waiters, the paleontologists, the musicians, the workmen who built the station in the first place and would salvage its fixtures when we were done with it ⦠maybe a hundred representative individuals in all.
When I was done, I had a three-dimensional representation of Hilltop Station as a node of intersecting lives in time. It was one hell of a complex figure.
It looked like the Gordian knot.
Then I started crafting a memo back to my younger self. A carbon steel, razor-edged, Damascene sword of a memo. One that would slice Hilltop Station into a thousand spasming paradoxical fragments.
Hire him, fire her, strand a hundred young scientists, all fit and capable of breeding, one million years BC . Oh, and donât father any children.
It would bring our sponsors down upon us like so many angry hornets. The Unchanging would yank time travel out of human handsâretroactively. Everything connected to it would be looped out of reality and into the disintegrative medium of quantum uncertainty. Hilltop Station would dissolve into the realm of might-have-been. The research and findings of thousands of dedicated scientists would vanish from human knowing. My son would never have been conceived or born or sent callously to an unnecessary death.
Everything I had spent my life working to accomplish would be undone.
It sounded good to me.
When the memo was done, I marked it PRIORITY and MY EYES ONLY. Then I prepared to send it three months back in time.
The door opened behind me with a click. I spun around in my chair. In walked the one man in all existence who could possibly stop me.
âThe kid got to enjoy twenty-four years of life before he died,â the Old Man said. âDonât take that away from him.â
I looked up into his eyes.
Into my own eyes.
Those eyes fascinated and repulsed me. They were deepest brown, and nested in a lifetimeâs accumulation of wrinkles. Iâve been working with my older self since I first signed up with Hilltop Station, and they were still a mystery to me, absolutely opaque. They made me feel like a mouse being stared down by a snake.
âItâs not the kid,â I said. âItâs everything.â
âI know.â
âI only met him tonightâPhilippe, I mean. Hawkins was just a new recruit. I barely knew him.â
The Old Man capped the Glenlivet and put it back in the liquor cabinet. Until he did that, I hadnât even noticed I was drinking. âI keep forgetting how emotional I was when I was young,â he said.
âI donât feel young.â
âWait until youâre my age.â
Iâm not sure how old the Old Man is. There are longevity treatments available for those who play the game, and the Old Man has been playing this lousy game so long he practically runs it. All I know is that he and I are the same person.
My thoughts took a sudden swerve. âGod damn that stupid kid!â I blurted. âWhat was he doing outside the compound in the first place?â
The Old Man shrugged. âHe was curious. All scientists are. He saw something and went out to examine it. Leave it be, kid. Whatâs done is done.â
I glanced at the memo Iâd written. âWeâll find out.â
He placed a second memo alongside mine. âI took the liberty of writing this for you. Thought Iâd spare you the pain of having to compose it.â
I picked up the memo, glanced at its contents. It was the one Iâd received yesterday. ââHawkins was attacked and killed by Satan shortly after local midnight today,ââ I quoted. ââTake all necessary measures to control gossip.ââ Overcome with loathing, I said, âThis is exactly why Iâm going to bust up this whole filthy system. You think I want to become the kind of man who can send his own son off to die? You think I want to become you ?â
That hit home. For a long moment the Old Man did not speak.
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