Eleanor
Voigt had the oddest job of anyone she knew. She worked eight hours a
day in an office where no business was done. Her job was to sit at a
desk and stare at the closet door. There was a button on the desk that
she was to push if anybody came out that door. There was a big clock on
the wall, and, precisely at noon, once a day, she went over to the door
and unlocked it with a key she had been given. Inside was an empty
closet. There were no trap doors or secret panels in it–she had looked.
It was just an empty closet.
If she noticed anything unusual, she was supposed to go back to her desk and press the button.
"Unusual in what way?" she’d asked when she’d been hired. "I don’t understand. What am I looking for?"
"You’ll
know it when you see it," Mr. Tarblecko had said in that odd accent of
his. Mr. Tarblecko was her employer, and some kind of foreigner. He was
the creepiest thing imaginable. He had pasty white skin and no hair at
all on his head, so that when he took his hat off, he looked like some
species of mushroom. His ears were small and almost pointed. Ellie
thought he might have some kind of disease. But he paid two dollars an
hour, which was good money nowadays for a woman of her age.
At
the end of her shift, she was relieved by an unkempt young man who had
once blurted out to her that he was a poet. When she came in, in the
morning, a heavy Negress would stand up wordlessly, take her coat and
hat from the rack, and, with enormous dignity, leave.
So
all day Ellie sat behind the desk with nothing to do. She wasn’t
allowed to read a book, for fear she might get so involved in it that
she would stop watching the door. Crosswords were allowed, because they
weren’t as engrossing. She got a lot of knitting done, and was
considering taking up tatting.
Over
time, the door began to loom large in her imagination. She pictured
herself unlocking it at some forbidden not-noon time and seeing–what?
Her imagination failed her. No matter how vividly she visualized it,
the door would open onto something mundane. Brooms and mops. Sports
equipment. Galoshes and old clothes. What else would there be in a
closet? What else could there be?
Sometimes,
caught up in her imaginings, she would find herself on her feet.
Sometimes, she walked to the door. Once, she actually put her hand on
the knob before drawing away. But always the thought of losing her job
stopped her.
It was maddening.
Twice,
Mr. Tarblecko had come to the office while she was on duty. Each time,
he was wearing that same black suit with that same narrow black tie.
"You have a watch?" he’d asked.
"Yes,
sir." The first time, she’d held forth her wrist to show it to him. The
disdainful way he ignored the gesture ensured she did not repeat it on
his second visit.
"Go away. Come back in forty minutes."
So
she had gone out to a little tearoom nearby. She had a bag lunch back
in her desk, with a baloney-and-mayonnaise sandwich and an apple, but
she’d been so flustered she’d forgotten it, and then feared to go back
after it. She’d treated herself to a dainty "lady lunch" that she was
in no mood to appreciate, left a dime tip for the waitress, and was
back in front of the office door exactly thirty-eight minutes after
she’d left.
At forty minutes, exactly, she reached for the door.
As
if he’d been waiting for her to do so, Mr. Tarblecko breezed through
the door, putting on his hat. He didn’t acknowledge her promptness or her presence. He just strode briskly past, as though she didn’t exist.
Stunned, she went inside, closed the door, and returned to her desk.
She
realized then that Mr. Tarblecko was genuinely, fabulously rich. He had
the arrogance of those who are so wealthy that they inevitably get
their way in all small matters because there’s always somebody there to
arrange things that way. His type was never grateful for
anything and never bothered to be polite, because it never even
occurred to them that things could be otherwise.
The
more she thought about it, the madder she got. She was no Bolshevik,
but it seemed to her that people had certain rights, and that one of
these was the right to a little common courtesy. It diminished one to
be treated like a stick of furniture. It was degrading. She was damned
if she was going to take it.
Six months went by.
The door opened and Mr. Tarblecko strode in, as if he’d left only minutes ago. "You have a watch?"
Ellie slid open a drawer and dropped her knitting into it. She opened another and took out her bag lunch. "Yes."
"Go away. Come back in forty minutes."
So
she went outside. It was May, and Central Park was only a short walk
away, so she ate there, by the little pond where children floated their
toy sailboats. But all the while she fumed. She was a good employee–she
really was! She was conscientious, punctual, and she never called in
sick. Mr. Tarblecko ought to appreciate that. He had no business
treating her the way he did.
Almost,
she wanted to overstay lunch, but her conscience wouldn’t allow that.
When she got back to the office, precisely thirty-nine and a half
minutes after she’d left, she planted herself squarely in front of the
door so that when Mr. Tarblecko left he would have no choice but to
confront her. It might well lose her her job, but . . . well, if it
did, it did. That’s how strongly she felt about it.
Thirty
seconds later, the door opened and Mr. Tarblecko strode briskly out.
Without breaking his stride, or, indeed, showing the least sign of
emotion, he picked her up by her two arms, swiveled effortlessly, and
deposited her to the side.
Then he was gone. Ellie heard his footsteps dwindling down the hall.
The nerve! The sheer, raw gall of the man!
Ellie
went back in the office, but she couldn’t make herself sit down at the
desk. She was far too upset. Instead, she walked back and forth the
length of the room, arguing with herself, saying aloud those things she
should have said and would have said if only Mr. Tarblecko had stood
still for them. To be picked up and set aside like that . . . well, it
was really quite upsetting. It was intolerable.
What was particularly distressing was that there wasn’t even any way to make her displeasure known.
At last, though, she calmed down enough to think clearly, and realized that she was wrong. There was something–something more symbolic than substantive, admittedly–that she could do.
She could open that door.
Ellie
did not act on impulse. She was a methodical woman. So she thought the
matter through before she did anything. Mr. Tarblecko very rarely
showed up at the office–only twice in all the time she’d been here, and
she’d been here over a year. Moreover, the odds of him returning to the
office a third time only minutes after leaving it were negligible. He
had left nothing behind–she could see that at a glance; the office was
almost Spartan in its emptiness. Nor was there any work here for him to
return to.
