Elko the
Potter
© 1997 by Jerry J. Davis
Franz Kafka looked at his small, elite
group of 22nd century students and tapped on the large text display with
his pointing stick. "The decisive moment in human development is a
continuous one," he said, reading his own words. "For this reason the
revolutionary movements which declare everything before them to be null
and void are right, for nothing has yet
happened." The students fidgeted. One, a
young man with so many freckles it looked painful, raised his hand. Kafka
nodded, and the youth spoke up. "Sir Oscar Wilde said, 'History is merely
gossip.'" Kafka took a step toward the
student, pointing the stick right at him. "Precisely!" he said, his voice
betraying only a echo of his former accent. "That is precisely my
point!"
#
A half mile away, Professor Raymond Burns
was looking directly into history. He was
searching for carts. They came from here,
he was sure of it. Raymond had tracked the carts all up and down the
region and they always came from here. After all, it made sense; the area
between the rivers was famous as being the cradle of civilization. The
muddy waters and the fertile desert land just begged to be mixed, and the
local villages listened. Irrigation was developed, and with it came more
food than the farmers could possibly use. This led to the gift of idle
time. Time to ponder, time to experiment. Villages became cities, and
cities became city-states. There came
kings and gods and law. The image that
was broadcast directly to Raymond's optic nerves caused a stinging pain.
There was a specially developed endorphin to counter this side effect, but
it wore off quickly. The pain distracted Raymond, but he was perpetually
putting off another dose for just one more
minute... He worked the controls,
slowing the temporal scan. It was right about here. Going forward through
time, slowing the rate, slowing so that he could see the passage of
humanity through the stinging hell of the retinal linkage. There were no
carts at all, and then suddenly they were everywhere! It was like there
had been an explosion of carts. He
reversed the scan, going backwards through time. Below his disembodied
eyes the city deteriorated into a village of mud huts, and the bronze plow
devolved to copper and then to a curved stick. The men and women carried
their harvest in by hand in large baskets. There was not a wheel in sight.
Wearily, Raymond flipped the controls forward again. This was taking
forever. For seven long years Raymond had
been waiting for this chance, and now he had only three days to accomplish
it. Two of those three days were already gone, and this last one was
rapidly coming to a close. Behind Raymond there was a long line of others
who waited for their turn at the temporal viewer, each with their own pet
projects. If Raymond didn't make his discovery within the next few hours,
it would probably never happen. Through
the haze of pain he watched it happen again. An explosion of carts. He
reversed the controls again and watched, scanning slower than ever, trying
to trace the progress. It had to have begun here.
Somewhere. And then --- suddenly!
--- he spotted it. He stopped the temporal scan, freezing the image.
Raymond was so elated he giggled like a madman. "That's it! That's it
that's it!" he yelled out loud. They were beautiful --- the most
beautiful thing he'd ever seen. Four round bricks drying in the hot summer
sunlight. Four bricks that would forever change the history of
mankind.
#
Elko, a Sumerian potter living on the
banks of the Euphrates, had this reoccurring feeling that he was being
watched. It would come and go, and sometimes he forgot about it
altogether, but then sometimes he could be all alone and it was like
someone was above him looking down. He attributed it as the attention of
the gods. His own father thought him a fool, so maybe the gods did too,
and Elko was providing them with
amusement. Elko, son a farmer, heir to a
long line of the most successful farmers anyone had ever known, had turned
down the family trade to play with mud. That's how Unko, his father, would
put it. Playing with mud. Unko saw water as the power, water
flowing through their hand-dug ditches, irrigating the fields. Man
controlling the power of water from the great
Euphrates. Elko firmly believed it was
not the water, it was the dirt. The water merely followed where the dirt
directed it. Hand-built levees, hand dug ditches --- it was the
dirt. Control the dirt. Mold the soil
into shapes from the mind's imagination. Anything was
possible! His father couldn't argue that
his son wasn't making a good living --- he was. Elko worked as a potter,
trading his bowls and vessels for food and clothing, and he lived in a
large home made from sun-hardened bricks he made himself. He had a good
woman and they were soon expecting a child. Everyone outside his immediate
family held him in high regard as a man of
ideas. "Look at you! You call this work?
You could be out growing food, building aqueducts! Instead you sit in this
fancy hut of yours and play with mud. It's like you never grew
up." "Father, what would you store your
grain in if you didn't have my vessels? They'd still be in a heap under a
blanket, being eaten by birds, rats, and
bugs." "Making pots is a woman's
job." It was useless. No matter what he
did, Elko couldn't convince his father that what he was doing was useful.
