The Theta Prophecy (9 page)

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Authors: Chris Dietzel

BOOK: The Theta Prophecy
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11 – The Big Dig

 

 

Year: Unknown

 

It wasn’t as easy as simply digging a hole in the ground. The Mi’kmaq needed all of their canoes for fishing, and any island Anderson would select would be too far away to consider swimming, especially with all of the tools and supplies he would need to take with him. Not to mention that after being dropped in the cold water upon his arrival, he never wanted to shiver that badly again. That was the least of his concerns, though.

Most of his energy went into thinking of ways to create a hole as deep as the one he envisioned. He wanted to create a pit, with the primitive tools he had available, that wouldn’t be able to be excavated until at least the nineteenth century. To do so, he would need all of his ability as a trained engineer.

At first, he had thought about creating a primitive drill that could lift loose dirt toward the surface as it continued digging a hole deeper and deeper into the ground. There was no way, however, to make a drill large enough for the job he planned to undertake. Not with the resources he had.

He also thought about trying to make a primitive version of dynamite and creating huge craters, one on top of the other, until he was working his way down into a makeshift tunnel. No idea was too foolish to automatically discount, not even trying to harness the power of the ocean’s waves or even solar power. But in the end, he knew none of it would work.

For moving up and down the hole as it got further and into the earth, he settled on a simple method of using moving floors that would be controlled with ropes and pulleys and allow him to move up and down a certain amount of distance, to the next level. Panels of each floor could be removed to allow him to dig further down or to climb up to a previous level. Every ten feet, he would step onto a new wooden floor, like a prehistoric elevator, and descend another ten feet. He would still have to do years worth of digging by hand, but at least it gave him a way to get deep below ground level. For the massive amount of dirt he would be moving, he would use a second series of pulleys for raising and lowering the buckets he was alternately filling and then emptying. With this system and a complete set of tools, shovels, and buckets, he would be able to dig into the earth as far as time allowed. And the one thing he had too much of was time—the entire rest of his life—so he could easily dig as far as four tree lengths, assuming his patience lasted that long.

But even once he settled on an approach, it wouldn’t be as easy as digging the hole. He would be all by himself, on a remote island, for long stretches of time; he needed to have all the resources for survival so he could live on his own. In addition to having to make all of his own tools, he would need a way to have a steady supply of drinking water and food as well as a sturdy shelter for when the winds and rain came. All of it would take time.

Before he started, he spent an entire day sitting around the village and thinking about his family and the rest of the country and even the rest of the world, and how everyone was a victim of the Tyranny in one way or another. If he was going to go through with this, if he was going to devote the rest of his life, or at least the next few years, to digging a massive hole in the ground in hopes that the box at the bottom might one day be used to prevent the Tyranny, he needed to know he was thinking clearly.

Without anyone he could talk to about his idea, all he could do was try to think what the other time travelers would do in his position. Each man had wanted nothing more than to prevent over a billion deaths around the world, stop millions of innocent people from being sent to prisons, keep everyone from living under the weight of thousands of laws meant to control every aspect of their lives.

Every Thinker knew there were a few key ways they could prevent the Tyranny—stop the gathering at Jekyll Island, foil JFK’s assassination—and that outside of these primary objectives and a batch of secondary objectives, no time traveler should interfere with the course of history. He knew that. But here, amongst the Mi’kmaq, hundreds of years before the Tyranny, it wasn’t so easy to give up the mission he had been sent back in time for. He had left his wife and son, he had survived his reappearance, and for what? Just to live as a member of a tribe?

At the end of his time reflecting on what he should do, he knew that simply living out his remaining years wasn’t enough. He couldn’t spend the rest of his life doing nothing. When it came time to eat that night’s supper with the rest of the tribe, he knew in his heart that he was doing the right thing, that the possible rewards outweighed the possible risks, that no matter what it took he would prevent Debbie and Carter and everyone else from being told where they could go and where they couldn’t, what they could say and what they couldn’t. He would keep the world from ever having to look up at the sky and see little cameras flying everywhere… or bombs dropping on their homes.

“Big day tomorrow,” he said to Benio as they ate a bowl of soup in front of a fire.

The elder did not say anything, only nodded and offered a faint smile.

“I start my big project tomorrow,” Anderson tried again.

The sides of Benio’s mouth curled upward and his eyebrows dropped into a frown. “Do what you feel you have to do. That’s all any of us can do.” Then the elder got up and walked away to chat with someone else.

“Whatever,” Anderson mumbled and ate the rest of the soup by himself.

The next morning, as the very first step in his project, he asked one of the men in the village to show him how to build a canoe. The native walked with Anderson to the forest so he could show him which trees made for good sailing, then walked with him to the existing canoes to point out how they were constructed. When the man did not know the English word for what he wanted to say and Anderson did not know the Mi’kmaq word, the native would use a combination of hand gestures and sound effects to demonstrate various things such as angled chopping and how to make an oar.

Even with the tools the Mi’kmaq let him borrow, it took Anderson two days just to chop down one tree. Each time he wound back with the axe and swung with all of his might, the blade barely left a mark on the giant hemlock.

He was sure the tribe would let him borrow one of their canoes if he asked, but he didn’t want to put them in that situation. He would need it for long stretches of time, and it wasn’t fair to use the tribe’s limited resources for a venture that went against their sacred beliefs regarding the land.

Once the tree was down, he had to give in and ask for help for the first time. It took a group of eight of the older boys to help him drag the tree trunk closer to the shore, where he would chop away the branches and start to form the actual vessel.

Every step of the process took longer and was more difficult than he thought it would be. It took two months to make a good canoe. It took a week just to make a good oar.