Just
to be safe, though, she locked the office door. Then she got her chair
out from behind the desk and chocked it up under the doorknob, so that
even if somebody had a key, he couldn’t get in. She put her ear to the
door and listened for noises in the hall.
Nothing.
It
was strange how, now that she had decided to do the deed, time seemed
to slow and the office to expand. It took forever to cross the vast
expanses of empty space between her and the closet door. Her hand
reaching for its knob pushed through air as thick as molasses. Her
fingers closed about it, one by one, and in the time it took for them
to do so, there was room enough for a hundred second thoughts. Faintly,
she heard the sound of . . . machinery? A low humming noise.
She placed the key in the lock, and opened the door.
There stood Mr. Tarblecko.
Ellie
shrieked, and staggered backward. One of her heels hit the floor wrong,
and her ankle twisted, and she almost fell. Her heart was hammering so
furiously her chest hurt.
Mr.
Tarblecko glared at her from within the closet. His face was as white
as a sheet of paper. "One rule," he said coldly, tonelessly. "You had
only one rule, and you broke it." He stepped out. "You are a very bad
slave."
"I . . . I . . . I . . ." Ellie found herself gasping from the shock. "I’m not a slave at all!"
"There is where you are wrong, Eleanor Voigt. There is where you are very wrong indeed," said Mr. Tarblecko. "Open the window."
Ellie
went to the window and pulled up the blinds. There was a little cactus
in a pot on the windowsill. She moved it to her desk. Then she opened
the window. It stuck a little, so she had to put all her strength into
it. The lower sash went up slowly at first and then, with a rush,
slammed to the top. A light, fresh breeze touched her.
"Climb onto the windowsill."
"I most certainly will–" not,
she was going to say. But to her complete astonishment, she found
herself climbing up onto the sill. She could not help herself. It was
as if her will were not her own.
"Sit down with your feet outside the window."
It
was like a hideous nightmare, the kind that you know can’t be real and
struggle to awaken from, but cannot. Her body did exactly as it was
told to do. She had absolutely no control over it.
"Do not jump until I tell you to do so."
"Are you going to tell me to jump?" she asked quaveringly. "Oh, please, Mr. Tarblecko . . ."
"Now look down."
The
office was on the ninth floor. Ellie was a lifelong New Yorker, so that
had never seemed to her a particularly great height before. Now it did.
The people on the sidewalk were as small as ants. The buses and
automobiles on the street were the size of matchboxes. The sounds of
horns and engines drifted up to her, and birdsong as well, the lazy
background noises of a spring day in the city. The ground was so
terribly far away! And there was nothing between her and it but air!
Nothing holding her back from death but her fingers desperately
clutching the window frame!
Ellie
could feel all the world’s gravity willing her toward the distant
concrete. She was dizzy with vertigo and a sick, stomach-tugging urge
to simply let go and, briefly, fly. She squeezed her eyes shut tight,
and felt hot tears streaming down her face.
She
could tell from Mr. Tarblecko’s voice that he was standing right behind
her. "If I told you to jump, Eleanor Voigt, would you do so?"
"Yes," she squeaked.
"What kind of person jumps to her death simply because she’s been told to do so?"
"A . . . a slave!"
"Then what are you?"
"A
slave! A slave! I’m a slave!" She was weeping openly now, as much from
humiliation as from fear. "I don’t want to die! I’ll be your slave,
anything, whatever you say!"
"If you’re a slave, then what kind of slave should you be?"
"A . . . a . . . good slave."
"Come back inside."
Gratefully,
she twisted around, and climbed back into the office. Her knees buckled
when she tried to stand, and she had to grab at the windowsill to keep
from falling. Mr. Tarblecko stared at her, sternly and steadily.
"You
have been given your only warning," he said. "If you disobey again–or
if you ever try to quit–I will order you out the window."
He walked into the closet and closed the door behind him.
There
were two hours left on her shift–time enough, barely, to compose
herself. When the disheveled young poet showed up, she dropped her key
in her purse and walked past him without so much as a glance. Then she
went straight to the nearest hotel bar, and ordered a gin and tonic.
She had a lot of thinking to do.
Eleanor
Voigt was not without resources. She had been an executive secretary
before meeting her late husband, and everyone knew that a good
executive secretary effectively runs her boss’s business for him.
Before the Crash, she had run a household with three servants. She had
entertained. Some of her parties had required weeks of planning and
preparation. If it weren’t for the Depression, she was sure she’d be in
a much better-paid position than the one she held.
She was not going to be a slave.
But
before she could find a way out of her predicament, she had to
understand it. First, the closet. Mr. Tarblecko had left the office and
then, minutes later, popped up inside it. A hidden passage of some
kind? No–that was simultaneously too complicated and not complicated
enough. She had heard machinery, just before she opened the door. So .
. . some kind of transportation device, then. Something that a day ago
she would have sworn couldn’t exist. A teleporter, perhaps, or a time
machine.
The
more she thought of it, the better she liked the thought of the time
machine. It was not just that teleporters were the stuff of Sunday
funnies and Buck Rogers serials, while The Time Machine was a
distinguished philosophical work by Mr. H.G. Wells. Though she had to
admit that figured in there. But a teleportation device required a twin
somewhere, and Mr. Tarblecko hadn’t had the time even to leave the
building.
A
time machine, however, would explain so much! Her employer’s long
absences. The necessity that the device be watched when not in use,
lest it be employed by Someone Else. Mr. Tarblecko’s abrupt appearance
today, and his possession of a coercive power that no human being on
Earth had.
The fact that she could no longer think of Mr. Tarblecko as human.
She
had barely touched her drink, but now she found herself too impatient
to finish it. She slapped a dollar bill down on the bar and, without
waiting for her change, left.
