How differently would people act if they
could experience their actions as others
do?
|
The story I want to tell you now is the oldest story in
the book. It’s the defining story of humanity, and it goes
like this: A new tool comes along. Men see it in the world or
in their minds. They strive to reach it, attain it, hold it
aloft for a moment’s wonder. Then they wield it wisely or
wantonly, and in so doing they transform a society–a tribe,
village, city, corporation, nation-state, or global
institution, spreading the effects on up the evolutionary
ladder of civilization.
It’s
a familiar story, yes. But to date, no tool has transformed
human society as drastically as deep-projection technology.
Not the first spark flinted for a fire, not the first ink put
to page, not the first night lit by electricity, not the first
atom split inside a bomb. None of those shocks were as
transformative as Transdimensional Extended Projection
technology, a.k.a. deep-projection.
How
can I be sure of this?
I’m
sure because deep-projection allows the impacts of those
famous shocks of the past to be directly
re-experienced–by allowing the past to be directly
revisited from the present by qualified volunteers, a
group that included myself from the very start. Yes, I was
there, at the Institute for Advanced Study in New Jersey back
in 2030, when the pilot test was performed. I was there, and I
witnessed an opening being made for the very first time into
unseen dimensions that stitch together the universal fabric of
reality. I watched the very first volunteer, a dear friend of
mine, project across the unseen frames of reference that
surround and suffuse our reality; with my own eyes I saw her
enter a dimensional plane that shared its reality with
a precisely targeted moment in the past. You may or may not
know that she was killed the following year, in riots at the
Institute.
Whatever you may think of her, and whatever you may
have heard of our early efforts, do not be misinformed about
our technology. Deep-projection was not "time travel" as
anyone had foreseen it. It was more like stepping into a
virtual-reality display of the past, a past that we cannot
affect in any way. . . . At least, we believed that
at the start. And for the most part it’s perfectly true: we
cannot affect the past in any way that can change what’s
already happened.
It’s
also perfectly true that some of my fellow volunteers made the
mistake of targeting moments in history that proved explosive
to cultures founded upon those misunderstood moments. Still
more explosive were news stories about the projection
volunteers who returned from the past suffering strange side
effects, consumed by poisonous thoughts and emotions long put
to rest, feelings they rereleased into our present-day
world.
Those
news stories were true too, though I myself never experienced
anything so negative during projection. In fact, my own
experience was so much the opposite I felt compelled to join
what’s being called New Spiritualism, a movement among
deep-projection users that focuses on "weak interactions" with
the past. Before long, I was an outspoken leader of this
movement.
And
that is why I was called on to testify at international
hearings on the global crisis that deep-projection technology
had triggered, hearings convened at the Hague in the fall of
2033. By that time, a worldwide ban on the use of the
technology had been decreed, and most deep-projection centers
were already shut down. Many had been ransacked by mobs, and
in some countries, projection facilities had been burned to
the ground, the staff and volunteers that made it out of the
fires alive arrested or worse. . . . I was one of
the lucky ones. Lucky enough to avoid being lynched, and lucky
enough to be asked to present the first case-study on our
technology at the international hearings.
Even
the World Court was curious to hear about my one-of-a-kind
case study–rumors had been circulating for months about an
unusual group of Americans who’d approached me, seeking
assistance for the innovative application of deep-projection
they’d come up with. The court saw my story as a potential
antidote to all the media horror stories concerning what
scientists had seen or experienced in the remote
past.
When
I walked to the podium in that great court, I began by stating
emphatically that deep-projection was not a dangerous
technology in and of itself. It was not, after all, a weapon.
It was merely a kind of transportation device. So whether it
was used for good or for ill depended on us.
Then
I shared with the members of the World Court what I’m about to
share with you: the case of a voluntary projection made by an
inmate of Lewisburg Federal Penitentiary in
Pennsylvania.
What
follows is adapted from the inmate’s
deposition. . . .
Raed
was in his thirtieth year of incarceration at Lewisburg when
they made him the offer to participate.
It
happened on the day of his annual psych review, and the
instant he entered the review room Raed knew something big was
up. The faces on the penitentiary’s psych panel changed slowly
over the decades. A few more wrinkles, an occasional fresh new
face to replace a retiree; but few new emotions. Yet
three new faces were visible on the panel. And Lew’s
balding senior psychologist looked guarded, even
confused.
Plus
there were a couple of lawyers present in the room, which was
very odd indeed. Raed hadn’t even seen a lawyer since
2014. . . .
"Please sit down."
A
guard ushered Raed to the lone chair facing the table of
psychologists. He lowered himself onto the chair, feeling
small, even though he was taller than anyone on the five-man
panel; he could see right over their heads to the mirrored
observation-pane in the wall behind them. Raed was careful not
to look directly into the mirrored pane, not because he was
afraid of being watched–after thirty years at Lew, he’d feel
out of sorts if he wasn’t watched–but because he didn’t
want to see how much he’d aged in Lew. There were no mirrors
back in his cell, of course.
"Something different on the agenda today, Raed," Lew’s
senior psychologist said, managing to sound both weary and
impatient. "I’d like to start by informing you of an
assessment made by our medical staff." The old man held up a
slate plugged into the table, read from it: "Raed, you were
twenty-four years old when given over to the supervision of
this penitentiary. With the supplements we feed you and with
the fitness routine you’ve elected to maintain, the prognosis
is you’ll have another fifty years with us here at
Lew."
That
simple assessment slammed into Raed. He blinked at the senior
psychologist, feeling disoriented, drawn out of the
"safe-houses" the man claimed Raed had in his head.
Fifty more years!
He
hardly heard what the two sharply dressed lawyers were trying
to tell him.
". . . which is why we’re your
court-appointed representation. We’re here to tell you about a
petition made by a group of interested citizens."
What
were these men going on about?
"Concerning an experimental rehab program," one of them
continued, "that might be looked upon favorably by the Federal
Board later, if you agree to undergo it."
Raed
suddenly laughed, something he did so rarely it hurt his
throat a little. "To what end?" he asked them. "Reducing
one of my life-sentences?"
Raed
was serving two thousand back-to-back life-terms. Convicted of
being an accomplice to "one of the most heinous crimes in
recorded history," he’d received the longest prison sentence
ever handed out by a United States court–partially because
he’d been a naturalized American citizen, but mostly because
he’d been fully aware of the outcome of the crime. So Raed was
never going to be released, reintroduced to
society.
Extending him an offer of rehab was a ridiculous
gesture.
"See
this program through, and who can say what’s possible?" The
lawyer shrugged. "For now, two things are directly on the
table. One: an opportunity to see your daughter."
Again
Raed blinked at them, feeling his face reddening, stunned into
apoplectic silence. When he’d entered Lew, he’d left a wife
and a three-year-old daughter behind. And the last time
lawyers had come to see him was back in Raed’s thirteenth year
here, when he’d been served divorce papers from Haifa
and papers disowning him as a parent from Basma, his
daughter. Basma would have just been old enough to sign those
papers, that year. Had she changed her mind, now that she was
in her thirties?
"Also," the lawyer went on, "an opportunity to enter
the world beyond your prison, in a limited and–well, unusual
way." The lawyer said this as though he didn’t quite believe
it.
Certainly Raed couldn’t quite believe it. He hadn’t
seen the outside since his trial ended. The thought unnerved
him, for he had no idea what the world was like anymore. "Who
made the offer?" Raed managed to ask.
Now
the second lawyer spoke up. "A group of citizens who have a
certain relationship with you, but do not wish to be
identified."
"Ah."
Raed knew just what group the lawyer was referring to. He
sighed, "I need to think about it."
After
the review was over and the guards took him back to his home
in Lew Cell #1, Raed found he couldn’t stop thinking
about the astonishing offer made to him. Raed knew the group
that had petitioned for the offer pretty well: an
Arab-American Rights group that checked in on him over the
years, to ensure he wasn’t abused in the penitentiary simply
because of the notoriety of his conviction. In the occasional
letter he’d received from the group every couple of years,
they emphasized Raed must not advertise their low-level
connection with him. They threatened to stop making inquiries
on his behalf to the Lew administration if he failed to
maintain their privacy.
Raed
understood the group wasn’t actually "making inquiries on his
behalf" because they were concerned about him, per se.
Their concern–especially during the early years–was that Raed
might take his own life in prison and become a martyr to his
old cause.
Raed
had no pent-up desire to become a martyr, and he was not
considered a serious candidate for suicide–although, due to
his uniquely lengthy sentence, he was permanently assigned to
the suicide-watch list at Lew. If ever there was a prisoner
who had nothing to looking forward to, it was surely
Raed.
But
now he could be a research volunteer for a new one-of-a-kind
rehab program.
He
would get to see his daughter, they’d told him.
He
would get to walk the outside world for short
stretches.
And
for long stretches he would get to leave Cell #1, the largest
and most expensive cell in the penitentiary, where Raed
resided alone under constant guard and camera
surveillance.
After
thirty years, the cell was a home to him. Raed had taped up a
picture of soaring desert dunes on one wall, a vista of the
Moon over the ocean on another. He’d nursed a dozen plants up
round the tiny window overlooking the courtyard that Raed
could see out of, but no one could see in through. He’d even
built up a modest bookshelf, though none of the books dated
from this century. And there were no newspapers allowed in
here, there was no television. Raed’s media exposure was
censored from the start of his incarceration "in order to
prevent continued political inflammation of the
prisoner."
Nevertheless, in the early years Raed protested this
political censorship of news by cutting himself off from
all news, all knowledge of outside events. He’d
withdrawn from modern civilization completely the day he set
foot in Cell #1. And why not? Raed had lost everything.
So he restricted himself to reading older texts, like the
Alif Layla Wa Layla, the Thousand and One Nights.
Shaherazade, it turned out, provided a soothing escape for a
man sentenced to spend ten thousand and one nights in a single
room. At his own insistence, none of the books on Raed’s shelf
were published after the day of infamy he’d been convicted of
participating in: the day the Lew staff still referred to as
"9/11."
In
the early years, Raed’s psychologists hadn’t been bothered by
his self-censorship. But after the first decade, they changed
their minds, complaining that he was retreating too far from
reality. That’s when the psychologists began to talk about
"safe-rooms" in his mind, about a "labyrinth of rooms" he was
building to escape not just from imprisonment but from
himself. Raed snorted when he first heard this metaphor–but
even then he’d suspected the description was all too
apt.
An
internal labyrinth. A long chain of rooms within rooms to hide
in at the back of his mind.
For
years he’d been building them, extending himself into new
selves, splinter-selves that left his memories of life on the
outside stored in some distant mental "room." In the decades
since Raed arrived at Lew, the administration had constructed
four new versions of Cell #1 just for him, each room a little
more livable, more "humane" than the last. Over the same
period, Raed probably constructed forty new rooms inside his
head, just to block away the portions of his mind he didn’t
need anymore. The first to go was his entire
twenty-four-year-old "outside-self," long lost now, dropped
down some dusty crevice of the labyrinth Raed built to divide
and conquer himself. During the ensuing years he’d wound his
way deeper into the labyrinth, until he’d found a room strong
enough to withstand eternal confinement and
isolation.
After
three very long and sleepless nights spent reflecting on his
position–something Raed hardly ever did–he broke down
and asked what was involved in the experimental program. He
was told it involved a new technology, but much of the program
itself would be left up to him.
A
month later, Raed was taken out of Lewisburg Federal
Penitentiary for the first time since he’d been brought into
it. He was taken out just after dusk in an armored van without
windows, and driven through the mountains toward a destination
unknown.
By
the sound of it, the armored van had a police escort, and the
escort led the way for about an hour, about as far as Reading,
Pennsylvania might be, Raed guessed. Then the van stopped, and
he heard the driver talking with security guards. Raed heard
something else too, a muffled sound familiar from his trial:
the sound of protestors shouting at the van. He was astonished
to think the public had found out he was being brought here,
had gotten up in the middle of the night to come here
themselves–but Raed wasn’t surprised that people still
harbored so much hate for him. On the rare occasions he gave
interviews, Raed saw the wariness in the journalists’ eyes,
caught them looking at him like a kind of living ghoul out of
the pages of history.
The
van parked in a loading dock. Raed was unloaded under guard,
then brought to an empty conference room, wearing a monitoring
restraint-collar that would sedate him instantly if he tried
anything. Moments later, the same trio of young psychologists
who’d sat through his review in Lewisburg entered the room,
followed by a pair of middle-aged men introduced to him as
"senior researchers." The two researchers began outlining
their experimental program, describing the new technology Raed
would be required to use. . . .
Raed
listened to them, briefly astounded, then disappointed.
"Projection" through a "dimensional fold" to a "targeted
moment in the past"? Raed’s mind began doing backflips trying
to guess what was really going on here. Had the legal
climate in the United States changed? Had new forces declared
Raed should be put through some punishment alternative to
confinement?
He
told the researchers flat out he did not believe them.
Traveling to the past was impossible, he didn’t care how many
decades had gone by since he’d been in the outside
world.
So
they took him down to the main "projection" floor, brought him
into a room dominated by a big spherical cagework. There had
to be a hundred different bars to the cage, not all of them
completely encircling it. And hanging in the cage’s center was
a body harness. Raed examined it suspiciously, wondering what
exactly these men were trying to trick him into.
. . . All the cage’s arcing yellow bars were studded
with cones that pointed inward, toward the harness suspended
by a dozen blue coil-cables.
"Questions, Raed?" one of the psychologists asked
him.
"What
are the curtains for?"
The
long back wall of the "projection" room was concealed–to hide
a viewing gallery?
But
then one of the guards who’d accompanied Raed from Lew drew
back the curtains, revealing a long pane of Plexiglas that
separated the room with the cage from–
A
much larger room with a hundred identical cages that were
occupied by suspended people.
At
least, the suspended occupants appeared to be people.
Raed stepped up to the Plexiglas pane, pressed his face
against it, uncertain whether he was seeing an image televised
across the pane or a real room on the other side of the
pane.
The
arena-sized room was real.
The
hundred-odd yellow cages seemed real.
But
all the suspended people looked blurry, far-off, fake, like
projected images. Most of the image-people were moving, some
running in their cages, a few leaping and rolling in
midair.
"Those people aren’t real," Raed said over his
shoulder, unable to turn from the pane. He was mesmerized. . .
. Abruptly, one of the closer cages flashed with light, and
the false floating image-person inside was instantly
transformed into a clear-as-can-be jumpsuit-wearing woman, a
real-as-can-be woman who stepped out of the yellow cage, a
little shaky on her feet, but otherwise not visibly worse for
the experience. She began conferring with a three-man team
clustered round display-desks adjacent to her big yellow
cage.
"You’re telling me that woman was deep-projecting into
the past?" Raed asked, noticing now there was a separate team
for each harnessed and hanging "time traveler." If this was
all a hoax, it was an elaborate one.
"Volunteers like her call it ‘ghosting’," someone
behind him said. "You’ll see why if you decide to follow our
program, and volunteer to try it for yourself."
The
"volunteers" in the cages beyond the Plexiglas pane were
not other prisoners, according to the researchers. The
volunteers were mostly historians and cultural
anthropologists, a handful of students, and others who
routinely "ghosted back to the past" from this facility
round-the-clock. Raed’s researcher-guides claimed the yellow
projection cages allowed people to experience the physical
reality of the past without fully being part
of it.
