Mr. Pratt was at the table that we had expected would be used by Jubal and Jill. (Our research on fine details was less than perfect, since it came from questioning people after the war was over.) So Jubal went out into the anteroom where the wounded waited and worked on triage, tagging the cases Cas and Pol were to carry through to Boondock—the ones who would otherwise have been allowed to die untreated, as being beyond hope. Jill gave a hand to both Dagmar and me, especially with anesthesia, such as it was.

  Anesthesia had been a subject of much discussion at our Potemkin Village drills. It was bad enough to show up in the twentieth century with anachronistic surgical instruments…but Boondock anesthetic gear and procedures? Impossible!

  Galahad decided on pressure injectors supplying metered amounts of “neomorphine” (as good a name as any—a drug not available in the twentieth century). Jill moved around the station and in the anteroom, injecting the damaged and the burned, and thereby left Dagmar and me with our hands free for surgery assistance. She made one try at helping Mrs. Pratt, but was waved away—Mrs. Pratt was using something I had not seen since 1910 or thereabouts: a nose cone with drops of chloroform.

  The work went on and on. I wiped off our table between patients, until the towel I was using was so soaked with blood that it was doing more harm than good.

  Gretchen reported a spotty kill on the second wave—sixty bombers attacked, forty-seven shot down. Thirteen bombers dropped at least one stick before being hit. Gretchen’s girls were using particle beams and night-sight gear; the usual effect was to blow up the plane’s gasoline tanks. Sometimes the bombs went off at the same time; sometimes the bombs exploded on hitting the ground; sometimes the bombs did not explode, leaving a touchy problem for bomb-disposal experts the next day.

  But we saw none of this. Sometimes we would hear a bomb drop nearby and someone would remark, “Close,” and someone would answer, “Too close,” and we would continue working.

  A shot-down plane makes a different sort of explosion from a bomb…and a fighter from a bomber. Mr. Pratt said that he could tell the crash of a Spitfire from the crash of a Messerschmitt. Probably he could. I could not.

  The third wave broke into two formations, so Gretchen reported, and came in from southwest and southeast. But her girls now had practice in using what was essentially an infantry weapon against targets they were not used to, under conditions where they must be sure that they had bombers in their sights, not Spitfires. Gretchen described this one as a “skeet shoot.” I made note to ask her what that meant, but I never did.

  There were lulls between waves, but not for us. As the night wore on we dropped farther and farther behind; they brought in victims faster than we could handle them. Jubal grew more liberal in tagging, and routed to Ishtar and her teams more and more of the less severely wounded. It made our help more blatant but it surely saved more lives.

  During the fourth wave of bombing, sometime early in the morning, I heard Gretchen say, “Yeoman to Horse, emergency.”

  “What is it, Gretchen?”

  “Something—a piece of plane, probably—hit our gate.”

  “Damage?”

  “I don’t know. It disappeared. Whoof! Gone.”

  “Horse to Yeoman, disengage. Evacuate via gate at aid station. Can you find it? Range and bearing?”

  “Yes, but—”

  “Disengage and evacuate. Move.”

  “But, Hazel, it is just our gate we’ve lost. We can still take out any bombers that come over.”

  “Hold. Bright Cliffs, answer. Deety, wake up.”

  “I am awake.”

  “Research showed four waves, no more. Is Gretchen going to have any more targets?”

  “One moment—” (It was a long moment.) “Gay says she can’t see any bombers warming up on the ground. We now have signs of dawn in the east.”

  “Horse to all stations, disengage. Blood, wait for Yeoman, then evacuate…bringing Prime with you. Use injector if necessary. All stations, report.”

  “Cliffs to Horse, roger wilco; here we come!”

  “Yeoman to Horse, roger wilco. Father Schmidt is leading; I’m chasing.”

  “Blood to Horse, roger wilco. Hazel, tell Ishtar to get all cases back here now…or she’s got some unscheduled immigrants.”

  The next few minutes were hilarious, in a Grand Guignol fashion. First the terribly burned cases came pouring back through the incoming gate, on their own feet and now quite well. Surgery cases followed them, some with prostheses, some with grafts. Even the last cases, ones that Galahad and Ishtar and other surgical teams were currently working on, were patched up somehow, pushed through to Beulahland, there to be finished and to stay for days or weeks—and then sent back through to Coventry only minutes after Hazel ordered an end to the operation.