During
the time it took to walk the block and a half to the office building
and ride the elevator up to the ninth floor, Ellie made her plans. She
strode briskly down the hallway and opened the door without knocking.
The unkempt young man looked up, startled, from a scribbled sheet of
paper.
"You have a watch?"
"Y-yes, but . . . Mr. Tarblecko . . ."
"Get out. Come back in forty minutes."
With grim satisfaction, she watched the young man cram his key into one pocket and the sheet of paper into another and leave. Good slave,
she thought to herself. Perhaps he’d already been through the little
charade Mr. Tarblecko had just played on her. Doubtless every employee
underwent ritual enslavement as a way of keeping them in line. The
problem with having slaves, however, was that they couldn’t be expected
to display any initiative. . . . Not on the master’s behalf, anyway.
Ellie opened her purse and got out the key. She walked to the closet.
For
an instant, she hesitated. Was she really sure enough to risk her life?
But the logic was unassailable. She had been given no second chance. If
Mr. Tarblecko knew she was about to open the door a second
time, he would simply have ordered her out the window on her first
offense. The fact that he hadn’t meant that he didn’t know.
She took a deep breath and opened the door.
There was a world inside.
For
what seemed like forever, Ellie stood staring at the bleak metropolis
so completely unlike New York City. Its buildings were taller than any
she had ever seen–miles high!–and interlaced with skywalks, like those
in Metropolis. But the buildings in the movie had been
breathtaking, and these were the opposite of beautiful. They were ugly
as sin: windowless, grey, stained, and discolored. There were
monotonous lines of harsh lights along every street, and under their
glare trudged men and women as uniform and lifeless as robots. Outside
the office, it was a beautiful bright day. But on the other side of the
closet, the world was dark as night.
And it was snowing.
Gingerly,
she stepped into the closet. The instant her foot touched the floor, it
seemed to expand to all sides. She stood at the center of a great wheel
of doors, with all but two of them–to her office and to the winter
world–shut. There were hooks beside each door, and hanging from them
were costumes of a hundred different cultures. She thought she
recognized togas, Victorian opera dress, kimonos. . . . But most of the
clothing was unfamiliar.
Beside
the door into winter, there was a long cape. Ellie wrapped it around
herself, and discovered a knob on the inside. She twisted it to the
right, and suddenly the coat was hot as hot. Quickly, she twisted the
knob to the left, and it grew cold. She fiddled with the thing until
the cape felt just right. Then she straightened her shoulders, took a
deep breath, and stepped out into the forbidding city.
There was a slight electric sizzle, and she was standing in the street.
Ellie
spun around to see what was behind her: a rectangle of some glassy
black material. She rapped it with her knuckles. It was solid. But when
she brought her key near its surface, it shimmered and opened into that
strange space between worlds again.
So she had a way back home.
To
either side of her rectangle were identical glassy rectangles faceted
slightly away from it. They were the exterior of an enormous kiosk, or
perhaps a very low building, at the center of a large, featureless
square. She walked all the way around it, rapping each rectangle with
her key. Only the one would open for her.
The first thing to do was to find out where–or, rather, when–she
was. Ellie stepped in front of one of the hunched, slow-walking men.
"Excuse me, sir, could you answer a few questions for me?"
The
man raised a face that was utterly bleak and without hope. A ring of
grey metal glinted from his neck. "Hawrzat dagtiknut?" he asked.
Ellie stepped back in horror, and, like a wind-up toy temporarily halted by a hand or a foot, the man resumed his plodding gait.
She cursed herself. Of course
language would have changed in the however-many-centuries future she
found herself in. Well . . . that was going to make gathering
information more difficult. But she was used to difficult tasks. The
evening of James’s suicide, she had been the one to clean the walls and
the floor. After that, she’d known that she was capable of doing
anything she set her mind to.
Above
all, it was important that she not get lost. She scanned the square
with the doorways in time at its center–mentally, she dubbed it Times
Square–and chose at random one of the broad avenues converging on it.
That, she decided would be Broadway.
Ellie
started down Broadway, watching everybody and everything. Some of the
drone-folk were dragging sledges with complex machinery on them. Others
were hunched under soft translucent bags filled with murky fluid and
vague biomorphic shapes. The air smelled bad, but in ways she was not
familiar with.
She
had gotten perhaps three blocks when the sirens went off–great piercing
blasts of noise that assailed the ears and echoed from the building
walls. All the streetlights flashed off and on and off again in a
one-two rhythm. From unseen loudspeakers, an authoritative voice
blared, "Akgang! Akgang! Kronzvarbrakar! Zawzawkstrag! Akgang! Akgang. . . ."
Without
hurry, the people in the street began turning away, touching their
hands to dull grey plates beside nondescript doors and disappearing
into the buildings.
"Oh, cripes!" Ellie muttered. She’d best–
There was a disturbance behind her. Ellie turned and saw the strangest thing yet.
It
was a girl of eighteen or nineteen, wearing summer clothes–a man’s
trousers, a short-sleeved flower-print blouse–and she was running down
the street in a panic. She grabbed at the uncaring drones, begging for
help. "Please!" she cried. "Can’t you help me? Somebody! Please . . .
you have to help me!" Puffs of steam came from her mouth with each
breath. Once or twice she made a sudden dart for one of the doorways
and slapped her hand on the greasy plates. But the doors would not open
for her.
Now the girl had reached Ellie. In a voice that expected nothing, she said, "Please?"
"I’ll help you, dear," Ellie said.
The girl shrieked, then convulsively hugged her. "Oh, thank you, thank you, thank you," she babbled.
"Follow
close behind me." Ellie strode up behind one of the lifeless un-men
and, just after he had slapped his hand on the plate, but before he
could enter, grabbed his rough tunic and gave it a yank. He turned.
"Vamoose!" she said in her sternest voice, and jerked a thumb over her shoulder.
The un-man turned away. He might not understand the word, but the tone and the gesture sufficed.