But
Raed knew that it was all a trick of some kind. If those
volunteers were experiencing any sort of "projection," it was
the sort of computer-fabricated reality the outside world used
to call–what was the word? Oh yes: a
simulation.
That
was the only thing "projection" could be, the only thing Raed
could bring himself to
believe. . . .
His
rehab programmers seemed prepared for Raed’s
disbelief.
For
the rest of the night, they cloistered Raed and his two Lew
guards in the otherwise-empty conference room, so that Raed
could browse through "holeos"–interactive 3-D training videos.
The holeos began with a list of weird implications of
"classical quantum theory": how subatomic particles appeared
out of nowhere and then disappeared, how such particles could
exist in many places at once, the development of a mathematics
that suggested particles were boring between
dimensions.
Apparently Raed’s rehab programmers knew he’d been
exposed to such strange concepts before, while studying for
his certificate in electronics.
Of
course they knew. Raed’s electronics training came out at the
trial because his certificate got him a position with the
airline, a low-level job that allowed him to scrutinize
airport security. . . . Anyway, one of Raed’s electronics
courses had touched on quantum theory–mainly for the
students continuing on into cell-phone or computer technology.
Raed hadn’t understood the half-day "quantum overview"
his college course included.
According to the holeos, Raed wasn’t the only one who
hadn’t understood. Most physicists chose to treat the theory
simply as a convenient way to calculate and predict the
positions of particles, rather than believe the world could
really be riddled by multiple dimensions. The holeo
invited Raed to imagine Copernicus and Galileo choosing to
ignore the overall implication of their new way of calculating
and predicting the positions of the planets–and refusing to
believe the Sun could really be the center of the solar
system.
Raed didn’t see why it was important for him to know or
imagine any of this. But he didn’t want anyone to think he was
backing out of the program. He didn’t want to be driven back
to Lew, not just yet. And he was an expert at biding his time.
Patience and playing the game were the essential survival
skills of a long-term prisoner.
So
Raed patiently sat through a tedious holeo-guided history of
quantum-in-the-large, which elevated the theory from the
subatomic realm up to far larger scales. He listened patiently
to young scientists attacking the notion that "multiple
dimensions collapsed into a single dimension" whenever a human
observer happened along–how could a theory of matter seriously
include human consciousness in a central role? He patiently
examined 3-D renderings of the first machines built to scan
"N-space," a theoretical realm that surrounded and suffused
the visible Universe with all manner of strange
dimensions.
But
when the holeos moved on to the topic of "forces experienced
during projection into N-space," Raed must have groaned aloud,
because his researcher-hosts came in and turned off the
holeos. They didn’t seem disappointed; perhaps they’d thought
he’d give up on their theoretical material much
sooner.
Next
they let Raed watch an old pre-millennium black-and-white
movie that was supposed to give him an idea of what it would
be like to be "projected" to a city he could do little but
wander through.
The
setting was Berlin, and the city was revealed through the eyes
of two angels wandering among the living–angels who resembled
two somber German men in stylish dark greatcoats. The citizens
of Berlin couldn’t see them, but the two forlorn-looking
angels could see and hear people talking in the world around
them. They could even hear the thoughts of people, although in
those parts of the film the soundtrack reverted to German, so
he didn’t get to hear what the citizens were thinking.
All he could tell from the tone of their untranslated thoughts
was whether they were sad or happy, angry or
afraid. . . .
After
it was over, one researcher sat down with him, described the
projection experience as a lot like being a ghost lurking in
an otherwise real world. Projection volunteers could see the
physical environment of the past perfectly, but could not be
seen by people in that past.
"Because," the researcher laboriously explained, "light
is so low in mass that it merely has one-way
transdimensionality. Volunteers can see light from the past,
but past-states can never receive light from farther along
Time’s dimension."
Raed
nodded dutifully, wondering what all the researchers here were
really up to, and why they would try so hard to make
him believe in an
impossibility. . . .
An
hour before dawn, he was hustled back to the armored van
waiting in the loading dock, handed printed materials to
review if he wanted to, then whisked out through the unseen
but audible protestors and returned to Lew to spend the day
resting in his cell. Which was fine by him. Stepping back
through the door of Cell #1 felt like waking from a dream. He
didn’t feel so out of sorts here, so confused and
vulnerable.
But
he couldn’t sleep. The thought that he’d just been beyond the
penitentiary’s walls had opened up a crack inside his
thinking. He still didn’t know what to make of his night out.
So much scientific argument just to convince him of something
untrue?
Eventually he gave up on sleep altogether, and began
looking over the strange explanations in the support material
they’d given him, looking for loopholes, looking for the truth
behind their lies. Raed used to be an imaginative man. But
imagination was not a good thing to have in prison and he felt
very rusty. Long-forgotten thoughts stirred up faded memories
of his teenage struggle to master challenging Western
concepts–an education paid for by the organization, the money
funneled to Raed through his cousins Nazir and Sayf, both of
whom died back on 9/11.
The
truth about "deep-projection" finally dawned on Raed. Now he
saw through the rehab programmers’ game, and saw how to get
what he wanted: a chance to see his daughter Basma,
whom Raed hadn’t seen since she was three years
old.
With
that reward firmly in mind, Raed finally fell
asleep.
The
next night, he was again driven out of the Appalachians to the
deep-projection complex. And again he heard protesters out in
force as the van went through the complex’s gates, although
the van’s walls muffled whatever was being shouted at
him. . . .
Waiting for him in the same conference room as before
were the three psychologists and the two so-called senior
researchers–his "projection parole board," for all intents and
purposes. These five men could approve his participation in
the program or send him packing for the rest of his
life.
"Questions, Raed?"
He
held up the printed materials he’d brought back with him. "Is
it really necessary for me to know any of this before I can
project?" Raed already knew the answer, but was curious to see
how they’d try to rationalize it to him.
A
compact researcher with close-cropped gray bristles instead of
hair took the printouts back from Raed. "You reviewed all
this?"
"Yes."
"Well
then, let’s see where last night’s holeo-lessons broke
off. . . ." He flipped to the final pages. "Ah,
yes: N-space forces and the role mass plays in them. Complex
stuff–but crucial to understanding what you’ll encounter
during projection, how you can move around, and so
on."
An
evasive answer that simply pressed ahead with the logic
crafted to convince him. Indeed, that was the ultimate purpose
of all this preparatory theory:
To make Raed believe "projection" would show him
the real past, so that the psychological benefits of
the rehab program could take effect.
The
science was all part of the rehab, part of the game these
psychologists were playing with him. He recognized their bag
of tricks well enough.
But
Raed could play the game better than anyone. After all, he’d
lived in America for seven years and played the game of being
one of the ordinary people on his Brooklyn street without
anyone suspecting his deep-seated separateness. So he would
play along with tonight’s game, stay on the move inside his
head, hop from room to room through the labyrinth until he
came out as the winner. . . .
This
time, the compact senior researcher with the bristle-hair
remained behind when the others left. The man introduced
himself as Francis Drummond, a volunteer himself during the
earliest test-projections. He seemed committed to helping Raed
understand the hard stuff.
"Get
through an hour with me, and you’ll get to project for the
rest of the night," Francis promised as he began summoning
images onto the conference table’s display-surface: the Moon;
a mountain; a building; a metal barricade. According to
Francis, each of the displayed objects was massive enough to
exert force "into many N-space dimensions." But people who
projected through N-space into the past could apparently
thrust their ghostly hands right through a foam mattress–or
even through a pane of glass, if they were patient
enough.
Raed
nodded, knowing all this information was being trotted out to
explain away the defects of the simulation he’d be projecting
into. "Will I be able to walk through walls, like the two
German angels in that black-and-white movie?" he asked,
getting into the spirit of the game.
"If
it’s the wall of a tent, sure. There’s a kind of ‘tingly give’
when you step through thin structures. But you can’t step
through ordinary walls of concrete or steel, no. It all comes
back to mass and massive
structure. . . ."
Over
the course of two hours with Francis, Raed struggled to keep
on top of the complex concepts paraded before him. Francis
even told him about the big surprise from the earliest
test-projections: "We discovered that life-forms of sufficient
mass exert some kind of energy into a few dimensions; we call
these ‘biomass signatures.’ Volunteers pick up these
signatures when animals of a certain size wander close to
them."
How
did they simulate that, Raed wondered. "That include
people?"
Francis nodded. "Conscious animals exert the strongest
signatures. Please don’t interpret this as something
‘psychic’; individual thoughts are far too fleeting to be
sensed. They essentially have no weight. But strong emotions
can last a long time in the forebrain, fill the hindbrain,
contort the face, change the way we walk, permeate our
muscle-tissues. Massive, you might say."
Francis seemed to be trying to reawaken Raed’s mind as
much as teach him about projection. And that was all right
with Raed. Because if he was going to go through their rehab
program, and notice all the things they’d want him to notice,
and win the reward they’d promised him, he’d need to be on the
ball. . . .
"Well, that about covers it," Francis finally
announced, shutting off the conference table. "Any last
questions?"
Raed
sensed this was a test he must pass. "You said gravity has
‘two-way transdimensionality’?"
"Yes." Francis seemed pleased. "It’s a strong-weak
interaction. Gravity from the past is exerted strongly onto
the N-space fold you’ll be in, and your own mass exerts itself
weakly onto the past–"
"Doesn’t adding my mass to the past change the
past? I thought paradoxes were outlawed by
quantum-in-the-large." Raed’s rusty brain was beginning to
work again. He wanted to show this clever man he’d been
listening and he would catch flaws in his logic, if Francis
wasn’t careful.
"Paradoxes are ruled out. Our technology
wouldn’t work at all if it were possible to project into the
future, for instance. And according to quantum-in-the-large,
people who project through N-Space to the past already visited
that past the first time around, so to speak. So their mass
was accounted for, and their presence won’t change anything.
They can only go back and weakly interact because they were
there all along."
"I
understand you perfectly."
"Excellent." Francis stood up. "I’ll send in a medic
who’ll take you downstairs, get you hooked up to the
cage."
The
man strode out of the room.
And
Raed waited, feeling out of his element, out of his cell,
completely out of sorts. He glanced at the guards watching him
from their shadowy corner of the room. He glanced at a
bookshelf against the conference room wall, took down a text,
looked at the cover: Creating Transient N-space
Intersections with Past Time.
A
book about a false bunch of theories? The book’s spine was
cracked worse than Raed’s copy of Shaherazade, as though it
had been thumbed through many times.
The
crack deep inside his thinking hadn’t gone away; it was still
down there, wedged wider by all the information they’d fed
him. And now a hint of fear was seeping up through that crack.
. . . Because Raed knew what his rehab programmers
were up to, he could guess their "precisely
targeted-destination," oh yes.
They
intended to project him back to 9/11.
A
burly male medic arrived, and led Raed and his two guards down
to the same curtained chamber off the main projection arena,
where the guards removed his restraint-collar. The medic
explained that the chamber’s projection cage was the only one
isolated in the facility, set up just for Raed. Then he helped
Raed don the harness, which was worn under his clothes,
against his body so the ’trodes could record biofeedback.
After strapping it on, Raed got into a magnetic jumpsuit. The
medic told him he could put his clothes on over the top of the
jumpsuit.
So he
did, fingers trembling as he re-buttoned his
shirt. . . .
The
pair of lawyers who’d first appeared at his review back in Lew
suddenly reappeared with a slate for him to sign. They
informed Raed about the protests being held outside the
facility. The protests were not about him, they said;
no one outside knew he was in here.
"What
are they protesting?"
Apparently the people outside felt projection
technology was too dangerous to be used. The lawyers assured
Raed no volunteer who’d undergone projection had been
physically harmed by the process itself; it was
emotional damage, that was the real risk. The potent
"biomass signatures" people gave off in the past could be
quite corrosive.
"That’s the only danger?"
One
of the lawyers told him, "There’s a movement called ‘New
Spiritualism’ that contends the transdimensional interaction
can be positive. Some New Spiritualists are sponsoring your
rehab program, by the way. . . ."
But
Raed was hardly listening, seeing more of the truth peeking
out from behind their lies. The protestors outside were
opposed to the simulations this technology produced.
And now Raed had been brought here–because if they could
convince him the simulations were real and use them to
help him rehabilitate, wouldn’t that be a big coup for a
beleaguered technology?
Raed
signed the slate held out to him. Then the lawyers asked the
medic to strap a special "ripcord" over Raed’s clothing,
reiterated that he could back out at any time, and as they
left the chamber, his personal projection team came in. An
Asian senior researcher, a boyish-looking controls operator,
and finally a woman psychologist–a Muslim psychologist, no
less, wearing a black cotton burqa that kept her hidden and
proper. Didn’t they realize Raed was no longer a
devout?
As
Raed was introduced by his guards, the woman’s wide-set black
eyes looked coldly over the burqa-veil at him. No doubt she’d
been sent by the Arab-American Rights group who’d petitioned
to get him into this crazy rehab program.
The
team quickly took their positions, the medic helping Raed
through the yellow bars into the cage, then pulling down the
blue coil-cables and magnetically latching them to anchor
spots on the jumpsuit beneath Raed’s clothes. The moment the
medic stepped out of the cage, the operators powered up the
blue cables, which recoiled, hoisting Raed comfortably into
midair. He tried to calm his breathing, and listened to the
chatter around him.
"Got
five hours."
"Time
for, say, ten projections?"
"Aim
for ten, minimum."
"Curtains open or closed?"
Raed
realized this was addressed to him. "Open." He didn’t care if
anyone looked in; he wanted to look out. So the curtains were
drawn aside, and Raed peered at the hundred-odd cages across
the main floor, which were again all occupied by volunteers,
some in jumpsuits, some in tracksuits, some in regular
clothes. Presumably this facility was packed day and night. He
heard something below him, and realized the Muslim
psychologist had stepped into the cage.
"Your
program for tonight involves a number of projections, all of
them focused on a primary time-locus–"
"I
know where you’re sending me," he told her. "Back to the day I
was convicted of being a party to. As punishment," he
added.
The
psychologist shook her veiled head. "It’s up to you what you
get out of the projection experience. If you want the offer
made to you upheld, you’ll have to stick the program out. On
the other hand, if you decide you no longer want to continue–"
She indicated the ripcord round his waist. "Pull this, you’ll
instantly shut down the cage-frame and return to the
present."
Raed
had been advised by the lawyers that any ripcord shutdowns
would be treated as a withdrawal from the program. "I’m not
afraid," he said to her.
He
was curious, though. Raed hadn’t thought much about 9/11 in
nearly two decades. All by itself the mind sprouted rooms
within rooms to tuck away what was destructive. And tucked a
hundred rooms away from the Raed of today was the
twenty-four-year-old Raed who’d aided and abetted his cousins
Nazir and Sayf. He no longer had any connection to that Raed,
but he was curious to know how history now looked on
the events of that day. . . . The medic was now
strapping a lightweight breather-mask round Raed’s neck. Would
it secrete some kind of hallucinatory gas?
"In
case we project you to the wrong coordinates," the woman
psychologist explained, still standing below him. "You’d pass
out in certain environments, but there’s little chance of real
physical harm. Anyway, you can use the microphone on the
breather to call out to us during projection. We’ll hear you.
The people of the past won’t hear you, remember. Sound
can only travel one way across the dimensional fold, just like
light. Now brace yourself," she warned him. "The world of the
past’s going to feel both startlingly real and
surreal."
With
a twirl of black cotton, she quickly slipped out of the cage.