  I know that it was only minutes because none of Gretchen’s troops had arrived from less than a mile away. Those girls move at eight miles per hour at field trot (3.5 meters per second). They should have made it in about eight or nine minutes, plus whatever time it took to get down that tower. I heard later that some of the civil-defense wardens tried to stop them and question them. I don’t think the girls hurt anyone very badly. But they didn’t stop.

  They came pouring in, Maid Marians with long bows (disguised particle projectors), dressed for Nottingham Forest, led by Friar Tuck complete with tonsure, and followed by Gretchen, dressed also for a Robin Hood pageant and wearing a big grin.

  She paused to slap Dagmar on her fanny as she passed Father’s table, nodded at the Pratts, who were already stupefied by the procession of recovered patients going the other way. She stopped at Woodrow’s table. “We did it!”

  All three tables were bare at that moment; we had reached that wonderful point where no more wounded were waiting. Jubal came in from the anteroom, said, “You did indeed.”

  Gretchen hugged me. “Maureen, we did it!” She pulled my mask down and kissed me.

  I bussed her back. “Now get your tail through that gate. We’re on minus minutes.”

  “Spoilsport.” She went on through, followed by Jubal and Gillian.

  “All Clear” started sounding. Mr. Pratt looked at me, looked at the curtain, said, “Come, Harry.”

  “Yes, Pa.”

  “Goodnight, all.” The old man plodded wearily away, followed by his wife.

  Father said in a gruff voice, “Daughter, why are you here? You should be in San Francisco.” He looked at Woodrow. “You, too, Ted. You’re dead. So what are you doing here?”

  “Not dead, Dr. Johnson. ‘Missing in action’ is not the same as dead. The difference was slight but important. A long time in hospital, a long time out of my head. But here I am.”

  “Mmrrph. So you are. But what is this charade? People in costumes. Other people trotting back and forth like Piccadilly Circus. Hell of a way to run an aid station. Am I out of my head? Did we take a direct hit?”

  Hazel said in my ear, “Come through, all of you! Now!”

  I subvocalized, “Right away, Hazel.” Dagmar had moved until she was behind my father. She had her injector ready; she queried me with her eyes. I shook my head a quarter of an inch. “Father, will you come with me and let me explain?”

  “Mrph. I suppose—”

  The roof fell in.

  It may have been part of a Spitfire, or perhaps a Messerschmitt. I don’t know; I was under it. Gwen Hazel heard it through my mike; her grandsons Cas and Pol got themselves badly burned going back through to rescue us.

  Everybody got burned—Castor, Pollux, Woodrow, Father, Dagmar, me—and gasoline burns are nasty. But Hazel got more help through, dressed in fireproofs (planning, not happenstance) and we were all dragged out.

  All of this I got from later reports; at the time I was simply clobbered and then I woke up in hospital an unmeasured time later. Unmeasured by me, that is; Dagmar says that I was laid up three weeks longer than she was. Tamara won’t tell me. It does not matter; Lethe keeps one comfortable and unworried
as long as necessary to let one get well.

  After a while I was allowed to get up and take walks around Beulahland, a beautiful place and one of the few truly civilized places in any world. And then I was transferred back to Boondock…and Woodrow and Father and Dagmar came to call on me.

  They all leaned over my bed and kissed me and I cried awhile and then we talked.

  It was a big wedding. There was Mycroft and Athene and Minerva of course, and my grandson Richard Colin, who had at last forgiven Lazarus (for being his father). My darling Gwen Hazel had no reason to remain on leave from the family when Richard Colin was willing and eager to join. My daughters Laz and Lor had decided to cancel the indentures of their husbands, Cas and Pol, in recognition of their heroism in diving back into the fire for us four laggards—and to allow them to marry into the family. And there was Xia and Dagmar and Choy-Mu and Father and Gretchen—and the rest of us who had been Longs for years—some more years, some less. Our new family members each had had one reason or another to hesitate, but Galahad and Tamara made it clear: We take just one vow, to safeguard the welfare and happiness of all our children.

  That’s our total marriage contract. The rest is just poetic ritual.

  Whom you sleep with, whom you make love with, is your private business. Ishtar, as our family geneticist, controls pregnancy and progeny to whatever extent control is needed for the welfare of our children.

  So we all joined hands in the presence of our children (of course Pixel was there!) and we pledged ourselves to love and cherish our children—those around us, those still to come, worlds without end.

  And we all lived happily ever after.

