THE FORESIGHT WAR Read online




  THE FORESIGHT WAR

  An alternative history of World War 2

  by

  Anthony G Williams

  Visit us online at www.authorsonline.co.uk

  An AuthorsOnLine Book

  Copyright © Authors OnLine Ltd 2004

  Text Copyright © Anthony G Williams

  Cover design by Tim O’Brien and James Fitt

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopy, recording or otherwise, without prior written permission of the copyright owner. Nor can it be circulated in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without similar condition including this condition being imposed on a subsequent purchaser.

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  This book is also available in paperback, ISBN 0-7552-0156-6

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  Anthony G Williams is a military technology historian. He is the author of 'Rapid Fire: The Development of Automatic Cannon, Heavy Machine Guns and their Ammunition for Armies, Navies and Air Forces', and the co-author of 'Assault Rifle: the Development of the Modern Military Rifle and its Ammunition' (with Maxim Popenker) and the three-volume series 'Flying Guns: Development of Aircraft Guns, Ammunition and Installations' (with Emmanuel Gustin). 'The Foresight War' is his first novel. He maintains a website at:

  http://www.quarry.nildram.co.uk

  CHAPTER 1 - THROWBACK

  He woke, and instantly wished that he hadn’t. The throbbing headache which consumed him seemed to extend beyond his head into every part of his body. He began to moan, but stopped abruptly as the ache intensified. He lay unmoving, gritting his teeth, enduring in silent desperation.

  After an indeterminate period, the pain subsided enough to risk an attempt at coherent thought. What on earth had he done last night? He was not a heavy drinker, and besides, the worst hangover he could recall was a pale shadow of this suffering. Had he been in an accident? Fallen ill? He gingerly searched his memory, but could find nothing to account for such appalling agony. The pain gradually dimmed further. Slowly, he opened his eyes to the dull light of early morning.

  He was lying on his back, staring at a ceiling. The ceiling was plain, with an old-fashioned frilly lampshade surrounding the single bulb. The lampshade stayed steady and his head remained intact. Adventurously, he turned his head sideways and immediately shut his eyes to ward off the surge of nausea. Time passed. Slowly, he opened his eyes again. No reaction. He took stock of what he could see.

  The wallpaper was dull and also old-fashioned. So was the varnished wooden door and the brown Bakelite light switch next to it. Puzzlement began to grow. He was certainly not in his bedroom, nor in anyone else’s that he recognised. Curiosity overcoming the gradually receding pain, he raised his head. A thin, brass curtain rail, suspending thin, drab curtains, framed a sash window. A further effort brought a pair of discoloured brass taps into view, followed by a porcelain washbasin on a metal stand, framed and partly obscured by the foot of a brass bedstead. A pair of brown leather shoes completed his field of view. He wiggled his feet and the shoes moved in sympathy. Turning his head to the other side, he saw a large wardrobe in dark wood. There was nothing else in the room, apart from a wooden chair on which sat his holdall.

  Experimentally he tried moving his legs. They obeyed orders promptly. The pain was fading rapidly now, and he swung his legs over the side of the bed with more confidence. Slowly sitting upright, he took stock.

  He appeared to be uninjured, and although weak and shaky, did not feel ill. He was fully dressed, still possessed a full wallet and his keys, and he confirmed (after a careful stretch to the chair) that his holdall retained its usual contents. Not a robbery, then. A careful shuffle to the end of the bed gave him a limited view of rooftops with a larger structure some distance beyond. At first, the rooftops caught his attention. There was something odd about them. The wisps of smoke rising from the chimneys was an unusual sight, but he suddenly realised that what puzzled him wasn’t anything he could see, but something he couldn’t see: there were no aerials; not a satellite dish, not even the most humble antenna.

  Something else nagged at him. He looked at the structure in the distance. It appeared to be an enormous, barrel-roofed greenhouse with towers at each end. He stared at it blankly, until he gradually realised that his memory was telling him what it was, but his mind was refusing to accept the data. He was looking at the Crystal Palace.

  For a long time he sat unmoving, his mind jammed by the utter impossibility of the evidence of his eyes. Slowly, his thoughts unfroze. He could not deny what he was seeing: the pride of the Great Exhibition of 1851, moved from Hyde Park to a permanent home at Sydenham Hill, destroyed by fire in the 1930s.

  Destroyed by fire in the 1930s – nearly seventy years ago! His mind locked again and he fought desperately to regain some equilibrium. He tried to think logically, to build on small steps. How did he know this was the Crystal Palace? Because he had seen pictures a hundred times, there was nothing of this size remotely like it. How did he know when it was destroyed? Because he was a historian, it was his business to know. So which year did he think he was in? 2004, at the end of the summer. How did he know that? Because he was a lecturer at London University, preparing for the next academic year. Knowledge flooded back into him as if a dam had burst.

  His name was Don, Dr Don Erlang. He repeated this out loud, to make sure it sounded right. The sound of his own voice in the quiet room startled him. He was forty years old, divorced five years ago, living alone in a flat in Kennington. He couldn’t possibly be seeing the view out of the window, and as he never took hallucinogens he must be experiencing an extremely vivid dream. Feeling very self-conscious, he pinched himself hard. It hurt. The Crystal Palace floated serene and unperturbed in the distance. He tottered to the washbasin, poured some cold water, splashed it into his face, then looked up. Still there. This close to the window, he could see more.