Ellie stepped inside, pulling the girl after her. The door closed behind them.
"Wow," said the girl wonderingly. "How did you do that?"
"This
is a slave culture. For a slave to survive, he’s got to obey anyone who
acts like a master. It’s that simple. Now, what’s your name and how did
you get here?" As she spoke, Ellie took in her surroundings. The room
they were in was dim, grimy–and vast. So far as she could see, there
were no interior walls, only the occasional pillar, and, here and
there, a set of functional metal stairs without railings.
"Nadine Shepard. I . . . I . . . There was a door! And I walked through it and I found myself here! I . . ."
The child was close to hysteria. "I know, dear. Tell me, when are you from?"
"Chicago. On the North Side, near . . ."
"Not where, dear, when? What year is it?"
"Uh . . . two thousand and four. Isn’t it?"
"Not
here. Not now." The grey people were everywhere, moving sluggishly, yet
always keeping within sets of yellow lines painted on the concrete
floor. Their smell was pervasive, and far from pleasant. Still . . .
Ellie
stepped directly into the path of one of the sad creatures, a woman.
When she stopped, Ellie took the tunic from her shoulders and then
stepped back. Without so much as an expression of annoyance, the woman
resumed her plodding walk.
"Here
you are." She handed the tunic to young Nadine. "Put this on, dear, you
must be freezing. Your skin is positively blue." And, indeed, it was
not much warmer inside than it had been outdoors. "I’m Eleanor Voigt.
Mrs. James Voigt."
Shivering, Nadine donned the rough garment. But instead of thanking Ellie, she said, "You look familiar."
Ellie
returned her gaze. She was a pretty enough creature though, strangely,
she wore no makeup at all. Her features were regular, intelligent–"You
look familiar too. I can’t quite put my finger on it, but . . ."
"Okay," Nadine said, "now tell me. Please. Where and when am I, and what’s going on?"
"I
honestly don’t know," Ellie said. Dimly, through the walls, she could
hear the sirens and the loudspeaker-voice. If only it weren’t so murky
in here! She couldn’t get any clear idea of the building’s layout or
function.
"But you must know! You’re so . . . so capable, so in control. You . . ."
"I’m
a castaway like you, dear. Just figuring things out as I go along." She
continued to peer. "But I can tell you this much: We are far, far in
the future. The poor degraded beings you saw on the street are the
slaves of a superior race–let’s call them the Aftermen. The Aftermen
are very cruel, and they can travel through time as easily as you or I
can travel from city to city via inter-urban rail. And that’s all I
know. So far."
Nadine was peering out a little slot in the door that Ellie hadn’t noticed. Now she said, "What’s this?"
Ellie
took her place at the slot, and saw a great bulbous street-filling
machine pull to a halt a block from the building. Insectoid creatures
that might be robots or might be men in body armor poured out of it,
and swarmed down the street, examining every door. The sirens and the
loudspeakers cut off. The streetlights returned to normal. "It’s time
we left," Ellie said.
An enormous artificial voice shook the building. Akbang! Akbang! Zawzawksbild! Alzowt! Zawzawksbild! Akbang!
"Quickly!"
She seized Nadine’s hand, and they were running.
Without emotion, the grey folk turned from their prior courses and unhurriedly made for the exits.
Ellie
and Nadine tried to stay off the walkways entirely. But the air began
to tingle, more on the side away from the walkways than the side
toward, and then to burn and then to sting. They were quickly forced
between the yellow lines. At first they were able to push their way
past the drones, and then to shoulder their way through their numbers.
But more and more came dead-stepping their way down the metal
stairways. More and more descended from the upper levels via lifts that
abruptly descended from the ceiling to disgorge them by the hundreds.
More and more flowed outward from the building’s dim interior.
Passage
against the current of flesh became first difficult, and then
impossible. They were swept backward, helpless as corks in a
rain-swollen river. Outward they were forced and through the exit into
the street.
The "police" were waiting there.
At
the sight of Ellie and Nadine–they could not have been difficult to
discern among the uniform drabness of the others–two of the armored
figures stepped forward with long poles and brought them down on the
women.
Ellie raised her arm to block the pole, and it landed solidly on her wrist.
Horrid,
searing pain shot through her, greater than anything she had ever
experienced before. For a giddy instant, Ellie felt a strange elevated
sense of being, and she thought, If I can put up with this, I can endure anything. Then the world went away.
Ellie came to in a jail cell.
At
least, that’s what she thought it was. The room was small, square, and
doorless. A featureless ceiling gave off a drab, even light. A bench
ran around the perimeter, and there was a hole in the middle of the
room whose stench advertised its purpose.
She sat up.
On the bench across from her, Nadine was weeping silently into her hands.
So
her brave little adventure had ended. She had rebelled against Mr.
Tarblecko’s tyranny and come to the same end that awaited most rebels.
It was her own foolish fault. She had acted without sufficient
forethought, without adequate planning, without scouting out the
opposition and gathering information first. She had gone up against a
Power that could range effortlessly across time and space, armed only
with a pocket handkerchief and a spare set of glasses, and inevitably
that Power had swatted her down with a contemptuous minimum of their
awesome force.
They hadn’t even bothered to take away her purse.
Ellie
dug through it, found a cellophane-wrapped hard candy, and popped it
into her mouth. She sucked on it joylessly. All hope whatsoever was
gone from her.
Still,
even when one has no hope, one’s obligations remain. "Are you all
right, Nadine?" she forced herself to ask. "Is there anything I can do
to help?"
Nadine
lifted her tear-stained face. "I just went through a door," she said.
"That’s all. I didn’t do anything bad or wrong or . . . or anything.
And now I’m here!" Fury blazed up in her. "Damn you, damn you, damn
you!"
"Me?" Ellie said, astonished.
"You!
You shouldn’t have let them get us. You should’ve taken us to some
hiding place, and then gotten us back home. But you didn’t. You’re a
stupid, useless old woman!"