  People in this Memoir

  Maureen Johnson Smith Long, July 4, 1882

  Pixel, a cat

  MAUREEN’S ANCESTORS, AUNTS, UNCLES, IN-LAWS

  Ira Johnson, M.D., father, August 2, 1852

  Adele Pfeiffer Johnson, mother

  John Adams Smith, father-in-law

  Ethel Graves Smith, mother-in-law

  (Paternal Ancestors)

  Asa Edward Johnson, grandfather, 1813-1918

  Rose Altheda McFee Johnson, grandmother, 1814-1918

  George Edward Johnson, great-grandfather, 1795-1897

  Amanda Lou Fredericks Johnson, great-grandmother, 1798-1899

  Terence McFee, great-grandfather, 1796-1900

  Rose Wilhelmina Brandt McFee, great-grandmother, 1798-1899

  (Maternal Ancestors)

  Richard Pfeiffer, grandfather, 1830-1932

  Kristina Larsen Pfeiffer, grandmother, 1834-1940

  Robert Pfeiffer, great-grandfather, 1809-1909

  Heidi Schmidt Pfeiffer, great-grandmother, 1810-1913

  Ole Larsen, great-grandfather, 1805-1907

  Anna Kristina Hansen Larsen, great-grandmother, 1810-1912

  IRA JOHNSON’S SIBLINGS

  Samantha Jane Johnson, 1831-1915

  James Ewing Johnson, 1833-1884

  (married Carole Pelletier, 1849-1954)

  Walter Raleigh Johnson, 1838-1862

  Alice Irene Johnson, 1840

  Edward McFee Johnson, 1844-1884

  Aurora Johnson, 1850

  MAUREEN’S SIBLINGS

  Edward Ray Johnson, 1876

  Audrey Adele Johnson, 1878

  (married Jerome Bixby, 1896)

  Agnes Johnson, 1880

  Thomas Jefferson Johnson, 1881

  Benjamin Franklin Johnson, 1884

  Elizabeth Ann Johnson, 1882

  Lucille Johnson, 1894

  George Washington Johnson, 1897

  Nelson Johnson, cousin, 1884

  (son of James Ewing Johnson and Carole Pelletier)

  MAUREEN’S DESCENDANTS AND THEIR SPOUSES

  Nancy Irene Smith, December 1, 1899

  (married Jonathan Sperling Weatheral)

  Carol Smith, January 1, 1902

  (married Roderick Schmidt Jenkins)

  Brian Smith Junior, March 12, 1905

  George Edward Smith, February 14, 1907

  Marie Agnes Smith, April 5, 1909

  Woodrow Wilson Smith/Lazarus Long, et al. November 11, 1912

  (first wife: Heather Hedrick)

  Richard Smith, 1914-1945

  (married Marian Hardy)

  Ethel Smith, 1916

  Theodore Ira Smith, March 4, 1919

  Margaret Smith, 1922

  Arthur Roy Smith, 1924

  Alice Virginia Smith, 1927

  (married Ralph Sperling)

  Doris Jean Smith, 1930

  (married Roderick Briggs)

  Patrick Henry Smith (by Justin Weatheral), 1932

  Susan Smith, 1934

  (married Henry Schultz)

  Donald Smith, 1936

  Priscilla Smith, 1938

  Lapis Lazuli Long, cloned from Lazarus, A.D. 4273

  Lorelei Lee Long, cloned from Lazarus, A.D. 4273

  Richard Colin Campbell Ames, grandson, A.D. 2133

  (son of Lazarus Long and Wendy Campbell)

  Roberta Weatheral Barstow, granddaughter, December 25, 1918

  Anne Barstow Hardy, great-granddaughter, November 2, 1935

  Nancy Jane Hardy, great-great-granddaughter, June 22, 1952

  MAUREEN’S SPOUSES, CO-SPOUSES, LOVERS, FRIENDS

  Charles Perkins, 1881-1898

  Brian Smith, husband, 1877-1996

  Justin Weatheral, 1875

  Eleanor Sperling Weatheral, 1877

  James Rumsey, Sr., M.D.

  James Rumsey, Jr., M.D.

  Velma Briggs Rumsey (Mrs. James Rumsey, Jr.)