  The street was cobbled; near by was a junction with a larger road. Ancient cars crossed the narrow field of view. A couple pushed a pram across the junction, the woman in a long dress and coat, the man wearing a trilby. The pram had huge overlapping wheels. His mind dived for cover again and he forced it to work with an effort of will. There had to be a rational explanation.

  The simplest was that he was suffering from an intense delusion. How this came to be, he had no idea. Certainly life was much less rewarding these days, with steady increases in class sizes, pressures to research and publish, the obtrusive quality assessments. Still, it wasn’t so bad that he was likely to have cracked under the pressure. His discipline was his all-consuming interest, indeed a contributory cause of the failure of his marriage. He knew more about the military history of the Twentieth Century than all but a handful of other academics and his life was in its study.

  Suppose he had lost his sanity? What should he, could he, do about it? How should he behave? Most immediately, what should he do now?

  He realised that he would have to leave this room, and instantly felt a strong reluctance to do so. The room was a little old-fashioned, but it was known, safe, explicable. The outside world was another matter. He forced himself to straighten up from the sink, walk to the chair, pick up his bag and walk to the door. It felt like a journey towards unknown terrors. He braced himself, opened the door and walked out.

  Autumn 1934

  Afterwards, Don remembered little of the building he walked through. It appeared to be some sort of low-cost boarding house but he met no-one to a
sk. The street was equally deserted, so he walked to the junction with the main road. The light breeze did not entirely dispel the smell of smoke.

  Across the road there were some shops, one of them a newsagent. He walked over, feeling an icy chill of apprehension. A looming shape and the blare of a horn caused him to jump quickly to the pavement. He entered the shop and approached the piles of newspapers. The nearest had the headline ‘THOUSANDS OFF THE MEANS TEST’. He noted vaguely that it was the Daily Mirror, and that the lead story was about Government efforts to help the workless. It took a real effort to force his eyes to the date. Monday 3rd September 1934. His vision spun in front of him, and he grasped at the counter to stay on his feet.

  ‘Are you all right mate?’ He barely heard the concerned voice, but nodded and staggered out into the street. He began thinking again some time later, when he was already a distance from the shop. He looked at his digital watch, which informed him that the time was 9.37 a.m., and the date Friday 3rd September 2004. Exactly seventy years. He was only a few yards further down the road when the significance of the date struck him. It was precisely five years before the British Prime Minister, Neville Chamberlain, would announce that the German refusal to withdraw from their invasion of Poland meant that Britain was at war with Germany; five years before the start of the Second World War.

  He kept on walking blindly and after a while realised that he was beginning to feel calmer, more relaxed. There must be a limit to the amount of stress a mind could take before it began adjusting, accepting the current appearance of reality, no matter how absurd. At least this particular delusion was remarkably consistent as well as detailed, with no obvious anachronisms. Of course, that could simply reflect his knowledge of the times. That being so, he reflected that he might as well behave accordingly: as if the delusion were reality.

  What to do next? He was already beginning to feel hungry and it was clear that this delusion required him to go through the motions of eating if he were not to become uncomfortable. He had enough money to buy food, but when he stopped to check his wallet he found that it still held twenty-first century currency, useless in this context. He would need to find someone to help him. He noticed from the position of the sun that he had been instinctively walking north, towards the centre of London. He had a long way to walk, but although it had evidently rained earlier, it was becoming warm and sunny. As he walked, he considered who he might contact. It occurred to him that he was not without resources. Some of the gadgets he possessed would be of great interest, and above all he had knowledge. The thought struck him with such force that he stopped. Six years of war. Fifty million dead. Britain bankrupted. Eastern Europe imprisoned. In this milieu, his knowledge was beyond price.

  He continued walking more thoughtfully. He was treating this delusion as if it were reality, but what alternative was there? He was clearly going through some escapist wish-fulfilment fantasy, as there were few people as well-equipped as himself to provide useful advice about what to do over the next few years. He might as well enjoy the opportunity and see what happened.

  Winston Churchill. The obvious name came to mind. After a while, Don dismissed the idea. In 1934 Churchill was in the political wilderness, a notorious Jeremiah, always prophesying war. He would be convinced readily enough by Don’s story but it was unlikely that anyone would listen to him. He needed to speak to someone with authority, but not a politician who might consider only the party political implications. After a while, he made up his mind and walked with more purpose, staring with fascination at his surroundings. The relative absence of motor vehicles made the walk more of a pleasure than he would have expected, but he had to smile wryly as he encountered his first trams. He recalled reading recently that London was considering the reintroduction of a tram system and wondered if the old tracks were still there, buried under the tarmac. He crossed the Thames by Blackfriars Bridge, noting with a pang of nostalgia the steam train chuffing its way across the railway bridge to his right. He had forgotten, though, just how smoky the air would be, and how grimy the buildings in their layers of soot.