It
was all Ellie could do to keep from smacking the young lady. But Nadine
was practically a child, she told herself, and it didn’t seem as if
they raised girls to have much gumption in the year 2004. They were
probably weak and spoiled people, up there in the twenty-first century,
who had robots to do all their work for them, and nothing to do but sit
around and listen to the radio all day. So she held not only her hand,
but her tongue. "Don’t worry, dear," she said soothingly. "We’ll get
out of this. Somehow."
Nadine stared at her bleakly, disbelievingly. "How?" she demanded.
But to this Ellie had no answer.
Time
passed. Hours, by Ellie’s estimation, and perhaps many hours. And with
its passage, she found herself, more out of boredom than from the
belief that it would be of any use whatsoever, looking at the situation
analytically again.
How had the Aftermen tracked her down?
Some
sort of device on the time-door might perhaps warn them that an
unauthorized person had passed through. But the "police" had located
her so swiftly and surely! They had clearly known exactly where she
was. Their machine had come straight toward the building they’d
entered. The floods of non-men had flushed her right out into their
arms.
So it was something about her, or on her, that had brought the Aftermen so quickly.
Ellie
looked at her purse with new suspicion. She dumped its contents on the
ledge beside her, and pawed through them, looking for the guilty
culprit. A few hard candies, a lace hankie, half a pack of cigarettes,
fountain pen, glasses case, bottle of aspirin, house key . . . and the
key to the time closet. The only thing in all she owned that had come
to her direct from Mr. Tarblecko. She snatched it up.
It looked ordinary enough. Ellie rubbed it, sniffed it, touched it gently to her tongue.
It tasted sour.
Sour,
the way a small battery tasted if you touched your tongue to it. There
was a faint trickle of electricity coming from the thing. It was
clearly no ordinary key.
She
pushed her glasses up on her forehead, held the thing to her eye, and
squinted. It looked exactly like a common everyday key. Almost. It had
no manufacturer’s name on it, and that was unexpected, given that the
key looked new and unworn. The top part of it was covered with
irregular geometric decorations.
Or were they decorations?
She
looked up to see Nadine studying her steadily, unblinkingly, like a
cat. "Nadine, honey, your eyes are younger than mine–would you take a
look at this? Are those tiny . . . switches on this thing?"
"What?" Nadine accepted the key from her, examined it, poked at it with one nail.
Flash.
When Ellie stopped blinking and could see again, one wall of their cell had disappeared.
Nadine
stepped to the very edge of the cell, peering outward. A cold wind
whipped bitter flakes of snow about her. "Look!" she cried. Then, when
Ellie stood beside her to see what she saw, Nadine wrapped her arms
about the older woman and stepped out into the abyss.
Ellie screamed.
The
two women piloted the police vehicle up Broadway, toward Times Square.
Though a multiplicity of instruments surrounded the windshield, the
controls were simplicity itself: a single stick that, when pushed
forward, accelerated the vehicle, and, when pushed to either side,
turned it. Apparently, the police did not need to be particularly
smart. Neither the steering mechanism nor the doors had any locks on
them, so far as Ellie could tell. Apparently, the drone-men had so
little initiative that locks weren’t required. Which would help explain
how she and Nadine had escaped so easily.
"How
did you know this vehicle was beneath us?" Ellie asked. "How did you
know we’d be able to drive it? I almost had a heart attack when you
pushed me out on top of it."
"Way rad, wasn’t it? Straight out of a Hong Kong video." Nadine grinned. "Just call me Michelle Yeoh."
"If
you say so." She was beginning to rethink her hasty judgment of the
lass. Apparently the people of 2004 weren’t quite the shrinking violets
she’d made them out to be.
With
a flicker and a hum, a square sheet of glass below the windshield came
to life. Little white dots of light danced, jittered, and coalesced to
form a face.
It was Mr. Tarblecko.
"Time criminals of the Dawn Era," his voice thundered from a hidden speaker. "Listen and obey."
Ellie
shrieked, and threw her purse over the visi-plate. "Don’t listen to
him!" she ordered Nadine. "See if you can find a way of turning this
thing off !"
"Bring the stolen vehicle to a complete halt immediately!"
To
her horror, if not her surprise, Ellie found herself pulling the
steering-bar back, slowing the police car to a stop. But then Nadine,
in blind obedience to Mr. Tarblecko’s compulsive voice, grabbed for the
bar as well. Simultaneously, she stumbled, and, with a little eep noise, lurched against the bar, pushing it sideways.
The vehicle slewed to one side, smashed into a building wall, and toppled over.
Then
Nadine had the roof-hatch open and was pulling her through it. "C’mon!"
she shouted. "I can see the black doorway-thingie–the, you know, place!"
Following,
Ellie had to wonder about the educational standards of the year 2004.
The young lady didn’t seem to have a very firm grasp on the English
language.
Then
they had reached Times Square and the circle of doorways at its center.
The street lights were flashing and loudspeakers were shouting "Akbang! Akbang!"
and police vehicles were converging upon them from every direction, but
there was still time. Ellie tapped the nearest doorway with her key.
Nothing. The next. Nothing. Then she was running around the building,
scraping the key against each doorway, and . . . there it was!
She seized Nadine’s hand, and they plunged through.
The
space inside expanded in a great wheel to all sides. Ellie spun about.
There were doors everywhere–and all of them closed. She had not the
faintest idea which one led back to her own New York City.
Wait,
though! There were costumes appropriate to each time hanging by their
doors. If she just went down them until she found a business suit . . .
Nadine gripped her arm. "Oh, my God!"
Ellie
turned, looked, saw. A doorway–the one they had come through,
obviously–had opened behind them. In it stood Mr. Tarblecko. Or, to be
more precise, three Mr. Tarbleckos. They were all as identical as peas in a pod. She had no way of knowing which one, if any, was hers.
