Barrington Bayley - Collision with Chronos

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The alien ruins that dotted Earth’s landscape were an enigma.
Archaeologist Rond Heshke dismissed as a ridiculous hoax the photographic evidence which suggested that the ruins disobeyed the laws of time. The Titanium Legions believed that the ruins had been left behind by an invading force from space, which had been repelled in a past age and whose imminent return was feared.
It was not until the Titanium scientists perfected their time machines that the truth began to emerge piece by piece: that the builders of the ruins belonged not to the stars but to Earth’s own future, and that the dreaded confrontation was indeed shortly due - not with aliens, but in a form more horrifying, more calamitous, than anything imaginable…
For Earth was to be the victim of an extraordinary cosmic accident. Time itself was about to collide! Mankind’s leaders became even more fanatical, pressing on with new plans, determined at all costs to survive…

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“Perhaps you would prefer to meet me in different surroundings,” the Oblique Entity said. Everything vanished, and was replaced.

Ascar was sitting in a moderately sized room. The walls were of pale blue decorated with a white cornice. The light, coming from an unseen source, was very radiant, reminding him of sunlight. Before Ascar stood a table of polished walnut.

A door opened. In walked a young woman who sat down opposite him. Her skin was silver-blue. A slight smile was on her lips. Her eyes were bright blue, also, but they looked beyond, Ascar, as if they weren’t functional.

“Good day,” she said in a pleasant, full voice. “Is this more agreeable?”

Ascar took a moment to recover himself. “But this isn’t you as you really are, is it?” he said then.

“No, that is true.”

Ascar was vaguely disappointed. “Then it’s just an illusion you’re putting through the all-sense receiver. I didn’t come all this way looking for illusions.”

“Incorrect: it is no illusion. I have constructed the environment as a physical reality, into which I then projected your senses. Even the woman is a real living woman.”

Now Ascar was startled. “You can do that – in a moment?”

A pause. “Not in a moment, exactly. To produce the woman took a hundred years. Duration is of no consequence when time can be turned in a circle.”

So that was it, Ascar thought. It was the Production Retort all over again, but on an even larger scale. Here, the beginning and the end of a lengthy process could be bent around to occupy successive moments. He mulled over another point.

“Sometimes you call yourself I, and sometimes we, ” he observed. “What are you, a single intelligence or a community?”

“I am neither individual nor plural,” the Oblique Entity replied. “Neither I nor we is adequate to describe my nature.”

“Then just what are you?”

The girl inclined her head, her eyes seeking a point beyond the wall, and a slight, quizzical frown crossed her features.

“Perhaps these surroundings, even, are disconcerting?” she suggested. “Let us try again.”

She rose, and pointed to a second door that opened itself behind Ascar. “Please continue on down the corridor,” she invited. “Another room has been prepared.”

After a last doubtful glance at the girl Ascar obeyed. At first the corridor was featureless, grey and doorless, stretching away to a bend, or dead-end, about two hundred yards ahead. But as he proceeded a peculiar illusion began to occur. Out of the corner of his eye he glimpsed arcaded openings beyond which fish-like shapes flitted among green stalks and through wavering groves. Yet when he turned his head to look directly at this phenomenon his eye met only a blank wall.

He began to get the odd feeling that the elusive fish-shapes flitted, not externally, but through the recesses of his own mind. After a few tens of yards, however, the illusion ceased. But at the same time the character of the corridor began to change subtly, to become less featureless and more familiar. Suddenly Ascar stopped. He had come to a door: a door with the number 22 stencilled on it.

He looked around him. Just ahead was a T-junction, where arrowed notices pointed out departments in either direction. He looked again at the door with the number 22, recognising scratch marks and pimples in the paint.

This place was a corridor in the Sarn Establishment! Or a perfect replica thereof.

With thumping heart he opened the door. Within was a cosy, cabin-like room with a bunk, chairs, and a table strewn with abstracts and reports together with a large scratch-pad. The wall to his left was a bookcase holding a small library of specialised volumes.

It was his own room and refuge that he’d inhabited for five years.

Slowly he closed the door and sat down in his favourite chair, realising as he did so that the Oblique Entity must have extracted all these details from his own memory.

Above the door was a small speaker that had been used in the Sarn Establishment for paging. The Oblique Entity spoke now through this grill.

“To answer your question,” it said in its former male voice, “the type of consciousness I possess is neither an individual consciousness, nor is it a group consciousness or a community of individuals. In your language I could come closer to the facts simply by referring to ourselves as here, rather than to I or we. Henceforth, then I will give ourselves the personal pronoun here.

Ascar pondered that, nodding. The Entity’s ploy, he decided, was working. He did feel more relaxed to be sitting here in his own room. It would have been easy to forget altogether that this was not, in fact, the Sarn Establishment.

“Since you can evidently read my mind, you already know what I mean to ask you,” he said. “Tell me, how much do you know of Earth?”

“Here know all about Earth,” the Oblique Entity replied.

“You mean you’ve read all about it in my mind?”

“No. Here knew about Earth already. By direct observation.”

“Then you know what’s about to happen there?”

“Yes.”

“Then,” said Ascar, giving his words emphasis and deliberation, “is there any way – any way at all – that the stream of time can be turned aside or stopped? Any way that collision can be avoided?”

The Oblique Entity didn’t answer immediately. Instead, a rich humming note issued from the speaker. All at once everything exploded around Ascar. He was floating in an inchoate void. Around him swam coloured shapes of every description, drifting in and out of his vision like sparks.

His body seemed to become elongated, like a streamer of smoke in a breeze; he was being stretched out to infinity. This process seemed to go on for a long, long time; and then, just as suddenly, he was back in his favourite chair in his comfortable room.

“There is nothing you can do,” the Oblique Entity said.

When Brourne’s troops finally broke into the space-time observatory they found Leard Ascar still sitting in the transparent sphere of the all-sense transceiver.

After a matter of minutes they contrived to open the hatch. Ascar appeared not to see them. He sat muttering unintelligibly to himself, offering no resistance when they grabbed him by the arms and hauled him out.

“This must be Ascar,” the sergeant said. “If you ask me these Chink gadgets have driven him out of his mind!”

“Maybe he’s fallen foul of a Chink puzzle,” a trooper offered helpfully.

“Eh? What?” Ascar began to come round, peering at the trooper with narrowed eyes.

“Let’s get him away from here,” the sergeant ordered. “Major Brourne wants to see him right away.”

They steered Ascar out of the observatory. And then an unexpected sound caused them all at once to come to a stop and gaze at one another wonderingly. For some hours the city had been quiet, but now, from the distance, came, the sudden, continuous eruption of heavy gunfire.

Heshke accepted a tobacco roll, inhaling the fragrant smoke with a sense of special pleasure.

It was, in the fullest sense, a farewell party. They all knew that the Titans would come rolling into the reservation tomorrow, or at the latest the day after. Herrick had called together a few of his friends, as he put it, to “celebrate the end of the species”.

The atmosphere was relaxed and convivial. Heshke couldn’t help but admire the calm way the Amhraks were accepting the inevitable. Perhaps, he thought, it was the inevitability that lent such dignity. If there had been any hope at all, that might have led to panic.

Much of the conversation was in Amhrak, at which Heshke was not as yet very skilled. However, out of politeness, enough Verolian – the main language of white men that was used all over the Earth now – was spoken so that he felt by no means left out.

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