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Page 18


  “What?”

  “Simple enough. I had access to the stacks, naturally. So I stepped over a chained railing when no one was around, dug this up, and walked out with it. They’re very trusting out there. Meanwhile, they won’t miss it in years . . . Only you’d better not let anyone see it on you, nephew.”

  Foster stared at the film as though it were literally hot.

  Nimmo discarded the core and reached for a second apple. “Funny thing, now. There’s nothing more recent in the whole field of neutrinics. Not a monograph, not a paper, not a progress note. Nothing since the chronoscope.”

  “Uh-huh,” said Foster absently.

  Foster worked evenings in the Potterley home. He could not trust his own on-campus rooms for the purpose. The evening work grew more real to him than his own grant applications. Sometimes he worried about it, but then that stopped, too.

  His work consisted, at first, simply in viewing and reviewing the text film. Later it consisted in thinking (sometimes while a section of the book ran itself off through the pocket projector, disregarded).

  Sometimes Potterley would come down to watch, to sit with prim, eager eyes, as though he expected thought processes to solidify and become visible in all their convolutions. He interfered in only two ways. He did not allow Foster to smoke and sometimes he talked.

  It wasn’t conversation talk, never that. Rather it was a low-voiced monologue with which, it seemed, he scarcely expected to command attention. It was much more as though he were relieving a pressure within himself.

  Carthage! Always Carthage!

  Carthage, the New York of the ancient Mediterranean. Carthage, commercial empire and queen of the seas. Carthage, all that Syracuse and Alexandria pretended to be. Carthage, maligned by her enemies and inarticulate in her own defense.

  She had been defeated once by Rome and then driven out of Sicily and Sardinia, but came back to more than recoup her losses by new dominions in Spain, and raised up Hannibal to give the Romans sixteen years of terror.

  In the end, she lost again a second time, reconciled herself to fate and built again with broken tools a limping life in shrunken territory, succeeding so well that jealous Rome deliberately forced a third war. And then Carthage, with nothing but bare hands and tenacity, built weapons and forced Rome into a two-year war that ended only with complete destruction of the city, the inhabitants throwing themselves into their flaming houses rather than surrender.

  “Could people fight so for a city and a way of life as bad as the ancient writers painted it? Hannibal was a better general than any Roman and his soldiers were absolutely faithful to him. Even his bitterest enemies praised him. There was a Carthaginian. It is fashionable to say that he was an atypical Carthaginian, better than the others, a diamond placed in garbage. But then why was he so faithful to Carthage, even to his death after years of exile? They talk of Moloch—”

  Foster didn’t always listen, but sometimes he couldn’t help himself and he shuddered and turned sick at the bloody tale of child sacrifice.

  But Potterley went on earnestly, “Just the same, it isn’t true. It’s a twenty-five-hundred-year-old canard started by the Greeks and Romans. They had their own slaves, their crucifixions and torture, their gladiatorial contests. They weren’t holy. The Moloch story is what later ages would have called war propaganda, the big lie. I can prove it was a lie. I can prove it and, by Heaven, I will—I will—”

  He would mumble that promise over and over again in his earnestness.

  Mrs. Potterley visited him also, but less frequently, usually on Tuesdays and Thursdays, when Dr. Potterley himself had an evening course to take care of and was not present.

  She would sit quietly, scarcely talking, face slack and doughy, eyes blank, her whole attitude distant and withdrawn.

  The first time, Foster tried, uneasily, to suggest that she leave.

  She said tonelessly, “Do I disturb you?”

  “No, of course not,” lied Foster restlessly. “It’s just that—that—” He couldn’t complete the sentence.

  She nodded, as though accepting an invitation to stay. Then she opened a cloth bag she had brought with her and took out a quire of vitron sheets which she proceeded to weave together by rapid, delicate movements of a pair of slender, tetra-faceted depolarizers, whose battery-fed wires made her look as though she were holding a large spider.

  One evening, she said softly, “My daughter, Laurel, is your age.”