"Through here! Quick!" Nadine shrieked. She’d snatched open the nearest door.
Together, they fled.
"Oolohstullalu
ashulalumoota!" a woman sang out. She wore a jumpsuit and carried a
clipboard, which she thrust into Ellie’s face. "Oolalulaswula ulalulin."
"I
. . . I don’t understand what you’re saying," Ellie faltered. They
stood on the green lawn of a gentle slope that led down to the ocean.
Down by the beach, enormous construction machines, operated by both men
and women (women! of all the astonishing sights she had seen, this was
strangest), were rearing an enormous, enigmatic structure, reminiscent
to Ellie’s eye of Sunday school illustrations of the Tower of Babel.
Gentle tropical breezes stirred her hair.
"Dawn Era, Amerlingo," the clipboard said. "Exact period uncertain. Answer these questions. Gas–for lights or for cars?"
"For cars, mostly. Although there are still a few–"
"Apples–for eating or computing?"
"Eating," Ellie said, while simultaneously Nadine said, "Both."
"Scopes–for dreaming or for resurrecting?"
Neither woman said anything.
The
clipboard chirped in a satisfied way. "Early Atomic Age, pre- and
post-Hiroshima, one each. You will experience a moment’s discomfort. Do
not be alarmed. It is for your own good."
"Please."
Ellie turned from the woman to the clipboard and back, uncertain which
to address. "What’s going on? Where are we? We have so many–"
"There’s
no time for questions," the woman said impatiently. Her accent was
unlike anything Ellie had ever heard before. "You must undergo
indoctrination, loyalty imprinting, and chronomilitary training
immediately. We need all the time-warriors we can get. This base is
going to be destroyed in the morning."
"What? I . . ."
"Hand me your key."
Without
thinking, Ellie gave the thing to the woman. Then a black nausea
overcame her. She swayed, fell, and was unconscious before she hit the
ground.
"Would you like some heroin?"
The
man sitting opposite her had a face that was covered with blackwork
tattoo eels. He grinned, showing teeth that had all been filed to a
point.
"I beg
your pardon?" Ellie was not at all certain where she was, or how she
had gotten here. Nor did she comprehend how she could have understood
this alarming fellow’s words, for he most certainly had not been speaking English.
"Heroin." He thrust the open metal box of white powder at her. "Do you want a snort?"
"No, thank you." Ellie spoke carefully, trying not to give offense. "I find that it gives me spots."
With a disgusted noise, the man turned away.
Then the young woman sitting beside her said in a puzzled way, "Don’t I know you?"
She turned. It was Nadine. "Well, my dear, I should certainly hope you haven’t forgotten me so soon."
"Mrs. Voigt?" Nadine said wonderingly. "But you’re . . . you’re . . . young!"
Involuntarily,
Ellie’s hands went up to her face. The skin was taut and smooth. The
incipient softening of her chin was gone. Her hair, when she brushed
her hands through it, was sleek and full.
She found herself desperately wishing she had a mirror.
"They
must have done something. While I was asleep." She lightly touched her
temples, the skin around her eyes. "I’m not wearing any glasses! I can
see perfectly!" She looked around her. The room she was in was even
more Spartan than the jail cell had been. There were two metal benches
facing each other, and on them sat as motley a collection of men and
women as she had ever seen. There was a woman who must have weighed
three hundred pounds–and every ounce of it muscle. Beside her sat an
albino lad so slight and elfin he hardly seemed there at all. Until,
that is, one looked at his clever face and burning eyes. Then
one knew him to be easily the most dangerous person in the room. As for
the others, well, none of them had horns or tails, but that was about
it.
The elf leaned forward. "Dawn Era, aren’t you?" he said. "If you survive this, you’ll have to tell me how you got here."
"I–"
"They
want you to think you’re as good as dead already. Don’t believe them! I
wouldn’t have signed up in the first place, if I hadn’t come back
afterward and told myself I’d come through it all intact." He winked
and settled back. "The situation is hopeless, of course. But I wouldn’t
take it seriously."
Ellie blinked. Was everybody mad here?
In
that same instant, a visi-plate very much like the one in the police
car lowered from the ceiling, and a woman appeared on it. "Hero
mercenaries," she said, "I salute you! As you already know, we are at
the very front lines of the War. The Aftermen Empire has been slowly,
inexorably moving backward into their past, our present, a year at
time. So far, the Optimized Rationality of True Men has lost five
thousand three hundred and fourteen years to their onslaught." Her eyes
blazed. "That advance ends here! That advance ends now! We have lost so
far because, living down-time from the Aftermen, we cannot obtain a
technological superiority to them. Every weapon we invent passes
effortlessly into their hands.
"So
we are going to fight and defeat them, not with technology but with the
one quality that, not being human, they lack–human character! Our
researches into the far past have shown that superior technology can be
defeated by raw courage and sheer numbers. One man with a sunstroker
can be overwhelmed by savages equipped with nothing more than neutron
bombs–if there are enough of them, and they don’t mind dying! An
army with energy guns can be destroyed by rocks and sticks and
determination.
"In
a minute, your transporter and a million more like it will arrive at
staging areas afloat in null-time. You will don respirators and
disembark. There you will find the time-torpedoes. Each one requires
two operators–a pilot and a button-pusher. The pilot will bring you in
as close as possible to the Aftermen time-dreadnoughts. The
button-pusher will then set off the chronomordant explosives."
This is madness, Ellie thought. I’ll do no such thing.
Simultaneous with the thought came the realization that she had the
complex skills needed to serve as either pilot or button-pusher. They
must have been given to her at the same time she had been made young
again and her eyesight improved.
"Not
one in a thousand of you will live to make it anywhere near the
time-dreadnoughts. But those few who do will justify the sacrifices of
the rest. For with your deaths, you will be preserving humanity from
enslavement and destruction! Martyrs, I salute you." She clenched her
fist. "We are nothing! The Rationality is all!"