And within seconds the inward-angled cones on all the arcing
yellow bars began to focus shimmering beams on him, opening a
"transient N-space fold" around him. Raed blinked through the
bars, met the hard eyes of the young Muslim psychologist,
still refusing to believe–until the woman began to blur, and
shift, and slide off to one side, and everything around Raed
swirled into a tunnel of light–
A
light thump, and the tunnel of light focused into a
tubular space. Raed’s eyes adjusted, recognized an
oh-so-familiar interior: he was inside a large, mostly empty
767 passenger jet sitting on a runway.
Raed
had dropped down into one of the rearmost seats from midair,
as the "gravity" of the simulation took hold of him. It
was a simulation, wasn’t it? He blinked at his
surroundings, seeing every detail of the seat-back ahead of
him and the belts and buckles lying on the empty seats beside
him, the empty row across the aisle, the magazines and
folded-up meal tables all perfectly visible, his
surroundings absolutely real no matter which way he
looked. Light has a strong multidimensionality, Francis
had said, but such negligible mass it can only cross
one-way, from the past to the
present. . . .
But
then Raed noticed he was sinking right through the
padded seat-cushion beneath him–he could feel himself bumping
down against the hard steel frame inside the seat
itself. Flaws in the simulation, just as he’d suspected! He
let out a sigh of relief, and watched his body rebound
slightly, settling into place almost on the surface of the
seat cushion visible between his legs. It was a strange
sensation, but Raed was sure it was controlled by the coiled
harness cables back in the "projection" cage he had to be
still hanging in. . . . From a great distance away,
too far off and far too soft to be real, the whining sound of
jet engines powering up. More like a whisper, when the sound
should have been screamingly loud in his ears–another flaw!
Raed felt he was hearing a faulty soundtrack in a movie
theater too big for the speakers.
But
then he recalled the materials he’d been given to study:
sounds would be strange, nothing would be loud enough to make
out unless Raed was standing close to the source.
Slowly the 767 went through a 30-degree turn on the
runway, and the quality of light spilling through windows
across the aisle made it clear to Raed this was an early
morning flight. His heart began to beat faster. He leaned over
the seat beside him, peered out the oval window. His plane
appeared to be taxiing toward a main runway, and the airport
was–
Logan
International, Boston.
No
doubt this was supposed to be the fateful day. Raed struggled
to get up, wanting to see if he could see Nazir or Sayf seated
in the rows ahead, biding their time until the 767 had taken
off. But no, something was wrong–the weird far-off whining of
the engines was powering down, shutting off altogether. Raed
tried to get to his feet, struggling with the distorted
friction of this simulation-world, all the while clinging to
the fact that he was really attached to a harness in the air
somewhere. In the seat ahead of him, a passenger was sleeping,
one arm thrown across his lap, digital wristwatch visible:
9:13 am.
An
hour after the time they should have been in the air,
if this was one of those infamous flights. No wonder the plane
was at a standstill! Plopping back down in the empty window
seat, Raed pressed his face to the strangely rubbery glass of
the window, caught sight of other motionless planes lined up
on another runway. . . . On the morning of 9/11, all
flights in the country had been grounded shortly after 9
am.
They’d projected him back aboard the wrong
plane! Raed released a breath he hadn’t realized he’d been
holding.
But
if it was all just a simulation, under the control of the two
projection operators, then shouldn’t this be one of the
planes that had left Boston an hour earlier?
He
moved back to the aisle seat, saw a stewardess walking towards
him from the front of the plane, looking distraught, touching
the passengers she passed on the shoulder, and speaking
soundlessly to them. Raed heard nothing at all until she was
quite close, then he heard the stewardess speaking four words
to the passengers in the rows ahead of him: "Never forget this
day."
Her
voice sounded too loud, and more than a little hoarse, as
though she was on the edge of tears. "Never forget this day,"
she boomed again, leaning in to touch the passenger in the
seat directly ahead on the shoulder. She passed Raed by
without looking at him, but her knee brushed his hand, resting
on the hard plastic aisle-arm–
FEAR-ANGUISH-DISBELIEF! All three emotions flooded out
of the passing stewardess and into Raed, the potency of his
brief physical contact with her a kind of pain he’d never
experienced before. He recoiled from the aisle, clutching his
hand as though he’d been burned, and feeling certain in every
fiber of his body that the stewardess had just been informed
about the planes striking their New York targets.
For
an instant, just one instant, Raed was clutched by the fear
that he was not in a
simulation. . . .
Murmurs were rising from the surrounding
seats:
"What’d she mean?"
"Why
aren’t we taking off? Know what’s going on?"
Raed
rubbed at his hand, wondering whether stewardesses had
actually acted this way on the real day of infamy. Two rows
ahead and across the aisle, a man was listening to his cell
phone, a shocked look dawning on his face. And in the aisle
seat three rows ahead, a woman was standing, turning, walking
slowly toward the back, moving as though she had arthritis
even though she was only in her thirties. She looked directly
at Raed when she came alongside him, leaned over him and
repeated the same four words: "Never forget this day." Then
she reached down to Raed’s shoulder, but before she could
touch him, the woman’s arm elongated, slid away, there was a
whirl of light and–
Raed
was back in the deep-projection facility, hanging in the
center of the projection cage, groggy and disoriented and
fighting a desire to remove the harness, exit the cage, and
ask to be returned to his cell in Lew. The veiled psychologist
stepped through the bars beside him, gave him a thumbs-up to
show his bioreadings were acceptable, wanted a thumbs-up in
return–Raed was supposed to signal if he was up to continuing,
ready for the next part of the program.
He
didn’t give her a thumbs-up. Instead he lifted his breather,
gasped to her, "I thought you said the people of the past
couldn’t see me?"
"They
can’t," she agreed, tapping a note onto the slate she was
holding.
The
projection cage operators called out that the
target-coordinates were recalibrated, and the cage was ready
for a second "folding." Was Raed ready for a second
"ghosting"?
"They
can’t see you," she repeated, covering her veiled mouth with
her hand to remind Raed to refit his breather. "And don’t
worry," she assured him, "you’ll get used to ghosting after
another few tries." She slipped sideways out between the bars
again, before turning back and adding, "You won’t be harmed,
Raed."
Who
did she think he was? Raed wasn’t afraid of a computer
simulation. His hand still tingled from his brushed contact
with the stewardess, but it was all a trick of the ’trodes
lining his harness straps, all just a trick of the mind. He’d
been conned into overreacting by all the holeo material they’d
made him study, that’s all. He was playing the game so well he
was beginning to con himself.
But
they could not send him into the past.
And
he was not ready to give up. The thought of being
driven back to Lew was deeply comforting–Cell #1 was the only
place Raed felt safe, felt under his own control. But Cell #1
was also a cage more frightening than this cage, and after
leaving it two nights in a row, Raed knew the crack inside him
was yawning wider. He sensed the new need pouring through,
throwing the balance of his desire in the direction of
continuing these trips out of Lew, no matter what simulation
they put him through.
The
psychologist gave him the thumbs-up again, and in response
Raed balled up the hand that had touched the stewardess into a
defiant fist, and said into his breather-microphone, "I am
ready."
And
said to himself only a simulation as the universe
around him shifted, slid, swirled into the tunnel of
light–
–which widened to become a vast, impossibly wounded
sky. It was the sky of some inhuman world wreathed in shadow,
pierced only by shafts of weird blue light, and threatened by
thunderclouds that coiled not with water, but with ash that
rained down on a dead land.
Another bump as Raed fell back onto a patch of
ground littered with jagged concrete shrapnel and twisted
piping, which did not cut him; he barely sensed any sharp
edges. Pushing himself up off this rubble was extremely
difficult. Raed struggled to stay on his feet, see where he
was. All round him lay a spaghetti-panorama of tangled wiring,
twisted metal braces, giant steel girders scattered like logs,
sections of shattered furniture–and paper. Crests and
swirls of scattered pages, documents jammed between wiring,
sticking out from shards of concrete. Suddenly a nearby swell
of paper shot skyward as steam vented from the unsteady,
uneven landscape. Raed had "projected" to a place where some
war had been going on forever, by the littered looks of
things–a place worse than any he’d seen before coming to
America as a teen. Far worse than any part of Beirut, where
he’d lived for a time as a small boy.
Unfortunately, Raed knew the name of this impossible
place.
"Ground Zero," they’d called it.
He
appeared to be standing on the island of Manhattan, on the
spot where the Twin Towers had stood–and stood not long before
he’d arrived, if the roiling sky was rendered accurately. This
time he seemed to have missed 9/11 not by an hour, but by
twenty-four hours. Smoke still hugged the rubble-strewn ground
like patches of fog; distant figures drifted in and out of
this fog, mostly firemen and policemen; a few were using
search-dogs, trying to sniff out victims trapped under the
rubble.
Raed
himself smelled nothing. Not the smoke, not the scent of jet
fuel that should have filled the air. Not even the
singed-cinder aroma from the ongoing fires in the distance.
Thirty years, and they still can’t program smells properly
in computer simulations, he told himself, but that was
just his mind trying to deny what he was seeing: an
inconceivably detailed landscape of devastation that extended
for blocks in every direction, and a too-huge-to-fake sky
above, drawing Raed’s eyes up through bluish curls of smoke to
the heavens. Out under the sky!
His
soul had yearned for open sky for three long decades, but now
that he seemed to be standing beneath one, he felt it was too
awesome, too exposed, too heavy, too terrible to
bear.
So he
turned his eyes down to the tangled ground, and began to pick
his way over to the only source of noise close enough to hear:
a soft hissing emanating from the mist-shrouded bank of rubble
directly behind him. Clambering back over a filing cabinet
that might have fallen from the Moon–it was flattened like a
stomped soda can–Raed started slowly across the damp ground
toward this soft sibilant sound, presumably a very loud sound
"in reality." Keeping his balance was complicated by the fact
that he kept plunging through an insubstantial blanket of
papers and paper ash, soot and concrete dust, getting his feet
stuck in crevices beneath this visible surface-blanket, yet
leaving no footprints in it, disturbing nothing he fell
against, moving nothing he grabbed onto for support. At one
point, he blinked down at a pair of eyeglasses, both lenses
starred, crushed underfoot–
But
not by him. Whoever had worn them was not his victim,
no. Raed could sense the old defense almost rising to his
lips, could almost hear himself saying it in a courtroom long
ago. America puffed itself too high in those two towers.
Anyone trapped inside them had been trapped there by America
alone, so they weren’t my victims. The old defense,
the denial he’d dropped somewhere along the way, abandoned in
an outer room of the labyrinth in Raed’s mind, rooms away from
the middle-aged man he was now. It all seemed so long ago, too
long ago to feel clear on the subject.
Nothing seemed clear about 9/11, especially not here,
not now.
But
then a breeze he couldn’t feel began clearing the mists ahead,
revealing a looming shape just a few feet from him: the side
of a huge fire truck, its designation ash-smeared but still
visible. Tower Pumper No. 146.
Raed
maneuvered round the front of the pumper truck, and dragged
himself onto an adjacent mound of debris to get a better view
of things. He was now level with the top of the truck’s cab,
and he could see the mist was coming from a hose being aimed
from the crow’s nest atop the pumper. A giant fireman in a
soot-stained yellow coat stood in the center of the crow’s
nest like an indomitable statue, soaking down a fire inside a
half-collapsed structure sixty or seventy feet away. A second
fireman lay face-down further down the roof of the pumper,
obviously exhausted.
Only
two firemen for a truck this size?
It
had to be less than twenty-four hours after 9/11; otherwise
Ground Zero would be swarming with volunteer firefighters from
out of state, even out of the country, if Raed recalled
correctly. From his debris-hilltop, Raed turned and surveyed
the entire scene, which was opening up as the imperceptible
breeze cleared more spray and smoke and steam away.
The
scene before him might have been some imaginary rendering of
the end of the world. Smoldering multi-story sections of both
towers lay strewn about like so many titanic accordions, while
in the distance, Manhattan’s financial canyons were on fire in
a hundred spots. Closer at hand, the ground was draped with
stretches of outer tower-walling, glittering and ribbed,
resembling enormous metallic mats–or magic carpets used by
giants from the Alif Layla Wa Layla, Jinnis that had
vanished back into the sky, leaving behind explosive plumes of
blue smoke. It was a vista more fantastical than any
Shaherazade ever imagined. . . .
So unreal.
Yet
this unreality was far harder to pass off as a simulation than
the contained commonplace-reality of a passenger plane
stranded on a runway. The interior of a 767 was a plausible
space to model. But the exterior of New York, under an open
sky? Around him the ground was seething, and crews of firemen
and rescue workers were materializing from beyond veils of
vapor swinging grappling hooks and pick-axes, each figure
perfect and alive and real. Many of them disappeared into the
gray-white crater in the center of this vast dead zone in time
and in place.
The
dead past.
Not
rendered, not simulated.
Legs
turning watery, going out from under him. Raed dropped
helplessly onto the blackened husk of what might once have
been a fine office couch.
Ground Zero.
Could
his cousins Nazir and Sayf really have brought this
about?
Could
he really be here?
Real
or unreal, Raed wanted this re-visitation to end. He was more
than ready to return to the present. And if the first
projection back to the grounded plane was anything to go by,
he wouldn’t have to sit here long before they brought him out
of all this. So Raed waited, watching the fireman atop the
pumper truck hose down flames licking out of a
crushed-accordion section of one of the fallen towers, and
wondering whether he was seeing something that might be real,
might be true: had the two men on Tower Pumper Truck No. 146
been working here through the night, fighting fires since the
World Trade Center collapsed?
For
an instant, the huge man working the hose lost his grip on it.
A cloud of spray swept over Raed, and he swung his hand
through the moisture without feeling a drop. Not massive
enough, he thought, the science they’d fed him
regurgitating an explanation for this flaw in the visual
reality. Things will appear both startlingly real and
surreal, the Muslim psychologist had warned
him.
Suddenly the hose shut off altogether, and the weary
fireman stumbled out of the crow’s nest, tore off his goggles,
wiped tears from his eyes–no doubt he’d lost many
firemen-friends when the towers came down–then the man
collapsed on the pumper’s roof right beside his prone
coworker. That’s when Raed became aware of a prickling
sensation, a cloud of something uncomfortably tingly
swimming over him. . . .
Heat!
Heat was able to "span the dimensional divide" that
purportedly separated Raed from this past. Heat was
cumulatively massive, Francis had told him–it had sufficient
structure to transmit a force across N-space. Whatever the
case, he was definitely sensing a radiation from the burning
accordion-floors not far away–an itchy, uneasy chill. A cold
and ticklish pressure, unlike any cold he’d ever
felt.
So
this was heat in the land of the dead, three decades
back!
Raed
shivered, on the verge of believing again, wondering if those
two firemen really were lying only a dozen feet from him,
unaware of his ghostly presence. He rubbed the edge of his
left hand, where it had made that fiery contact with the
stewardess. Human contact was one that did feel hot in
these projections–too hot too handle, which was why Raed was
being careful not to get too close to anyone this time around.
He would not touch any of the people he encountered at Ground
Zero, and he would not be touched by them. He was not
responsible. He was not the twenty-four-year-old who’d
helped two cousins bring the Twin Towers down. That boy was
long gone, locked down in the dustiest, most unreachable part
of the labyrinth of Raed’s mind, the key to his pre-prison
self thrown away ages ago.
So
how could it possibly help him to see all this
again?
