Author Topic: Chrono Pause: An Intermission  (Read 2299 times)

Thought

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Chrono Pause: An Intermission
« on: March 28, 2008, 03:26:35 pm »
EDIT: Revised section can be found in the 4th post of this thread: http://www.chronocompendium.com/Forums/index.php/topic,5246.msg182157.html#msg182157


“Excuse me sir, you have a visitor.”

The old man nodded without taking his eyes off his work, wires for which were sprawled across the workbench and floor. Sparks flew from his finger and two pieces of metal were welded together. “Who is it, Mr. Smith?”

“Not so much a ‘who’, sir. It is a robot.”

“Yes, yes. But who sent it?” the old man asked, holding a lens to his eye as he inspected the details of his work.

“No one, sir. The robot is here on its own behalf. It claims that it has some information that would interest you.”

The old man reached out with one hand towards a component on the far side of the room and it drew itself towards him. As his fingers closed over it he spoke again, “I’m sure it does, my boy, but I don’t have time to listen to everyone that stops by, as much as I want to, even if the person in question is technically not a person yet acting as a person.”

“Yes sir. Shall I dismiss it then?”

“Please.”

“Very well.” The messenger turned and began to leave the room. Upon reaching the door he pressed his hand to the wall next to it and it slid open. He stopped for a moment on the threshold and turned back to the old man. “He did say it was about something called ‘the Ocean Palace,’ if that is significant.”

The old man stopped dead, a circuit spinning lazily in the air between his thumb and forefinger. Carefully he put it down and pulled a cloth over the entire project. “Did he now? Well, that means he has either traveled a very long way or knows someone who has. It would only be polite that I meet with him, then.” He stood, smoothed out his blue and white robes, and adjusted his rather odd hat. “Lead the way, if you please, Mr. Smith.”

“Very good, sir. He is in conference room 23A.”

The two left the workshop behind and walked down the gleaming corridors of the complex. Holographic projections were situated at regular intervals, displaying various scenes of natural beauty whereas windows would have shown only rock and soil. After a few minutes the messenger stood to the side of a seemingly random door, opened it, and motioned for the old man to enter. The door slid shut after he did so, leaving him alone in the room with a robot.

The machine was mostly humanoid in its form with a nice copper finish and two brilliant blue eyes. “You’re one of the R series, aren’t you?” the old man asked.

“That is correct, sir. My name is Prometheus.”

The old man raised a bushy white eyebrow at the name. “Well, Prometheus, they call just call me the Old Man around here.” He paused for a moment in thought. “I didn’t think the R series were given names.”

“We were not, sir. I chose the name of my own accord.”

“Well now, you are a bit of an enigma. Most the R series were retired about two hundred years ago, after some nasty business with that renegade computer. It is most unusual for any robot, particularly ones from that era, to have a name given to them, and the list of those who have chosen one of their own accord is rather infamous. And you know something about the Ocean Palace. That is a name I haven’t heard in many years and in another life. But perhaps you are not referring to the same place I am. Please, tell me what you know of it.”

Prometheus bowed an affirmative. “Allow me to be direct, sir. I have been to Zeal and I have walked the halls of the Ocean Palace. I have seen the Mammon Machine, I have seen the earth from the floating continents, and I have ridden the Blackbird. I have looked into the eye of the Queen and seen madness. And I have talked with Schala.”

The old man grabbed the back of a chair to steady himself. He barely whispered the name, “Schala?” With a great weariness, he slumped into a chair and gazed intently at the table, his eyebrows knitted in thought and low over his face. He sat silently as the minutes ticked by. Prometheus waited with clockwork patience.

At last the Old Man found words again. “I was once known as the Guru of Reason. Except perhaps for two men, friends and associates of mine, I know more about the ebbs and flow of time than any living or dead creature in this world. Like you, I have been in Zeal, but through an unfortunately incident I was sent to this time period. Ever since I came here my mind has seen two timelines unreel. One is this world, a civilization to contend with Zeal at its height. The other is a world of ruin that exists only in my mind. I suspect that you are familiar with this feeling.”