Then
everyone was on his or her feet, all facing the visi-screen, all
raising clenched fists in response to the salute, and all chanting as
one, "We are nothing! The Rationality is all!"
To
her horror and disbelief, Ellie discovered herself chanting the oath of
self-abnegation in unison with the others, and, worse, meaning every
word of it.
The
woman who had taken the key away from her had said something about
"loyalty imprinting." Now Ellie understood what that term entailed.
In
the gray not-space of null-time, Ellie kicked her way into the
time-torpedo. It was, to her newly sophisticated eyes, rather a
primitive thing: Fifteen grams of nano-mechanism welded to a
collapsteel hull equipped with a noninertial propulsion unit and packed
with five tons of something her mental translator rendered as
"annihilatium." This last, she knew to the core of her being, was
ferociously destructive stuff.
Nadine
wriggled in after her. "Let me pilot," she said. "I’ve been playing
video games since Mario was the villain in Donkey Kong."
"Nadine,
dear, there’s something I’ve been meaning to ask you." Ellie settled
into the button-pusher slot. There were twenty-three steps to setting
off the annihilatium, each one finicky, and if even one step were taken
out of order, nothing would happen. She had absolutely no doubt she
could do it correctly, swiftly, efficiently.
"Yes?"
"Does all that futuristic jargon of yours actually mean anything?"
Nadine’s laughter was cut off by a squawk
from the visi-plate. The woman who had lectured them earlier appeared,
looking stern. "Launch in twenty-three seconds," she said. "For the
Rationality!"
"For the Rationality!" Ellie responded fervently and in unison with Nadine. Inside, however, she was thinking, How did I get into this? and then, ruefully, Well, there’s no fool like an old fool.
"Eleven seconds . . . seven seconds . . . three seconds . . . one second."
Nadine launched.
Without
time and space, there can be neither sequence nor pattern. The battle
between the Aftermen dreadnoughts and the time-torpedoes of the
Rationality, for all its shifts and feints and evasions, could be
reduced to a single blip of instantaneous action and then rendered into
a single binary datum: win/lose.
The Rationality lost.
The time-dreadnoughts of the Aftermen crept another year into the past.
But
somewhere in the very heart of that not-terribly-important battle, two
torpedoes, one of which was piloted by Nadine, converged upon the
hot-spot of guiding consciousness that empowered and drove the flagship
of the Aftermen time-armada. Two button-pushers set off their
explosives. Two shock-waves bowed outward, met, meshed, and merged with
the expanding shock-wave of the countermeasure launched by the
dreadnought’s tutelary awareness.
Something terribly complicated happened.
Ellie
found herself sitting at a table in the bar of the Algonquin Hotel,
back in New York City. Nadine was sitting opposite her. To either side
of them were the clever albino and the man with the tattooed face and
the filed teeth.
The
albino smiled widely. "Ah, the primitives! Of all who could have
survived–myself excepted, of course–you are the most welcome."
His
tattooed companion frowned. "Please show some more tact, Sev. However
they may appear to us, these folk are not primitives to themselves."
"You
are right as always, Dun Jal. Permit me to introduce myself. I am
Seventh-Clone of House Orpen, Lord Extratemporal of the Centuries 3197
through 3992 Inclusive, Backup Heir Potential to the Indeterminate
Throne. Sev, for short."
"Dun Jal. Mercenary. From the early days of the Rationality. Before it grew decadent."
"Eleanor Voigt, Nadine Shepard. I’m from 1936, and she’s from 2004. Where–if that’s the right word–are we?"
"Neither
where nor when, delightful aboriginal. We have obviously been thrown
into hypertime, that no-longer-theoretical state informing and
supporting the more mundane seven dimensions of time with which you are
doubtless familiar. Had we minds capable of perceiving it directly
without going mad, who knows what we should see? As it is," he
waved a hand, "all this is to me as my One-Father’s clonatorium, in
which so many of I spent our minority."
"I see a workshop," Dun Jal said.
"I see–" Nadine began.
Dun
Jal turned pale. "A Tarbleck-null!" He bolted to his feet, hand
instinctively going for a side-arm which, in their current state, did
not exist.
"Mr.
Tarblecko!" Ellie gasped. It was the first time she had thought of him
since her imprinted technical training in the time-fortress of the
Rationality, and speaking his name brought up floods of related
information: That there were seven classes of Aftermen, or Tarblecks as
they called themselves. That the least of them, the Tarbleck-sixes,
were brutal and domineering overlords. That the greatest of them, the
Tarbleck-nulls, commanded the obedience of millions. That the maximum
power a Tarbleck-null could call upon at an instant’s notice was four
quads per second per second. That the physical expression of that power
was so great that, had she known, Ellie would never have gone through
that closet door in the first place.
Sev gestured toward an empty chair. "Yes, I thought it was about time for you to show up."
The
sinister grey Afterman drew up the chair and sat down to their table.
"The small one knows why I am here," he said. "The others do not. It is
degrading to explain myself to such as you, so he shall have to."
"I
am so privileged as to have studied the more obscure workings of time,
yes." The little man put his fingertips together and smiled a fey, foxy
smile over their tips. "So I know that physical force is useless here.
Only argument can prevail. Thus . . . trial by persuasion it is. I
shall go first."
He
stood up. "My argument is simple: As I told our dear, savage friends
here earlier, an heir-potential to the Indeterminate Throne is too
valuable to risk on uncertain adventures. Before I was allowed to
enlist as a mercenary, my elder self had to return from the experience
to testify I would survive it unscathed. I did. Therefore, I will."
He sat.
There was a moment’s silence. "That’s all you have to say?" Dun Jal asked.
"It is enough."
"Well."
