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His wife looked over at him. “Yes, Jimmy?”

“Oh, shut up,” Jimmy grunted. He wanted a beer, any beer. But he’d stashed all of his cans upstairs and there was none within reach. “I thought you admired this guy anyway.”

“These have been tragic times for our country,” Beresford said. Jimmy snorted. Somehow, he didn’t think that Beresford had found them very tragic. It was clear that he was well-fed and content, even if he was the focus for a great deal of anger. The aliens would protect him if the lynch mob ever reached his door. “We have been forced to adapt to a new world order — and yet there are those who are resolved to fight to the bitter end. But their fight is hopeless — we are part of a greater universe now and it is time to earn our place in it.”

“By whoring for the aliens, no doubt,” Jimmy sneered. “Bet you’re not worried about thugs slashing your tires when you park and go for a beer.”

He smiled at the memory. It hadn’t been that long ago that he and his fellow lorry drivers had caught a pair of young kids slashing their tires. They hadn’t bothered to call the police, knowing that the little brats would only be let off with a warning. Instead, they’d thrashed hell out of them and abandoned them some miles from town. Jimmy had half-expected them to inform the police, but there had never been any comeback. Perhaps the police had figured that the brats deserved their treatment.

“We have broken many cells of bitter-enders, people who believe that they must still fight on,” Beresford continued. “It is with great regret that I am forced to confirm that those fighters — who have killed far more innocent humans than aliens — will be executed in two days. Their deaths will serve as a warning — being a bitter-ender will bring you nothing, but grief. The entire population will see their executions on television. And then let us pray that that will be an end to the fighting. Our poor country has suffered enough.

“But you haven’t suffered at all,” Jimmy bellowed, and threw the remote at the television set. People like Beresford never suffered. They simply attached themselves to the centre of power and made themselves indispensible, at least until a new centre of power arrived. Bottom-feeders, the lot of them. “Do you really think that we will be impressed?”

“It gives me great pleasure to announce that the daily ration will be increased in response to the increasing number of people who have seen the inevitable and started to work with the aliens to build a new world,” Beresford concluded. “Together, we will build a new Britain.”

His face vanished from the display. Moments later, the next soap came on, while a small line of text underneath the pictures warned that the alien broadcast would be repeated every hour on the hour. Everyone in Britain would see it. And then they would watch in horror as the aliens executed their captives. Jimmy shrugged as he stood up. What had Britain ever done for him that he should fight for it? He’d been nagged by the nanny-state since he was a little kid. Don’t smoke, don’t drink, don’t question… we know what’s best for you, never mind that you don’t like it… we have the right to reshape you as we see fit…

He rolled his eyes, just as the doorbell rang. Jimmy blinked in surprise; ever since he’d gone to work for the aliens, their circle of friends had dwindled away to almost nothing. His wife had taken it harder than he had — he was happy as long as he had beer and a place to sleep. Perhaps it was one of the religious freaks who went around offering salvation — in exchange for a cash donation, of course — or someone collecting for charity. It seemed that the only endangered species unworthy of assistance was the white male.

Carefully — there were bitter-enders out there — he peered through the tiny spy hole and frowned. Two brisk young men stood in front of the door, wearing civilian clothes. They didn’t look like religious freaks. Maybe they wanted to sign up with the aliens — it wouldn’t be the first time he’d been approached by someone looking for a job. He opened the door and scowled down at them. They didn’t seem intimidated by his face.

“We need to talk to you,” one of them said. He stepped forward, put his foot neatly in place to prevent Jimmy from shutting the door, and pointed a gun right at his face. Jimmy jumped back in shock, feeling the pleasant haze of near-drunkenness fading away. “You’re going to help us rescue our friends.”

Jimmy found himself on the floor, looking up at them. “And if you don’t help,” the man added, “you’re really not going to enjoy what happens next.”

* * *

Alex rolled over as she heard the sound of the cell opening. They seemed to take her to a different cell after each interrogation session, sometimes with someone in the cell, sometimes empty so she had a chance to brood on what would happen to her next. Her body just ached constantly, the pain blurring together into a single mass tearing away at her mind. She was half-convinced that they were torturing her for the fun of it, or perhaps they were waiting for her to break. They certainly hadn’t bothered to ask her any questions.

The light came on, revealing a man with a blood-stained face hobbling into the cell. Like her, he was naked, with dark blue-black bruises covering his entire body. She found herself wondering if she would recognise him, but as her eyes adapted to the light she realised that he was a stranger. The blood on his face suggested that he’d been tortured worse than she had, at least physically. Being at the mercy of a pair of sadists who could do anything they wanted to her was taking its toll. The only thing keeping her from breaking was a bitter determination not to give them the pleasure.

“Hi,” Alex said. So far, all of the other prisoners she’d met had been women. She hadn’t even known that there were any male prisoners in the complex, although she wasn’t really sure how large the complex actually was. It felt as if they were underground, but there was no way to know for sure. God alone knew if they were even still in Britain. “What did they do to you?”

The man stumbled to his knees, grunting in pain as he hit the stone floor. “They caught me two days ago,” he said, quietly. Alex blinked in surprise. It looked as if he had been worked over more than once, but maybe she was mistaken. “They were lying in wait — wiped us out, apart from me. I was the lucky one they took alive.”

There was a bitterness in his voice that was alarmingly convincing. “I was in Chester’s group,” he added. “Good old Chester — Shiny Two’s Colonel. He’s dead too, now.”

Alex winced. Shiny Two was the nickname for 2 Para, one of the toughest units of fighting men in the British Army. She’d flown missions supporting their operations in Afghanistan, before returning to Britain and flying in defence of the UKADR. If they’d been wiped out, what hope was there for anyone else?

“We lost contact with everyone else,” he admitted. “Who were you with?”

“No one,” Alex admitted. The memory was a bitter one, although if he was telling the truth it would seem that the professional soldiers hadn’t done much better. “I don’t want to talk about it.”

“It’s over,” the man insisted. “None of us are ever going to see the outside world ever again. What possible harm could it do now?”

Alex considered the point for a long moment. She didn’t know who had betrayed her and she probably would never know. It was nice to think that Archer and the others would carry on the war without her, but the traitor might have betrayed them as well. And if that had happened, their resistance cell would have been blown open and destroyed. The supplies that Archer had guarded ever since 1940 would have been confiscated by the aliens.