  The porter at Imperial College was suspicious. ‘The Rector is a busy man. He isn’t accustomed to seeing people without appointments.’ His look clearly suggested that anyone as strangely dressed and dishevelled as Don, still perspiring from his long walk, would be unlikely to be granted such an honour.

  ‘Do you have an envelope I could use?’ Don asked politely. The porter grudgingly passed one over. Don opened his wallet and slipped something inside the envelope before sealing it. ‘Could you take this to the Rector, please? I am certain he will want to see me.’ He tried his most confident smile. With more grumbles and suspicious looks, the porter bade him wait and disappeared inside the building.

  Henry Tizard was irritated but clearly intrigued. ‘What’s all this nonsense about?’ He asked coldly, holding up the 2002 pound coin.

  Don did not immediately reply, but instead passed over his digital watch. Tizard looked at it with incredulity, his pale face even more tense than usual, fierce eyes glinting through metal-rimmed spectacles. Don opened his holdall and took out the notebook computer.

  ‘Let me show you what this can do.’ He said calmly.

  Don reflected with some amusement that for all Tizard’s reputation for being penetrating, tough and prickly, he looked decidedly nonplussed now.

  ‘Very well, then,’ Tizard said abruptly, ‘for the sake of argument, let’s accept your story that you’re a visitor from the future. What do you want? Why have you come to see me?’

  ‘The second question is easier to answer than the first, Sir Henry,’ Don began, then realised his mistake as Tizard frowned. ‘I’m sorry, of course you haven’t been knighted yet.’

  There was a glint of amusement in Tizard’s eyes. ‘Indeed I haven’t,’ he growled.

  Don ploughed on. ‘You are chairman of the Aeronautical Research Committee and shortly to become chairman of the Committee for the Scientific Survey of Air Defence, which will among other things sponsor the invention of radar.’ Seeing Tizard’s expression, Don hurried on. ‘You are one of the most respected scientists in the country and your word carries weight with politicians as well as your peers. Besides,’ he added, ‘I knew where to find you. As to what I want, that’s hard to say. Perhaps, above all, to give a warning.’

  ‘What kind of warning?’

  Don spoke slowly. ‘The War to end all wars isn’t over yet. This is no more than a pause in the struggle. The worst is yet to come.’ He leaned back in his chair and then paused as an increasing distraction claimed his attention.

  ‘Before I begin,’ he said apologetically, ‘do you think I could have something to eat and drink?’

  The meeting had taken weeks of argument, demonstration and persuasion to organise, and was being held in conditions of absolute secrecy. Don had not been introduced to anyone present, but Dunning had warned him about that.

  ‘They haven’t been able to ignore the evidence you brought with you, which is why they are coming,’ he explained, ‘but they are acutely sensitive of the prospect of public ridicule if news of the meeting leaks out, so they won’t officially be here.’

  Tizard had introduced Charles Dunning to Don a few days after what Don had come to think of as his ‘reversion’. A neat, well-dressed man of about his own age, Dunning was self-effacing but had an air of quiet authority. He had described himself as a civil servant, but his reticence combined with his remarkable ability to make things happen suggested to Don that his particular branch of the civil service probably had no official existence. He had rapidly organised some rooms close to Whitehall in which Don had been spending most of his time, and had turned up without warning to take him to this meeting.

  Dunning had assured him that although no politicians were present (‘This is being kept away from them until their advisers know what to make of it’) the meeting included highly influential civil servants and military advisers (‘They won’t be in uniform, but you�
�ll probably be able to pick them out’).

  So far Don had related, for the umpteenth time, the story of his strange reversion and his summary of the events of the next decade. He had then spent a considerable time fielding detailed questions, many of which he found surprisingly difficult to answer. He somewhat ruefully realised the extent to which general background knowledge tends to be frustratingly unspecific.

  The air was thick with smoke, cigarettes vying for pre-eminence with pipes and cigars. Don felt ill, but was too nervous to ask for a window to be opened. The chairman of the meeting was a lean, grey-haired man wearing the authority of one whose judgement was unquestioned. He had chain-smoked cigarettes throughout the meeting.

  ‘Very well, we have heard Dr Erlang’s account. Let us assume for the purpose of this meeting that it is accurate. Certainly there are enough straws in the wind to make his story credible.’ He began ticking them off on his fingers. ‘Last June Hitler and Mussolini met in Venice. At the end of that month, Hitler purged Rohm’s faction from the Nazi Party.’ (Don tried to recall when the phrase ‘Night of the Long Knives’ had been coined). ‘In August, the Austrian Chancellor, Dolfuss, was assassinated by a Nazi and in the same month Hindenberg died and Hitler immediately combined his position as Chancellor with that of the Presidency. He is clearly well on the way to becoming the unchallenged dictator of Germany. In the light of Dr Erlang’s revelations, what response should we make?’

  There was a rather uncomfortable pause. Clearly, no-one wanted to appear foolish or gullible. Finally, an elderly man who had not yet spoken removed his cigar and cleared his throat.

  ‘The key problem is clearly the German Nazi Party in general and Hitler in particular. Japan is a separate issue of lower priority. The question must be: how can we stop Hitler?’