Read Through the Eye of Time Online
Authors: Trevor Hoyle
And again she said aloud, holding the machine tightly, âI
want Queghan to walk in and take me. I'd say to him, “Please take me. What I need is a damn good fuck and I want you to do it to me. Do it to me. Oh shit, do it, do it, please ⦔'
She tasted salt on her lips and realized that she was crying. She was wet elsewhere.
Well now. Professor deGrenier. This is not the kind of behaviour becoming to a scientist and a lady. And then she thought, This silly stupid female business acting up again. Why do women have to cry? What do men do in place of crying? Are they as tough and hard and controlled as they seem or is it all show, mere masculine display? In place of crying they must do something.
She looked at her watch. It was one-forty. Without another thought and with single-minded intent she returned to the office and pressed the code that would connect her directly with his private line.
*
When Queghan saw his wife again she scrutinized him closely and said: âHow many this time?'
âIs it beginning to make a difference?'
âIt's very upsetting for a woman to have a husband who looks younger than she does,' Oria said. âIt sets people talking. Every time you come back from
Tempus
I expect to see you looking like Dorian Gray.'
âRemember what happened to him.'
âWell, how many?'
Queghan thought for a moment. âTen.'
âYou're sure it's not more?'
âHow long was I away?'
âNearly three months.'
âThat's near enough then.' Queghan counted on his fingers. âI spent one week on
Tempus
, which coincides roughly with Earth IVn time; add a week for travel through the Field. So I aged two weeks in real-time while three months passed by here. Two weeks from twelve is ten.'
Oria still wasn't happy. âDon't you think it would be a good idea if wives were permitted to take a trip through the E.M.I. Field? That way we could keep up with our husbands. As it is,
we're going in opposite directions â I'm heading for the grave while you're regressing to the cradle.'
âI'm two years older than you to begin with,' Queghan pointed out.
âYou
were
two years older. According to my reckoning we're now about the same age, and it isn't doing my morale any good.'
Queghan laughed. âYou always make the mistake of assuming that I'm getting younger â I'm simply ageing more slowly than you are. Time dilation in the E.M.I. Field
*
doesn't reverse the ageing process, it slows it down by a variable factor depending on the velocity of the traveller relative to light-speed.'
âSo when I'm sixty-five you'll be celebrating your fiftieth birthday. “Who's that with you?” they'll ask you. “Your mother?”'
âDon't worry about it. As an extra-special birthday treat I'll arrange a long trip for you â a month or so in the Field â and when you get back we'll be the same age. You might even be younger.'
âBut I'll be away all those years waiting for you to catch me up!' Oria wailed.
âNo,' Queghan said patiently. âYou'll be away just one month on your time-scale. It's me that's going to have to wait for you. A month in the field is â¦' he did a quick rough calculation â ⦠approximately nine years. But to achieve that you'll have to spend a month in hyper-suspension at a fraction below light-speed.'
Oria meditated on this. She said suspiciously, âDoes that mean you're going to be left on your own for
nine years
while I'm shuttling about in spacetime somewhere?'
â 'Fraid so,' Queghan said, poker-faced. âThere isn't any other way it can be done.'
Oria went and looked at herself in the mirror. âThat's a tough decision. To lose nine years in age or to have my husband
running around loose for all that time. I can't win either way,' she told her reflection. âIf I don't take the trip some young bright-eyed girl will come along and snatch him away from the aged hag he's living with, and if I do go into the Field he'll be fancy-free for nine years.'
âWould you like to be left alone while you decide?' Queghan inquired solicitously.
âYou might think it funny,' Oria said, turning from the mirror.
âI'm not laughing.'
âWhat's that expression on your face?'
Queghan beckoned and she came to him. âWhat have you been doing while I've been away?'
âGetting steadily older.'
âIf you go on like this it'll become an obsession.'
âIt is an obsession. If you must know I've hardly been out of the house. Run off my feet most of the time. Slaving over a hot stove. Hardly a minute to call my own.'