Dun Jal cleared his throat and stood. "Then it is my turn. The Empire
of the Aftermen is inherently unstable at all points. Perhaps it was a
natural phenomenon–once. Perhaps the Aftermen arose from the
workings of ordinary evolutionary processes, and could at one time
claim that therefore they had a natural place in this continuum. That
changed when they began to expand their Empire into their own past. In
order to enable their back-conquests, they had to send agents to all
prior periods in time to influence and corrupt, to change the flow of
history into something terrible and terrifying, from which they might
arise. And so they did.
"Massacres,
death-camps, genocide, World Wars . . ." (There were other terms that
did not translate, concepts more horrible than Ellie had words for.)
"You don’t really think those were the work of human beings, do
you? We’re much too sensible a race for that sort of thing–when we’re
left to our own devices. No, all the worst of our miseries are
instigated by the Aftermen. We are far from perfect, and the best
example of this is the cruel handling of the War in the final years of
the Optimized Rationality of True Men, where our leaders have become
almost as terrible as the Aftermen themselves–because it is from their
very ranks that the Aftermen shall arise. But what might we have been?
"Without
the interference of the Aftermen might we not have become something
truly admirable? Might we not have become not the Last Men, but the
First truly worthy of the name?" He sat down.
Lightly, sardonically, Sev applauded. "Next?"
The
Tarbleck-null placed both hands heavily on the table, and, leaning
forward, pushed himself up. "Does the tiger explain himself to the
sheep?" he asked. "Does he need to explain? The sheep
understand well enough that Death has come to walk among them, to eat
those it will and spare the rest only because he is not yet hungry. So
too do men understand that they have met their master. I do not enslave
men because it is right or proper, but because I can. The proof of which is that I have!
"Strength
needs no justification. It exists or it does not. I exist. Who here can
say that I am not your superior? Who here can deny that Death has come
to walk among you? Natural selection chose the fittest among men to
become a new race. Evolution has set my foot upon your necks, and I
will not take it off."
To
universal silence, he sat down. The very slightest of glances he threw
Ellie’s way, as if to challenge her to refute him. Nor could she! Her
thoughts were all confusion, her tongue all in a knot. She knew he was
wrong–she was sure of it!–and yet she could not put her arguments
together. She simply couldn’t think clearly and quickly enough.
Nadine laughed lightly.
"Poor
superman!" she said. "Evolution isn’t linear, like that chart that has
a fish crawling out of the water at one end and a man in a business
suit at the other. All species are constantly trying to evolve in all
directions at once–a little taller, a little shorter, a little faster,
a little slower. When that distinction proves advantageous, it tends to
be passed along. The Aftermen aren’t any smarter than Men are–less so,
in some ways. Less flexible, less innovative . . . look what a stagnant
world they’ve created! What they are is more forceful."
"Forceful?" Ellie said, startled. "Is that all?"
"That’s
enough. Think of all the trouble caused by men like Hitler, Mussolini,
Caligula, Pol Pot, Archers-Wang 43. . . . All they had was the force of
their personality, the ability to get others to do what they wanted.
Well, the Aftermen are the descendants of exactly such people, only
with the force of will squared and cubed. That afternoon when the
Tarbleck-null ordered you to sit in the window? It was the easiest
thing in the world to one of them. As easy as breathing.
"That’s why the Rationality can’t win. Oh, they could
win, if they were willing to root out that streak of persuasive
coercion within themselves. But they’re fighting a war, and in times of
war one uses whatever weapons one has. The ability to tell millions of
soldiers to sacrifice themselves for the common good is simply too
useful to be thrown away. But all the time they’re fighting the
external enemy, the Aftermen are evolving within their own numbers."
"You admit it," the Tarbleck said.
"Oh,
be still! You’re a foolish little creature, and you have no idea what
you’re up against. Have you ever asked the Aftermen from the leading
edge of your Empire why you’re expanding backward into the past rather
than forward into the future? Obviously because there are bigger and
more dangerous things up ahead of you than you dare face. You’re afraid
to go there–afraid that you might find me!" Nadine took something out of her pocket. "Now go away, all of you."
Flash.
Nothing changed. Everything changed.
Ellie
was still sitting in the Algonquin with Nadine. But Sev, Dun Jal, and
the Tarbleck-null were all gone. More significantly, the bar felt real in a way it hadn’t an instant before. She was back home, in her own now and her own when.
Ellie
dug into her purse and came up with a crumpled pack of Lucky Strike
Greens, teased one out, and lit it. She took a deep drag on the
cigarette and then exhaled. "All right," she said, "who are you?"
The girl’s eyes sparkled with amusement. "Why, Ellie, dear, don’t you know? I’m you!"
So
it was that Eleanor Voigt was recruited into the most exclusive
organization in all Time–an organization that was comprised in hundreds
of thousands of instances entirely and solely of herself. Over the
course of millions of years, she grew and evolved, of course, so that
her ultimate terrifying and glorious self was not even remotely human.
But everything starts somewhere, and Ellie of necessity had to start
small.
The
Aftermen were one of the simpler enemies of the humane future she felt
that Humanity deserved. Nevertheless they had to be–gently and
nonviolently, which made the task more difficult–opposed.
After
fourteen months of training and the restoration of all her shed age,
Ellie was returned to New York City on the morning she had first
answered the odd help wanted ad in the Times. Her original self had been detoured away from the situation, to be recruited if necessary at a later time.
"Unusual in what way?" she asked. "I don’t understand. What am I looking for?"
"You’ll know it when you see it," the Tarbleck-null said.
He handed her the key.
She
accepted it. There were tools hidden within her body whose powers
dwarfed those of this primitive chrono-transfer device. But the encoded
information the key contained would lay open the workings of the
Aftermen Empire to her. Working right under their noses, she would be
able to undo their schemes, diminish their power, and, ultimately,
prevent them from ever coming into existence in the first place.
Ellie
had only the vaguest idea how she was supposed to accomplish all this.
But she was confident that she could figure it out, given time. And she
had the time.
All the time in the world.