But
Raed had never seen Ground Zero the first time around, of
course; he hadn’t dared venture anywhere near it in the
aftermath of 9/11.
A
minute after the first fireman shut off the hose and slumped
down on the pumper’s roof, his resting companion slowly got
up, climbed into the crow’s nest, and started the hose up
again.
Fifteen minutes later, this shorter, stockier fireman
began to tire too, stepped out, dropped onto his back in
exhaustion. Then the larger of the two men rose again, and
took his place back behind the hose.
Raed
was left to imagine how many hours their tenacious routine had
been going on. . . . After two more
edge-of-exhaustion exchanges of duty in the crow’s nest,
someone else appeared atop the pumper, a track-suited citizen
just visible climbing up the ladder at the far end of the
truck. A journalist, Raed thought, or some lost local too
distraught to go home. Someone foolish enough to show up
without a filter over her mouth, at any rate. The woman
stepped right up onto the pumper, reached the fireman lying
prone on the roof before her and was so overcome she crouched
down beside the man, and abruptly embraced him. An emotional
show of gratitude for his efforts to extinguish what was left
of the angry fire from the jets. . . .
Or
maybe she was hugging the spent fireman just because he looked
like he needed it.
Raed
didn’t have to wonder whether this sort of thing had actually
happened after 9/11–he’d seen it happen, in the streets of
Brooklyn just hours after the towers came down. He’d seen
strangers walk straight up to a weeping member of New York’s
Finest, and spontaneously embrace the policeman. New Yorkers
had reached out to each other in ways that had surprised Raed
that day. . . . Again falling spray clouded his view
of what was going on, Ground Zero became a swirling gray,
began sliding away, and–
He
was back, praise be, he was back.
Pulling off the breather-mask, Raed gasped in mouthfuls
of air and blinked out through the bars of his cage at the
hundred-odd other projectors beyond the pane of Plexiglas,
writhing and walking in their suspended states, ghosting back
to other places and other times, if all this was to be
believed.
No,
no, no, he would not believe. Turning back to
the team assisting him, he saw the veiled psychologist saying
something to him from outside the cage, and again offering him
a questioning thumbs-up, wanting to know if he was
okay.
Raed
gave her a thumbs-down.
She
entered the cage immediately, her eyes alight behind the
burqa–with concern? With contempt? "Are you unable to
continue?" she asked him, fingers poised over her slate to
make another note.
"Can’t you project me somewhere else?"
"Perhaps." She tapped in her note, glanced back at the
researchers manning the controls, shrugged, then said to Raed,
"I’m obliged to remind you: you can withdraw from our program
at any time, if you don’t feel up for it."
She
made it sound as though quitting was the obvious choice. Maybe
she expected him to give up, go back to his cell in Lew
and simply rot away for the rest of his days. . . .
But the crack that had opened deep within Raed was wider now.
It was swallowing the walls he’d built to hold the outside
world out–his mind’s labyrinthine safe-house was losing whole
rooms to that yawning insidious divide-inside. So he didn’t
know if he could just give up and go back. It was
surely not so easy as this wide-eyed woman made it
sound.
Anyway, he was not about to give up.
"Send
me where you will," he told the woman, waving her dismissively
out of the cage, all the while thinking please let it be
just a simulation! Bracing himself again as the beams
shimmered on and the rift reopened, twirling the cage’s bars
away, tunneling him back to–
A
living-room in someone’s house.
Raed
dropped softly onto a pine floor in front of an antique
cabinet, bounced once, fell forward onto hands and knees, and
looked around at the spindly legs of furniture handcrafted
from some dark wood. He got to his feet easily, but saw no one
down the hall of the house’s ground floor. Was he in some
suburb of New York? Raed peered out a shaded front window onto
a lawn gleaming in the Sun. The street at the end of the lawn
looked broad and sleepy under large trees; there was no
traffic, and the houses across the street were widely
separated.
He
doubted he was in New York.
The
cage-operators must have heard the request he’d made to
"project somewhere else" through his breather-microphone.
. . . That, or they’d really missed the
target this time.
No, it’s just a simulation.
Again, the light filtering through the trees onto the
lawn suggested it was early morning; so did the dew still
gleaming on the grass. Perhaps there were people still
upstairs, getting ready for work. Raed cautiously made his way
up to the second floor, and peeked even more cautiously into
each of the floor’s rooms: guest bedroom, master bedroom, a
spacious bathroom, a small office. The house appeared to be
empty.
A
window at the back of the office was partially open, so Raed
slipped inside the room, glanced through the window over a
side lawn at a neighbor’s clapboard house, then tried to put
his arm out beneath the window. He had to push his hand right
through the mesh-screen meant to keep the bugs out; he felt
only a little gluey resistance. He got his arm completely out,
but that was all–the window, presumably left open for air,
wasn’t open enough for him to squeeze his head or chest out.
And as hard as Raed pushed on the window-frame itself, he
couldn’t budge it wider. He couldn’t move things in this
world.
So
leaving the office, he looked in again at the windows of the
guest bedroom and the bathroom, found them all closed. The
master bedroom at the back of the house had a big window, but
it was closed too, and curtained for privacy. . . .
Lying on a big bed beneath the window was a cream-colored
blouse, a black skirt folded neatly, a frilly pink bathrobe.
The sight of the clothing reminded Raed powerfully of Haifa,
his wife. His eyes went helplessly to the framed photo on the
bedside table, which showed a couple hugging on a beach. The
woman was laughing. The man was bent to kiss her neck. Almost
certainly a photo of the couple whose bedroom Raed was
standing in–and placed on that table, he guessed, by the
woman, as a proud memento of her happiness.
No
such photos of Raed and Haifa existed, not even in his memory.
What Raed remembered most when he thought of Haifa was her
fear of him. He hadn’t treated her well, especially in the
final years, when his cousin Nazir’s beliefs took a stronger
and stronger hold over him. Turning away from this thought,
Raed caught a shaft of sunlight streaming through a
partly-open door in a corner of the bedroom. Stepping over to
it, he discovered a bright bathroom, the morning Sun pouring
gloriously down through a big skylight. After ensuring the
bathroom was empty, he eased round the door into the
Sun-filled space–only to find more woman’s things arranged on
the long counter. Skin creams, make-up, hair clips, a big
brush with fine black strands wrapped about its
bristles. . . .
To
his surprise, Raed found himself in the grip of an unbearably
lonely longing he’d thought he’d gotten rid of ages ago–as
though he’d just eased round a partially-open door into a room
in his head he’d thought he’d lost the key to. Mixed in with
the longing was an intense sense of lost opportunity. For
Haifa had edged more and more toward moderation in America,
whereas Raed had arrived a moderate and only became a devout
in those last few years before the towers came down, under
Nazir’s tutelage. And after the towers fell, after his fear
grew and his family was taken from him, Raed gradually lost
his devotion altogether.
So it
was unpleasant now to recall how he’d fought to keep Haifa
under his thumb, forcing her to accept a fundamentalism he
hadn’t believed in when they’d married as teenagers. The
innocent boy he’d been became a kind of monster, a fanatic to
be feared during those final years of freedom, before he’d
melted down into something else entirely during the first
decade of imprisonment.
Melted down into what, though?
Raed
had been careful not to step in front of the bathroom’s long
mirror. Now he took a look, and saw–
No
reflection of himself.
It
was the eeriest thing, as though he was . . . what
did they call it? A vampire. Raed was a kind of vampire in
this past.
But if he was supposed to be back in September of 2001
again, wouldn’t he then look young again? Raed’s hands were
still veined, mottled with middle age. He ran one hand through
his hair, tracing the receding hairline, then ran the hand
back down over his bony brow and over the breather-mask to his
chin and throat. Clean-shaven, as he’d been back in 2001, to
attract less attention in America. For a while, he’d grown a
proper beard in prison. But a few years later, Lew started
handing the new shaving gels out to prisoners–offering the
prospect of a wipe-on, wash-off mirrorless shave–so Raed went
back to clean-shaven again. He’d grown too used to the
routine, during the years leading up to 9/11. Routine was the
key to staying sane in prison.
Routines like avoiding mirrors.
Raed
was glad he cast no reflection; he hated to think what he
looked like now. A ghost of the young man he’d been for sure,
his thick dark hair turned thin, his strong face turned gaunt,
the high cheekbones of his people sticking out too much now.
. . . But his fear of mirrors wasn’t really about
becoming old, was it?
Another surprising memory breaking free from a locked
storeroom in his mind: Raed realized he’d started avoiding
mirrors before he went to prison. He’d avoided them
immediately after 9/11 because he’d looked so awful. He’d
looked twisted, like a monster even to himself–
Raed
wriggled out of the narrow bathroom door and fled the bedroom,
almost tumbled back down the stairs, forgetting how tricky
walking was on an intangible carpet covering soft slippery
wood beneath. When he reached the bottom–and got back to his
feet–he began looking for a way out, wandering through the
handful of rooms; living room, dining room, the long hall with
its open coat-filled closet, a downstairs bathroom, a cozy den
with a fireplace. Each of the rooms exhibited a
down-to-the-last-detail visual authenticity, and each was a
living space that made a mockery of the concrete cell he
called home. None of the rooms, however, offered him a way to
get outside.
Raed
felt the wholly believable reality of this American home
closing in on him, reducing the number of rooms for him to
hide in in his mind.
The
last room on the ground floor he managed to squeeze into was a
blindingly bright back kitchen. One whole wall of the kitchen
was floor-to-ceiling windows, letting in the sun and letting
Raed look out over a patio and a long yard. Raed walked right
up to the windows–one was actually a glass patio-door–and
gasped at the vista before him: beyond a picket fence at the
end of the yard, the land dropped through rolling green hills
down to a small steepled village about a mile away. The
village stood on the edge of a sunlit ocean, the waves
sparkling off to a distant horizon.
Nothing Raed had seen in thirty years looked more like
home!
It
was not the home he’d been born into, a small village that had
stood near waves of desert sand. No, this was the American
ideal of home: a peaceful village with quaint clapboard houses
and colonial buildings, like something out of a story book–a
story Raed had lived for a time. He’d been a preteen when he’d
arrived in America, and had lived all the years of his
adulthood on American soil, so he knew its stories, knew its
dreams. . . .
The
dream-house he was in now looked like it might be on the
shores of Rhode Island. He and Haifa had driven along that
shoreline after Raed finished a bit of "security
reconnaissance" at the airport in Boston. During their seaside
drive, Raed had derided the storybook villages they’d passed
through. Now he could not remember why the sightseeing had
left him so unimpressed, or why had he’d been so eager to obey
the organization ordering him to Boston in the first place. He
must have been hiding in rooms in his head even before he’d
reached prison. Hiding from the reality he’d lived in, hiding
in a seventh-century corner of his mind and ignoring the
twenty-first-century America around him. . . . But
that was another Raed, not the middle-aged ghost from the
future standing in this kitchen, looking with longing on the
village down below, a wholly magical place Raed was ready to
believe in.
He
felt his throat tightening with emotion. He wanted to
be back in this past, simulation or no simulation. He wanted
to break free of the harness holding him to 2033 and wander
down into that peaceful perfect village, buy a coffee in a
shop, sit and listen to people talk, and never look
back.
They’d said if he participated in their program he
would get to see "the outside world again, in a way." Is this
what they’d meant? If so, the psychologists had cheated him.
The scene before him was so pristine it was heartbreaking to
look upon. And Raed couldn’t so much as step out to the
backyard.
Then
he remembered what the researcher Francis told him about
volunteers sticking their hands through glass. So he began to
try, pushing hard against the glass of the patio-door, and
gradually feeling his fingers sink into a surface like glue
that had almost hardened. But after several minutes, he’d only
managed to get the tips of two forefingers to peek through the
other side of the glass. And he did not want to be
stuck here if people arrived, came into the kitchen, and
brushed up against him.
As he
stood drawing his fingers back out, Raed glanced around the
kitchen, and saw a calendar facing him from the nearest wall.
It was open to September 2001, and on the week of September 11
the words TOM IN L.A. were marked across several days.
The calendar could not tell him what day this was, of course;
but Raed knew, oh, he knew. He turned back to the glass door,
focused on freeing his fingers. That’s when he noticed the
reverse-reflection of the digital clock on the stove at the
back of the kitchen behind him. He turned completely around to
see if he was reading it right.
8:45
am.
One
minute to go on the last pristine morning of the world. One
minute before the first of the four planes would hit its
target. Raed drank in the view beyond the glass door for
another few seconds, wishing this last moment could last
forever, bracing himself for . . . 8:46
am.
Nothing happened. Naturally, New York was far from
Rhode Island. His fingers finally popped free, and he stood
there flexing his hand before realizing he was hearing a soft
buzzing from somewhere. The front doorbell? No, it had be
something close, in the kitchen. Raed walked around the room,
and ended up beside the phone, which was ringing really loudly
when he was right beside it. The ringing stopped, and an
answering machine adjacent to the phone clicked on. A woman’s
voice announced, "We’re not here, but you can leave us a
message." Then the caller began to speak:
"Angie, I’m . . . it’s Tom," a male voice said, and
Raed’s eyes shot to the calendar. TOM
IN L.A.
"My
flight’s been hijacked," Tom continued all too calmly. "I’ll
try to call again, but don’t know if there’ll be time.
Whatever happens, Angie, know that I love–"
Raed
leapt away before he heard the end of the message, knowing the
sound would drop off faster than it should–and it did, the
rest of Tom’s words to Angie unable to reach across a foot
more of kitchen floor. He backed all way into the patio door,
disturbed and disbelieving. How could a man caught on any of
those planes have been so calm?
It
was a question Raed had asked himself over and over the day
before 9/11. That was the day he’d driven his cousins
across the state border into Connecticut and booked them into
a motel on the Massachusetts border for the final night of
their lives. Chipmunk-cheeked Nazir. And thin-faced Sayf,
always skeletally thin, more than a little obsessed-looking.
But Sayf and Nazir had both been calm and controlled during
that afternoon drive through the Connecticut countryside,
mentally preparing to sacrifice themselves when the morning
came. They’d met with their cell-leader less than an hour
before the long drive began, and had been let in on the target
of their mission a little early because their leader trusted
them. Nevertheless, Nazir broke down and let Raed in on their
terrible secret before they reached the motel because Raed was
kin, the last member of their family who would see Nazir and
Sayf alive. After his cousins booked into the motel under
assumed names–the names later published under their photos in
the papers–Raed stayed in their room with them for a few hours
before driving back home to Brooklyn alone, wondering all the
way how his cousins could have been so calm.
Raed
saw the light on the answering machine start to blink. He
walked toward it slowly–wanting to be sure it was finished
recording–then stared down at the damned machine, hoping the
cage-operators didn’t make him wait in this house until Angie
came home and listened to what was on it. But at least, he
thought, as the kitchen began to slide sideways away from him,
at least Tom had said what needed to be said to his
wife–
Back,
back in the present, and breathing hard.
Raed
shook his head, wanting to rid himself of the sad end to such
a beautiful dream, a beautiful simulation. He gazed blearily
through the yellow bars, saw the hundred other spherical cages
beyond the Plexiglas, scattered across the main projection
arena. A hundred other volunteers were hanging in their
harnesses, looking strangely blurred, squirming and swaying in
midair. Folding back across N-space to a hundred lost moments
in history?
It
can’t be.
"Feeling all right, Raed?"
The
woman psychologist was already in the cage below him again,
waving a hand before his eyes to get his attention.
He
dragged the breather down again.