  Foster started, as much at the sudden unexpected sound of speech at the words. He said, “I didn’t know you had a daughter, Mrs. Potterley.”

  “She died. Years ago.”

  The vitron grew under the deft manipulations into the uneven shape of some garment Foster could not yet identify. There was nothing left for him to do but mutter inanely, “I’m sorry.”

  Mrs. Potterley sighed. “I dream about her often.” She raised her blue, distant eyes to him.

  Foster winced and looked away.

  Another evening she asked, pulling at one of the vitron sheets to loosen its gentle clinging to her dress, “What is time viewing anyway?”

  That remark broke into a particularly involved chain of thought, and Foster said snappishly, “Dr. Potterley can explain.”

  “He’s tried to. Oh, my, yes. But I think he’s a little impatient with me. He calls it chronoscopy most of the time. Do you actually see things in the past, like the trimensionals? Or does it just make little dot patterns like the computer you use?”

  Foster stared as his hand computer with distaste. It worked well enough, but every operation had to be manually controlled and the answers were obtained in code. Now if he could use the school computer . . . Well, why dream, he felt conspicuous enough, as it was, carrying a hand computer under his arm every evening as he left his office.

  He said, “I’ve never seen the chronoscope myself, but

  I’m under the impression that you actually see pictures and hear sound.”

  “You can hear people talk, too?”

  “I think so.” Then, half in desperation, “Look here, Mrs. Potterley, this must be awfully dull for you. I realize you don’t like to leave a guest all to himself, but really, Mrs. Potterley, you mustn’t feel compelled—”

  “I don’t feel compelled,” she said. “I’m sitting here, waiting.”

  “Waiting? For what?”

  She said composedly, “I listened to you that first evening. The time you first spoke to Arnold. I listened at the door.”

  He said, “You did?”

  “I know I shouldn’t have, but I was awfully worried about Arnold. I had a notion he was going to do something he oughtn’t and I wanted to hear what. And then when I heard—” She paused, bending close over the vitron and peering at it.

  “Heard what, Mrs. Potterley?”

  “That you wouldn’t build a chronoscope.”

  “Well, of course not.”

  “I thought maybe you might change your mind.”

  Foster glared at her. “Do you mean you’re coming down here hoping I’ll build a chronoscope, waiting for me to build one?”

  “I hope you do, Dr. Foster. Oh, I hope you do.”

  It was as though, all at once, a fuzzy veil had fallen off her face, leaving all her features clear and sharp, putting color into her cheeks, life into her eyes, the vibrations of something approaching excitement into her voice.

  “Wouldn’t it be wonderful,” she whispered, “to have one? People of the past could live again. Pharoahs and kings and—just people. I hope you build one, Dr. Foster. I really—hope—”

  She choked, it seemed, on the intensity of her own words and let the vitron sheets slip off her lap. She rose and ran “up the basement stairs, while Foster’s eyes followed her awkwardly fleeing body with astonishment and distress.

  It cut deeper into Foster’s nights and left him sleepless and painfully stiff with thought. It was almost a mental indigestion.

  His grant requests went limping in, finally, to Ralph Ni
mmo. He scarcely had any hope for them. He thought numbly: They won’t be approved.

  If they weren’t, of course, it would create a scandal in the department and probably mean his appointment at the university would not be renewed, come the end of the academic year.

  He scarcely worried. It was the neutrino, the neutrino, only the neutrino. Its trail curved and veered sharply and led him breathlessly along uncharted pathways that even Sterbinski and LaMarr did not follow.

  He called Nimmo. “Uncle Ralph, I need a few things. I’m calling from off the campus.”

  Nimmo’s face in the video plate was jovial, but his voice was sharp. He said, “What you need is a course in communication. I’m having a hell of a time pulling your application into one intelligible piece. If that’s what you’re calling about—”

  Foster shook his head impatiently. “That’s not what I’m calling about. I need these.” He scribbled quickly on a piece of paper and held it up before the receiver.

  Nimmo yiped. “Hey, how many tricks do you think I can wangle?”

