Epilogue

The Future: Met Four Base

Beneath Nevada’s Valley of Fire, in a twist of a vast helix bored by a nuclear subterrene tunneller, Professor Jennifer Proctor felt the first intimations of tiredness. She commanded a neural script to sharpen her concentration.

Proctor was two days out from an academic conference in Boulder, five away from a periodic review of Project Déjà Vu, and a month clear of her divorce from Sara. She looked through the transparent wall of the control room to the floor of the tunnel, where the centrifuges were turning even now. She credited her neural scripts with giving her the strength to stay on top of this mess. True, there were colleagues with whom she could confide. But there was none, apart from one man, she could trust.

She walked down the long flight of steps that led to the blast wall. Technicians nodded as she passed. There had been a time when she knew their names without recourse to the data overlay that enhanced her vision. These days, the importance of those personal connections seemed to have diminished.

She carried the chill of paranoia always: Which of them knew that she had sent the solider, codenamed Cory, through time and to his death? She had been careful to erase all trace of the operation. Logs, after all, could be deleted, and technicians paid off. But the potential for discovery remained.

And none of this changed the fact that she did not yet know why her father had been murdered.

She opened the metal door in the blast wall and entered a short corridor. Luminescent motes glowed. The corridor ended in a larger, deeper chamber about the size of a school bus. There was a rack of outdoor suits. She put one on and waited for the gases in the material to expand. The young technician at the door nodded to indicate that he had begun the priming.

Proctor stood by the technician until the priming was complete. He muttered something about a football game. She noted this attempt at small talk and smiled, but could not summon enough interest to engage with him. There was a visual overlay of his name floating near his chest. She didn’t bother to read it.

The door opened with a hiss of equalisation and Proctor stepped into Kaliningrad.

A level concrete walkway had been laid on the sloping floor of the underground bunker. It spanned the sealed chamber in a lazy sigmoid that reached all the way to the far end, where vertical panels of amber stood in the arrangement they had once held, almost a century before, when the German army had evacuated them from St Petersburg.

Proctor pulled up her hood to cover her white hair. She approached the three sets of amber panels. They were silent as monoliths. Parts of the panels had been damaged in transit, scorched, or cracked by the team who had supervised the restoration, before being encased in carbon nano-mesh.

The panels surrounded a time band, which had been placed in the centre of the floor. Touching one side of the device was a transparent tube filled with ball bearings. A electromagnet at the top of the tube turned on and off, lifting the column of metal balls only to let them drop against the band.

Proctor watched the sequence for a minute. She felt great regret. Saskia had been a friend. She sighed, then passed a command to the electromagnet.

It stopped.

She remained among the panels for another half an hour. She touched them and thought about the implications of the data she had collected from Saskia. Those implications struck her with enough force to wake her from the apathy that characterised her life. Years before, she had felt the same way about gravity: there had been the smallest glimmer of possibility in those equations, a possibility that spoke to time travel under low-energy conditions.

Something creaked above her head. She considered the weight of the reconstructed Königsberg Castle. It did not matter to her that the room was deep underground and sealed. She liked confined spaces. Always had.

She felt the movement of air as the door to Met Four Base was primed and equalised. She did not turn to see who had joined her because she had given instructions to refuse all but one individual.

‘Pass me your report, please,’ she said.

Before her next cold inhalation, Proctor’s brain had accepted the imprint of tens of thousands of moments, each of them a slice of Alexei Draganov’s life. Sudden new memory. She became a subtly different person.

‘So Saskia thinks you are dead,’ said Proctor. ‘That’s just as well.’

Draganov stepped alongside her. He was clean-shaven and had gelled his hair. He wore jeans and a checked shirt.

‘If she digs into the circumstances of my execution, she might become suspicious.’

‘What was it? Firing squad?’

‘Hanging.’

‘Must have been painful.’

Draganov gave her a sour look. ‘Did you collect the data we needed?’

‘There are certain facts now established.’ Proctor smiled despite herself. She had data, and that was always a joy. ‘We cannot yet pass any great quantity of matter from one universe and the next, but we can send information. If that information happens to be the digital consciousness of a dead mind, like Saskia’s, then we have a method for…exploration.’

‘So it seems,’ said Draganov. He crouched and took the transparent tube of ball bearings. These he poured into his palm. ‘She claimed that Meta is rather more advanced in the reality we sent her to.’

Proctor had to smile again. Their own Meta had precisely two members: herself and Draganov.

‘I believe her,’ she said. ‘You and I also exist in these alternative realities. In some, I guess we started earlier.’

Draganov did not seem amused. ‘Has it occurred to you that they might be more advanced in passing matter into our universe? I wouldn’t want to meet my doppelgänger.’

‘Yes,’ said Proctor, quietly. ‘It has occurred to me.’

‘Jennifer, I made it clear, months ago, that if we are to find a method of shaping the present through changing the past, it should not be for personal gain.’

Proctor rubbed her forehead. She was getting a headache. ‘A better world? What could be a more exalted aim, and still lead to personal gain?’

‘It will not bring your father back.’

Proctor watched him take the time band and break it.

‘That’s expensive,’ she said. ‘Especially in these troubled times.’

‘What shall we do with all this?’

‘The charges are laid.’ She indicated plastic yellow boxes in each corner. ‘We just need to set the timer.’

‘Do we know what happens to Saskia after 1908?’

‘There’s nothing in the records. Those of Nakhimov are scant. She will have adopted a new identity. Why do you ask?’

Draganov stood. ‘I’m going back to get her.’

‘For the data on her brain chip? Don’t trouble yourself.’

‘No,’ said Draganov. ‘She’s done something for us, so we can do something for her. The time paradox that protects her stifles her, too. I’m going to find her and bring her to 2023. Once she has played her role in those events, she will be free.’

‘Free to die? Personally, I wouldn’t rush to thank you.’

Proctor and Draganov walked to the door and used the low-frequency transmitter to signal the technician in Nevada. As the door opened, Draganov gestured with his hand.

‘Ladies first,’ he said.

Proctor looked at him. She knew, now, his background as a former Templar Knight. It explained much about him.

Before she stepped through, she commanded the charges to blow.

‘Ten seconds,’ she said.

They closed the door. As Proctor thanked the technician—this time using his name—she counted down from ten. The door did not so much as tremble. For those near Königsberg Castle, Kaliningrad, there would be a distant rumble as the last of the Amber Room was destroyed.

Canterbury, UK; November 2007 to January 2013

Saskia Brandt will return.
~

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Do you want to know when my next book will be published? Email me at ihocking@gmail.com and I’ll let you know. You will also find me on Twitter: ian_hocking.

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