"I
feel. . . ."
"What?" She waited, one hand poised over her
slate.
Lost, he wanted to say. Full of lost
opportunities. Raed had heard passengers had contacted
their loved ones from those doomed planes, but . . .
he hadn’t ever contacted Haifa to tell her his own
feelings–because he hadn’t realized how strong his love for
her really was until too many years had passed, and it was
much too late. So the acid dose of heartbreak filling him now
was as much for himself as for the man who’d left that
bittersweet message.
Raed
peered down at the psychologist, knowing he was already losing
tonight’s game badly. "You can’t make me believe," he said to
her, no longer wanting to play any more games. "You can’t
convince me I’m really seeing the past, I don’t care what you
show me."
The
woman nodded, tapping away at the slate. "What you believe is
entirely up to you. And what you do where we send you–that’s
up to you too."
"What
is there to do," Raed retorted, "when I’m just as
cooped up back there as I am in Lewisburg?"
"You
really want to find out?"
Raed
let out a long shuddering breath, unsure whether this veiled
and proper young woman sounded hopeful for the first time–or
whether she was trying to warn him about what was coming next.
But he was sure of the answer to her question. Some part of
him did want to find out. Something was stirring down
in the crack through the core of his being: an ashen yearning
to go back there and confront whatever they would show
him.
"Yes," he sighed. "Send me again."
The
look in the psychologist’s wide black eyes subtly changed.
Surprise? She whirled, exited the cage, and conferred with the
two operators sitting at their consoles. And Raed closed his
eyes, knowing it didn’t really matter where they projected him
to this time, because what he’d told the psychologist was the
truth: he wouldn’t, couldn’t bring himself to believe that he
was folding through "N-space" back to–
New
York City, an empty sidewalk.
Raed
dropped onto the walk as it appeared before him, caught his
balance, steadied himself on his feet, and looked around. He
was not in Manhattan, not in any of the busier parts of the
city. And he was finally outdoors! No walls to hold him back,
no mounds of rubble to block his progress. Free to go where he
pleased.
Raed
started up the quiet side-street he was on, heading for a
larger cross-street so he could figure out where he was. He
passed the steep steps of a row of four-story walkups. One of
the boroughs, for sure. This was the New York he remembered,
glad to have an image of it to replace the desolation of
Ground Zero. . . . Blue skies above, a breeze
rippling the leaves of a haggard tree on the corner. An autumn
morning, for sure. Back in that morning once more?
Before the attacks occurred? After?
The
signs at the end of the street told him he was back in
Brooklyn, on a corner several miles from where he’d lived; a
vaguely familiar corner. Raed spun around, orienting himself.
The East River had to be just behind the row-houses that were
blocking his view of the World Trade Center. He couldn’t see
whether the Twin Towers were still standing–but if they were,
he could walk around the block and head down to the riverside,
maybe just in time to watch the planes striking their
targets.
Was
that what the projection operators wanted Raed to
do?
Surely it would do him no good whatsoever to witness
the destruction of the towers all over again. He’d seen those
images a hundred times on TV, along with everyone else. Surely
it would be senseless to waste this precious chance to walk
the world he’d lost by going down to the river to gawk. The
Twin Towers were not his victims anyway–they were the West’s
victims, America’s victims. . . . Raed started
walking west, keeping the Trade Center’s location behind his
back. His eyes kept turning to the perfectly clear skies,
searching for low-flying passenger jets. He prayed he wouldn’t
see any. Stopping at another cross-street to let a yellow taxi
roll by, he felt certain he knew this neighborhood. Only a few
people were out on the streets, and those that were hurried
along as though late for work. The Sun looked too high to be
early in the morning. What time was it? What day was
it?
A
New York Post box coming up on his left. When he
reached it, Raed hunkered down on his haunches, and saw
something on the cover page about "Ban on Cell-Phone Use While
Driving."
But
the date on the newspaper was 9/11, all right.
He
walked on, hurrying now, spying a tiny park across the street
not much farther ahead. Not much more than a grotto, really,
but Raed began jogging toward it, feeling sure the visually
stunning simulation of a New York morning he was moving
through was about to change. All he wanted was a few moments
of peace sitting beneath those trees before this blissful
reality was yanked out from under him.
And
then it hit him: he was near Basma’s Islamic daycare and
prayer school, a small building at the other end of the little
grotto park. No wonder all this looked so familiar.
Basma.
Raed
broke into a run, remembering the promise made to him–that he
might get to see his daughter again. Was this what the rehab
programmers meant? Then they’d tricked him–they’d known
perfectly well he’d hoped to see Basma all grown up. Raed ran
for the school all the same, wanting to see his little
daughter in this all-too-perfect recreation, suddenly wanting
it very badly. Wanting to know once and for
all.
As he ran up the block, something happened to the sky.
A cloud of confetti appeared from over the four-story walkups
on his left. Snowflake-sized particles were fluttering down
onto the sidewalk ahead of him, some larger pieces of paper
floating down too. . . . Documents! Memos and
letters and receipts from all the way across the East River,
fallout from Twin Tower offices. The paper cloud began to
litter the tops of trees in the grotto-park as he passed
it.
Just
ahead loomed the Islamic prayer preschool, all the
toddler-students dressed in their jackets and milling about on
a fenced-in patch of tarmac alongside the school’s front
steps. Half of them were roped together.
What
was going on?
Raed
reached the wrought-iron fence, and found the school’s
entrance-gate closed. He struggled to get over the tall black
bars but kept slipping down, unable to get any purchase with
his shoes. There was no room for him on the crowded tarmac
beyond anyway, so he strode impatiently around the fence,
hearing the chaos of chattering and squealing, trying to spot
Basma among the children. In the midst of the preschoolers
stood a teenage girl dressed in salwar and kameez, gaping up
at the sky in astonishment; a more resourceful Muslim girl was
untying the rope tethering several kids together. Of course!
The young teachers had been caught preparing the children for
their eleven o’clock walk through the park. No TV was allowed
inside the conservative classrooms, so neither the children
nor the adults looking after them had any idea what was going
on yet.
But
where was his Basma?
The
thickening confetti-rain was making it harder to see who was
who. Unleashed four-year-olds danced through the downfall,
turned their tiny faces upward, and grabbed at papers.
. . . At last Raed spotted a child smaller than the
rest, squatting with tiny hands on knees in a familiar blue
raincoat, her head turned to the ground, looking curiously at
the scraps of paper lying there.
Heart
in mouth, Raed knelt outside the bars, as close to her as he
could–but the girl scrambled away into the center of the
crowd, vanished for a moment, and reappeared duck-walking
toward him with an ever-so-Haifa-like look of concentration,
creased brow, mouth drawn tight, sucking her teeth
exactly as Basma so often did during the three years
he’d been father to her.
God and the Prophet within, what am I
seeing?
The
child stopped just a few feet from him, crouched just as
before, reaching now for a big file-folder that had just
landed, its edge smoldering.
"Don’t!" he cried out. But the Basma before him did not
pause, did not hear him, could not see him. Raed thrust an arm
through the bars, and tried to snatch her tiny fingers
away–too late: she’d grasped the burning edge and immediately
let go. She began to cry, lower lip shooting out
exactly as it had on the day Raed was taken away from
her forever. He had not seen Basma since his trial, not until
this very moment. . . .
For
Raed knew in his heart of hearts he was actually seeing
his daughter now.
His
mind reeling, the world whirling, Basma blurring as she drew
back, plopped onto her bottom–
"Please," he gasped into the microphone of the
breather-mask, "I believe, don’t bring me
back. . . ." But it was only his own tears
blurring things. Raed was still there, still clutching the
iron fence in September of 2001, inches from his real
daughter.
Another teacher burst through the school’s side-door,
teary-eyed herself, shouting something to the teenage girls
standing among the children–something about parents coming
early to take their children back, the city under
attack!
Basma’s wailing finally drew one of the teens to her
side. The girl scooped his daughter up, and Raed leapt to his
feet, reached as far he could over the fence, Basma sobbing
over the young teacher’s shoulder right in front of his
eyes, his hand almost touching her hurt little fingers,
almost. . . .
"We
put a bandage on that?" the teacher asked, and little Basma
nodded through her sobs.
Raed
watched the pair disappear through the school’s side-entrance
while the other two teens rounded the rest of the children
back inside, out of the paper rain. "I believe," he moaned
again, tugging his arm from between the bars, sinking to the
paper-littered ground. "Now I believe." Raed had not allowed
any cameras in his house during those last paranoid years of
freedom; he’d certainly forbidden any video footage to be
recorded of himself or his family in those years. And the
Islamic daycare and prayer school could not afford any video
equipment . . . so no one could possibly simulate
the Basma he’d just seen.
Raed
knew he was actually kneeling outside her
school.
"Be
merciful–let me stay," he prayed aloud, hoping the projection
operators would hear his words in the future. "Let me wait
here and see her again." But the wrought-iron bars of the
fence were already sliding out of his hands. The school
building was beginning to swirl into the confetti-sky, and he
was starting to tunnel back–
To
the present.
Hanging in midair in the yellow cage, his breath still
hitching with emotion. Had Basma’s hand been bandaged when
Raed picked her up from the pre-school that day? He couldn’t
recall, and he doubted he would have noticed. That day Raed
had been too busy worrying about being tracked down, accused,
arrested. He’d spent the entire day wondering how to ensure
he didn’t end up getting burned by the backlash to the
World Trade Center attacks to notice whether Basma had already
been burnt or not.
Not
his victims?
Surely little Basma was his victim, if anyone was–and a
couple of bandaged fingers was of little consequence compared
to the inevitable consequence of losing her
father. . . .
"Here." The veiled psychologist was standing in the
cage below him again, holding a cup of water up to Raed.
"Drink this," she said.
He
tugged down his breather-mask, a little embarrassed as he
wiped back his tears, recalling how the fireman at Ground Zero
had looked when he’d pulled off his goggles to wipe
away tears. Raed had been there–he’d actually been to
Ground Zero!
And
now, like that fireman, he just wanted to get out of the
harness and throw himself down on the ground. "I wanted to
stay," he complained to the psychologist, more than a little
embarrassed by his earlier profession of disbelief to her.
"Why’d you have to bring me back so soon?"
"Because you’ve more to see tonight, more to do. Here,"
she said again, "you’ve got to be thirsty–"
He
knocked her hand and the cup aside. "I don’t need water, I
just need to go back–" He broke off, seeing her reaction, the
flash of intensity in her wide-set black eyes. Because Raed’s
fingers had briefly brushed hers?
"You’ll feel thirsty, where you’re going next," she
warned him. Picking up the cup, she slipped out through the
bars.
And
Raed slumped back in the harness, acceptance sweeping through
him. For the first time tonight he did not want to be
here, where he was middle-aged in a spherical cage.
Better to be a ghost lurking in that past again.
Outside the yellow bars the psychologist–a grown Muslim
woman whose hand he’d reached out and touched, just in
case–watched him watching her, then she tapped something into
her slate and turned away, slid away, vanished around an
impossible bend in space that opened into–
A
deep canyonlike street.
Downtown Manhattan, on the same bright sunny morning
he’d ghosted to the last time–only this time Raed could
hear an unearthly rumbling and he could see people running
away from him, fleeing for their lives before his eyes. He
whirled. High in the sky above him were the Twin Towers. The
South Tower, only a block away, was erupting from the top
down.
Raed
staggered backwards, gaping at the giant cloud of dust and
debris surging forth from the building his cousins had crashed
into, like a storm being injected into the blue sky at
tremendous speed. He swung around, and a man sprinting by
bumped against him–
TERROR-ADRENALINE-ANIMAL URGE TO RUN!
Raed
obeyed the fiery emotions transmitted by the man’s touch,
hurtling himself across the street and around the corner of a
nearby building. At the end of the road he’d turned onto,
people were throwing themselves over the railings into the
Hudson River–hoping for safety in the water? Raed veered in
another direction, down a narrow lane and out onto a broader
side street, the rumbling behind him swelling along with his
fear. To his amazement, he saw a crowd of people standing in
the distance, all their faces turned up like sunflowers in the
instant before they, too, began to run.
And
then, all at once, everything Raed could see vanished–the
distant crowd, the canyon-walls of the high rises and the
street itself, all swallowed in dust and darkness that felt
like the end of the world.
This
time he’d ghosted back to the world he’d lost at the very
moment it was lost!
It
was so dark on the street he could only make out shapes a few
feet in front of him. It seemed impossible that just seconds
ago it had been a clear blue-skied morning. . . .
Fumbling his way along a building-front in the direction he
thought he’d been heading, hearing a tinkling
sound–glass shards falling out of the sky? Windowpanes
shattering in the storefronts around him? Either way, the
sound had to be much louder and closer than it seemed. He
caught glimpses of big debris-chunks crashing onto the
pavement to his left, and burnt paper and concrete dust
swirled thick as sleet.
The
darkness began to yield to a wintry dimness–like a strangely
dry snow squall in Manhattan–and Raed reached the next
cross-street corner just in time to witness a hail of burning
shrapnel striking a car-filled parking lot across the street.
Cars began bursting into flame.
He
dove under a parapet protecting a building front-door,
reminding himself the projection-team claimed he couldn’t be
harmed. But Raed knew he could feel forces in this past, and
he didn’t want the force of any of that shrapnel striking him.
So he sat under the parapet watching cars ignite, one after
another. Incredible! As though missiles were being launched
from the burning windows of the surrounding high-rises.
. . . Suddenly a large oblong shape loomed out of
the dust-mist hanging over the street–a fire truck loaded with
men who leapt off, rushed into the parking lot, fighting back
shadows and smoke as they searched for people trapped in
burning vehicles. Those firemen were crazy to charge in
there!
Looking for a safe escape route, Raed noticed a lane
leading from his parapet-covered patch of sidewalk back into a
plaza behind him. He ducked through, rounded another corner,
and felt his way along the lee of another wall. A set of
double doors just ahead of him burst open, the light from
inside the doors revealing men in overcoats stepping forth,
rifles at the ready. The armed men–not police, possibly
FBI–formed a ring outside the open doors and peered into the
murk, as though looking for whoever was to blame. Looking for
Raed, who was holding his breath, flattened against a
window-well just feet from them. You already caught me,
he thought. I’ve already served thirty
years.
Now
more people were piling out through the doors into the armed
cordon. Older officials wearing suits, fire hats,
air-filters–not chiefs, possibly fire commissioners–all of
them lucky to be alive in a command post this close to the
Twin Towers. And all of them alternately shouting into
hand-held radios, then listening for a response, shouting,
then listening, throwing off waves of voices Raed could hear
without making out individual words. In the light streaming
through the open doors, he saw the despair contorting their
faces. The commissioners weren’t getting any responses from
the fire crews in the collapsed South Tower.
Then
a familiar long-faced man in wire-rim glasses strode into the
crowd of stunned city officials, issuing commands, arguing
with the armed detectives who seemed to want the cordon to
stay put. But the long-faced man sent the party off across the
dust-clouded plaza in the direction, Raed suspected, of the
Trade Center.
Raed
suddenly knew exactly who that man was.
The
Mayor of New York City.
Heading to Ground Zero only minutes after that
nightmarish zone had formed? Or steered to safety by his armed
protectors? Raed took off in the opposite direction, rounded
another corner, found his path blocked by a steaming shape
taking up the sidewalk and half the road in front of an
abandoned fast-food outlet: a jet-engine turbine.