Despite his success, this bothered him, and sometimes he lie awake at
night trying to think of a way to change his father's
mind. It came to him on one of those days
when he felt he was being watched, while he was busy filling an order of
24 vessels for Yurdmal the Trader. Elko had fashioned a round table that
he could spin by kicking at thick pegs radiating from the base. The whole
table was very heavy but well balanced in a depression in the floor ---
once he got it going, it would continue spinning for quite a while. It
wasn't his idea, but it was one he'd improved upon. The spinning table
allowed him to make the smoothest and most uniform vessels in the region,
and quickly too. He made them by the dozens and sold them
cheap. Being in a hurry that day, Elko
kicked the table too hard. It lost its balance, and he was just able to
leap back as it tipped over and went rolling around the room. It reminded
Elko of something he'd seen as a child --- some faint, dream image
reaching out from years past. He watched the table rolling until it
stopped, then took a breath and went to it. The gods, he was sure, were
laughing at him. But after a few minutes of grunting Elko had the table
into position and went right back to work. His mind, however, was far from
what he was doing. That night, from the
finest of his brick-making clay, Elko made four large round bricks with
holes in the exact center. After a week of drying in the sunlight they
were rock hard, and he mounted them onto two poles. Across the poles he
put a big, strong basket, fastening it tight. When he was done he tested
it out, and it worked just like he thought it would. So, gathering his
nerve, he rolled his invention out to his father in the fields. "I made
this for you," he said. "This should make it easier to carry in your
harvest." Unko walked around the unlikely
contraption, staring. He tried pushing and pulling it back and forth.
"Son," he told Elko, "this is very clever." A crowd gathered around, and
they tested it by filling it with a large load of grain. With it, one man
could carry in more than ten men could carry without it. Everyone agreed
that this was indeed very clever, and within a month the whole valley was
swarming with copies. Elko's father still
grumbled about his son's choice of profession, but now there was a touch
of admiration in his voice. This was enough for Elko. His life seemed
complete.
#
The report was titled: Elko Potter,
Inventor of the Wheel. Professor Raymond Burns submitted it to
Technica along with a copy of the recordings from the temporal viewer. It
chronologged his search for the first wheeled cart, tracing it back to one
Sumerian potter, then detailed the potter's life from birth to
death. Raymond had been waiting for the
call. He'd been sitting in his condo all morning wearing a suit and a tie,
ready for the occasion. He couldn't see anything other than complete
acceptance, as his thousand-to-one shot project had been a total success.
Raymond found Elko at the very last moment. He had to quick-talk his way
into another several hours with the temporal viewer so that he could lock
it on Elko and scan the man's entire
existence. The call came, and Raymond
answered it with a quick, nervous jab at the button. It was Barbara
Lemmas, a professor of the Seventh Level, one of Technica's local bigwigs.
"Raymond, we've reviewed your project," she
said. "Yes."
"This appears to be a major find. We have to talk about your follow-up
research." "Yes." "Meet
us at Fine Hall, third floor." "I'm on my
way." Lemmas nodded once and broke the
connection. Fine Hall! Raymond thought. Third floor! It was
the domain of the gods. Technica was to
science what the Catholic Church was to religion. There were branches of
it everywhere, influencing everything, owning vast fortunes in knowledge
and patent rights. And here, in the Livermore Valley of California, was
Technica's "Vatican," The Institute of Human Endeavor. Here and
only here could one find humanity's only time machines --- three of them,
to be exact --- and the only Great Hall of
Learning. The board of directors, all
professors of the sixth level and above, sat at a large horseshoe-shaped
table around the single stool and podium where Raymond sat and fidgeted.
The chairman himself, the "Pope" of Technica, was out of the solar system
on a project of his own. "We congratulate
you on your success," Lemmus was saying. "Your method was precise and your
supporting evidence very convincing. Elko Potter does indeed seem to be
the inventor of the wheel. Your detail of his life is, also, very
thorough." "Thank you, Professor,"
Raymond said. He allowed himself a modest
bow. "The circumstances of his death also
lend itself to our advantage. Suicide in the
Euphrates." "It appeared to be suicide,
yes. We won't know for sure until we ask
him." The professors around him nodded,
except for Steve Gibson. He was a large-chested man with long flowing
white hair and big blue eyes. "I suggest we make that an imperative. Burns
should split his next phase into two; one being a covert contact to ask
the subject exactly that: Did he really invent the wheel? It is possible
that he only recreated it. Perhaps he saw such a thing earlier in his
life. If so, then go on with the next
phase." A few of the members of the board
nodded at this, but Lemmas --- who was acting director in the
Chairperson's absence --- shook her head. "We've all reviewed Professor
Burns's data. There is no evidence of the wheel in any temporal scans
earlier than Elko Potter's first
cart." "I suggest that his time scans may
not have caught earlier incarnations," Gibson
said. "We are all aware that Professor
Burns's project may cut into your own research time with the temporal
devices, Professor Gibson. I suggest that you let him get on with his
project as quickly as possible so that it minimizes delay with
yours." Gibson rolled his eyes but said
nothing. "Now, if there are no further
objections, then I would say Professor Burns has the green light for the
second phase of his project." Lemmas stared at Gibson, waiting for him to
object. Gibson heaved a loud, disgusted sigh and crossed his arms
defensively across his chest, but said nothing. Lemmas turned to Raymond.
