Killing Time

Home > Science > Killing Time > Page 21
Killing Time Page 21

by Caleb Carr


  Had it even occurred to me to take this statement seriously, I might well have fallen over; as it was, I only became steadily more convinced that the man’s mind had snapped. “Listen, Malcolm,” I said, putting a hand to his shoulder. “Try to understand—as a doctor it’s incumbent on me to tell you that you’ve suffered a breakdown. A potentially severe one. And given what we’ve all been through, I’m not surprised. You have friends in Edinburgh, and no doubt they’ll know of hospital facilities we can use quietly. If you let me run some tests and suggest a course of treatment—”

  “You haven’t answered my question yet, Gideon,” Malcolm said, his voice still betraying no emotion.

  “Your question?” I said. “Your question about roaming back and forth through time, that question?”

  He shook his head slowly. “Not back and forth. No one seriously believes that we can create closed timelike curves that could allow a subject to move in one direction and then return to the exact point from which he or she started. At this point it’s just not feasible.”

  “Oh, but going one way is?”

  Malcolm ignored my sarcasm. “The physical problem isn’t particularly exotic or complex,” he said. “Like most things it’s really just a question of power—electromagnetic power. And the only conceivable way of generating such power—”

  “Would be superconductors,” I said with a sudden shudder, vaguely remembering an article I’d read on the subject some months earlier. I looked to the floor, still in a state of disbelief but for some reason quite shaky all the same. “Highly miniaturized superconductors,” I added, real apprehension beginning to belie my dismissal of his words.

  “Sounds familiar, doesn’t it?” Malcolm had increasing difficulty controlling his emotions as he went on: “Imagine not being forced to accept the present that’s been handed down to us. Having instead the ability to engineer a different set of historical determinants. You say that the contemporary world can’t be helped by the work we’re doing now, Gideon, that it’s beyond such remedies. Well, the same thought began to occur to me over a year ago. But the answer, I saw, wasn’t to suspend what we were doing. We needed to adjust the work, certainly—that was part of the reason we brought you in. But we had and have to keep at it until the day comes when we can change the actual circumstances of our present reality by modifying the past.” He put a hand to his head, obviously feeling the effects of the controlled but no less extreme passion with which he had told me his tale. “That day isn’t far off, Gideon—not far off at all.”

  I sat back down in my chair. The worst insanities often come in ostensibly rational forms; and I told myself that such was the reason I had been momentarily uneasy, even credulous. I also acknowledged that there was no way I could force him into the kind of serious program of rest, medication, and psychotherapy that he clearly needed; nevertheless, I made one final, weary attempt to reach him:

  “Malcolm, I wonder if you realize the language you’re using. And if it doesn’t suggest something to you.” He didn’t answer, which I took as a sign that he was willing to listen to what I had to say. “You talk of ‘engineering the past,’ ” I went on. “Don’t those words strike you as awfully loaded, given your personal history? I don’t doubt that you’d like to change the present that was ‘handed’ to you—you have every conceivable reason. But you need to hear this—” I stood up and walked to him. “You can use the tools your father developed to try to destroy the world he helped build. You can bury society in confusion, deceive the public into believing your version of history, even watch people and cities be destroyed, and you can tell yourself all the while that it’s a necessary and noble crusade. But in the end you’re still going to be the man you are—you’re still going to be ill, you’re still going to need those crutches and that chair, and you’re still going to be consumed by heartbreak and anger. You don’t want to change the past, Malcolm—you want to change your past.”

  For several long minutes neither of us spoke; then Malcolm’s glittering eyes went narrow and he nodded once or twice, making his way back to his chair. He got himself into it slowly, then looked up at me and asked:

  “Do you have anything to offer, Gideon, other than the utterly obvious?”

  Insults from patients with grandiose delusions were certainly nothing new to me; but this one, I must admit, stung. “Can you really call it obvious,” I answered, trying to sound unfazed, “and still go on with what you’re doing?”