From
Flight 175? From Nazir and Sayf’s plane?
The
turbine was so dust-whitened it looked like the engine of some
ghost-plane. Tingling waves of cold heat were coming off it,
so Raed gave it a wide berth and hurried on, only to be slowed
by more dust-and-ash-cloaked obstacles as he fled out of the
south end of Manhattan. Twisted stick-shapes that had to be
melted office chairs, an overturned desk in the middle of a
sidewalk, a huge tire, all made visible by the fires sprouting
in nearby buildings, offering Raed a weird torch-light to
light his way. . . . Incredible. He’d seen TV images
of Manhattan after 9/11, but they failed to capture the scope
of the devastation. In his wildest dreams, Raed never thought
his cousins could cause so much damage to the city.
And
in his wildest dreams he’d never imagined he might "time
travel" back to see it with his own eyes! This time he’d
ghosted back to before his visit to Basma’s school.
Perhaps as much as an hour before, if he remembered correctly.
Somewhere in the unseen sky high above him, a file folder from
the South Tower was being carried by air currents over the
East River, drifting down toward the little prayer school
tarmac. Basma hadn’t burnt her fingers yet. She wasn’t
a victim yet.
But
Raed was stepping over victims wherever he went, shrouded
forms that seemed to be sleeping in the middle of the
streets–forms he didn’t want to think about. Nazir’s victims,
Sayf’s victims. Not his victims.
After
almost falling onto one of those shrouded figures, Raed
scrambled up an embankment onto a higher boulevard.
Disoriented, he tramped along the boulevard in a direction
that seemed a little less dusty. But within minutes, smoke
from the spreading fires behind him descended on the
boulevard, thickening the dust-haze. Raed passed an EMS triage
team working on a wounded woman already partly buried beneath
the paper-ash fallout; the rescue workers were trying to
revive the woman and keep themselves from passing out at the
same time, handing a single oxygen mask back and
forth.
He
gave the team as wide a berth as he’d given the jet engine,
wanting to avoid more physical-contact discharges from
distraught New Yorkers. It was traumatic enough just trying to
escape the shrapnel-fires. . . . He wasn’t the only
one trying to escape, of course. After hopping out of the way
of a beaconless ambulance–its roof littered with paper and its
wipers rapidly swishing–Raed noticed a few other ghost-shapes
trudging along through the haze. People with grime-covered
faces, holding pieces torn from their own clothing over their
mouths, coughing soundlessly.
Raed
felt like coughing too, even though he wasn’t breathing any
dust in. Most of it was falling right through him, only the
largest paper-flakes hovering on his clothes for a few seconds
before slipping off. The "masslessness" of the falling dust
made it easy for Raed to avoid and quickly out-pace the real
downtown-refugees he encountered–because they were forced to
slosh slowly through the paper and ash pooling on the street,
which was already several inches deep. Raed hurried on,
undeterred by the debris build-up, always drawn in the
brightest direction, even though the sources of brightness
turned out to be shops and services with their doors thrown
open. Each open doorway offered a consoling peek into an
interior of clarity and detail–a reminder that the New York
Raed had seen for a few seconds at the very start of this
projection still existed, hidden behind all the hazy
detritus.
In
the beaming entrance to a footwear store, he saw a man handing
out free running shoes to women wandering by in stocking feet,
unable to walk through miles of fallout in their high
heels.
In
the rear door of a restaurant-supply firm, he saw a teenage
boy passing out wet towels to everyone who stepped up for one,
so people had better air-filters to breath through.
In
the arched portal of an old church, he saw women pouring cups
of water and lemonade for passers-by. The church was getting
crowded because the people coming up for drinks were stepping
inside it, kneeling down in pews, bowing their heads. Raed
paused across the street from this softly-glowing scene,
watching the parade of dust-whitened ghosts gratefully downing
lemonade and water, and reaching up to his own throat. He’d
felt thirsty from the first moment the debris-cloud enveloped
him, and his thirst had grown worse with every passing block.
It wasn’t just the exertion of a long walk. It was the
look of ash-laden air all around him, the sight
of coughing, choking civilians stumbling through the streets.
The psychological dryness was getting to him.
But
what was really getting to him was the fact that he was
actually experiencing what it had been like to make an
escape from lower Manhattan the morning of 9/11. Because he
was actually here, witnessing all this just as it had
happened–or rather, as it was happening. A
cement-mixing truck rolled slowly by, a dozen dust-coated Wall
Street suits clinging to its sides. Raed followed it for a
bit, then turned onto an empty side street he thought might
take him in the direction of the Brooklyn Bridge.
That’s when he spotted the strange pair of New Yorkers
sitting on the stone steps.
What
was strange about them grew more and more obvious as Raed
walked toward them: one was a man so thickly coated in dust
and ash he resembled a statue huddled against the railing of
the steps–he was clearly in serious trouble, gasping for air,
mouth hanging wide open and taking in more dust. The other was
a woman who’d clearly just come out of the building the steps
led up to–she had only a bit of dust on her, and she was
holding the dying man, her head tucked onto his shoulder as
though he was an old friend she’d found collapsed outside her
door.
The
strange thing was she wasn’t helping him
inside.
"Get
him off the street," Raed suggested as he passed the pair,
knowing he wouldn’t be heard. But he thought he saw the
woman’s eyes move up from her companion. He thought he saw her
eyes following him up the narrow street.
Raed
halted. Turned back. It was hard to see–he had to squint into
the driving dust. Was she really looking over at
him?
He
approached the steps cautiously, still unwilling to be touched
by these people, but getting close enough to see the dying
man’s eyes were rimmed completely red, bloody coals in his
ash-whitened face. And he was close enough to see the woman’s
NYU sweatshirt, a red ribbon pinned to her collar. She had her
eyes closed now, head tucked back on her companion’s shoulder
again.
He
must have been seeing things. "Don’t you know your friend is
dying?" Raed muttered, surprised to find himself thinking
another death would be needless. . . . The woman
shielded her eyes against the falling dust, and peered up at
Raed.
He
lurched back in shock. "You can see me, can’t
you?"
But
just then an accumulation of dust slid off the ledge above the
steps, engulfing the pair in a swirl of white that transformed
into a blurred tunnel, pulling Raed back to–
The
yellow projection cage.
Raed
peered out through the bars at the two Lew guards in one
corner, the two cage-operators behind their consoles, the
medic looking over the operators’ shoulders . . .
and the Muslim psychologist slipping in through the bars to
speak with him, again bringing him a cup of water.
This
time Raed accepted the cup, lifted it to lips that felt
parched, his throat dry as bone. After gulping the water down,
he told the psychologist, "Someone saw me that time." Then he
described the woman he’d seen sitting on the steps.
"Sure
she wasn’t looking up at the ledge-dust about to drop on her
friend?" The psychologist removed her slate from a pocket,
tapped in something about Raed’s claim.
"Are
you sure people can’t see me in the past?"
"I
studied the same materials you did," she replied. "Light only
has ‘one-way transdimensionality,’ so it only flows out of the
past into an N-space fold, but–"
"Doesn’t flow back out of the fold, yes, yes," he said,
wondering if he’d been mistaken about where the woman in the
NYU shirt was actually looking. It had been pretty hazy back
there. And pretty scary at moments.
"There are two-way interactions," the
psychologist added, pocketing her slate again. "But all are
mass-related, I think. And light doesn’t have much
mass. . . ."
That
reminded Raed: those big chunks of mass falling from the sky
at him. "And no volunteer has been injured by two-way
forces–not even gravity?"
"Two-way interactions are ‘weak-strong,’ so I’m told.
Weak from you onto the past–"
"And
strong from the past onto me," Raed finished, raising his
eyebrows at her. That’s precisely what bothered him. He handed
back the cup, accidentally touching the psychologist’s fingers
again–and wishing he could receive some contact-discharge from
her so he’d understand what she was feeling. She was,
after all, about his daughter’s age.
"Strong or weak," the psychologist told him, "the worst
any projected force can do is render you unconscious, which
will immediately pop you back here. So there’s nothing to
fear. Keep that in mind," she advised him, "your next
ghosting’s going to be a lot more challenging."
Again
he said, "Send me where you must," trying to sound dismissive
to hide how apprehensive he was. But after the psychologist
exited the cage, Raed took a deep breath, wondering what part
of 9/11 he was about to experience now, watching the yellow
bars blur as the fold formed about him, and N-space wrapped
him back to–
A
darkened stairwell strewn with chunks of drywall and concrete,
a smoky haze in the air.
Raed
lost his footing as he dropped onto the steps, slid down onto
a landing, and ended up sprawled before a steel door in the
landing’s opposite wall. The red glare of emergency bulbs
illuminated words printed across the door:
WTC
BUILDING 2
FLOOR
82
Raed
was high up in the South Tower some time after Flight
175 had crashed into it!
The
door to Floor 82 burst open. Two men shoved through, forcing
Raed to scramble back to avoid being bowled over. The men
hurried onto the shadowy flight of steps leading below. And
Raed fell in behind them, wondering how much time was left
before this building came down. He was fairly sure it had
collapsed about an hour after the crash . . . which
meant he had less than an hour to get down eighty
floors.
But
he kept falling in the stairwell. Where the masslessness of
paper and dust had played in his favor on the streets, here
the low friction of his shoes on the darkened steps and the
more tangible clutter of concrete shards made it difficult to
stay on his feet. Raed had a hard time catching up to the two
men, and only managed to keep them in sight at all by hanging
onto the railing, sliding himself along walls that were
crawling with a chilly tingly pressure. The pressure grew
worse and worse, the air of the stairwell swimming with a
tingling cold-fire as Raed reached Floor 78. He was afraid
that floor’s fire-door might melt as he ran by it.
But
he had to be passing the floors Flight 175 had actually
crashed into–and the fact that the fire hadn’t yet spread into
the stairwell suggested it couldn’t be too long after the
crash. He might have as much as fifty minutes to get down and
out.
He’d
been told he’d come to no harm. Did that mean the projection
team intended to extract him from the building before it
collapsed? Raed had been in danger from the hail of burning
shrapnel during the last ghosting, and his team seemed to
expect him to rescue himself . . . It’s up to you
what you do back in the past, the psychologist told
him.
Perhaps it was up to Raed to find a way out before the
forces in this world crushed him.
The
landing of Floor 70 had working lights, and so did the stairs
below it. A brighter passage and clearer air helped Raed move
right down behind the two men he was following, close enough
to hear their conversation as he looked for an opportunity to
pass them. The injured man was Garth, and he kept thanking
Peter for pulling him to safety after the explosion. How long
ago, Raed wanted to know, wishing the men would walk single
file instead of one gripping the other. Peter kept insisting
he’d done nothing special, switching back to his worries about
coworkers who’d headed up to the roof instead of trying to get
below the fire.
"Your
coworkers are lost," Raed snapped in frustration, "and you’ll
be lost too, if you don’t move faster!" These men were too
calm–he had to get past them. At the next landing, he
tried to shove himself between them–
HORROR-HURT-DESPERATION-CONFUSION
Raed
crumpled to the floor, unable to withstand the tremendous
emotional discharge. Peter and Garth weren’t calm at all! They
were barely keeping their fear in check. What had they seen
before entering this stairwell?
By
the time he got back to his feet and caught up to them, Raed
saw that more people were blocking the stairwell below Peter
and Garth. There was some kind of pile-up on the next landing
down, a crowd gathered round a burn victim. The delay was far
more frightening for Raed than for the people surrounding
him–because he knew the building was going to collapse
soon. Was this projection meant as punishment for his
foreknowledge of the Flight 175 crash?
The
Muslim psychologist back in 2033 suggested it was up to Raed
whether the projection was punishment or–what?
What
was he supposed to do here?
He
passed more burn victims outside the door to Floor 67; men
with most of their clothes burned away, their skin turned gray
or even black, patches of flesh peeling from their limbs. The
people staying to look after them had torn off shirts to make
tourniquets. Others were cloaking the shivering gray figures
in suit jackets. The next landing held another group huddled
about badly injured people, and so did the next, and the
next, forcing Garth, then Peter, and then Raed to file
slowly past. Only Raed knew those groups were all doomed, but
it wouldn’t have made much of a difference if he could have
communicated that knowledge, at least not to the burn
victims–they didn’t look as though they’d live long enough to
make it to a hospital.
It
was the people staying behind to console them–it was all the
comforters that bothered Raed. There was so many of them! Why
didn’t some of them just head down to safety?
Because they weren’t aware of the imminent collapse, as
Raed was.
"Come
on, move on!" he growled at Garth and Peter.
Winding down through the suffering was taking too long,
leaving too much time for Raed to wonder what all this was
for. Surely there was more to his rehab than sharing in the
harrowing experiences of 9/11 victims. There had to be
more to it. But what more could he do in this past?
You
really want to find out?
The
psychologist’s question nagged at him, and Raed tried to
recall the theory they’d given him. Strong-weak two-way
interactions . . . the past cannot be changed
. . . because projection volunteers had
always been part of the moments they time-traveled back
to . . . so Raed had always been here–was
here now–following down behind Peter, who had his arm wrapped
round Garth’s shoulder, guiding the injured man
down.
But
did–or would–Peter and Garth get out before the building
fell?
No
way for Raed to get past them now–there were too many people
crowding the stairwell directly below the pair. Others were
coming down behind Raed, sandwiching him in the stairwell,
occasionally forcing him to bump into Peter or Garth–and to
suffer another shock of PITY-ANXIETY-DREAD-DISTRESS, emotions
that almost knocked him down. The discharges astounded him.
I can actually sense how these two men are feeling! He
remembered the black-and-white movie about the two angels in
Berlin who could hear what people were saying, but whenever
they listened to peoples’ thoughts, the soundtrack reverted to
German, leaving Raed only with a sense of the emotional-tone
underlying thoughts. . . .
By
the time they reached Floor 60, Raed was in a panic. Peter and
Garth had to do a lot better than a floor a minute to
get out in time–and to let Raed get out in time! This was a
lot more nerve-wracking than the last
projection.
But
it seemed most of the injured had been already been passed,
and below Floor 60, the stream of escapees began moving much
faster. Peter and Garth slipped by slower people who were
resting on the steps, and waving everyone coming down from
above on past. Raed began to count off his own breaths, timing
the pace between floors. He thought they navigated three
flights in about a minute, timed it again and got the same
result for the next three. They might just make it!
There
was no panic in the stairwell, and no more injuries to pass
until Floor 44, where a security guard and some others were
trying to assist a man whose head was bleeding profusely. The
people comforting the man looked up as Peter, Garth and Raed
reached the floor; one of them asked Peter if he would send
help from below. Peter agreed without slowing, guiding Garth
on down the next flight with Raed right on their
heels.
On
Floor 40, they eased by a man in a foot cast being carried
down by four coworkers who switched him between pairs at the
landing, sharing the exhausting load. A compassionate act
indeed. But would any of them make it out of the South Tower
alive?
On
Floor 33, there was an even more miraculous sight. People
carrying a woman and her wheelchair down! The acts of
selflessness Raed was witnessing inside the building he helped
to destroy were wearing him down. He wanted to scream
at everyone to drop their burdens and run–run so he
could run too, down to the bottom and out onto the street
before it was too late. Because it was impossible to believe
he was not in the danger they were in, no matter how
many assurances he’d been given that no projection volunteer
had ever come to harm before. How could the force of the South
Tower falling not harm him?