"Once you submit a detail of your plans," she said, "you shall have what
assistance you need and free use of Temporal Transfer Chamber number
three." Raymond exited from the meeting
gleefully, carefully avoiding Steve Gibson's smoldering stare.
#
Forty-two years was a long time to be
alive. His face lined, his hands hard and stiff with arthritis, Elko the
potter could no longer work. His wife was long dead, and his sons had
already taken over his trade. He was nothing but a burden on them, now,
and so one night with the moon full in the sky --- and having the distinct
feeling that he was being watched --- Elko scraped up with dignity he
still had and took a walk along one of his late father's canals to the
river. There on the shore, he removed his shirt, headpiece, skirt, and
sandals, and waded out into the churning muddy water. "I give myself to
the gods of Earth and Water," he said, "in thanks for the gift of my
life." The current grew strong and swept
him off his feet. He treaded water as he was carried along past the city
and out beyond the farmlands. To either side of him were great expanses of
moonlit desert, calm and peaceful. Elko felt relaxed, and floated easily.
He wasn't in a rush to get it over with. He was reliving memories of his
wife and his children. A ring of lights
glared down at him, and there was a harsh sloshing sound as a lot of water
tried to climb up the side of a silver wall. It only reached so far, then
came surging down in a wave that came back at Elko. He bobbed with it as
it passed him, then amazingly the wave hit another silver wall on the
other side and came back again. There was a round silver wall completely
surrounding him. The ring of lights from above seemed to be mounted on a
ceiling. He was in a room! The water
drained quickly and left him splayed in dismay on a cold metal floor. He
took a breath and sat up, wincing with the pain and stiffness. Slowly,
carefully, he got to his feet and shuffled back and forth, looking at the
metal and wondering how he'd arrived here. "Hello?" he said. His voice
echoed with a ringing quality. There was no response, so he stood and
patiently waited. A round hole opened in
the ceiling and a ladder dropped into view. A strangely-dressed man
climbed down and spoke to him with a thick accent. "I am a friend," he
said. "Nothing here will hurt you." Elko
looked him up and down, seeing finely woven cloth of thread so thin you
could barely see it, and sandals that covered all of the feet in a black
shell like a foot-sized dung beetle. The man's face and smile were oddly
disconcerting, and his eyes were a watery green. Without a doubt, this was
a god. Which god, Elko had no idea --- but definitely a god. "I
am your humble slave," Elko said. "No,
you are my friend. You will understand in time. Come with
me." With difficulty and fear, Elko
followed the god up the ladder.
