Thursday, 1 August 2013

COMPLETE THE CIRCLE - Chapter 20

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Chapter 20

After a pretty active weekend with each other, Deanne Clarkson and David Lutman left the house the following Monday morning, immediately after another sumptuous breakfast, for the Hartingdon Physics Laboratories. There were no changes in their current plans as there still had not been any e-mail.
To Lutman’s surprise, the labs were located fairly close to the centre of town; he had expected them to be placed somewhere isolated, miles from anywhere. Upon arrival, however, there was the immediate task of arranging the necessary clearances required for him to gain access into the complex.
As they waited outside the perimeter, he could see that the facility was a series of white blocks: low-level, clean and modern. The whole structure was surrounded by two separated five-meter high wire fences. The inner was electrified, with red notices ominously telling him in no uncertain terms what would happen if touched.
Accessing the complex required clearing two sets of security. At the main gate, they entered a reception area contained within one of the smaller white blocks. It was here that Lutman’s passes were arranged, sorted, signed, and verified. Despite her father’s string-pulling, it still took a whole hour of sitting and waiting before he was finally able to get into the grounds.
Passing countless other blocks and white-coated people, they walked about four hundred meters towards another white building, the purpose-built laboratory block where Deanne’s workplace was housed. Despite its extremely modern appearance, it was one of the older constructions, around thirty years old. It was also completely surrounded by another high wire fence.
Another security guard frisked Lutman, taking two minutes to closely examine all his shiny new identification cards before letting him through. But if he was surprised to find that the two cardboard boxes they were carrying contained two identical green baseball caps, he did not show it.
Lutman was both surprised and puzzled. ‘So why all the high fencing and the two sets of checks if your lab isn’t considered high security?’ he asked as they finally made their way through the heavy blue swing doors and down the white-walled corridor.
It isn’t,’ Deanne said, smiling. ‘There’s other places here that require not just two checks, but three or more, not to mention special pass cards allocated only to certain staff. There’s even electronic scanning machines that examine your palm prints or eye retinas in detail before they even let you in.’ She added that access to these levels demanded an incredibly intensive investigation into an individual’s historical background before they could even seek gainful employment at the labs: for certain, Lutman would not have been allowed inside if it had not been for her father’s influence.
The sophistication, the variety, and the number of pieces of equipment, along with the brain-power contained within the facility, was, Lutman learned, unique and even covert. As Deanne pointed out, the secrets that could be unravelled from the minds and machines here was perhaps only second to a certain set of laboratories in Switzerland.
She pushed open a heavy swing fire door, revealing a long, fluorescently-lit but featureless grey corridor. They walked past a number of windowless white doors before approaching another heavy door with a frosted-glass window. Once opened, they entered a small office area where the far side wall was one large window.
My laboratory,’ Deanne said proudly.
Jesus.’ The laboratory was far bigger than Lutman had ever imagined. He learned that it was not only occupied by Deanne during working hours, but it was also used by five other staff. They were decked out in spotlessly clean pale blue gowns, hats, and gloves, and wearing surgical masks. They looked more like surgeons than scientists. The lab itself was pretty much what he had in mind: pointlessly big, white, grey, lots of big metal boxes, and lots of flashing lights.
Deanne’s workplace was about the size of her apartment living room. Like most offices, it contained bookshelves, a desk, two office chairs, a large metal cupboard in the corner, and a computer. There was also clear glass which made up the wall facing the laboratory. ‘Right,’ she announced nonchalantly. ‘We’re off to take a shower.’
Er, sorry?’ said Lutman, really not believing what he had just heard her say.