  Mammy Della

  Elizabeth Louise Barstow Johnson (Mrs. Nelson Johnson)

  Hal and Jane Andrews

  George Strong

  Arthur Simmons, 1917

  Jubal Harshaw, 1907

  Tamara

  Ishtar

  Galahad

  Hilda Mae Corners Burroughs Long

  Deety Burroughs Carter Long

  Jacob Burroughs Long

  Zebadiah John Carter Long

  CATS

  Pixel

  Chargé d’Affaires

  Princess Polly Ponderosa Penelope Peachfuzz

  Random Numbers

  Captain Blood

  MORE PEOPLE

  Judge Hardacres, a corpse

  Eric Ridpath, M.D.

  Zenobia Ridpath, a gracious hostess

  Adolf Weisskopf, M.D.

  Dagmar Dobbs, RN

  Major Gretchen Henderson, Time Corps soldier

  Jesse F. Bone, DVM—he saved a kitten

  Ira Howard—he funded the Howard Foundation, 1825-1873

  Jackson Igo and sons

  Judge Orville Sperling, Foundation Chairman, 1840

  The Reverend Clarence Timberly

  Mrs. Ohlschlager, neighbor and friend

  The Reverend Dr. Ezekiel “Biblethumper”

  Mr. Fones, employer of Brian Smith

  Mr. Renwick, driver, Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Co.

  The Reverend Dr. David C. Draper

  Mr. Smaterine, a banker

  Deacon Houlihan, a bank president

  Mr. Schontz, a butcher

  Anita Boles, a stenographer

  Arthur J. Chapman, Howard Foundation Trustee

  Dr. Bannister, dean of academics, KCU

  Alvin Barkley, President, U.S.A., 1941-1949, time line two

  George S. Patton, Jr., president, U.S.A., 1949-1961, time line two

  Rufus Briggs, Foundation trustee, an oaf

  D. D. Harriman

  Col. Frisby, Argus Security Patrol

  Rick, Argus Security Patrol

  Mrs. Barnes, matron, Argus Security Patrol

  Mr. Wren, Public Health officer

  Mrs. Lantry, Public Health officer

  Daniel Dixon, financier

  Dr. Macintosh, chancellor, University of New Mexico

  Helen Beck, dancer/scholar

  Dora Smith (Mrs. W. W. Smith), New Beginnings colony

&nb
sp; Helen Smith, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Smith

  Freddie, a gunsel

  Patty Paiwonski, a priestess with snakes

  Wyoming Long, daughter of Gwen Hazel and Lazarus

  Castor and Pollux, grandsons of Gwen Hazel

  The Reverend Dr. Hendrik Hudson Schultz, Time Corps agent

  Gillian Boardman Long, RN, quondam high priestess Church of All Worlds

  COMPUTER PEOPLE

  Mycroft Holmes IV, chairman Lunar Revolution, time line three

  Minerva Long, former executive computer Tellus Secundus, now flesh and blood

  Athene, executive computer Tellus Tertius, Minerva’s twin

  Shiva, Athene/Mycroft interfaced, led by Minerva

  Dora, sentient ship

  Gay Deceiver, sentient ship

  THE FIRST MAN ON THE MOON

  Time line one—Captain John Carter of Virginia

  Time line two—Leslie LeCroix

  Time line three—Neil Armstrong

  Time line four—Ballox O’Malley

  Time line five—Skylark DuQuesne (NOT SHOW)

  Time line six—Neil Armstrong (alternate time line)

  THE COMMITTEE FOR AESTHETIC DELETIONS

  Dr. Frankenstein

  Dr. Fu Manchu

  Lucrezia Borgia

  Hassan the Assassin

  Bluebeard

  Attila the Hun

  Lizzie Borden

  Jack the Ripper

  Dr. Guillotine

  Professor Moriarty

  Captain Kidd

  Count Dracula

  PUBLIC FIGURES

  William Gibbs McAdoo

  Franklin Delano Roosevelt

  Josephus Daniels

  Woodrow Wilson

  Robert Taft

  William Jennings Bryan

  Al Smith

  Paul McNutt

  Herbert Hoover

  John J. Pershing

  Pancho Villa

  Patrick Tumulty

  William Howard Taft

  Leonard Wood

  Harry S. Truman

  Champ Clark

  Theodore Roosevelt

  William McKinley

  PEOPLE OFF STAGE

  Dr. Chadwick

  Dr. Ingram

  Richard Heiser

  Pop Green, druggist

  Dr. Phillips

  Jonnie Mae Igo

  Mrs. Malloy, landlady

  The Widow Loomis

  Mr. Barnaby, principal

  Major General Lew Rawson, target

  Bob Coster, ship design