#
They jabbed brightly-polished metal
thorns in his arms, which oddly enough brought pleasant waves of relief
from the pain in his joints and hands. In four days, they told him, the
pain would be gone forever. In the mean time they had provided him with a
large rectangular room in a building that seemed to be so big it went on
forever, and in this room one whole wall was fashioned out of the purest
crystal. Through it he could see a land lush with green grass and gnarled
trees, rolling hills, and a reassuring blue sky. Black roads painted with
broken yellow lines crossed the landscape. Graceful buildings bigger than
any he'd ever seen thrust up out of the ground toward the sky, so
skillfully crafted they brought tears to his
eyes. He sat on a soft, high bed and
watched as brightly-colored, wheeled machines raced at astonishing speeds
along the black roads. Machines also flew through the air, some close and
slow, some very far away and traveling very fast. Some of these left long,
thin, straight clouds behind them, and as Elko watched these clouds grew
fat and translucent and then drifted
away. A smiling, brown-skinned woman and
the man who'd first greeted him came to visit and asked how he was
adjusting. Elko had no idea what they meant by this, but he told them how
grateful he was for the wardrobe of fine, new clothes. They asked him if
he would like to learn their language. He said, "Yes, I would be
honored." "We have different methods of
teaching than you are used to," the dark-skinned woman said. "They are
much faster." "I am humbled by your vast
knowledge," he said, hoping this was
appropriate. "With the language lesson
will come knowledge of things you will need in order to understand this
new world. The lesson will change the way you view things. Do you
understand this?" "I am anxious to
understand your new world," he told
them. "You do not object to the lesson,
then?" "I have no
objections." They led him though a maze
of carpeted hallways, spent time in a room called "an elevator" --- which
seemed like great magic to Elko --- and finally to a room full of
comfortable beds. They had him lie down in one and told him to
relax. "This is a machine that will teach
you," he was told. They rolled a metal box over to his bed. The box had
numerous colored lights which looked like captive stars, and a headband
that was attached to it by a long
cord. "We're going to put this on your
head," they told him, showing him the headband. "It will feel odd but it
will not hurt you." When they slipped it over his forehead it made all his
muscles jump, as if he'd been startled. Then sleep came with a
rush. Through his slumber he dreamed of a
stampede of mad oxen trampling through the farmlands, through the town,
through his very home. They were possessed by the god of oxen, and that
god was furious. The oxen were everywhere, jabbing their horns and
crushing with their hooves. They swept everything away; his home, his
sons, his grandchildren. He heard women crying in
anguish. When he awoke, it was abrupt. He
felt dizzy, and his forehead was damp with cold sweat. He stared up at the
boxes with the colored lights and said, "Computer!" The word, even as he
said it, startled him, and the concept behind it was bizarre. "Microchip!"
he said. "They're made of dirt!" Disoriented as he was, this fact
gave him a spasm of joy. A great
understanding seemed to be trying to catch up to him. He could feel it
coming up from behind, thundering along on a hundred-thousand mad hooves.
Technica! he thought. A church of science! Truth! Great thought!
The understanding swept over him, trampling him. Crushing him over and
over again. Technica collected the great minds of humanity. They thought
he was one of them. They thought he had invented the wheel!
Either the god of good fortune was in love with him, or the god of
practical jokes. This was a prank of horrible proportions!
#
Elko sat at the table by himself with his
plate of gourmet cafeteria food in front of him, untouched. That day
Professor Burns had taken him out on a balcony on the top floor of the
West Tower, and let him behold the wonders of 22nd century civilization.
It spread like a carpet across the Livermore Valley, covering the
mountains to the west and continuing on to the sea. "Wheels," Raymond had
told him. "Everywhere you look, you see wheels. It all started with you,
Elko. The cart you built for your father. You are the father of everything
you see today. The day you put that cart together was the decisive moment
in the history of Mankind." Even with his
new found understanding of this alien world called "The Future," this
concept still boggled his mind. These people had build a devices that,
though manipulating the basic fabric of reality, was able to reach back
through the ages and scoop him out of the water. They saved his life and
brought him here so they could honor him as the father of technology, and
allow him to teach a class in pottery in the Great Hall of
Learning. Here he was, elbow to elbow
with the great minds of the ages, just because he put four wheels on two
sticks and attached a basket to the top. It didn't make sense to
him. "So, you're the inventor of the
wheel." Elko looked up at the man who spoke. He was tall and had a
charming smile, and his name tag read, "John Kennedy, Great Political
Leader." John introduced himself and shook Elko's hand, then indicated a
short, dark-haired man standing next to him. "Elko, this is my good friend
Franz. Franz Kafka. He's a famous
writer." Franz shook hands with Elko. "I
program computers, now," he
said. "Computers made of dirt! Digital
logic!" Elko blurted. He covered his mouth with his hands, and shook his
head. "Recent language upload, eh?" John
said. "Don't worry, it calms down after a few days." He and Franz sat down
across from Elko, each with their own cafeteria trays. "The foods here's
great, isn't it?" "Preprocessed cloned
non-cholesterol!" Elko blurted. "Fabricated meat food
product!" "Amazing, isn't
it?" "I never did like greasy food,"
Franz said. "It always gave me
indigestion." "It must be a real change
for you, Mr. Potter. Food-wise as well as everything else. I heard you
made an over seven-thousand year
leap." "Eight-thousand," Franz said.
"He's from around six-thousand
B.C." "Before Christ . . .
imagine that!" "Millennium!" Elko
blurted. "Cosmos!" "Wasn't that right
around the time of the invention of the written word itself?" Franz said.
"Did written language exist during your time
period?" "Hieroglyphics!" Elko's mouth
spat the word out violently, then he was able to control himself. He drank
some water and took a deep breath. "Crude writing was around. It existed.