  He let out a disdainful hiss. “Gideon,” he said, shaking his head in evident disappointment. “Do you imagine I haven’t been over all this? And through the kinds of programs you’re suggesting? In my youth I tried them all: psychotherapy, electroshock, drug treatments, everything—with the exception of further gene therapy, of course, which I think I can be excused for ruling out. And yes, I learned what drives me, how deep the anger inside me runs, how personal as well as philosophical my motives are. But in the end I’ll say to you what I said to every doctor I saw.” Some of the manic gleam went out of his eyes, to be replaced by undiluted sadness. “It doesn’t really change anything, does it?”

  “Doesn’t really change anything?” I echoed in astonishment. “My God, Malcolm, if you know that you’re acting out of personal prejudices and unresolved feelings—”

  “Oh, they’re resolved, Gideon,” he answered. “I’m resolved that I hate the world that my father and his kind built—a world where men and women tamper with the genetic structure of their children simply to improve their intelligence quotients so that they can grow up to devise better and more convenient ways to satisfy the public’s petty appetites. A world where intelligence is measured by the ability to amass information that has no context or purpose save its own propagation but is nonetheless serviced slavishly by humanity. And do you know the hard truth of why information has come to dominate our species, Gideon? Because the human brain adores it—it plays with the bits of information it receives, arranging them and storing them like a delighted child. But it loathes examining them deeply, doing the hard work of assembling them into integrated systems of understanding. Yet that work is what produces knowledge, Gideon. The rest is simply—recreation.”

  “And how,” I asked, making no attempt to hide my weariness with his tirade, “does this relate to your awareness of your personal motivations?”

  Again shaking his head, he replied, “Gideon—these are my personal motivations now. I understand that you think I need treatment, but I’ve traveled that road—and shall I tell you something? It’s led directly back to the point where it started. Admittedly, having made the trip, one knows just where that point is and what surrounds it. But one is still there. So what do you want people to do, Gideon, when they discover their personal motivations? Abdicate? Stop playing a role in the world? What person in history was not driven by his own personal motivations? And how could there have been any development without those drives?”

  “That’s not the point,” I countered. “If you’re genuinely self-aware, then your behavior can change.”

  “Ah, the mantra of the psychologist!” Malcolm’s voice was rising disturbingly. “Yes, Gideon, it can indeed change, but change to what? Shall we be Christlike and turn the other cheek to avarice, exploitation, and ruination? Shall we watch the world burn down because we fear that our motives might not be strictly impersonal? I tell you, I’d hurl myself into that sea first! Because you’re not talking about change, Gideon—you’re talking about paralysis!”

  “No,” I said, “I’m talking about addressing those problems in ways that don’t end up killing millions of people.”

  “I did not destroy that city!” he shouted, and by the way his body had begun to tremble I could see trouble coming; yet, much as it shames me to admit it, I was too appalled by what he was saying to do anything about it. “I didn’t train Dov Eshkol,” he went on, “and I didn’t turn him loose on the world. Nor did I create a society so obsessed with commerce that it refuses to effectively regulate even the m
ost dangerous forms of trade! But I’ll tell you what I did do. I suffered through a set of experiences that gave me a unique perspective from which to view—and perhaps affect—that same society. Should I refuse to do so because my motives have a personal dimension that worries people like you? Take my advice, Gideon—worry about the purity of your own motives, and let mine be.” He spun his chair around toward the window, raising one fist. “I know why I am what I am—but I will not let those who made me this way enjoy the final triumph of my acquiescence in their effort to make the world a massive hive, one in which human beings play with information endlessly for the profit of hidden masters—and in the process learn nothing.”

  Far more than the conversation, it seemed to me, had ended with that last fateful word. I offered no argument, for there was no point in arguing with such profound psychosis. Some of what he’d said was doubtless true, though I couldn’t say how much. All I knew for certain were the same two things I’d been sure of when I’d entered the room: that I could no longer stay on that island or participate in Malcolm’s schemes, and that when I left I wanted Larissa to go with me. My uneasiness about telling Malcolm these things had vanished in the face of his mad monologue, and I blurted it all out in a fairly arch manner; yet as soon as I did, his features began to draw into an expression of defiant threat that made me regret my boldness.