It took another year to make the levers and pulleys he would need. He asked one of the men in the village, a man who specialized in making jewelry, if he could forge something out of metal from one of Anderson’s designs.

“What is it?” the man said, looking at the sketch.

Anderson looked at the drawing and said, “People where I come from call it a block and tackle.”

Once the canoe was done, he dragged it into the bay’s cold water just to make sure it wouldn’t sink.

“What am I doing?” he said when he started shivering in the frigid water. No one was around to provide an answer. Benio hadn’t visited the entire time he had worked at constructing the canoe.

But somewhere out there, his wife and son were going on with their lives. They were eating their first and last meal of each day together. They were watching television together. At least he liked to think they were. Maybe the Tyranny’s men had shown up and dragged them away as a message to everyone else. And even if they were alive, would they know that none of the things that were said about him on television were true, that he wasn’t a radical or a traitor? When the people on television were nothing but a sounding block for the Tyranny, paid to praise everything the Tyranny did and ostracize everyone who would question them, it was easy to forget who the real traitors were.

Each time the people on the news said Anderson and the others like him had all betrayed their country, it would be up to his wife to whisper to their boy, “Standing up to injustice is never wrong, no matter how many people try to tell you it is, no matter what reason they give.”

But even if the Tyranny hadn’t dragged her away to one of its prisons, maybe she still wouldn’t defend him to their son when these things were said about him on the news. After all, if she did, the Tyranny would be listening and would hear that she was dissenting, and that would be all the reason it would need to ensure their son grew up without either parent.

“Daddy is a radical!” Carter would say after seeing the men in fancy suits say the same thing on television and all Debbie would be able to do would be to groan and keep silent or else never turn on the television in the first place.

Whenever he was cold or tired, whenever a new blister ripped open on his hands, he thought about these things—his wife and son and everyone he knew still under the reign of the Tyranny—and he got back to working again.

Satisfied that the canoe would get him where he wanted to go, he rowed out into the bay and began looking for a suitable island. Two miles out, he found one he thought might work. It was still within sight of the Mi’kmaq village in case something happened and he needed help, but was far enough away that they wouldn’t hear him working or notice anything he did.

But even once he was there with all of his equipment, the work was still excruciatingly slow. He had to build a shelter before he got started digging his hole because he didn’t want to be out in the open when it rained or snowed. By himself, with ineffective tools, the shelter took a month to build. It didn’t help that he went back to the mainland every three or four days to ask advice on how to address all the issues he was having building a home, asking which plants were safe to eat, and so on.

On one trip back to the mainland, he even asked the woman who had given him that first bowl of soup how she made it. A funny thing had happened during his time with the Mi’kmaq: the soup that he had once thought of as dirty water had become his favorite meal. Either his taste buds had changed or he had learned to focus on what food tasted like and not its appearance. Now, whenever someone made it, he asked for seconds and treasured each sip.

After the shelter was complete, he walked the perimeter of the island a couple times to find the best place to begin his task. When he found the spot he liked, the giant hole began as nothing more than a single shovel’s worth of dirt dug and thrown over his shoulder. Compared to making a canoe and building a shelter, digging the hole was easy because it was something he knew how to do. It would take time, much more than building the boat or a cabin, but it was not above his level of expertise.

After an hour, he had the beginnings of a circular hole that was eight feet wide. Granted, it was only two inches deep, but it was the start of what would become a pit a hundred feet into the ground.

The work was slow but steady. By the end of the next day, the hole was three feet deep and he started thinking about constructing the removable wood planks that would become the first “floor” of the hole, which could be lowered down to ten feet.

By the end of the second week, the hole was five feet deep and he was in the middle of tying ropes around each set of conjoined wood planks so they could be raised and lowered with a block and tackle.

Large chunks of time went by without him realizing it. He lost track of how long it took to finish the first set of wood planks, get them joined together, and run them with rope so he could start using it as he intended. Each day, he worked in a haze of memories of AeroCams and wars and checkpoints and surveillance, all of which kept him moving along. After a month, he wouldn’t be sure if a week had passed or a year.

Six months of every year was devoted just to threading lengths of fiber strands together with the women from the village. Between the ropes used to raise and lower each floor—forty feet of rope for the first level, eighty feet for the second, and eventually, a very long time later, four hundred feet of rope for the final level—he needed an inordinate amount of rope.

Usually, he did this when it was raining because the hole would fill up with water and it would take days or weeks for the water to empty and for the hole to be suitable to dig again. The makeshift cover he built to keep water away from the hole only showed marginal results. After a tropical storm passed through, the hole was filled with water for five months. By the time it was dry again, he had made a coil of rope that was two hundred feet long.

Year after year went by. The progress was slower the further he made his way underground, but he was always making some sort of headway. The rope and pulley system, along with the partial floors to lower himself to the depth he was digging and then raise himself back to the surface, worked perfectly. He shoveled so much that his first shovel broke and he had to go back to the mainland to have a second one made. When that one also ended up breaking a year later, he had to have a third shovel constructed.

He lost track of how many times he lowered himself to the bottom, filled the buckets, and then raised himself back to the surface. He calculated, though, that it took roughly one inch of dirt across the eight-foot wide circle to fill all the buckets he had. By the time he got to the bottom of the pit, he estimated he had made the trip down and up roughly twelve hundred times. There was so much dirt coming out of the hole that the island’s shape changed. Mounds of earth appeared where there had been flat ground. He formed hills so wide that he unintentionally changed the way the water ran off during storms, creating a marsh where no marsh had been before. The mounds could even be seen all the way from the mainland.

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