We regarded it with a mixture of suspicion and
awe." "What do you think of it
now?" "Alphabet!" Once again, Elko put
his hands over his mouth. "Information!" he shouted into his hands.
"Immortality!" "In a few days they're
going to have you start writing your thoughts and reflections down," Franz
said. "It's to give the students a database of quotes they can attribute
to you as they're learning." John leaned
forward and whispered, "If you need any help, give Franz here a call. He
wrote half of mine for me." Elko
cautiously moved his hands away from his mouth. In a low, uneven voice he
said, "Ill keep that in mind, thank you."
#
Elko attended his first cocktail party as
Raymond Burn's special guest. It was his first time outside the Technica
campus, and his first ride in a car. He kept closing his eyes because
things seemed to be coming at him too fast, and by the time they reached
Raymond's large round house in the hills he was feeling
nauseous. There were several different
levels to Raymond's house, each one reached through the wide circular
staircase in the center of the structure. Elko was dazzled by the
architecture, and kept running his hands over the smooth, hard surfaces.
Concrete! his mind shouted, but by now Elko had learned how to keep
it to himself. Clay so hard it turned to stone! The top floor was
one large round room with a shallow domed roof ornamented by a spectacular
stained glass skylight. There were over-stuffed chairs, leather couches
and ornate wooden cocktail tables everywhere, as well as white-uniformed
butlers ready to serve. One white piano stood out near a large window, and
next to it stood a large golden harp. To Elko's amazement they played
themselves. Computerized! he thought.
Automated! The reason for the
party was that Raymond was celebrating his elevation in status from 5th to
6th level professor at Technica. The reason for his elevation, so Elko
gathered, was the discovery by Raymond of Elko himself. Elko was
considered a very important discovery for Technica, and he was honored as
one of the most important additions to the Great
Hall. A cocktail party, as Elko soon
discovered, was a loosely-conducted ritual where many people stood around
sipping alcoholic drinks and saying meaningful things to each other. Elko
was at a loss trying to ascertain what his part in it was, though people
kept coming up to him and asking him all sorts of disturbing
questions. "How long did it take you to
develop the wheel from concept to working
model?" "How far have you ever tried to
calculate the value of p
?" "Were you inspired by the
moon?" "Man, what I would have given to
be your patent attorney." "When inventing
the wheel, how many different shapes did you go through before deciding on
a circle?" In the middle of this, a very
large, imposing man made his way over and stared at him with cold blue
eyes. The man had an impressive mane of long white hair, and a deep,
grumbling voice that seemed loud even when he was whispering. "You didn't
really invent the wheel, did you?" he said. "You got the idea from
somewhere else." The room seemed to be
utterly quiet just after the man asked this, and Elko gazed across the
room to see Raymond. Raymond looked like he was choking on an ice cube or
something. Elko knew instinctively that a lot was riding on this, and he
shrugged and said, "My table gave me the idea. It fell over and rolled
around the room." The white-haired man
seemed a bit deflated by this answer, but across the room Raymond looked
like he could breathe again. Elko guessed that he'd said the right thing.
The white-haired man, who's name he found out later was Professor Gibson,
muttered something about ideas having to come from "somewhere" but he
didn't argue the point. A week later Elko
ran across Raymond at Technica, and Raymond excused himself from a crowd
of professors and went to go speak to him. "How're your classes coming
along, Elko? Any problems with the
students?" "Oh, no. The students are very
bright and respectful." It was true enough, as Elko was thrilled with the
electric pottery wheel and the other new developments such as the
plastic-based clays. He created bowls, vases and urns so fluid and
beautiful they awed the students. "That's
good," Raymond said. "I'm glad to hear it. If any of the little bastards
give you any trouble let me know --- he'll be out of here so fast that
it'll take thirty seconds for his screams of anguish to catch up to
him." "Well." "What?" "Its
that, um . . . " "Someone
is giving you a problem?" "Oh, no.
It's me. Something has been bothering me for the last few days, and I
think it would be best if I told you about
it." "Well, what? Tell me about it. I
don't care what it is, I'll have it solved for you before the day's
finished. What?" "I didn't invent the
wheel." Raymond's look startled Elko. It
was as if Raymond's eyes had almost popped out of their sockets. Then he
quickly looked back and forth down the long, wide hall to see if anyone
had been near enough to hear. "Let's not discuss this here," Raymond said
in a strained voice. "Follow me." He led the way to his office, then
ushered Elko quickly inside and shut and locked the door behind them.
