bird watchers, no? I am looking for a warbler. And a crake. And â how do you say this one? â a mallard?'
âWell, I'm convinced,' Aubrey said. âBut what about your fallback, just in case someone else isn't? Your story behind the story? You don't want to be mistaken for Holmlanders.'
âWe've been sent by the Central Railway Company,' Caroline said. She slipped off her royal blue jacket to reveal a high-necked white blouse underneath. âThe firm is interested in passenger and freight possibilities in this area after the war, but wants to remain secret because of rumours that a rival company is in the area, sniffing along the same lines.'
Aubrey sat on the blanket and plucked a blade of grass. âNicely done.'
While passing platters of cold chicken and salad around, they shared Saltin's news. Sophie had never met the airman, but had heard of him. âHe was a hero after you rescued him, George.'
âWell, I say,' George took a pickled onion from a jar, âAubrey was there too. Quite helpful, he was.'
Aubrey let this pass, with a smile. âIf the remote sensers aren't aboard this train, we'll need to decide what to do next. Communication, first, I'd say. Caroline?'
âWe can, tonight, but we must be careful. I have the impression that they're out there.'
âThe Holmlanders? Of course they are.'
âListening, I mean, trying to intercept any communications.' âYou can tell that?'
âIt's a feeling I get when I'm wearing the headphones.' She looked into the distance, in the direction of the battle front. âIt's like the hollowness of the ether gets bigger, if that makes any sense. I can feel that someone is out there, waiting.'
Aubrey raised an eyebrow. He sometimes had that feeling, when he became aware that Dr Tremaine was in the vicinity, but that was due to the magical connection the rogue sorcerer and he shared ever since their first magical encounter.
He was grateful he wasn't alone. Without George and Caroline, the unease about their circumstances would be oppressive. He could imagine a solo operator actually being glad of capture, relieved at not having to live under such uncertainty any more.
âWe'll make the communication short,' Aubrey suggested. A sudden, almost frantic increase in the artillery bombardment made him look to the northeast. The sound hadn't been drawing any closer for some hours, but he couldn't decide what that meant. Was it a stalemate? A Gallian success resulting in a Holmland withdrawal? He rubbed his hands together with frustration.
He went to canvass these possibilities with his friends when he noticed Sophie's expression. While George busied himself with making another sandwich and Caroline searched in the hamper, Sophie had frozen, her face very pale, and she, too, was staring to the north-east at a redoubled barrage of artillery.
Her concern was apparent, but to Aubrey's mind it was more than simply being worried about an imminent invasion. And while he didn't doubt that she was fond of George, did it explain her willingness to remain in such a dangerous place?
âYou have another reason for being here,' he suddenly said to her.
She turned, eyes wide. âWhat do you mean?'
âIn Divodorum. You have another reason for being here.' As he said it, a number of pieces fell into place. âIf your role with
The Sentinel
were so important, you would have been in contact with its office, or the editor. I'm sure he'd be interested in a story from one of his journalists on the front line.'
Sophie's face fell. âWe have been so busy.'
George patted her on the shoulder and gave her his handkerchief. He frowned at Aubrey. âI say, old man, aren't you being a bit harsh?'
âNo, George,' came a tiny voice from the other side of the handkerchief. âHe is right. I should have told you.' She caught her breath and looked up. âIt's my brother, Théo. He has enlisted, and I must see him.'
The tale she told them was complicated yet familiar and Aubrey finally understood what his grandmother had hinted at. Family troubles. Sophie's brother was two years older than she was, but sounded years younger from the way he behaved. For some months he had been growing more and more hostile to his parents, arguing that his father had been treated poorly by his business partners because of some innate â and unspecified â weakness. Finally, he'd stormed out vowing to enlist, against his father's wishes, and to fight for what was rightfully theirs.
âRightfully ours,' Sophie said wistfully. She twisted George's handkerchief in her hands. âThat's how he said it.'
âIt's worrisome,' Aubrey ventured. âWhenever I hear “rightfully” I hear entitlement and pride.'
âHe did not always use language like that,' Sophie said. âNot before he met ... her.'
Sophie's unhappiness invested that single word with something approaching contempt.
Unsurprising,
Aubrey thought â not without an ironic sense of his own situation â
a sudden change in a young man after meeting a young woman.