âI thought we'd moved on from the D. H. Lawrence phase?'
âWe have. I'm into mid-Twentieth America now.'
âYou'll have to change your vocabulary. Americans in the mid-Twentieth didn't, I'm quite sure, use the phrase “Slaving over a hot stove”.'
âWhat phrases would they have used? I haven't got round to researching the semantics of the period. Would they have said “Run off my feet”?'
âIt doesn't sound right somehow. Their talk was much more clipped, epigrammatic. Remember the film we viewed in Archives? What was that line ⠓I'll love you, baby, till hell freezes over”.'
Oria said, âI can't go round saying that. Who would I say it to? Are there no other lines you remember?'
âMm,' Queghan said after a moment. âHow about this: “Here's looking at you, kid”?'
â“Here's looking at your kid”?' Oria repeated, staring at him. âWhat does it mean?'
âI was trying to do the accent. The line is: “Here's looking at
you
, kid”.'
Oria said this several times but still didn't understand it. âI like the sound of it but what does it mean?'
âIt means ⦠well I suppose it means â¦' Queghan rubbed his nose. âDoes it really matter? If it sounds all right why not use it?'
Oria looked doubtful. âI'd better check on it first; I want to use it in context.'
âHow's the rest of the research coming along?'
âI used the cyberthetic system at MyTT while you were away. It saves a lot of time â it gave me a complete dossier on the life profile: fashion, furniture, transportation, social moresâ'
âBut not speech patterns.'
âI never asked about that.'
âYou should study the newstapes in Archives,' Queghan recommended. âYou'll be able to see how the people actually looked and behaved and spoke. Have you chosen a decade?'
âThe 'Fifties. It was just after their Second World War and everything was changing rapidly. It's an interesting period.'
âWhich is how you came to know about the first atomic bomb,' Queghan said.
Oria seemed suddenly preoccupied. She had drifted away, as she did on occasion without warning. âYes, that's right,' she said, her face clouded.
âAre you all right?'
âYes,' she said, nodding, and then: âThere was something in the dossier that didn't make sense. At least I couldn't understand it.'
âWhat was it?'
âI asked the cyberthetic system for items of interior decoration to make the reconstruction authentic. Amongst them was a list of popular household plants: daffodils, roses, tulips, something called chrysanthemums, rubber plants, and so on, and right at the end, deadly black nightshade.'
Queghan didn't say anything. He was breathing lightly and evenly.
âI couldn't understand it so I looked up the classification in the encyclopaedia. The botanical description of nightshade is
Solanum nigrum
. It's also known as morel.' Oria sighed. âIt didn't make sense even then.'
âI don't suppose it would.'
He had waited patiently and was now rewarded. There it was, large as life: the third coincidence.
*
Queghan reported to the Director on his visit to the
Tempus
Control Laboratory. Karve was amused at Max Herff's reaction to the proposal that the search for the elusive anti-particles should take place at an average mean temperature of one thousand billion degrees. He bit on the stem of his pipe, shaking his head and chuckling to himself.
âHe really looked as if he was about to cry,' said Queghan, standing at the angled window on Level 40. The campus below looked fresh and green in the clear morning light.
âWhat do you estimate their chances to be?'
âI wouldn't have said high.'
âNeither would I. But I have every confidence in Max; he might not welcome you with open arms the next time you meet but he'll do his best with CENTiNEL.'
Queghan looked at the Director. âLet's be honest, Johann, we're dealing with a range of sub-atomic particles we know very little about, and when we start talking about anti-matter and minus time we're like infants trying to grapple with Einstein's Unified Field equations.' It struck him, and not for the first time, that Karve was not too dissimilar in appearance to Einstein: the same flowing grey hair, broad Semitic nose and deep-sunk eyes â he even smoked a long-stemmed pipe as the father of Pre-Colonization physics had done â though Karve lacked a straggling moustache to complete the image. âIf you want an opinion I'd say that the law of probability will have a lot to do with their chances of success. They might find the anti-particle equivalents in six months, ten years, or it could be tomorrowâ'
âAnd then we face the real question: what do we do with the data once we have it.'