  “I’m not sure I like the idea of you roaming loose, Gideon,” he said in a measured tone, “now that you know all our secrets. And do you honestly think that Larissa would go with you?”

  “If you didn’t stand in her way,” I replied, as bravely as I could. “And as far as your secrets go, what are you worried about? I’m a criminal, remember, I’m in no rush to go to any authorities. And even if I was, who in the world would believe me?”

  Malcolm cocked his head, considering it. “Perhaps . . .”

  Suddenly he sucked in a rush of air, and his hands fairly flew to his temples. I made a move to help him, but he waved me off. “No!” he said, gritting his teeth and fumbling in his pocket for his injector. “No, Gideon. This—is no longer your affair. Take your tender conscience—and leave—now!”

  What was there to do but comply? Farewells would have been inappropriate, even grotesque, in light of all we’d been through and said to each other. I simply crossed over to the door and opened it, all anger gone, all compassion numbed. As I stepped out I turned once, to see Malcolm sitting there, huddled with the injector at a vein in his hand, murmuring something to himself through his still-clenched teeth.

  I found myself thinking that it was a pity that all his talk of time travel had been so obviously delusional; for when all was said and done there really was very little in the present for such a man.

  C H A P T E R 4 3

  My only remaining quandary was how much to tell the others about my conversation (if conversation it could be called) with Malcolm. I knew that all of them were immensely loyal to him, though each in a different way, and it was not my purpose to tamper with those relationships. But they had a right to know that his behavior and statements had been such as to make me question his sanity, and so I asked them to join me in my quarters, which they did at sunset. As I related my tale, I sat in the bay window that looked out over the little cove, the omnipresent flocks of seabirds keeping up a chatter during their evening feed that made it difficult for me to speak in the hushed tone that I could not help but feel the situation warranted. I tried not to be biased in my explanation, but I also tried to be frank and complete, stressing Malcolm’s consistent refusal to accept any responsibility for the Moscow disaster and detailing in full his apparently genuine belief that he would soon be able to travel through time.

  “Did he happen to say,” Eli remarked, looking, to my surprise and dismay, very intrigued, “whose configuration he’s emulating?”

  I had to shake my head hard. “What?”

  “Was it Gödel?” Eli went on. “Kerr? Or Thorne maybe?”

  “Not Thorne,” Jonah said dismissively. “Even Malcolm doesn’t have the power to create a wormhole in his lab—”

  “Eli? Jonah?” I was a bit dismayed and let it show. “You’re not going to do any good by humoring him about this. It’s a fantasy, and a potentially dangerous one, based in a lot of old and new psychological trauma—”

  “Do you know that?” The tone was Malcolm’s, but the voice belonged to Larissa. She was sitting near me but looking away, deep concern all over her face; she seemed to have known from the moment I’d begun speaking that she would shortly face a crisis of her own.

  “If you do, Gideon,” Julien threw in, “then you know more than many brilliant minds who have studied the subject for generations.”

  “Listen, I’ve read Einstein and Hawking,” I countered. Then I added, with some embarrassment, “Well, I’ve read Einstein, anyway. But I’ve read about Hawking. And both said that the paradoxes inherent in the idea of time travel forbid it as a physical possibility.”

  “They forbid one type of it,” Eli countered, adding, in terminology that matched Malcolm’s, “closed timelike curves. But there are other ways to move through time, though they’re not particularly appealing—”

  “I think,” Colonel Slayton said firmly, “that this is perhaps not the moment for an academic discussion of time travel.” He eyed me sternly. “Gideon, I’m sorry to have to say this, but you could be seen as having personal reasons for calling Malcolm’s judgment into question. You’re aware of that, I trust—and aware of the fact that we’re aware of it.”

