He shrugged and stood up. “There are places to sleep here, so get some rest,” he added. “In the morning, we will start checking out our targets and planning the final stages of the operation. And then we’re going to send a lot of people out through the tunnels before the shit hits the fan.”
Chris nodded. “Let the CO know that we got here,” he said. “How do you plan to check out the targets?”
Abdul smiled. “Let’s just say that we had a little help and leave it at that,” he said. “You don’t need to know the precise details.”
* * *
The following morning, after a breakfast that mainly consisted of the ration packs they’d carried through the tunnels, Abdul led Chris and a couple of others out into the city. They’d all been issued ID cards that noted their occupation as workers, people who moved from place to place to do manual labour for the alien overlords. London had simply too much damage to clear up and almost everyone who wasn’t in a priority occupation had been tasked to help with the work — or starve. It was an attitude that Chris found rather understandable — it would certainly have helped clear up many of Britain’s inner cities and housing estates — but the aliens didn’t care about the niceties. From what many of the resistance fighters who’d stayed in London had reported, the aliens pushed the workers as hard as they could.
Dozens of work gangs roamed the city, clearing up smashed or burned-out cars, carting away debris from fallen buildings and even picking up dead bodies from where they’d been abandoned. Chris wouldn’t have been surprised to discover that Londoners had an epidemic on their hands as well as everything else, just from the number of dead bodies that had been left to rot for a few days. The teams that cleaned up the dead wore NBC suits and were apparently granted special privileges by the aliens. Chris doubted that anyone could be given enough privileges to make the work worthwhile.
And there were policemen everywhere in Central London. Chris watched them checking ID cards as they patrolled, remembering the stories he’d heard about the French Resistance and those who had collaborated with the Germans. The police might have started to collaborate out of a desire to keep the public safe, but now they were nothing more than a millstone around London’s neck. Some of the men wearing police uniforms reminded Chris of the torturers he’d pulled out of the Detention Camp and executed, men who wanted to indulge their dark tastes and were willing to serve the aliens in exchange for having their way with their victims. Others looked ashamed and tried to do as little as possible.
The aliens themselves were very much in evidence. Chris watched as they ran armed patrols through London, waiting for one of the resistance fighters to take a shot at them. When they were engaged, they threw back a hail of bullets, with an alarming lack of concern for civilians who might be caught up in the crossfire. They didn’t seem to recognise that some people just wanted to get on with their lives and ignore politics; anyone they caught close to the resistance fighter was often dragged away and dumped in the back of an alien vehicle.
“They go outside the city to one of the camps,” Abdul muttered, as they busied themselves carting away rubble. “The Leathernecks sometimes press them into service, but mostly they just seem to leave them in the camps. We don’t know why…”
“We don’t know a great deal about them,” Chris muttered back. They’d been studying the alien base they’d built on the remains of Buckingham Palace, a base that was heavily guarded, without any humans allowed to pass through the fence. The intelligence briefing had stated that the alien commander charged with invading and occupying Britain was based there, which explained the precautions. They had to feel more isolated than the Americans in the Green Zone in Baghdad had felt during the war in Iraq. “It’s not going to be easy to get in there, not if they don’t let humans into the building.”
“There are some humans allowed in,” Abdul said. “Their collaborator-in-chief, for one. I don’t think he’d help us unless we pointed a gun at his head and I think the aliens would probably notice if we did.”
Chris chuckled. The aliens did seem to be curiously uninterested in some human activities, although there seemed to be no rhyme or reason to their disinterest. They didn’t seem to be interested in what humans were wearing, or in sex, even though both of them were clues to another human that something might not be right. He picked up another piece of rubble and dropped it in the cart, shaking his head. The aliens had their weaknesses, just like humans. All they had to figure out how to do was use their weaknesses against them.
His lips twitched with sly amusement. If it was that easy, he knew, everyone would be doing it.
They’d definitely realised that having their troops keep a fixed routine was a dangerous mistake. The patrols through London seemed to be random, while the guards patrolling the fence surrounding their base were varying their routine. Chris suspected, from the way they were moving, that there were probably reinforcements inside the base, just as there had been at the Detention Camp. But apart from that…? The closest major alien base was outside the city. If they could pin down the forces defending the base itself, they could run riot before the aliens could respond…
* * *
“I think you’re going to be going out of the city tonight,” Bongo said. Fatima nodded, tiredly. Her skills had helped save lives, but she’d watched too many people die because she didn’t have the supplies or equipment to save them. “Once you get through the tunnels, you’ll probably be taken up north with some of the others.”
Fatima sighed. She’d never really been out of London, apart from a brief trip to Edinburgh. Her stepmother had wanted her to go to Pakistan, but Fatima had refused — she’d suspected that her stepmother had intended to marry her off. And now… where was her stepmother? The aliens had taken her away and… what? Had they killed her, or imprisoned her, or… she wasn’t anyone important, not really. Hardly the kind of person they’d want to interrogate thoroughly.
But she’d been related to the first suicide bomber. That alone made her a person of interest.
“I see,” she said, finally. “When do you want me to be ready?”
“Get your stuff ready when you have a moment,” Bongo said. “We’ll have to wait until dark anyway. They might spot us moving through the streets in daytime.”
Fatima grinned, realising that she was being teased. As far as she knew, the aliens still wanted her for the crime of being related to a young man foolish enough to blow himself up — along with hundreds of humans and a dozen aliens. The collaborator government kept making that point on the BBC, reminding everyone of the evils of suicide bombing. Fatima couldn’t really disagree, even though she’d disliked the young asshole. He’d thought that all women should be neither seen nor heard.
“Right,” she said. “Will you be coming with me?”
“Probably not,” Bongo said. “I have work to do here.”
Fatima nodded. “Good luck,” she said. “May God go with you.”
North England
United Kingdom, Day 51
“I think we have a problem.”
Gavin looked over at the operator. He was manning one of the computer stations monitoring alien activity in the region, using their own computer networks against them. It gave them a view of what the aliens were doing, although he had to keep reminding himself not to take it for granted. The aliens, if they ever worked out what the humans were doing, could get around it by simply disconnecting from the network.
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