Thursday 21 March 2013

COMPLETE THE CIRCLE - Chapter 6


Chapter 6

It had now been exactly a week since his future self had paid David Lutman that visit with that message.
On this particular Saturday evening - as he did so on most Saturday evenings - Lutman kept himself shut away in his bedroom from the rest of the world. With his computer connected to his large wall-mounted high-definition TV, he then flung himself on the bed, laid down and settled to watch some television.
His bedroom had seen little change since his teens. Apart from the heaving bookshelves and a rather messy dressing table covered with loose coins, a few magazines, and piles of mail that had been both opened and unopened, it was reasonably tidy. Miscellaneous junk had been placed into neat piles upon whatever spare space existed on the shelves, and there were two orderly piles of magazines stacked in one corner. There was also a thickish layer of dust around the sills, cupboards and wardrobes that perhaps only saw a duster in Lutman’s hand once a month. His mother had long abandoned the idea of keeping his room in order. As far as she was concerned, Lutman was more than old enough to do that job.
As an action-packed drama unfolded on the screen, his mind, not for the first time, wandered back to the events last Sunday afternoon. Maybe his future self might come back and tell him more? Maybe the baseball cap was deliberately left behind. It had that message, and that surely meant something. But Dzizzy-R was all that he said before he disappeared, a phrase that was blurted out with such urgency that it, unquestionably, had to have meant something important.
But what was he supposed to do next? The holiday was now booked - that earlier instruction was clear enough - but he had no clue as to his next course of action. But every ounce of his being was telling him to continue as normal. The scenario had been set, and that there would be no way of turning back.
         He then realized that he had been staring at the TV screen for the past ten minutes with absolutely no idea as to what had been happening.
         So he switched off the TV, deciding that there really was nothing worth watching, and turned on his laptop. He went to a search engine, and once again, began the task of punching in key words and hope he would hit on something useful.
This time he spotted something. One of the results looked like it had something worth reading. He wondered how he had missed it last time around. He clicked on the link.
Headed Time and Time Travel: A Supplement to Temporal Manipulation, the piece began with some complicated and confusing explanations before stating that there were two laws of time. The first law was that no one should be allowed to meet themselves, after which it then stated that it would be impossible for anyone to interfere with their timeline. Lutman grinned, feeling pretty certain that this law had already certainly been broken, thanks to his future self. As regards the second law, the article said that it would be impossible for one to go back to the same point in time and have several attempts to change something in order to get it right. To break these rules would create paradoxical situations.
All of this was rather interesting, but Lutman then decided to return to the search engine, typing in the letters ‘DCCR’. And just as before, he was faced with a list that included ‘Detroit Catholic Charismatic Renewal’, ‘Division of Commissioned Corps Recruitment’ and the ‘Deaf Connect Chat Room’, along with another 50,000 plus hits. And just as he had done so on that long night after the event, and had been doing so regularly since then, he tried ‘DCCR’ and ‘Time Machine’ together. And not for the first time, the search engine simply told him:

Your search did not match any documents.

Now getting increasingly frustrated, he once more typed in all the obvious words and phrases. Time travel. Time paradoxes. He briefly glanced at those hits that looked promising, but not for the first time got absolutely nowhere, mainly because he soon found himself completely and utterly lost in the scientific language.
*
A very unhappy-looking Jeannie was waiting for Lutman as he arrived at work the following Monday morning. As he plopped himself into his chair, she began to explain that she and her boyfriend had split after a blistering row Friday evening. But what he had not expected to hear was that the following Saturday morning she had rushed to the travel agent, and discovered to her surprise that there had been a cancellation on his trip. She booked the slot. ‘Well, I’m free now,’ she explained cheerfully, ‘and after what you told me, it sounds fun,’ adding, ‘and it’d be a great way to forget about that arsehole.’
Yes, he thought sadly. She's free. She's young. She's single. And she’s three years younger than he is. A good age. In the current scenario, the first potential candidate for a wife.
Don’t be such an idiot, he told himself. Had he forgotten his ‘no colleagues’ rule? There will probably be many more girls to meet in the tour party when he got there. Nevertheless, he thought, who was to say that the girl concerned would come from his tour party?
‘David,’ said a graspy, chain-smoked voice from next door, ‘I’ve got someone from the Hensfield Mercury on my line wanting to talk to you about those planned night shelter spending increases.’
There would be plenty of American girls out there too. So many possibilities. Pleasant though she was, he really hoped Jeannie would remain an outside bet.
‘David! Pick up your bloody phone, will you!’
‘What? Oh, bloody hell!’
‘It’s the Hensfield Mercury!
All right! Okay! Yeah, what do they want?’
‘Didn’t you hear me? For goodness sake, find out yourself!’

Chapter 7 >

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