Garth
and Peter finally got past the wheelchair crew, only to find
the stairwell below the Floor 31 landing completely clogged
with firefighters. At least a dozen of them were hoisting
themselves up the steps in their heavy gear, blocking the
route down–doomed men, the most doomed of all that Raed had
seen . . . because they were trying to climb
up.
As
people bunched onto the landing–and Raed crushed himself into
a corner to avoid unbearable contact-discharges–Peter moved
over to the fire-door leading into the floor itself, and
opened it.
"Let’s try for the elevators," he said to
Garth.
And
Raed didn’t hesitate, knowing there was no time to lose
waiting on this landing. He followed the pair through the
door, which closed behind him. Moments later he stood close
behind Peter as the man tried the elevator buttons.
"Not
working."
Try another stairwell, Raed prayed, realizing he
was now trapped on this floor–invisible or not, he couldn’t
walk back out through a steel door or wall.
"Hey,
there’s some phones in here," Garth said, peering into a room
off the hall they were in. "I want to call home."
No!
But
both men were stepping through into the room, and the door was
almost closed. . . .
Raed
dove through just as it shut, afraid of getting stranded in
the hall if there was another way out of that room. Sure
enough, a door in the opposite wall of the conference room
they’d entered had a stairwell exit-sign above it.
Peter
and Garth sat on the edge of the room’s long central table,
dialing up loved ones on the phones.
"No
time! There’s no time," Raed shouted at them, "we’ve
got thirty more floors to go!"
It
was no use. Raed stood close enough to the receiver Peter was
holding to hear the anxious tones of the man’s wife–but Peter
couldn’t hear Raed screaming right in his ear. "Put the phone
down and go! Please go!" He pounded a fist on the
phone-unit sitting on the table, trying to hang the damn thing
up, when Peter suddenly hung up himself. But then the man
began dialing another number, telling Garth he was
calling in the EMS request he’d promised for the injured man
up on Floor 44.
Peter
was on hold with EMS for several minutes that had Raed howling
around the conference room, both hands wrapped around the
ripcord on his belt that was supposed to instantly return him
to the projection-cage, eyes focused on the ceiling that might
come down at any second. . . .
If
Raed ripcorded back now, he’d be out of the program, his fear
would have won and he’d live out the next fifty years in Lew
Cell #1, knowing he’d been unable to face what these two men
had faced.
But
they had no idea what was about to happen!
Finally Peter got through, made his EMS request, and
got off the phone. Raed ran to the door with the stairwell
sign as the two men started toward it, opened it, then stepped
through, leaving Raed just enough room to follow. The
stairwell beyond was empty, and the only thing that slowed
them as they hurried down was a pipe that spontaneously burst
from the wall. A sign the collapse was about to happen? How
many seconds left?
Water
from other exploded pipes and from sprinkler-systems on the
higher floors seemed to be collecting in this stairwell,
making it difficult once more for Raed to keep up to Peter and
Garth. . . .
And
then, before he knew it, all three of them were at the bottom,
hurrying through an underground plaza toward an outside
street. A cop halted the two men before they crossed the
street, warning about debris dropping from above–
Raed
just ran for it, leaving his companions for the first time
since Floor 82.
He’d
made it!
He
put a block between himself and the South Tower before looking
back to see if it was coming down yet. Smoke billowed out of
the hole two-thirds of the way up. He had to get
farther.
But
Garth and Peter were running over, and for some reason Raed
waited for them, watching the sky overhead just to be sure.
When they caught up to him, Raed began following the pair
again, curious to know whether they’d get far enough away to
survive. More than curious: he wanted them to survive.
He cared about these two American strangers, having
shared in their ordeal and overheard their exchange of
friendship. Was that the whole point of this projection? Or
was there more to it, something he’d failed to do?
As
the two men continued north along the rubble-strewn blocks,
Raed felt a weird echo of the relief they were professing to
each other. Garth again thanked Peter for saving his life,
Peter again dismissed the notion. Little did he know! A clock
on a big electronic billboard read 9:59 am. They’d made
it down and out with only seconds to spare. Were they far
enough away?
Garth
stopped in front of a church, and asked his friend whether he
wanted to go in. Peter nodded, then they both turned for one
last look at the South Tower. It was visibly
shuddering.
"That
building could come down," Raed heard Garth say.
Peter
dismissed that notion too. "It’s a steel structure, there’s no
way–"
The
building began to implode before their eyes.
Peter
and Garth dashed around the side of the church for protection,
and Raed did too. After a few minutes, the rumbling stopped,
but the dust and debris kept coming, thicker and heavier,
churning into the all-enveloping gloom. The two men beside him
closed their eyes against the dust-fall, and for a few
seconds, Raed did too. All those people, he thought,
his mind’s eye recalling faces seen high in the stairwell,
people he was sure didn’t make it out. He may have been
aware of the outcome of Nazir and Sayf’s attack back
when he was twenty-four, but only now did Raed
understand that outcome. Only now did he appreciate the
sort of selfless, courageous people who’d ended up caught in
the aftermath of his cousins’ actions. . . . Nazir
had told Raed they’d be bringing down America along with those
two buildings. But all they’d brought down was–
Well,
Americans.
All those people, he thought again, horrified by
the outcome for the first time in his life. Then he heard
Peter say it too: "All those people," the big man croaked,
shaking his head. Beside him Garth was weeping.
But
they, at least, had lived. Peter and Garth had lived! And as
the two men began to swirl away, Raed had just enough time to
regret parting company with them before their faces vanished
into the tunnel of history, and he found himself
back–
In
2033, back in the present.
Back
in his cage, blinking at the bars, and thinking of Peter and
Garth. Did they still live, in the present?
"Anyone see you that time, Raed?"
It
was the veiled psychologist, entering the cage
again.
"No,"
he answered. "I mean–I don’t know." Some of the people
comforting the burn victims in the stairwell had looked up as
he’d passed by. Raed had thought they were looking at
him at first, before realizing they’d been looking at Peter or
Garth or at someone else behind Raed. . . . Perhaps
the same was true of that woman he’d seen in the previous
projection, the one in the NYU sweatshirt with the red
ribbon–perhaps she’d also been looking at someone passing
behind Raed. Who could say?
He
was still too horrified by his latest experience of 9/11 to
think clearly.
But a
feeling of horror wasn’t enough. Raed saw that in the eyes of
the psychologist standing below him, tapping away at her
slate. He had not faced whatever he must face, had not done
whatever he must do. What could he do, without changing
the past?
"That
was your longest projection so far," the psychologist told
him, "almost an hour. So we’ve only time for a few more.
They’ll be short and to the point. And for the next one,
Raed," she said, "remember what your lawyers told
you."
"Just
send me," he groaned.
But
she stayed for another second or two, holding Raed’s eyes, her
own wide eyes filled with–foreboding? After she slid out
between the yellow bars, Raed closed his eyes and clenched his
teeth, preparing to ghost once again back to 9/11. So many
projections to the same target-time! He thought of the two
firemen at Ground Zero who’d taken turns climbing into the
crow’s nest of their pumper truck, returning to the fire time
and again, refusing to give up even though hope was already
gone. If they’d been able to face it over and over, well then,
so could Raed.
But
when he opened his eyes, he was surprised to find
that–
He
was back in a stairwell in the South Tower, standing on the
landing of Floor 54, no one in sight. And right in front of
him a zipper-rip was forming in the outer wall.
The
whole stairwell seemed to pitch. Raed lurched for a railing of
the flight leading down, barely able to keep his feet. What
had the lawyers told him? Emotional harm was the only real
danger during a projection–and if he used the ripcord before
the cage operators brought him back, he’d be automatically
disqualified from the program. . . .
Raed
scrambled onto the flight leading below only to stop short
halfway down, seeing some people appear at the bottom climbing
up. Firemen! The same doomed men he’d seen around Floor 30
during his last ghosting. They were all panting, far more
exhausted now.
And
even if he could get down past them, he would never make it
out in time, not this time. Short and to the point, the
psychologist had promised.
The
building rocked again, and Raed sprawled onto the steps, one
hand gripping the railing to keep him from sliding into the
firemen below, who were all hanging from the same railing and
staring at each other, clearly wondering whether they should
continue.
"Go down!" Raed wailed at them, pulling himself
back upright.
And
the firemen reacted, but not to Raed’s yell–someone trapped a
few floors higher was screaming for help. En masse they began
to climb, aware of the danger of collapse but not of its
imminent certainty.
Raed
flattened himself against the stairwell wall, wrapping both
arms around the railing–and then the firemen were crushing up
through him. He could feel their huge souls,
giant lionhearts swelling with
FEAR-FURY-DEFIANCE-DETERMINATION. And during the endless
seconds it took for them to climb by, Raed believed that
nothing could kill such men. . . . After the
last of them had passed, Raed slumped to the stairs, and lay
there in a heap as the building rocked and rippled. The
firemen were forced to stop just above him, all of them
bracing themselves against the walls.
"Feel
that just now?" gasped a man two steps above Raed.
Another nodded. "Something’s telling me we’re not gonna
get out of here."
Had
they sensed Raed’s thoughts as they pushed by him? But no,
individual thoughts could not be exchanged. Biomass
could only produce "strong-weak" interactions: strong
from these firemen onto him, too weak from him onto them to
change their minds about anything.
And
any further words the firemen above him might have said were
abruptly drowned out by loud snappings and
splittings that sounded to Raed like the fabric of the
Universe tearing. The sounds snowballed into a terrific
roaring, and Raed moved one hand off the vibrating railing
onto his belt, fingered the ripcord, and looked up in
anticipation–to his astonishment, some civilians who had made
it down from the landing above were squeezing between the
firemen. Then the stairwell walls seemed to give out, the
people above clutched onto their would-be rescuers, Raed
instinctively grabbed the railing with both hands, and God in
Heaven dropped the world of 9/11 down on top of him, using the
building Raed helped bring down to smite him once and for
all–
A
sharp smell roused him. Raed opened his eyes, unsure of where
he was. Two figures swam into view: the burqa-veiled
psychologist and the burly male medic, who was holding
smelling salts.
Raed
took in a painful breath, raised both hands to his chest, and
checked for broken ribs.
"It’s
just sympathetic pain," the psychologist assured him, "all in
your mind."
"You’re okay," the medic agreed. "It’s just the shock
of being blown out of the fold."
"Why–" Raed broke off, sucked in air, still
psychologically winded. "Wasn’t I crushed? Gravity of the past
. . . pulled everything down on us–on
me."
The
medic pointed to the inward-pointing cones studding the cage’s
arcing bars. "The particles they focus on you only open a
transient fold. Any strong force exerted on the
exterior–the force of a wall falling on you, a bullet fired at
you–and the fold’s sphere spontaneously pops, blowing you
right back here. Bit of a shock," he repeated, "but you get
used to it."
"You’ve faced. . . ." Raed wasn’t sure
what to call it.
"A
‘mortal force’ in the past?" The medic rolled up a sleeve,
revealing a tattoo of the Statue of Liberty on one big bicep.
"I was born in France," he said, "so I ghosted back to the
Revolution, and got hit by a cannonball fired into a crowd
outside the Bastille–I was standing too close to some of my
ancestors." The big man folded his arms, frowned up at Raed.
"Gotta tell you, facing death during a ghosting’s not the hard
part. It’s not easy–but it’s not the hard part."
"What," Raed wheezed back at him, "is the hard
part?"
The
medic looked over the psychologist’s shoulder, and read
something on the slate she was accessing again. "I believe you
already know," he said, then nodded at Raed and left the
cage.
Raed
met the psychologist’s wary eyes.
"Can
you?" she asked him, a hint of pleading in her voice. Had she
expected him to ripcord out before the South Tower collapsed?
Had she hoped he’d stick it out with those firemen?
The
thought that the psychologist held out a faint hope for him
gave Raed a little strength. "I think . . . I can,"
he breathed, then began breathing easier.
After
all, he knew now she’d been telling the truth. He
couldn’t come to harm. And after she exited the cage,
Raed watched the psychologist and the others outside the bars
begin to slide away, knowing the next projection couldn’t get
any worse, it could only get–
More
strange.
Raed
dropped to the floor of an elevator with its double-doors
partially open. Beyond the gap in the doors a debris-littered
lobby kept rising, then plunging, then rising again, as though
the elevator was a yo-yo on a string about to snap. The steel
walls around him were visibly vibrating, so he knew he didn’t
have much time. But he waited until the lobby outside fell
from above his shoulders to a foot below the level of the
elevator–
Raed
threw himself out, landing flat on his chest on the cluttered
lobby carpeting. A sign fallen from a shuddering wall told him
this was Floor 104 of the South Tower. And there was a man
propped against a smoldering reception desk nearby, his legs
trapped under a huge twist of black metal that had stabbed
down through the ceiling.
The
trapped man wasn’t alone.
Raed
got to his feet, staggered closer, and stared at a woman
kneeling beside the trapped man, her arm round his shoulder.
She stared back at Raed, following him with her
eyes.
"You
can’t see me," he insisted, and then fled from the
pair, down a hall, and around a corner, not wanting to be seen
by a victim about to meet her end. Not wanting to sit idly by
as two more people met their doom, unable to do a thing about
them or himself.
Not understanding what he was supposed to do
here!
Ceiling panels crashed down in a hall he turned into,
and an electrical panel exploded. Raed was driven back, his
time probably almost up again. Short and to the
point.
The
point being to meet more of the people he’d help trap
in this tower? I didn’t trap them, I wasn’t
on that plane. It was Nazir, Sayf, and their comrades! But
no matter how he tried to rationalize, how he tried to escape,
Raed was blocked at every turn. There was just no way out.
Corridors came down in a rain of rubble, passageways filled
with a tingling pressure before bursting into flame, and
doorway after doorway was barricaded by debris. All the rooms
within rooms closed off to him now, all his mental defenses
collapsing, forcing him back
to. . . .
The
central lobby and the elevators, where he hated to go but had
to, and–in the end–wanted to, so he wouldn’t have to face the
end alone. As he stumbled into the lobby, Raed saw the trapped
man now had two companions consoling him instead of one, both
comforters wearing red ribbons on their collars but neither
looking at Raed. Their eyes were squeezed tightly shut,
knowing the collapse was upon them, hearing the roar and
hugging the arms of the trapped man, one on either side, their
faces agonized.
Yet
the man propped between them seemed unaware of his two
steadfast friends, his hands clasped together in prayer, face
somehow calmer, eyes turned up toward his own version of
Heaven. We do this to Americans because they are
godless, Nazir had told Raed repeatedly.
And
that was not true.
And
feeling horror for this trapped trio was not
enough.
Raed
threw himself down on the shuddering floor before them. He
knew what the hard part was now. "I don’t have the strength,"
was all he had time to say before the world descended on them
all again–
Sharp
reviving odors.
Opening his eyes, squinting at yellow bars, then down
at the big medic, and the small Muslim
psychologist.
"Was
seen–again," Raed managed to say when he’d caught his breath.
"Were two of them. Two . . . shouldn’t have been
there."
"What
do you mean?" The psychologist was tapping it all into her
slate.
"Both
wearing ribbons," Raed said, less winded this time. "Pinned to
sweatshirts," he went on, "like the other one who saw me–when
I turned up that side street."
She
surprised him by replying, "You’ve gotten a long way into our
program tonight Raed, and you’re nearly there."
"There?"
"Understand–the program’s spiraling you toward the
core-event you were convicted of being an accomplice to. Time
to take you in for a close-up."