We’re taking a shower. Now.’
Er, you’re having me on… aren’t you?’
No, I’m not joking!’ she laughed. ‘Follow me!’
They left the office and made their way to a blue door that was clearly marked with a shower rose pictogram.
Get your clothes off,’ she said firmly after they walked into what looked like a sports changing room. She immediately began stripping off. ‘Put your clothes in the lockers over there,’ she said casually, ‘then follow me through to the next door. You’ll see an air-sealed shrink-wrapped towel inside. Take it with you, but don’t open it.’
Er… okay,’ Lutman was feeling shy and very uncomfortable as he began to remove his clothes, looking around to see if there was anybody else in the same room, or if there was anybody about to join them. ‘Can, er, anyone use these rooms? I mean, are they unisex?’ he added coyly. But then the next door hissed slowly open, sliding to the right. Lutman suddenly felt a rush of air. Clearly the next area was pressurized. Completely naked, they walked through to be met by four shower cubicles. Deanne strode straight to the one on the far left and began washing herself. ‘And wash yourself thoroughly,’ she called to Lutman.
They spent the next five minutes scrupulously soaping and cleansing themselves in the most powerful showers he had ever experienced.
Wrapped in her towel, Deanne opened a white metal locker and took out one of the surgical gowns he had seen earlier, and what appeared to be a disposable bra and knickers. She indicated to Lutman that his gown and underpants would be found in the same numbered locker as his clothes locker.
I hope it’s warm out there,’ said Lutman hopefully, ‘’cos we really don’t have much on!’
Believe me,’ said Deanne, ‘it is!’
They proceeded to a heavy glass door which automatically, but slowly, opened with another, very audible hiss. After entering Deanne ensured it clicked shut behind them. Another large glass door was right in front of them, next to which was a keypad.
Deanne tapped in another combination. The room suddenly depressurized, and then the large, very heavy glass door also opened slowly. Warm air suddenly blew hard into their faces. As Lutman caught his breath, his lungs were suddenly filled with the sweetest, freshest air he had ever experienced.
This is perhaps one of the most sterile places around,’ Deanne explained, ‘and although we’ve air-con, the heat these machines generate means we’re constantly in the eighties here.’
The first thing to hit Lutman as he surveyed his new surroundings was that everything was spotlessly clean and immaculately white. There was a considerable amount of electronic equipment: large, small, sophisticated, with lots of flashing, lots of perspex, miles of wiring, constant humming noises, in fact everything he would expect a hi-tech laboratory to contain. There were two sets of metal stairs that led up to another floor that lined all four walls, and which contained even more electrical apparatus. This left the centre of the lab with considerable space which was covered by a clear blue-glass ceiling. The far wall was made up of several additional windows to allow as much natural light as possible into the laboratory.
Despite the size of the lab, Deanne’s tour took less than ten minutes. ‘It would take me the best part of a week to explain what everything does and how they all work, and I have to get on with my own tasks,’ she explained.
So when can we get to look at the caps?’ Lutman asked restlessly, at the same time wondering if they would have to go back through the complicated showering routine to retrieve them.
Later David, when things aren’t so busy, okay?’
So what can I do here?’
She shook her head. ‘Not a lot, I reckon. Look, why don’t you go to my office and do a bit more investigating on my computer, and check whether Mr. Carl or Mr. Pickover have responded?’
What?’ said Lutman incredulously, ‘after all that palaver? You're kidding me, right? You mean I’ve got to go back through the whole shower routine again?’
Oh dear, you do complain!’ she said laughing, ‘It’s not so bad on the way back. Just press the glowing red button, all the doors will slide open automatically, look for the perspex box, and get rid of your gown by following the instructions.’
Okay,’ he said uncertainly, ‘so how long will you be out here?’
All day, at least ‘til six. Don’t worry – they come round often with drinks and sandwiches, so you’ll be well fed.’
Right,’ said Lutman dully. ‘Thanks a lot.’
*

