By Meghashri Dalvi
white wine
“Riya!”
Stan
was waving at me. “Wait, Riya, I need to talk to you, just a couple of
minutes.”
I
was not sure about his wide grin. If our last week’s encounter was anything to
go by, it was better to stay away from this oddball.
Last
Tuesday I had got an unexpected call from the Molecular Lab. The small
one-storied red brick building at the east end of the institute where Stan
Harper and his five assistants did fundamental molecular research. Not many had
ever met them and the obvious vibe their occasional sightings gave was of pure
eccentricity.
Someone
had conveyed Stan’s message that he wanted to meet me. I had obliged and landed
at his lab.
Up
close, Stan appeared good looking and nice, except for that sheer streak of
madness in his turquoise blue eyes.
“So
you are Riya, who will share the 17th July Time Machine slot with me.
Right?”
“Yes.”
“And
what research you want to do in this slot?”
“Well,
I am working on the weapons used at the end of the Seventeenth century,
and–”
“Aha!
Just wanted to see who you were. You can go now.”
With
that curt reply, he simply disappeared.
And
now, what does he want from me now?
“Listen,
Riya,” he came closer, still grinning. “I have got a great idea. Our Time
Machine slot is pointed at the time of Newton. Right? Sir Isaac Newton. Guess
what I am going to do? I will leave Einstein’s Relativity Theory in that time.
What say?”
“What?!”
He
laughed out aloud. Several people were already looking at us; their expressions
just went more quizzical.
“Yess!
Einstein’s Relativity theory! Time can bend, Newton’s classical physics is not
applicable everywhere in the universe, and stuff–you
know.”
“That
is nonsense!”
“Of
course not! If scientists in that time can get their hands on that legendary
Einstein stuff, who will be bothered with the Newtonian
theory?”
“How
is this even possible, Stan?” My voice was sharp. “We get the time machine slot
for research. Pure research. We are not supposed to do anything else during that
period. We are not supposed to meddle with time. We are not supposed to disturb
the space-time fabric and the continuum and–”
He
was still laughing. “You believe all that Riya? Oh, of course! What do you
historians know about space-time, anyway?”
“What
do you mean?”
“Listen,
do you know that some people have already attempted that? I mean disturbing the
space-time continuum, whatever–”
He
was clearly mocking me, and I did not like it a bit.
“Stan,
if they had attempted, apparently their attempts have failed.” I tried to
reason. “We go back in time just to view. We cannot carry anything with us.
Nobody in that era can see us. How can such foolish attempts ever
succeed?”
“Obviously
their foolish experiments failed. Because they were foolish. But my
experiments never failed.”
“What!
You have done such things before?” I couldn’t believe the total recklessness his
snobbish eyes conveyed.
He spread
out on the soft lawn. Looking down on this so-called genius molecular
scientist would have strengthened my position. But the Sun was stinging my eyes
at that angle.
I
sat down near him keeping a meaningful distance as if not to catch his mad
thoughts like bad breath.
“Yes,
Riya. I have done them.” The grin was still there, although a little
soft.
“You
mean you have played with time and its arrow?”
“Yes,
ma’am.”
“Something
you are not supposed to do?”
“Sure!”
“Why?
Didn’t you know the risks? I mean a small gesture of yours could have made so
many changes to the present.”
“They
could have. But they did not.”
“What
do you mean? You said your experiments succeeded.”
“They
indeed succeeded. But not to the extent I wanted.”
“I
don’t get you, Stan.” My exasperation could no longer be
hidden.
“Look,
Riya, you know Leonardo da Vinci. Right? You know about his flying machine,
don’t you? How do you think he got it?”
I
was dumbstruck.
“It’s
true that he did not actually make the flying machine. He probably could
not, given that he was only an artist. But do you ever stop and think about it?
He was an artist. How did he suddenly get a scientific idea? With a complete
concept? Down to its full details?”
“So
you, I mean you had given him the sketches?”
Stan
started laughing again. Mockingly loud.
“Are
you making fun of me, Stanley Harper?” I was red. “I thought so. As it is, you
cannot take any physical thing in the past–”
“Why
not? I managed. I left them there. Only to get in the hands of
Leo.”