"Okay," he said, "what is this
nonsense?" "I don't belong here with
these people," Elko said. "I'm not one of the great minds of
humanity." "Don't be silly! You belong
here more than most of those other idiots in the Great
Hall!" "I feel like a fraud,
Raymond." "This has something to do with
Gibson, doesn't it? What has he said to
you?" "He knows that I didn't invent the
wheel." "But you did invent the wheel! I
saw you do it!" "No, I recreated
something I saw as a child. There was a group of nomads, and they had an
oxen pulling a giant basket which rolled on wheels. I was five, maybe six
years old, and they were off in the distance. It was a strange sight, and
it always stuck in my mind --- but it never occurred to me to duplicate
their cart until that one day when my potting wheel tipped
over." Raymond was silent for a moment,
looking very agitated. "This is absolute nonsense!" he finally blurted.
"This memory of yours could have been a dream for all we know! A product
of your own imagination. As a matter of fact, it could have been a very
recent dream brought on by post-hypnotic suggestion because of that damn
Steve
Gibson!" "No----" "Yes,
Elko! Yes. Your mind can easily play tricks upon you. Memories are
fragile, unreliable things. Every time you remember something it gets
restored, and every time it gets restored it is restored slightly
different. Every time you remember something you change your memory. It
gets to the point that you're remembering memories of memories of
memories, and it becomes very unreliable. Things that you swear happened
to you as a child are in actuality memories of dreams. I myself for years
swore that as a child I saw a news report about a giant frog being found
during World War Three, and have vivid memories of photos of this giant
frog being towed into the San Francisco bay by an aircraft carrier. This
never happened! I dreamed it. Don't you
see?" "No," Elko said. "I saw those
nomads. That's where I got the idea for using wheels. I didn't invent
it." "Shut up!" Raymond yelled. "God damn
you, you little Sumerian bastard! What are you trying to do to me? You
want to wreck my career! I don't give a damn about what you remember.
History shows that you invented the wheel, and that's
final." "But----" "You
just forget about it! I swear to god, if you blab this to anybody, it'll
be the hardest on you! You, Elko! I saved your god damned ass
right out of the Euphrates, and I can put it right back in there. We have
a clone of you growing right now, did you know that? A clone that we have
to send back in time to replace you in your death. It wouldn't be hard at
all for me to keep the clone here and sent you back with a rock strapped
to your back. Do you understand me? Do you,
Elko?" "Yes." "Have
you said a word about this to anyone
else?" "No." "Are
you absolutely
sure?" "Yes." "Okay,
then. Forget about it. I mean it, if you open your mouth and destroy
everything I worked on, my whole god damned career, you'll be right back
in that river. You have my promise on
that!" Elko left Raymond's office with
the promise still ringing in his ears. All through the day he kept trying
not to think about it. During his classes he tried not to think about it.
During dinner that night, in Franz's apartment, he was consciously not
saying anything about it. "It's absurd,"
John was saying, "they bring me here and they expect me to teach politics
and leadership. But they wont' let me join in their politics or lead
anybody. Have you gentlemen noticed that, honored as we're supposed to be,
we're not really citizens in this society? We're not. We more resemble
possessions than anything else. Items in a collection. Pass the salt,
would you, Elko?" Elko passed the salt,
consciously not saying anything. "I know
the feeling," Franz said. "They brought me here and filled my head with
this Esperanto language, interpreted the way they wanted it to be
interpreted, then sat me in front of a class and expected me to teach
creative writing. How can I teach these kids how to write, especially in a
class? The best thing I say to them is, 'Lock yourself alone in a room and
write your thoughts.' And another thing, they set me in front of a word
processor and say, 'Write anything you like.' On a word processor? How can
you concentrate on writing with a word processor? It's the most
fascinating device I've ever seen, so much so that I'm more interested in
the word processor than my writing. I find that this computer device can
do so much more than word processing, and that I can use it to do just
about anything. So I learn a programming language and I start writing
programs. Is Technica happy? Are they supportive? No, they want me to
write fiction. Well, fiction writing was the first part of my life. They
give me a new life, I take up a new career. If we had computers back in
the old days I never would have been a
writer." Elko's silence broke. He
couldn't help it. "Professor Burns told me today that they're growing a
clone of me to send back in time to die in my
place." "That is so that they don't
change history," Franz said. "As if they were able to do such a thing.