Do you want to dispose of your protective gown?

Lutman pressed yes on the touch screen.
The next instruction then told him to place the gown into the container, and to close it. A second later, everything inside was immediately swallowed up as the suction sent it into a sterilizing vacuum chamber. He was then directed straight to the main door and out of the changing rooms. Another shower was not necessary.
Soon he was back in Deanne’s office. He then saw Deanne, who was waiting for him, and standing at the window, holding a tiny remote receiver. She beckoned to him to switch on the similar device on the desk.
I have a little additional task for you,’ said her voice from the speaker. She pointed. ‘See that Perspex case over there?’
Lutman looked across the room. ‘I do.’
I want you to put the baseball caps into the two clear bags in the case, and then put the case into that small door over to your right marked ‘goodies’.’
Goodies?’
That’s where stuff has to go before we can examine it. Decontamination, sterilization, the rest of it. Put them in when you see me gesture at you from the other side, okay? Again, just follow the on-screen instructions. I’ll also give you my log-in name and password so you can use my computer.’
Lutman placed the caps into individually sealed containers as per touch-screen instructions, and placed them into a larger, blue perspex container. The containers then dropped slowly down and out of sight into a box that was attached to the wall. Thirty seconds later Deanne received them from the other side, eagerly scooping them up and disappearing behind one of the big machines.
*
Returning to the computer, David Lutman began to check their mail. Still nothing.
He decided it was high time to find out what was happening back in the UK; he had not done this since he and Deanne set off from Las Vegas; he was too focussed on her.
There were messages from his family, and even one from work from his boss, Mr. Theodore Meade, that was dated the previous Friday. He told him to get in contact on a special number as soon as he returned home.
He went back to the search engine and decided to see if Deanne Clarkson herself was listed in any of the indexes. Indeed, this name was listed several times, and there were four different Deanne Clarksons, most of the entries concentrating on a little-known author. After discovering his Deanne, Lutman found that the first four links mentioned her being involved in some scientific projects.
It was not until he clicked on the fifth link that he found something of more interest. There was a student yearbook that included a group photograph of sophomore physics students from John Carroll University in Cleveland. He looked closely at the photo, clicked to save, and then pressed print. There were six students in the photo, and despite having much longer hair, Deanne was distinctly recognizable. There was also another girl, and four men.
He made a note of the web site address and the names of each of the students.
The one remaining link had her listed, with her father, as respected physicists on a specialized website, which required an account to access.
He decided, once more, to conduct a little more time travel research. After about fifteen minutes sifting through a few initially hopeful sites that promised much but said nothing, he hit upon a magazine interview with someone who claimed they had successfully built and travelled in a time machine. The magazine was called SBT (Strange But True), a monthly science and fantasy periodical that published selected extracts from contributors online. It had chosen to publish the latter part of an interview it claimed as ‘exclusive’.
The interviewee concerned was referred to only as Nick in the dialogue:

