A Chronetic Memory (The Chronography Records Book 1) (13 page)

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Authors: Kim K. O'Hara

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BOOK: A Chronetic Memory (The Chronography Records Book 1)
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Kat and Marak looked at her oddly. “No, sweetie,” Kat said, “this was 2208. That’s when we first met.”

First met? Dani’s mind raced through the dates she knew. The milestones of their marriage. Of course Kat was wrong. But how could she make a mistake like that? “That’s impossible. You can’t have first met a month after Jored was born.”

Marak looked utterly baffled. “Jored? Who are you talking about?”

“Jored! Your son, Jored!” Dani rushed down the hall to his room, his bright yellow room with playful pups.

Only it wasn’t yellow. It was a tasteful brown, with a textured border. The walls were viewwalls, displaying a continuous stream of updating news reports. An efficient-looking desk sat dead center.

“Whose son are you talking about? And why are you looking at my office?” Marak asked.

That’s when Dani started screaming.

15
Detection

SEEBAK HOME LABORATORY, Vashon Island, WA. 2130, Wednesday, June 7, 2215.

Lexil glanced up at the corner of the viewwall, which was currently displaying a clock. It was going to be a very late night. Bits of the dinner they’d ordered from the Heli Deli three hours earlier still remained on the worktable: a container of Italian olives and artichoke hearts, some hothouse strawberries, and their water globes. The meal had been delivered through the airtube above the house by the usual remote-control delivery shuttle. They had long since consumed the delicious grilled chicken and pesto pasta dish, but the extras were nice to nibble on while they were immersed in tracking this latest disturbance.

It had been a big one, the biggest one yet. The main disturbance had occurred, as nearly as they could tell, at 1330 in the afternoon. But its effects reached back nine years. That was a common characteristic of the disturbances caused by the institute: The origin was always present day; the effects sometime in the last twenty years. Also, they could always physically locate the origin within the institute grounds, and that sealed it.

From the time of the first disturbance, they’d been busy setting sensors, recording and analyzing data, and locating blips, both physically and chronologically. If they could find a blip that occurred chronologically after the origin event, it would give them an extraordinary opportunity to measure it.

“Doc? I’m catching a close one here. Present-time, over in Lower Queen Anne. Still causing ripples, and they are big ones.”

The doctor came over to look. “If we can get a stable one that doesn’t break down in a few hours, we can see how sensitive it is to outside influences. It would do a lot to help us determine what kind of causes we’re looking at for these.”

“If we can get a stable one,” Lexil repeated, “I will go over there myself and find someone to interrogate. I will find out exactly what caused it.”

“Not in the institute.”

“These aren’t in the institute. They’re across Elliott Bay. I can still get there by tube, though.”

“Look for details. Can you fine-tune it to a street and number? Find out what business or residence is at that address?”

“Yes, working on it.”

They worked silently for a few minutes, with each man monitoring a half-dozen of the sensors. Each device consisted of two main parts. Half of it was surrounded by a chronetically-sealed enclosure, which blocked temporal quantum entanglements and would thus be impervious to changes in the timestream. The other half was left outside the enclosure, and fully subject to any changes. They were connected by thin strands of a chronetically sensitive alloy. The first device had been set up in 2199, the second and third at six-month intervals. All three were needed before any details about time and place could be determined.

Lexil remembered learning, as he worked with Doc in the early years, that the sensors resembled ancient seismographs, which had to be located some distance apart to be able to determine epicenters of earthquakes with any degree of accuracy. With the seismograph, the extra dimension had been depth. With chronetic sensors, of course, the extra dimension was time.

He leaned back in his chair and stretched. It had already been a long night. They should start setting the automatic recorders to track changes while they slept, but neither of them wanted to leave the lab. All the other events they had had the good fortune to note from the origin were tiny drops compared to this one.

Finally the calculations were completed. “Here’s the address, Doc.”

The older man came over to look. “That looks familiar. Is it a residence?”

“Should be, in that neighborhood. Hang on, let me look it up.”

A few more swipes with a finger, a few more taps on the screen, and Lexil displayed the names.

“Are you sure?”

Lexil was startled by the intensity in his mentor’s voice. The names were unfamiliar to him. “Who are they? Do you know them?”

“Marak and Katella Wallace? I know them. I’ve known Marak for longer than Kat. He interviewed me once for story he was working on.”

“A story? What is he, a journalist?”

“Yes, and a very thorough one. But one of the most honest and honorable ones I’ve met. He always checks his quotes, and he doesn’t go searching for dirt. He hardly has to track a story any more. People come to him now, most of the time.”

“What does Katella do?”

“I believe she organizes protesters outside our own favorite institute.”

Lexil turned sharply to look at him. “She might not mind helping us with our research, then.”

“No, although …” he paused.

“Complication?”

“Kat’s uncle has been involved with the institute since its beginning, when I was there. He’s still marginally associated with it.”

Lexil whistled. “I’ll bet that makes for some interesting conversation at family gatherings.”

Suddenly, Doc snapped his fingers. “I just remembered. You’ve met them too. You were with me the day Marak met Kat on her uncle’s boat. It was back in 2208. You were eighteen. It was June 7. That’s today, actually! Seven years ago today.”

“Say that date again?”

“June 7, 2208.”

“Doc, that’s one of the first blips that appeared. That exact date.”

Once more Doc came over to check his figures. “That is more than a coincidence. Has to be. Where was the blip located?”

“Elliott Bay Marina,” Lexil answered.

“That was where they met. Definitely not a coincidence.”

“But that would mean their meeting is a result of this disturbance. What then? They wouldn’t have met otherwise?”