They have to act like they can change history, though, to be able to time
travel. What actually happened, though, is that you never did drown in
that river. Your clone did." That's not
for certain, Elko thought, but he said
nothing. "It's just like I never really
died in that ghastly sanitarium in Kierling, my clone did. And John here
was never shot by a sniper." "Thank god
for that," John said. "So, then, all
these things in history never actually
happened?" "No. Not to
us." "Then it's a
lie?" "Yes," Franz
said. "For an institute dedicated to
truth, this whole place seems to be built on lies," John said. "It's
ironic, really. It's not much different from when I was . . .
alive? There's an odd thought." "You
think of yourself as dead?" Elko
said. "Yes, I do, or at least part of me
does." Franz nodded emphatically at John.
"I feel that the Franz they pulled out of the death bed was a different
Franz that is alive and talking to you here and
now." "I feel like I am dead," Elko said.
"Or at least, I feel like I'm supposed to be dead. It's not like I want to
die, though, it just feels like I'm not really
alive." "It's the lack of free will,"
John said. "What passes for free will for us is an illusion. We're not
really free. We can't walk out of here and say, 'I quit.' What kind of
life is this?" He looked at Elko and at Franz. "Gentlemen, I'm going to
level with you. I've been thinking about this for a long time. I say we
should get the hell out of here." "I
agree with you, but I don't see how it would be possible," Franz said.
"They have the time devices, they can see where we went and be there
before we get there." "The time devices
put us at a severe disadvantage," John said. "But they have a weakness.
Aren't all of them controlled by one central
computer?" Franz
nodded. "You're the programmer, Franz.
What can we do?" Franz thought for a
moment, then his eyes brightened. "The computer is programmed, by law, not
to let anyone use the time devices for traveling into the future, or
anywhere shorter than a hundred-twenty-five years in the past. It's a
black-out program, locking the controls out of a certain
range." "Why can't they travel back
within the last one-hundred-twenty-five years?" Elko
asked. "The time travel law states that
there should be no possibility of interfering with the past of anyone
alive in the present," John told him. "It's one in a series of laws
restricting what Technica can do with time
travel." "It's also one we can definitely
use to our advantage," Franz said. "Give me a day or so to work out the
details. I think we can do it." He nodded to himself, looking more
cheerful than Elko had ever seen him. "I think it is entirely
possible."
#
It was two weeks later when they made
their move. Elko was walking down the ramp from the fifth level commons to
the Temporal Studies Complex, as planned, when he ran into Professor
Raymond Burns. "Hello Elko. Looking for
me?" Elko fidgeted. "Not
really." "Where are you going,
then?" "I was going to go take a look at
the time devices. To observe." "You don't
have access, Elko." "Oh." Actually Elko
did have access, as Franz had raised Elko's access level in the computer
system. He couldn't tell that to Raymond,
though. Raymond looked at his watch.
"Actually, my schedule's free for the next hour. Come with me, I'll give
you a personal tour." Unable to think of
a reasonable reason not to accept, Elko went along with him. The guard
door took Raymond's full hand print, voice print, and retinal scan before
letting them inside. Beyond was a curved hallway which encircled the
high-energy fusion plant, and which led to each of the three surrounding
temporal study labs. While Raymond paused and was explaining something
about the power plant, Elko caught a glimpse of Franz in the corridor
ahead. He'd seen Raymond and ducked back around the curve, out of sight.
After a few moments both Franz and John came into sight, walking quickly
around the curve toward them. They had Raymond surrounded before he
recognized either of them. "My goodness,
what are you two doing here?" Raymond
asked. John grabbed the back of Raymond's
suit collar and pressed a ball-point pen against Raymond's head. "You feel
that?" John said. "That's a cerebral disrupter set at full. Don't force me
to scramble your cortex." "What is
this?" Raymond said, his voice rising in astonishment. "What do you think
you're doing?!" "Keep silent and do as we
tell you." "What are you doing?"
Elko exclaimed. "We only have five
minutes to get out of here," Franz told him. "We have no other choice but
to take him with us." "Take me?" Raymond
said. "Take me where?" Already they were dragging him down the hall to the
door of the closest temporal study
lab. Elko watched in confusion and
horror. "We can't take him with us!" "If
we let him go, we won't get out of here," Franz said. "The options are
that we give up, or we let him go and get caught, or we take him with us,
or we kill him." "Kill me!? Don't do
that!" "Only if you force us to," John
said, winking at Franz. He still had the ball-point pen pressed against
the back of Raymond's head. They entered Temporal Transfer Chamber #1 and
John forced Raymond to lie face-down on the floor, his hands together
behind his head. "Elko, keep him covered. If he tries anything, push this
button." Out of Raymond's sight, he handed Elko the pen and winked several
times. Deception! Elko's mind shouted.