“I
don’t believe a single word you say. It’s just a pastime for you, maybe. But I
have some meaningful work to do–”
“Wait
a moment. I did it again, you know. When I went back to the First century. I
took a thin paper on which I had put all the information about a cool system
with a steam engine, levers, and pulleys–the works. Just on a thin sheet. What
efforts I took to manage that feat-”
“Obviously
no one got that. Otherwise our industrial revolution would have happened way
back!” I snapped and got up to go.
“You
are wrong, baby. One person did pick that sheet up.”
“Ha!”
I started to leave.
“And
he understood all the technical stuff, too. He must have been a smart guy. Way
too smart. For he used the sketches very very cleverly. You know for what? For
opening the temple doors. The lamp in the temple provided him with the heat
energy, with which he generated steam–”
“Heron!
Are you talking about Heron? From Greece? Alexandra temple? And people thought
he was a great magician?”
“Absolutely!”
“That
is not possible! You are bluffing!”
“No,
Riya. Listen, this is what I mean by the limited effect I got. My ideas, my
information reached that time. Fell into the right hands, too. But those guys
did not take them further.”
“Good.
You are anyway not supposed to interfere with the development and evolution of
our culture. So the real damage was not done at all! Good! Good to know that
time or destiny or whatever takes care of what exactly is supposed to happen and
when!”
I
simply left him and started walking towards my lab. But I was so giddy with the
disturbing exchange that I had to stop and grab a nearby
rail.
Stan
managed to catch up.
“It
happened two more times. I succeeded, but only to a limited extent.”
He
certainly wanted to continue bragging.
“Stan,
why are you doing this? If all these risky experiments were in vain, why do you
want to do it one more time?”
“Because
this time it’s special. See the coincidences–the time is right, it’s Seventeenth
century. The place is right, it’s Newton’s England! The language is right,
too, it’s English. And I can do Seventeenth century English easily. Besides, I
have a sound plan this time!”
The
arrogant grin was back. So was my ire.
“Look,
there is no use explaining Relativity to Newtonian people. Or to Newton, for
that matter. He won’t understand it. And even if he does, he will not buy it
just because some paper arrives from future. It was a golden era of science.
There were discussions, arguments, lots of logic, experiments. How would they do
it without quantum theory? It’s of no use. Now please stop and let me
go.”
“Want
to bet on this, Riya?”
“Oh,
God!”
“I
tell you, this time I have got a sound plan, and it’s going to succeed! You’ll
see.”
“This
is illegal, and I don’t want to get into it.”
By
the time I reached my lab, I had decided to report Stan.
The
next three days I managed to stay away from him. His room, lab,
clothes, everything must have gone through a rigorous search. And I wanted to be
as far from it as possible.
But
on July 17th, I had to face him.
He
was whistling coolly when we both approached the Time Machine Centre. I avoided
eye contact.
“What
was the need to report? They obviously could not find anything. As if! I mean
after all the stuff I disclosed to you, would I keep a thin sheet in my
possession? I am a veteran at time-travel baby, I know exactly what I am
doing!”
I
ignored the condescending sneer. It was my very first shot at the Time Machine
and I didn’t want to mess it. I looked straight ahead and went through the
procedures quietly.
Then
it was time.
Just
before entering the special chamber, I could not stop
myself.
“Stan,
I beg you. No pranks please. I don’t want to ruin my
chance.”
“Don’t
worry baby. No papers. Nothing.”
We
went in and waited above in the large space. I tried to concentrate on the
stasis arena where something fuzzy was taking shape.
Was
it a stone building? And paved lanes? A slim lady in voluminous clothes. A guy
in a top hat? Was it really the Seventeenth century? Was I already in there?
I
couldn’t believe my eyes!
And
then suddenly Stan started talking aloud. By the time I realized that he was
reciting Relativity theory, he had said too much. The people stopped in their
tracks and listened intently. They could not see us, naturally, but they could
hear us after all. Crystal clear.
So
this was the sound plan!
I
managed to pull the emergency lever. But it was too late.
The
next moment there was nothing. Nothing. No Time Machine. No Time Machine Center.
No Institute.
Instead,
there was a huge speaker of stunning proportions, accompanied by out-of-the
world acoustic machinery. The great empty space around us was filled with
heavenly musical notes.
Stan
was still by my side. But his smirk was gone. With a divine calm on his face, he
just mumbled a few well-known facts.
“Apparently,
Newton was so thrilled to receive sound waves from the future, that he abandoned
all his ongoing research work and directed his entire effort only towards
research in sound!”
No comments:
Post a Comment