The robot nodded an agreement. “It first started in 1999; memories of an apocalypse began to enter my databanks. But then, nothing. While no new memories surfaced, I had the distinct impression that memories should have been there. I underwent several diagnostics but found no fault with my systems or programming. I placed that incident in my memory archives and did not access it again until recently. About two months ago I again began to experience odd memories; I can remember a world in which friends that I have never seen saved me from ruin and stopped the apocalypse from ever occurring. It is my belief that these are not just fantastical data corruptions but rather real memories. I cannot explain them.”

“I had a friend, long ago, who studied this sort of problem,” the Guru stated. “What would happen when a time traveler causes the timeline to change? Would he be effected by his own change and thus be unable to travel in time in the first place to cause that change? That is known as the Grandfather paradox.”

“I am familiar with it.”

“Good. Well, my friend hypothesized that, to an extent, time can’t actually be changed, not in that sense of the word. The information that represents how things were would still exist, somewhere, but not in the new timeline. He thought that perhaps there might be a universal depository where these discarded timelines are relegated to; thus time isn’t changed, only replaced. From that depository, with the proper applications of force, a timeline or part of a timeline might be retrieved and restored.”

“And from this he constructed a device to do just that, a sort of ‘Time Egg’ to restore these lost timelines,” Prometheus said.

“You’ve met him, I see.” The Guru continued, “So when a time traveler changes the past, the original timeline would be discarded to this location, this… darkness beyond time, thereby preserving the information, and a new timeline would essentially be created in the exact same moment. The problem, then, is with the time traveler himself. No longer a part of the timeline that was discarded, he would remain as he was. But, with the new timeline there might be an individual who takes the place of the time traveler, an alternate version of himself. Alas, this violates basic principles of the universe; matter cannot be created.”

Prometheus nodded as the Guru stopped to take a breath. “My friend therefore concluded that a new incarnation of the individual wouldn’t be created but the information of that incarnation would still exist inside the time traveler’s mind. He would have memories of both the old time line and the new and for all intents and purposes there would be no distinction between the two version; both would be as real as is relevant.”

“So,” the robot prompted, “it is your belief that these memories we have are the results of timelines no longer in existence?

“That is correct.”

“Fascinating.” Prometheus watched the Guru for a moment before proceeding, “I have… friends. They gave me information and told me to come seek you, in order to repay a debt owed. They asked that I help you get home.”

“These friends wouldn’t happen to have been with you on your memories of time travel, would they?”

“No.”

“Ah,” the Guru said.

“But,” Prometheus offered, “their ancestor was. This ancestor left her family a legacy; they have watched over me and now watch over you. I believe you already know of them. Indeed, the family helped establish you in these workshops.”

The Guru smiled, “Ah, the Ashtears. A splendid family.”

***

“Excuse me, sir, you have a visitor.”

Prometheus nodded but did not move from his position, the chaise of an oddly shaped craft held firm and well off the ground. The Guru worked beneath it, the sounds of sparks and irklings of unscientific forces reverberating from there as he made adjustments to the engines. “Thank you very much, Mr. Smith, but I am unable to attend to them currently. Could you please ask them to return later?”

“Very good sir.” The messenger turned and left the workshop.

“My,” the Guru said, “you seem to be quite the popular one as of late.”

“Yes. It touching, though strange.”

“The Ashtear boy again?”

“Presumably.”

“Well, I think I’ve just about finished here,” the Guru said, crawling out from underneath the craft. “You can set it down now.”

Prometheus obeyed. The Guru wiped his hands off and said, “Well, I must say, you are certainly speeding things along. Thank you. And, of course, please pass my thanks along to the Ashtears. That ancestor of your friends, Lucca was it?” The robot nodded. “Lucca has an impressive understanding of the temporal sciences. Or had… talking relativistic time is always a linguistic nightmare. I’m afraid I never was one for the humanities. Another friend of mine that you met, however, was much better at those sorts of things.”

“Shall I activate the diagnostics, sir?”

“Yes, please.”

External computers set up around the craft began to hum with life as they tested the various capabilities of the device. The two figures watched in silence for a moment. The Guru glanced at one of the monitors and nodded. “It looks like that might have taken care of the anomaly.”

“That may be so but the fact that the anomaly arose in the first place does not sit well with my systems. The records of the Epoch provided by Lucca conformed exactly to your memory and both of our calculations. If that craft worked, then this one should have as well.”