Subterfuge! He nodded and sat down on Raymond's shoulders, the pen pressed
against the back of the Professor's head. John and Franz disappeared out
of the chamber to set the final
variables. "Elko, why are you a part of
this?" Raymond whispered. "What do you hope to
accomplish?" "We're quitting
Technica." "My God,
why?" "Corruption and
hypocrisy." The skin on the back of
Raymond's neck was flushing a deep red. "You think you can escape
corruption and hypocrisy by leaving Technica?!" he said. "Good luck, Elko.
Good goddamn luck! If there's one thing I've learned in all the studies of
man throughout the ages, is that there is no escape from corruption and
hypocrisy!" "I don't doubt this," Elko
said. "We want to leave
nonetheless." "Elko, you can't get away
with it. Think about it. They'll know where you went simply by watching
you go with one of the other time devices. You can't escape, it's
impossible!" "Franz thinks
differently." "It's madness, Elko! If you
let me go, I can end this and I'll make sure you're not a part of it. I
can keep you clear from it." "Sorry,
Raymond." "You owe it to me! I saved your
life!" "I had no choice in the matter.
You did it without asking me. It was my time to die, and you took it away.
You gained from it. You. Not me. All for you. Then you threatened my life.
I owe you nothing, Raymond." The others
came back down the ladder. "It's all set," John said. "The transfer will
take place any second now." "Where are we
going?" Elko said. "Well, we don't
precisely know," John admitted. "Franz had to program a random variable
into it to prevent them from finding
us." "You can't prevent them from finding
you!" Raymond yelled. "You idiots! They're watching us right
now!" "If they are, they're breaking the
law," John told him. "You should know
that." "They can still track you
down!" "Not if we travel to a destination
within the blackout zone." "You
can't travel within the blackout
zone." Franz smiled. "You can if you
reprogram the central computer." There
was a deep puffing sound, like air suddenly escaping out of a big tank,
and a sudden, intense concussion like being in a train wreck. All of them
fell a foot or so onto hot dry soil, and there was a half-dozen startled
screams. Robes fluttering in the wind, a crowd of people scattered away
from them, heading in all
directions. John pushed himself up into a
sitting position, and dusted off his jacket. "Say," he said, "Franz, this
doesn't look like the black-out zone to
me." Raymond got to his feet, staring off
at the people they'd just frightened. "You idiots! I can't believe you
pulled this stunt!" John helped both
Franz and Elko to their feet. Elko stared around him, feeling like he was
in a dream. The barren landscape above and the farm fields below were all
very familiar. "All that I was saying,"
Franz said, "were things I had to say, because Technica will hear it. It
is not the truth." "I should say not!"
Raymond said. "This is the cradle of civilization. Technica's going to be
here any second to take us back. You
idiots!" Elko looked longingly at the
farmland. "I couldn't actually disable
the black-out program," Franz told John. "But I could make it look like I
did. My program chose this destination, sent us here, erased itself, and
then crashed the computer. It'll be days before they'll be able to get it
going again, and there's no way for them to see where we went. They'd have
to scan all of time." "That's what you
think," Raymond said. "They'll find us any
second." "You scanned this region
yourself during your project, Raymond. Did you ever see us
here?" Raymond started a reply, but
stopped, his mouth hanging open. "You fools! You idiots!" He turned away
from them, raging. "You've stranded us here! Here! Look at that
village, Elko hasn't even invented the wheel yet! Of all the places you
could have picked, you stranded us in this
place!" "It's the cradle of
civilization," Franz said defensively. "Where else would we have greater
opportunities? We have all of history ahead of
us." "Idiots!" John
looked bemused. "Well, I suppose to survive we're going to have to start
some sort of enterprise. Elko my friend," he said, patting him on the
shoulder, "let's go build you a pottery shop somewhere. Once we get
ourselves established, I'll run for office." He and Franz laughed. Elko,
still dazed, managed a smile. They headed off over the hill with Raymond,
still cursing and grumbling, tagging behind.
#
It was a year later when a young Elko,
awakened from his sleep by strange noises, looked out his window and saw
the nomads and their strange contraption. An oxen driven cart --- on
wheels --- with the strange markings painted on the side: "John &
Franz's Traveling Medicine Show" Of course the young Elko couldn't read
Esperanto. He was fascinated by the wheels though, as the cart lumbered
past and disappeared into the gloom. He returned to his bed and fell
asleep, the thought still in his head. Round things spinning, turning,
moving . . .
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