âThat's what none of the CENTiNEL team bothered to ask,' Queghan said. âThey were interested, it was obviously a
challenge, I could see it in their eyes, but what happens if we find that a genus of sub-atomic particles is meddling with spacetime and affecting organic structure? We can't understand them, we can't communicate with them, we don't know what their purpose is. They're probably totally oblivious to our presence. So far as they're concerned we could be a bizarre and not particularly interesting astro-biological specimen, a smear culture on a laboratory slide that's hardly worth a passing glance. What they choose to do with the fabric of spacetime and the structure of matter is in their own interest and doesn't concern us; we happen to be in the position of an unfortunate bystander caught up in the process. Tough shit for the human race.'
After a moment's rumination Karve said, âBut it doesn't follow that we're powerless. We have CENTiNEL and we also have control, to a limited degree, of a Temporal Flux Centre. These are not inconsiderable technological achievements.'
âI suppose you're right,' Queghan said, not convinced.
âAnd we also have your gift for mythic projection.'
âIs that significant?'
âDon't you think so?'
âI don't know.' Queghan came away from the window and sat down in the ergonomic chair. âHow exactly?'
âIf our assumptions are correct and the anti-particles are in fact disrupting spacetime, what are the ways in which this will become apparent to us? They won't only affect time present, the here and now, but also the past and the future.'
âThey could affect the past?'
âMost certainly. The law of causality isn't sacrosanct. Do you suppose anti-matter is any respecter of our neat and tidy earthbound rules? If it affects time it will affect all time, and with it causality. Cause and effect is a direct corollary of spacetime. Therefore if spacetime
is
being disrupted it follows that cause and effect will get a pretty rough ride too. There will be ⦠inconsistencies.'
Queghan mulled this over. He envied Karve's powers of didactic reasoning. He said eventually, âSo somewhere in the past we should come across events â happenings? â which have been altered in some way. They will go against recorded history as we know it.'
âTo be honest I don't really know, Chris. I'm simply taking the data as supplied by CENTiNEL and interpolating a series of possible consequences.'
He looked at Queghan for a long moment and then from a drawer took a file sheathed in green vinyl. He said casually:
âDid you know that the Germans were the first to develop the atomic bomb? They made and tested a prototype by the autumn of 1943 Pre-Colonization.'
Queghan was surprised and intrigued. âNo, I never knew that.'
âNeither did I,' Karve said, smiling. He extracted the file from its sheath and opened it. âHow's this for an interesting and little-known fact: the British Blackshirts were voted into office on the 30th October, 1938, with Gerard Mandrake as Prime Minister.'
âDo you mean the Fascist party?'
Karve nodded and turned a page. âSurprising how ignorant we are of Pre-Colonization history,' he remarked lightly. âHow about this: Germany invaded Poland on the 9th May, 1939, and three days later Great Britain launched a sea- and airborne invasion of France which met with only token resistance. Within three weeks, by the 3rd June, France and her dependencies were occupied territory under the sovereign rule of Great Britain. The French Government capitulated and all power was vested in the Acting Consular-General, Sir Richard Brock-Tregenna.'
âWhat is this, the synopsis for a novel?'
âThe Anglo-German Peace Pact,' Karve went blithely on, âwas signed in the autumn of 1939, on the 3rd September, and one month later, to the day, a combined force of British and German troops crossed the border at Zbereze, and Russia, having entered into a treaty to protect the Ukraine, declared war. By Christmas the two sides were engaged in full-scale battles along nine hundred miles of frontierâ'
âBefore you go any further with your fairytale would you mind telling me what it's supposed to be?'
The Director held up the file so that Queghan could see the word RECONPAN on the cover. âThese are the pronouncements of one Adolf Hitler,' Karve said. âOr perhaps it
would be more accurate to say the simulated brain of Adolf Hitler,' He laid the folder on the desk. âYou look perplexed, Chris.'