  Julien, Eli, and Jonah looked away in evident discomfort; Larissa, however, moved closer to me. “That statement’s a little out of line, isn’t it, Colonel?” she said. “Gideon’s never done anything to warrant suspicion—or disrespect.”

  “Gideon is fully aware of the respect I have for him, Larissa,” Slayton replied. “But he also knows that I have to ask.”

  I nodded to Larissa, indicating that what the colonel had said was true but trying at the same time to silently thank her for coming to my defense. “I understand, Colonel,” I said. “But believe me, no personal interest would ever make me misrepresent something like this. It’s not just that it would be unethical—I’ve considered Malcolm a friend. And it’s friendship that’s making me warn you about this. There’s nothing more I can do. I told him I can’t participate in this undertaking anymore, and after a rather dicey moment he agreed that I should depart. So it won’t be up to me to deal with the question of his mental health. But I had to tell you that in my opinion it needs dealing with—badly.”

  Colonel Slayton took this all in with a slow nod and a look that was, for him, very close to being emotional. Julien and the Kupermans, on the other hand, were quite openly saddened. “But,” Eli said eventually, “where will you go, Gideon?”

  I glanced at Larissa, who did not return the look. “I haven’t really decided.”

  “There will be warrants out for you,” Slayton advised. “The U.S. is certainly out of the question, and Europe will be dangerous, too.”

  “I know.” For the first time since I had started to anguish morally over my participation in Malcolm’s enterprise, I began to realistically consider leaving these people with whom I had shared so much in such a compressed time; and it tugged at me hard. “I suppose I’ll head south,” I went on, turning away from them. “Try to find someplace where no one’s paying attention to any of this.” I attempted to rally and smile. “If anybody feels like coming along, I wouldn’t say no.”

  Slayton, Julien, and the Kupermans tried to return my half-hearted smile, but with as little success as I was enjoying: the moment had arrived for good-byes, and we all knew it. Slayton was the first to approach me, his strong hand extended. “One of us will get you over to Scotland in the jetcopter, Gideon. We’ve got an emergency reserve of various currencies, you can dip into that. And you’ll want some alternate identity documents and discs. But be careful—we can adjust them to match your DNA for the average reader, but
if anyone runs one through the universal database, you’ll be in trouble. You’d better have a couple of sidearms, as well.”

  “Thank you, Colonel,” I said quietly, shaking his hand.

  As he studied my face, his eyes went thin, the one on his right pulling at the long scar that I no longer even noticed when I looked at him. “Try not to be too alarmed about Malcolm. He’s exhausted. We’ll look after him and make sure he recovers—and once he has, you may want to return, Gideon. I know there are aspects of this fight you don’t like, but now that you’ve been part of it I think you’re going to find readjusting to the world you used to know . . . difficult.”

  “I’m sure that’s true, Colonel,” I said. “But you shouldn’t have someone on your team whom you can’t rely on absolutely. And after—well . . . too many questions, that’s all.”

  Slayton touched his scar briefly, then clasped my shoulder. “I suppose you’re right. But I’m sorry to see you go, Dr. Wolfe.” He began to walk slowly toward the door. “As for me, I’ve seen madmen burn cities before. Not on this scale, perhaps, but enough to know in my heart where the blame belongs. So take my word for it, Gideon—that’s one thing you don’t need to burden yourself with while you’re on the run.”

  As Slayton’s soldierly step began to resound on the stone walkway outside, Eli and Jonah came over to me together, Eli giving me the same generous smile he had when I’d first faced him in Belle Isle prison. “I owe you one jailbreak,” he said. “So if they pick you up and you get a chance to make that phone call . . .”

  I chuckled and shook his hand, then glanced from him to Jonah. “None of it bothers you two—the things I’ve said?”

  “About Malcolm?” Jonah answered. When I nodded, he went on, “The colonel’s right, Gideon. Malcolm’s mental state is exceptionally intertwined with his physical condition—I think you can appreciate how and why as well as any of us. But we’ve known him since we were teenagers. He comes out of these episodes if he gets enough time and rest.”

 

‹ Prev