  “You can get them, Uncle. You know you can.”

  Nimmo reread the list of items with silent motions of his plump lips and looked grave.

  “What happens when you put those things together?” he asked.

  Foster shook his head. “You’ll have exclusive popular publication rights to whatever turns up, the way it’s always been. But please don’t ask any questions now.”

  “I can’t do miracles, you know.”

  “Do this one. You’ve got to. You’re a science writer, not a research man. You don’t have to account for anything. You’ve got friends and connections. They can look the other way, can’t they, to get a break from you next publication time?”

  “Your faith, nephew, is touching. I’ll try.”

  Nimmo succeeded. The material and equipment were brought over late one evening in a private touring car. Nimmo and Foster lugged it in with the grunting of men unused to manual labor.

  Potterley stood at the entrance of the basement after Nimmo had left. He asked softly, “What’s this for?”

  Foster brushed the hair off his forehead and gently massaged a sprained wrist. He said, “I want to conduct a few simple experiments.”

  “Really?” The historian’s eyes glittered with excitement. Foster felt exploited. He felt as though he were being led along a dangerous highway by the pull of pinching fingers on his nose; as though he could see the ruin clearly that lay in wait at the end of the path, yet walked eagerly and determinedly. Worst of all, he felt the compelling grip on his nose to be his own.

  It was Potterley who began it, Potterley who stood there now, gloating; but the compulsion was his own.

  Foster said sourly, “I’ll be wanting privacy now, Potterley. I can’t have you and your wife running down here and annoying me.”

  He thought: If him kick me out. Let him put an end to this.

  In his heart, though, he did not think being evicted would stop anything.

  But it did not come to that. Potterley was showing no signs of offense. His mild gaze was unchanged. He said, “Of course, Dr. Foster, of course. All the privacy you wish.”

  Foster watched him go. He was left still marching along the highway, perversely glad of it and hating himself for being glad.

  He took to sleeping over on a cot in Potterley’s basement and spending his weekends there entirely.

  During that period, preliminary word came through that his grants (as doctored by Nimmo) had been approved. The Department Head brought the word and congratulated him.

  Foster stared back distantly and mumbled, “Good. I’m glad,” with so little conviction that the other frowned and turned away without another word.

  Foster gave the matter no further thought. It was a minor point, worth no notice. He was planning something that really counted, a climactic test for that evening.

  One evening, a second and third and then, haggard and half beside himself with excitement, he called in Potterley.

  Potterley came down the stairs and looked about at the homemade gadgetry. He said, in his soft voice, “The electric bills are quite high. I don’t mind the expense, but the City may ask questions. Can anything be done?”

  It was a warm evening, but Potterley wore a tight collar and a semijacket. Foster, who was in his undershirt, lifted bleary eyes and said shakily, “It won’t be for much longer, Dr. Potterley. I’ve called you down to tell you something. A chronoscope can be built. A small one, of course, but it can be built.”

  Potterley seized the railing. His body sagged. He managed a whisper. “Can it be built here?”

  “Here in the basement,” said Foster wearily.

  “Good Lord. You said—”

  “I know what I said,” cried Foster impatiently. “I said it couldn’t be done. I didn’t know anything then. Even Sterbinski didn’t know anything.”

  Potterley shook his head. “Are you sure? You’re not mistaken, Dr. Foster? I couldn’t endure it if—”

  Foster said, “I’m not mistaken. Damn it, sir, if just theory had been enough, we could have had a time viewer over a hundred years ago, when the neutrino was first postulated. The trouble was, the original investigators considered it only a mysterious particle without mass or charge that could not be detected. It was just something to even up the bookkeeping and save the law of conservation of mass energy.”

  He wasn’t sure Potterley knew what he was talking about. He didn’t care. He needed a breather. He had to get some of this out of his clotting thoughts—And he needed background for what he would have to tell Potterley next.