SBT: So tell us a little about your machine.
NICK: I’m afraid the mechanics and the motions are confidential, and I hope that as this interview progresses you’ll appreciate that.
SBT: So when you traveled which direction did you move in first?
NICK: I went into the past.
SBT: But when you traveled to the past weren’t you worried that you could change an event which subsequently affects the present?
NICK: I was only there for about five minutes in each case, so I had little or no time to do so. I didn’t at that stage want to test out the grandfather paradox, or be part of any paradox, or to find out if I was to become part of a pre-destination paradox.
SBT: What are these paradoxes?
NICK: The Grandfather paradox is when you go back and kill your own grandfather before mom or dad are conceived. But then what happens to you? Try this. If you try to kill someone but fail, could you then just try again and keep trying until you get it right? I personally don’t warm to that one but I wouldn’t want to unintentionally disrupt the timeline to affect mine. There is a similar paradox known as the Bootstrap Paradox where things exist without ever been created.
SBT: Explain.
NICK: The Bootstrap Paradox, from the expression ‘pulling yourself up by your bootstraps’, from a short story written by Robert A. Heinlein, is when you travel back in time to pass on an object, information, or themselves to someone in the past, who then uses what has been passed to them in order to create that very situation in the future that allows that person to travel back in time with that object, information, or themselves to that same individual in the past…
SBT: And the pre-destination paradox?
NICK: That’s when you are destined to do something, and thus become part of a never-ending time-loop. For example, if you go into the past to change something, it could be something you were meant to do. You change it, and in turn set up the events that lead to your future self doing the whole loop all over again.
SBT: So how far did you get in the future?
NICK: First of all it was three hours forward, and then, with a little tweaking, I got it to go forward a week, and then two months, and eventually I managed to get there by almost a year. To get it further into the future was rather like trying to get more horsepower out of a motor, and at one point on that latter journey I was afraid I might cause irreparable damage to the machine. But thankfully it got me back okay. Just before I managed that, one of my friends, who has a device built along the same lines, made it five years in the future, and what he told me filled me with considerable optimism.
SBT: And what did your friend discover?
NICK: A complete step forward in the human condition. Everyone was happy, no war, no violence, racial tolerance, flying cars. He said it was so wonderful, so peaceful. The human race had finally grown up. And in only five years!
SBT: Didn’t he try to find out what happened that made us change in those five years? It’s a considerably short space of time to change the way the human race works, when you think about the last century…
NICK: He was only out there for ten minutes or so…
SBT: But did he bring back any evidence?
NICK: No, nothing. Nothing tangible. There really wasn’t any material he could bring back as solid proof. There were no newspapers, magazines… nothing. People were no longer interested in that kind of thing.
SBT: Couldn’t he have been the catalyst of what is to come? That is, a pre-destination paradox? That he was destined to do this?
NICK: He didn’t, so clearly he was not.
SBT: So where is your proof that you have travelled in the future? You traveled a year into the future, and the world still appeared to be fine. Didn’t you bring back any newspapers or magazines – assuming they still had… they’re still going to have these things?
NICK: After my friend’s revelations, I decided to make that trip. And when I did, well, the world still seemed to be just like it is today, but it started to have that feeling of more… optimism.
SBT: Just as an example, how was the situation in the Middle East? Did its problems get solved?
NICK: No idea.
SBT: When did you make this journey?
NICK: A month ago now.
SBT: How did you know you’d progressed a year?
NICK: Well, quite naturally, I went straight to a newsstand. Yes, papers were still available, and I looked at a copy to confirm the date…
SBT: So we already know that fact. Do you have this newspaper?
NICK: No.
SBT: Why not? That was the proof you needed!
NICK: I’ve thought long and hard about this. In the end, I decided, if I had brought this paper back, then its future contents, if known in the present, could have serious consequences on the future. And after my friend’s experiences, I decided I didn’t want to be the catalyst to end what would be a wonderful future for us all. I did not want to inadvertently change the future.
SBT: Is this why you are here today? To tell us we needn’t worry about some kind of impending disaster simply because it’s not going to happen?
NICK: That is the main reason. And I believe the future that my friend and I saw will happen. My friend says he has seen the future. We will all live in peace and harmony. He seriously believes it cannot be changed, as it has already happened – in the future sense. I, however, do believe it can be changed because, for us now, it hasn’t happened yet and therefore we can still change it. But mankind still has every chance of f_____g it up.
SBT: Do you still have your machine?
NICK: I do, but I haven’t used it since. I did send invitations out to many prominent scientists to come and check it out, to confirm my story, but they’ve all ignored me. I think they’ve just simply torn them up and thrown them out. However, my friend has agreed to share with me the modifications necessary to make that leap further.
SBT: So what are you going to do now?
NICK: I’ve persuaded my wife and child to make this journey into the future with my friend, and we’ve no intention of coming back.

