If Wishes were horses, Mark couldn't have lied If turnips were watches, Lucy should never've died Together for the first and only time is the strange -but true - tale of Canvey teens Lucy and Mark, who head off to take pictures of Southend Pier in the October of 2013: and never come home. Using the diaries of key players, Winston Churchill, Lloyd George, Samuel Clemens, and the teenagers themselves the editorial team from the History They Tried to Suppress have lifted the lid on the secretive world of the Cabinet and the centre of their operations: the lost Underground Station, Aldwych Strand. What emerges within these pages is a horrific tale of murder, deceit and time travel. As Lucy and Mark find themselves pawns in Time's War. A war that begins in London at the turn of the 20th Century; transfers to a nightmarish 1949 a post war where Hitler and the Nazis control Britain; and concludes in 1888: a year in which NOTHING of any great note happened in London. In a world of uncertainties the only thing Mark and Lucy know is that unless they defeat the Armstrong Twins, once and for all, history as they know it, will be destroyed forever. But how can the friends succeed in light of legendary film director Alfred Hitchcock's prophecy? Especially as Mark won't be able to contain his temper when he finds out Lucy has danced with the Devil - not once but twice.