“Check it out. Look at the data from the enclosed devices.”

Lexil combined the readings and ran the figures through some algorithms. “It’s flat at June 7, 2208. So without the disturbance, there was no meeting that day. But look here. This was the first effect, the center of the first set of ripples, from this event.”

“The characteristics are the same.”

“Right, but on the other side, the inside, of the enclosure. Doc, I think in the original timestream, they met back in September of 2206. Is that what you see here?”

“I can’t say for sure. We’re scientists, and all that. But it’s clear that something that happened in 2208 in our timestream occurred in 2206 in the original, and it could very well be the date they met.”

“If that’s the case, this would be an amazing opportunity. To be able to pinpoint the inciting event and be present when—if—the third force starts nudging things back into place … wow!”

“I think we should plan some field work for you tomorrow.”

“Should we call them first?” Lexil asked.

“That might corrupt our data. This contact will need to be under very controlled circumstances. You’ll need to influence it only in certain very specific ways, if we want to follow through on the measurements before and after.”

“Okay, so the first meeting should be mostly data gathering.”

“Are you ready for this?” The older man eyed him carefully.

“I am so ready for this.” An idea occurred to him. “Doc, there’s that other thing I’ve been working on.”

“The insertion experiment?”

“Yes. Could we use this as an opportunity to test that?”

Doc laughed. “You’re getting ahead of yourself, Lexil. Let’s see what we’re facing first. Other plans can come later. Are your analysis programs set for the night?”

“All set.”

“Then I think, young man, that we should get some sleep. It sounds cliché, but I’ll say it anyway. We have a big day tomorrow. Especially you.”

Lexil saw the sense in that. He excused himself to walk to the house. “Big day” was an understatement. It was not just a big day. It was like being present when the comet fragment hit the moon in 2116. Not just watching it from earth, but actually on the moon. A once-in-a-lifetime event, to use another cliché.

He wondered what tomorrow would hold. He couldn’t wait to see.

16
Deductions

WALLACE HOME, Lower Queen Anne, Seattle, WA. 2230, Wednesday, June 7, 2215.

Dani opened her eyes to see a circle of concerned faces, Kat’s, Marak’s, and a square-jawed one, trimmed at the top with a fringe of gray hair, belonging to an older man she didn’t know. She didn’t remember how she got on the sofa, but she remembered what came before that. Jored was gone. It was like he had never existed. And her best friends, his parents, didn’t even know who he was.

That didn’t feel as horrifying at the moment as it had earlier. It felt disturbing, but in a fuzzy and comfortable way. Had somebody—had they—

“We had to give you a sedative,” Kat said. “Are you feeling any better?”

Dani considered. Yes, she felt better. But she didn’t feel good that she felt better. It felt wrong and skewed and overwhelmingly off. Or maybe that was what the world felt like.

“I’m calmer. And a little giggly. But I’m still screaming inside,” she finally managed.

Kat exchanged looks with the others. They had obviously been talking while she was out. “This is my uncle, Royce. He’s a doctor.”

“Nice to meet you, Dr. Royce,” Dani mumbled.

He laughed. “Royce is my first name. Just call me Uncle Royce. From what Kat says, you’re part of the family. I’ve heard a lot about you.”

“We didn’t know who else to call when you wouldn’t stop screaming,” said Marak. His eyes held only concern.

They seemed like the Kat and Marak she knew.

“Okay. I’m not screaming any more,” she said.

“Do you feel up to talking about it, or will you get all worked up again?” Kat asked.

Dani tested herself, thinking about all the things that were different, reminding herself that Jored was gone. The panic stayed safely down in the fuzzy zone. “I think I can talk about it.” She sat up, moving over to the left end of the sofa to make room, and also, she admitted to herself, to give her an armrest to lean on. Her head was woozy. She definitely didn’t want to stand up yet.

“Can you tell me when you started feeling something was off?” asked Uncle Royce.

“Um, no. Well … I was over here last night. Played chess with Jored.”

He turned to Kat and Marak. “What do you remember about last night?”

“She was over here last night. We talked about investigating RIACH, and suggested she make some friends in the institute,” Marak offered.

Dani looked up, alarmed.

“Don’t worry, Dani,” Kat said. “He’s on our side. One of the main reasons I started protesting and educating visitors.”

She relaxed. Well, really, she was already relaxed. But she felt reassured by Kat’s confidence.

“Do you remember that part, Dani?” Uncle Royce asked.

“Yes. And I brought some things to show you.” She gestured toward her bag and looked at Kat and Marak. “I almost forgot.”

“So when did this Jored come into the picture?” the older man persisted.

“Seven years ago,” Dani blurted. “When he was born.”

“But yesterday, he was here? Forgive me, my dear, but I’m trying to help you get to the bottom of this.”

“Yes. Kat and Marak and I cut up meat and veggies for shish kebabs, and Jored put them on skewers. He had all that energy, and all the pure childhood joy, just like he always does ….” Her voice broke as she remembered. “We played a matching game, all of us together, and then he and I played chess, just before he went to bed,” she finished lamely.

“Kat?” her uncle prompted her.

“Yes, we had shish kebabs. And yes, we played the matching game. But we don’t even have a chess set in the house.”

“You had to help him brush his teeth, because he always forgets when you don’t!” Dani objected, almost accusingly.

“No.” Kat shook her head.

“Nothing to correspond with that,” Marak added.

Uncle Royce sat back, putting his fingertips together and tapping them on his mouth while he thought. “The way I see it, it can be only one of two things.” He paused.

They looked at him expectantly.

“Either Dani had a very lucid dream last night, so vivid that it seems real …”

“A dream that goes back seven years?” she protested.

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