*
It was not until 6.30pm that Deanne felt able to make use of the technology available to her. Most of the staff had now disappeared, although there was one assistant keeping busy in another corner and showing absolutely no interest in anything else around her.
Using the Newton DCTT-A324A computerized electron microscope, the most sophisticated analytical technology possible, Deanne conducted a detailed analysis of her cap. She then conducted the same tests on the other, and then examined the findings of the two printouts.
After a few minutes she emerged back in her office straight from the lab, her face as white as a sheet. David Lutman looked at her, alarmed. ‘What’s the matter?’ he asked urgently.
The caps!’ she gasped, ‘David, they really are one and the same cap! Exactly the same, molecule for molecule, from what I can make out!’
So that’s it. There’s no doubt now in what I told you!’
Part of Deanne had still remained convinced that Lutman had managed to pull off an incredibly elaborate and clever trick. But now there was absolutely no doubt. ‘I’m so sorry I ever distrusted you…’ she said remorsefully, ‘but… but you realize we’re now in completely unknown territory here as far as science and physics are concerned! God, I don’t even know what the implications are of having two caps that are basically one and the same but are occupying the same time and space when they shouldn’t be!’
Her voice then changed to one of extreme urgency. ‘David, whatever you do, you mustn’t let these caps touch each other! The consequences if the atomic structures of each make contact…’
Erm, Deanne…’
Goodness knows, it could trigger some kind of cataclysm…’
Deanne! Hello! Listen to me!’ Lutman shouted. ‘They won’t cause the end of the world!’
She stared at him. ‘And how do you know?’
When I hugged you last night. I took your cap with my cap hand, and the two touched each other then. Nothing happened!’
Of course!’ she said angrily to herself, but then added in relief: ‘how the hell could I forget that?’
Well, it was an emotional time –’
And not to forget that we’ve even touched both indirectly, for sure picking up molecules of grease or dirt in both caps, an atom of which would have been sufficient to destroy anything, if that really’d been the case…’
She breathed an audible sigh. ‘Well, that’s blown that particular theory wide open, so to speak!’
*
It was quite late when they eventually got back to her apartment and had dinner. The excitement they both felt after such an overwhelming discovery, along with the evidence they had before them, was impossible to comprehend. Nevertheless, they settled down onto the spacious green sofa in the living room to discuss Lutman’s earlier discoveries on the Internet.
He produced the photograph of her student days. In his mind, she really was a very pretty young lady even then. However, he could not help but ask about the four males.
Well, out of those ‘males’, as you so eloquently put it,’ she began, ‘one of them I did keep in touch with for a while – that’s the guy there on my right – he’s also a physicist, but he’s more into numbers. Perhaps one of the best mathematicians I’ve ever met.’
Looks a bit like Shaggy out of Scooby-Doo, what with the mop of brown hair and the goatee,’ Lutman observed.
I confess we did date for a couple of weeks, toured the west together five years ago, but quickly realized we didn’t have that spark. Thankfully it was a short enough relationship to ensure we’d remain pretty good friends afterwards. Funnily enough, that Grand Canyon tee-shirt was a present he bought me, after he did the walk there and I didn’t. The green shorts I showed you, in fact, also belonged to him – I washed them for him when we got back, asked him if he wanted them, and he told me I could keep them! I just put them away with all my other stuff, and they’d never seen the light of day until you arrived. Actually, I haven’t heard from him for quite a while. I know he left the States about four years ago but that was the last I heard. After that, I went to the UK and you know the rest.
Now, this guy on the end, on the left, with the wavy blonde hair, he dropped out a year before finishing his studies after getting quite a lucrative job elsewhere, and I haven’t really heard from him since. The girl – ah yes, that’s Tonya. She was nice, but you know, she tended to sleep around a bit. She completed her studies, of course, but eventually met a nice guy and now happily married with three kids. Then you’ve got me in the middle, then the mathematician, then this guy with the short blond hair – now he did very well, Works for secret government guys –’
Secret government?’
Those guys that work for the government, and who keep an eye on things and make sure people don’t cross the line. On the odd occasion they even pay our labs a visit.’
So what about this one at the end? He looks rather strange.’
Her tone shifted uncomfortably. ‘Yeah, well, I don’t know what he’s doing these days,’ she said abruptly.
Lutman sensed her discomfort and decided to let it drop. ‘Erm… Okay.’

Chapter 21 >

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