âWhere did he meet her?' George said, filling in the awkward silence as they each contemplated young men and young women.
âYvette was a fellow music student, at the Conservatorium. She asked him to a political meeting and he was never the same again.'
âWhat sort of political meeting?' Caroline asked.
âThéo was never very clear about that. I thought it sounded like anarchists, then he began talking as if it were a workers' party. Rabble rousers, is that what you call them? Much talk and little action.'
âWe know the type,' Aubrey said. They'd had encounters with groups like that in Albion. With unease, he remembered how they'd been infiltrated by Holmland security and had nearly pulled off a plot to kill the King. This had been the affair that had introduced Aubrey to the world of espionage and secret plots â and the machinations of Dr Mordecai Tremaine, who was the puppet master behind the Army of New Albion. He had manoeuvred these deluded fools and convinced them that exploding a bomb during the King's Birthday Parade was more than a good idea, it was a
patriotic
idea. Aubrey had managed to disrupt this plot, as well as rescue his father from Dr Tremaine's clutches.
âLots of hot air.' George patted her hand. âNothing to worry about.'
âIt became very serious. He abandoned all his old friends, he ignored us, and he went off with these new people. Mother and Father are heartbroken.' She paused, and swallowed hard. âI ... At first, my father was sure that he had been beguiled.'
âHe suspected magic was involved?'
âHe thought so, but then dismissed it. Father had some magic, a long time ago. He still reads about it, in journals, in between his work for the government.'
Aubrey had heard enough already to have his curiosity â both professional and personal â leaping into action. He remembered his grandmother's correspondence with Sophie's father. âYour father works for the government?'
âTwo years ago he was asked to assist, in finance, by those who could see war was very close. He has been very busy.'
âSo I imagine. And he believes that Théo has had a spell cast on him? It sounds unlikely.'
Sophie's upper lip quivered. âBut he changed, so much, he was not our Théo. What else could explain such a thing? How could he do anything so foolish?'
Aubrey didn't have to look far to find an example of a young man doing foolish things, even without the help of a mirror. He kept mute and George took up. âSo you've come looking for him?'
âTo talk,' Sophie said. âI must talk to him. He sent me a few letters. He is here, but not so easy to see.'
âWhy not?' George said, indignation making his shoulders swell ominously. âThe camp commandant can't very well refuse him a visit from his own sister.'
âIt is not that.' Sophie looked to the north-east again at the sound of shelling.
âHe's out there,' Caroline guessed. âYou can't see him until he gets back.'
No-one said the âif' word but it hung in the air, an unwelcome visitor.
Sophie bit her lip and looked away. âNo. It is even worse than that.'
âWorse?' George said. âWhat's worse than being hunkered down in an artillery battle?'
âThéo did not enlist in the Gallian army.' Sophie used the handkerchief again. âJust before war was declared, he went over the border to Stalsfrieden. He joined the Holmland army.'
Aubrey nearly looked around to see who had thrown a bucket of cold water over him, then he realised it was simply the shock of Sophie's announcement. Her brother was a Holmland soldier? Fighting against his own countrymen?
A train whistle sounded. Aubrey leaped to his feet and seized the field glasses.
âAubrey,' Caroline said fiercely. âStop that.'
âStop what? Stop continuing with our mission?'
âThe train can wait. Sophie needs our help.'
I didn't hear her ask for help.
âWhat can we do?'
âAnything we can,' George said.
âNow, Sophie, I'm sure we can help you find him. Then you can talk some sense into him,' Caroline said.
Aubrey hesitated, then threw caution to the winds. âSo we're going wander about, not just in wartime but in an actual battle, find her brother and then change his mind for him? Make him see the error of his ways? In the middle of the Holmland army? And then bring him home again, through said battlelines?'
George looked at Sophie. âDo you know exactly where Théo is?'
She shrugged. âHis letters he sent, before war was declared, said he was part of a detachment in Stalsfrieden.'
âStalsfrieden? Doing what, exactly?' Aubrey asked.
âGuarding. So boring, he said, even though the factory was important.'
âDon't look like that, Aubrey,' George said. âStalsfrieden must have plenty of important factories.'
Aubrey agreed, but he had to press. âSophie, did Théo say anything else about the factory?'
She frowned and put a finger to her lips. âHe said it was a strange place, and he wrote about something he thought was funny. In the middle of the factory grounds were big animals.'