  He went on. “It was Sterbinski who first discovered that the neutrino broke through the space-time cross-sectional barrier, that it traveled through time as well as through space. It was Sterbinski who first devised a method for stopping neutrinos. He invented a neutrino recorder and learned how to interpret the pattern of the neutrino stream. Naturally, the stream had been affected and deflected by all the matter it had passed through in its passage through time, and the deflections could be analyzed and converted into the images of the matter that had done the deflecting. Time viewing was possible. Even air vibrations could be detected in this way and converted into sound.”

  Potterley was definitely not listening. He said, “Yes. Yes. But when can you build a chronoscope?”

  Foster said urgently, “Let me finish. Everything depends on the method used to detect and analyze the neutrino stream. Sterbinski’s method was difficult and roundabout. It required mountains of energy. But I’ve studied pseudo-gravities, Dr. Potterley, the science of artificial gravitational fields. I’ve specialized in the behavior of light in such fields. It’s a new science. Sterbinski knew nothing of it. If he had, he would have seen—anyone would have—a much better and more efficient method of detecting neutrinos using a pseudo-gravitic field. If I had known more neutrinics to begin with, I would have seen it at once.”

  Potterley brightened a bit. “I knew it,” he said. “Even if they stop research in neutrinics there is no way the government can be sure that discoveries in other segments of science won’t reflect knowledge on neutrinics. So much for the value of centralized direction of science. I thought this long ago, Dr. Foster, before you ever came to work here.”

  “I congratulate you on that,” said Foster, “but there’s one thing—”

  “Oh, never mind all this. Answer me. Please. When can you build a chronoscope?”

  “I’m trying to tell you something, Dr. Potterley. A chronoscope won’t do you any good.” (This is it, Foster thought.)

  Slowly, Potterley descended the stairs. He stood facing Foster. “What do you mean? Why won’t it help me?”

  “You won’t see Carthage. It’s what I’ve got to tell you. It’s what I’ve been leading up to. You can never see Carthage.”

  Potterley shook his head slightly. “Oh, no, you’re wrong. If you have the chronoscope, just focus it properly—”

  “No, Dr. Potterley. It’
s not a question of focus. There are random factors affecting the neutrino stream, as they affect all subatomic particles. What we call the uncertainty principle. When the stream is recorded and interpreted, the random factor comes out as fuzziness, or ‘noise,’ as the communications boys speak of it. The farther back in time you penetrate, the more pronounced the fuzziness, the greater the noise. After a while, the noise drowns out the picture. Do you understand?”

  “More power,” said Potterley in a dead kind of voice. “That won’t help. When the noise blurs out detail, magnifying detail magnifies the noise, too. You can’t see anything in a sun-burned film by enlarging it, can you? Get this through your head, now. The physical nature of the universe sets limits. The random thermal motions of air molecules set limits to how weak a sound can be detected by any instrument. The length of a light wave or of an electron wave sets limits to the size of objects that can be seen by any instrument. It works that way in chronoscopy, too. You can only time view so far.”

  “How far? How far?”

  Foster took a deep breath. “A century and a quarter. That’s the most.”

  “But the monthly bulletin the Commission puts out deals with ancient history almost entirely.” The historian laughed shakily. “You must be wrong. The government has data as far back as 3000 b.c.”

  “When did you switch to believing them?” demanded Foster, scornfully. “You began this business by proving they were lying; that no historian had made use of the chronoscope. Don’t you see why now? No historian, except one interested in contemporary history, could. No chronoscope can possibly see back in time farther than 1920 under any conditions.”

  “You’re wrong. You don’t know everything,” said Potterley.

  “The truth won’t bend itself to your convenience either. Face it. The government’s part in this is to perpetuate a hoax.”

  “Why?”

  “I don’t know why.”

  Potterley’s snubby nose was twitching. His eyes were bulging. He pleaded, “It’s only theory, Dr. Foster. Build a chronoscope. Build one and try.”

  Foster caught Potterley’s shoulders in a sudden, fierce grip. “Do you think I haven’t? Do you think I would tell you this before I had checked it every way I knew? I have built one. It’s all around you. Look!”

 

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