He
nodded. The hard part still remained. "Go ahead," he said, no
longer caring. . . . There were no rooms left to
hide himself inside anyway. Raed’s own core had been drawn out
now, and he was ready for anything, ready for the
truth.
Again
the psychologist hesitated before leaving, and again her
lingering gaze gave him strength. She wants me to see it
through.
Raed
realized he wanted to see it through, too.
Seconds later the cage-bars began to blur, then bend
away, and before he knew it he was–
Back
in the South Tower, and for the first time, he’d arrived
before it was hit. . . . The floor around him
was filled with people, a dozen desks visible in an open area
near some tall windows, a few of the desks still occupied by
people making phone-calls, although most looked upset. Most
others had left their desks and were standing at the windows,
looking out at the North Tower, which had a smoking hole a
number of floors higher up its side.
What
floor was he on in this building? Raed turned and hurried
around to the elevators, darting in and out of groups of
people, and in the central lobby discovered he was on Floor
78.
The
point-of-impact for the South Tower.
Raed
kept right on running through the floor, around to the tower’s
opposite outer wall. Finding another open area past a row of
offices, he peered out through some windows facing south. A
gleaming speck was just visible against the blue sky in the
southeast, slowly arcing around to get into
position.
Raed
had often wondered about Nazir and Sayf’s last moment in that
cockpit. In the early years, he’d even tried to picture it:
opening their shirts and exposing their hearts to God, praying
for entrance to Heaven. Madmen, and Raed had sensed it even
then. But he’d been a little mad himself, in that period.
. . . And now that he was in a position to glimpse
the expression on their faces as they plunged into the side of
this building, Raed found he had no interest in glimpsing any
such thing. He turned his back to the windows.
Four
of the dozen desks arrayed before him had knots of people
standing around them. And sprinkled in among the business
attire worn by most of those people–none of them currently
looking out the windows to the south–there were a handful of
standouts in casual clothes, sweats, even one in an all-blue
jumpsuit. All the casual-dressed people had their hands on the
shoulders or backs of one or another of the
victims-to-be.
Raed
moved over to the nearest occupied desk, where a young
blond-haired man in a crisp mauve shirt and black tie sat
facing the outer windows, too busy talking on the phone to
notice the speck growing in the sky beyond the windows.
Standing directly behind this young businessman was another
older blond-haired man, in his mid-forties perhaps,
approaching middle-age, yet dressed in silvery track pants and
a Columbia University pullover. He had both hands on the
shoulders of the desk’s occupant and was crouched over him,
head bent low, eyes closed and concentrating, to all
appearances eavesdropping on the seated man’s phone
call.
Neither the seated man nor anyone else in the area
seemed to take any notice of this peculiar
eavesdropper.
Except for Raed.
"Who
are you?" he asked the man in silver track pants.
The
man frowned up at Raed, his concentration broken. Raed
immediately saw that the eavesdropper and the businessman
below him might have been twins, but for the ten-year age
difference between them. And now the red ribbon pinned to the
eavesdropper’s collar was plainly visible . . .
Below him, the seated man continued reassuring whoever he was
talking to on the phone that he was all right, that it was the
other tower that was hit–but his eyes were finally widening,
focusing on something behind Raed, beyond the windows. The
eavesdropper bowed over the seated man again, concentrating
harder, tightening his grip on his younger twin’s
shoulders.
Out
of the corner of his eye, Raed caught other people reacting to
something in the sky beyond the south windows. And now,
somehow, there were twice as many people in sweats and casual
clothes in the open area–though Raed had seen no one enter the
area. All the newcomers had their heads bowed, holding tightly
to some shocked-looking businessman or woman.
"Who
are all of you?" Raed yelled across the open
space.
He
got no answer. The casual-dressers were too focused on the
task at hand: remaining in physical contact with people who
were beginning to scramble away in disbelief–
A
loud clattering drew Raed’s eyes back to the desk he was
standing in front of.
"Oh
God, oh my God." The young blond businessman had
dropped the phone receiver and was on his feet, gaping at the
windows behind Raed. A woman’s voice squeaked out of the
receiver inches from Raed’s hip: "Steve? You still there,
Steve?"
The
older man in silver track pants clung onto Steve, his face
pained–
Then
everyone was breaking free from their casually-dressed
companions and fleeing, falling over chairs and furniture in
desperate attempts to escape. And all the ribbon-wearing
clingers left behind turned toward Raed.
"Why
did you bring me here?" he cried as he backed right up against
the windows, wanting this to be over quickly. A shadow fell
across the area of desks–
Revived again, safely back in his cage in
2033.
Raed
focused blearily past the bars and across the main projection
arena, where a hundred other volunteers hung suspended in
cages too, most of them mere image-people, half here, half
there, still currently ghosting somewhere. In some of the
closer cages, volunteers appeared to be crouched over
something in the past, or clutching onto someone. Those in the
closest cages seemed to be in some kind of pain.
But a
number of volunteers were no longer glowing images. Their
projections had just ended, just like Raed’s. In one or two
cages, he could see people being revived with smelling
salts. . . .
In
his own cage, the Muslim psychologist was again consulting
with the big medic, both standing just below him. Raed waited
until the medic slipped back out before he summoned to will to
say to the psychologist, "I need to ask something."
"Ask."
He
gestured toward the cages filling the main arena. "Those
people are all ghosting back to 9/11, aren’t they? They’ve
been accompanying me. . . ."
"They
have their own business in that target-time," she told
him.
Tackling what I’ve been avoiding, Raed thought. The
hard part.
"But yes," the psychologist went on, "they are
accompanying you, in a way–they’re projecting through folds
oriented identically to your own." Behind the burqa-veil, the
woman’s eyes seemed disappointed. "Is that your
question?"
He would not disappoint her. He said, "They’re the
group of ‘interested citizens,’ yes? The ones who petitioned
to get me into this program."
She
nodded. "Is that your question?"
"Who
are they?" Raed asked. That was the
question.
"The
grown children of your victims, mostly," she told him. "Plus a
few victims’ nieces, nephews, friends, one or two of the
surviving spouses."
Raed
swallowed, a soft clicking deep in his throat. "And
you?"
"Yes," she answered without hesitation, her
liquid-black eyes swallowing his question. "I’m also the child
of one of your victims." She adjusted the folds of her burqa
to show him the red ribbon she was wearing. The same ribbons
worn by the out-of-place clingers and companions in the
past–the people in the cages beyond the Plexiglas.
Raed
bowed his head. If the woman below him was his
daughter, then Haifa, his wife, was surely another of Raed’s
victims. And if the woman below him was his daughter,
surely it was no surprise she’d become a psychologist–not with
a father like Raed to try to comprehend.
She
said to him: "I was one of those curious to see if you were
capable of making it through this program." A beeping drew her
eyes to her slate. She turned, nodded to the projection
operators at their consoles, and glanced up at Raed again.
"Looks like we have time for just one more."
"Just
one more," he agreed, even though he felt wearier than he’d
ever imagined he could feel–weary down in his soul.
But
there was one more place left to face, wasn’t there? Raed
watched the psychologist step out through the bars, then
watched the world of 2033 slide away as the cage tunneled him
back to–
That
oh-so-familiar tubular space. He was back where his night of
projection began, back in a seat on board a large passenger
jet.
This
jet, however, was airborne.
Flight 175, Boston to Los Angeles. Raed was sitting in
a window-seat about halfway up the plane. The oval portal
beside him offered a good view of the Atlantic beyond the
wing, and the Eastern seaboard. The plane was already well off
its flight path, well on its way to its doomed target. But the
familiar Manhattan skyline was not in sight yet; there was
still a little time left.
Raed
shifted out to the empty aisle seat, saw that the back half of
the plane behind him was crammed with passengers. There were
even people crouching in the aisle. Directly across the aisle,
in the same row as Raed, a sturdy-looking man in his late
thirties was dialing someone on a cell phone. After a few
seconds the man began to speak. Raed instinctively drew back,
then forced himself to listen: ". . . flight’s been
hijacked," the man was saying. "I’ll try to call again, but
don’t know if there’ll be time."
You must be Tom, Raed thought, recognizing the
voice and recalling a bright kitchen with an answering machine
in a warm Rhode Island home.
"Whatever happens, Angie, know that I love you," Tom
went on, maintaining his unearthly calm. "That I’m thinking of
you now, and the kids too. . . ." He let out a
breath. "They’ll be fine with you as their mom," he said. "So
don’t let them be sad for too long."
Raed
stared across the aisle, humbled by Tom’s ability to pass
beyond denial of his dire situation into an acceptance of it.
This man was neither hysterical nor paralyzed by terror–he was
just terribly lonely.
"I’ll
always be with the three of you. And Angie," Tom finished, "in
my heart I know we’ll meet again." He shut off his phone, and
turned to stare out the window.
That’s when Raed caught a glimpse of someone seated on
the far side of Tom, tucked up against him. Raed pulled
himself to his feet, stepped into the aisle, and saw a
sixty-something woman with her hands wrapped round Tom’s arm,
her head on his shoulder, her face drawn tight,
concentrating.
She
wasn’t wearing a seatbelt because she didn’t need one, of
course.
Raed
wanted to ask the woman her name, but sensed it wouldn’t be
appropriate. Besides, he knew who she had to be:
"Angie"–Angela or Angelica–Tom’s spouse. An old woman now, yet
still strong enough to ghost back to her lost husband’s side,
strong enough to withstand the discharge of his dread long
enough to add a little of her own calm to his. Angie was
comforting Tom on the way to that greater comfort the man
clearly had faith in.
The
plane rolled, awkwardly changing direction, tossing Raed off
balance. Through the windows of the forward seats he spotted
distant skyscrapers, including the towers of the World Trade
Center. Up in the cockpit his cousins and their pilot friends
were beginning the approach to the South Tower, intent on
bringing it down. And because Raed had known their intentions
before his cousins and their comrades ever boarded this plane,
he was just as responsible as they were. He could no longer
deny it, now that he was actually on board with them. He’d
always been on board with them, in some sense or
other. . . .
So
the thought of walking up to the cockpit door and
eavesdropping on Nazir and Sayf’s final words held no interest
for Raed. His cousins’ hold over him disintegrated long ago,
in the awful period after the Twin Towers came
down.
Raed
turned his back to the cockpit, and began to walk down the
aisle, looking over the people filling the rear of the
plane–his cousins’ victims, his victims too. He knew
there’d only been sixty-five passengers on Flight 175, but he
could see closer to a hundred crowded into the rear rows.
Before him a sad and beautiful truth was playing out.
. . . The plane banked again and Raed reeled on his
feet, but not because of the deficiencies of the pilot. What
he was seeing was almost too overpowering to
witness.
The
back of the plane was packed with lonely people, many of them
being comforted by their own ghost-children–mostly full-grown
forty-somethings now, adults strong enough to come back to
this unthinkable moment, to tackle the hard part and take on
the two-way interaction "biomass" unleashed: strong emotions
flooding from the passengers into these
ghost-descendants.
And
weak emotions seeping from the ghosts back into their
long-lost loved ones.
Whatever weak effect we have on the past, the
researcher Francis told Raed, it was made the first time
around, if you get my meaning. So nothing can be
changed!
Cause
and effect aside, every row Raed passed held an
anguished-looking adult in track pants or jumpsuit, a red
ribbon pinned to their collar. The ghosts were squeezed in
behind the seats of some passengers, leaning over headrests,
arms draped down around the shoulders of a mother, or an aunt,
or a family friend they’d come back to comfort. A few were
even kneeling in the aisle, their heads tucked onto the laps
of passengers. All these agonizing visitors were soaking up
the frenzied emotions of the passengers, while oozing an ounce
of serenity back the other way, an ounce of certainty that
their loved ones were with them, in spirit.
It
was all they could do. Raed understood that now, and he
understood what the projection-team was putting him through.
He saw the method underlying their rehab program, ghosting him
back to see things that should help him know what to do, like
those two firemen taking turns in the crow’s nest of their
pumper truck, falling out exhausted, then climbing back in
again to help douse the raging fires.
That’s just what Raed was witnessing in the rear of
Flight 175, as some ghost-comforters overcome with emotion
simply vanished, others immediately appearing to take their
place. The volunteers from his own time were projecting in, in
wave after wave, taking turns taking on the pain of relatives
and friends in their moment of greatest need.
The
plane dropped lower, and a cry rose up from several passengers
on Raed’s left. Through the oval windows he saw the
smoke-trail from the North Tower, both buildings drawing
inexorably closer.
Time
to face the hard part himself.
In
the second-to-last row, a woman was curled up with a tiny,
tired-looking child, a girl the age of the Basma he’d lost. A
middle-aged man in coveralls stood behind the woman’s seat,
his head bowed, his arms draped down over the woman’s
shoulders, while her own arm was wrapped tightly round the
shoulders of the child in the aisle seat.
Raed
lowered himself to his knees, falling into a prayer-position
in the aisle beside the child, a victim of the pitiless
madness of Raed’s own youth. But pitying her now, he placed
his arm across her, received the awesome discharge of her
emotions, concentrated, and tried hard to push his own
feelings and his fatigue back onto her: FORGIVE ME-FIND PEACE
IN YOUR MOTHER’S ARMS-ADD MY WEARINESS TO YOURS.
. . . The child’s drooping eyes finally closed, Raed
felt her fall unconscious as the plane accelerated
down, saw some of the fear ease from her face in the last
second of his embrace–
END
OF FIRST
DEEP-PROJECTION CASE
Many
more cases and depositions were presented to the World Court
over the course of the hearings on deep-projection technology.
Some were further examples of New Spiritualist experiments,
like the program designed for the inmate Raed. These
positive-result cases sparked far greater interest among the
worldwide audience following the hearings than the overstated
cases claiming negative consequences. So by end of the
hearings the court made its controversial decision, lifting
the ban on deep-projection "for limited use"–such use to be
governed by a duly-appointed body that would oversee and
approve projection programs.
I,
Francis Drummond, am the head of that governing
body.
The Hague hearings dramatically boosted the number of
New Spiritualist volunteers, as it became apparent to the
public that emotions transcend time in some miraculous way,
and in a two-way direction. . . . From that
day to this, our movement has spread into every culture,
changing the nature of the mid-twenty-first century entirely.
Projection arenas have been reopened or built anew in
thousands of cities, and now hundreds of thousands of
volunteers ghost back to the past, participating in programs
designed to open their eyes to the universality of tragedy in
cultures other than their own
The
result has been a wider recognition of our present as the
precious, precarious climax to all our ancient pasts. After
millennia of struggle and strife, back-breaking labor and bad
luck, madness and sadness and small successes piled one atop
the next, most societies are making that final leap up the
ladder of progress toward a transcendent, tolerant
civilization.
The
goal of New Spiritualism is a reawakening to the truth of what
has gone before us, what it has taken all of us to get here.
And though the controversy rages on, today that goal is being
achieved. Waves of volunteers are returning to comfort their
own ancestors–or comfort mere strangers caught in the tragic
forces of world history–as a way of thanking the generations
whose sufferings helped bring about a world they feel
fortunate to live in. The target-times these volunteers
revisit are mostly old and familiar turning points of the
past, key moments in the histories of many cultures. The
oldest stories in the book, you might say, and each one
defined by a truth that volunteers of all cultures report
witnessing: down through the ages the greatest humanity is
always to be found in the midst of tragedy and catastrophe, as
the living cling to loved ones lost with hearts unbound.
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