“Yes, it is odd,” the Guru agreed. “It is almost as if the very fabric of time changed in the ‘time,’ if we can use such a word, between when that craft was utilized and when we tested this one. But come, the diagnostics will take quite some time and we have a meeting with the Central Regime in the morning. I could use the rest.”

“I must once again recommend against this course of action, sir,” Prometheus said. “My goal was to help you return to your home. You are not meant to be in this time period.”

“I would return home if there was a home to return too. You’ve told me that the floating continents have fallen, Schala is missing, the Queen is dead, Janus is on a ‘journey,’ and my two friends remain where they are. The only good of the situation is that Lavos is dead and gone,” the Guru reasoned.

“Even at that, sir, there is a difference between living your life at this Time Research Laboratory that the Ashtears constructed for you and building an entire city focused on time research. Time is not so hardy as to withstand the possible results from such an undertaking.”

The Guru looked straight into the robot’s eyes and smiled. “You are correct, my friend. This ‘City of Time’ idea is quite dangerous. But do you know how we three Gurus of Zeal came to understand time so well? We have a sixth sense about the matter, as did the royal family. We can feel time; we can feel where it is heading and where it came from. I don’t understand why I need to build this city, but I can feel that time is flowing in a direction that will make us glad we have it.”

***

“Excuse me sir, you have a visitor.”

The Protectorate nodded and waved for the man to bring the visitor in. An old man robed in blue and white shuffled in with a robot in tow. Not exactly “a” visitor, then, but robots barely merited the use of a plural. “The ‘Guru of Reason,’ I presume? And this is… an R series! Perhaps you are unaware, but those are inauspicious machines. There was a rather unpleasant uprising a few centuries ago and all of them were decommissioned.”

“I am aware,” the Guru responded, “but Prometheus here is-”

“Who?” the Protectorate asked.

“Prometheus, the metal man standing before you. Now, he is something of an anomaly. I believe if you check your history books you will find that a small band of the R series, led by my good friend here, were instrumental in retiring the master control program. I believe it was called Mother Brain. They were certainly not decommissioned. But I did not come here to discuss history with you.”

“Yes, so your message said. You want my support in the oversight committee.”

“That is correct. Prometheus and I are advancing the temporal sciences but there is a limit to what one man and one machine working in a small laboratory can do.”

The Protectorate laughed. “Small? The Time Research Lab is the largest research center of its kind in existence or in history.”

“Known history, you mean,” the Guru mumbled. Louder, he continued, “Be that as it may, my resources are limited. With additi-”

“Limited?” the Protectorate interrupted again. “Limited? As far as I can tell, you have no resources. Your Time Research Lab just popped up one day, and you along with it. Indeed, I can’t even find where you get your power from!”

“The power is generated from a simple air-core coil that utilizes the phantom loop effect in order to induct energy from the Earth’s magnetic field and other radiant energy sources. It is all very last-millennium. There is a limit to the viability of this method, however. With additional resources we could develop practical applications of time manipulations.”

“For example,” the Guru offered, “it could be possible to expand the agricultural produce of the planet exponentially. Consider…” he motioned towards Prometheus, who opened up his body covering to reveal a projector that thrust an image of a simplified urban community and a farm onto the far wall. “A farm that was temporally displaced, where time could run at an accelerated rate. Given proper modifications, such a farm could produce a year’s worth of crops every month, every day, indeed every minute. But that is only one probable and somewhat early result of temporal research.”

The Guru continued, “Consider a single apple…” Prometheus switched the display to the mentioned fruit. “With exact control over time, it might be possible for one apple to feed tens of thousands of individuals.” The image split into several identical apples. “All that is require would be to remove the apple from a second ago and bring it to the present, then remove the apple from two seconds ago, and bring that to the present, and so on and so forth. Mastery over time could provide endless resources.”

By the time the two left the Protectorate’s Office greed gleamed bright in the politician’s eyes and the two had his support in the oversight committee. While taking the tram back to the workshops, Prometheus thought over the meeting and was ultimately disappointed in the outcome. “Sir, to my understanding of temporal mechanics, it would not be possible to remove an unlimited or near unlimited number of specific instances of an object from the time stream and place them in a central location.”

“That is quite correct. At best you’d end up with just one apple, a lot of wasted effort, and potentially reprehensible damage to the very fabric of time. But the Protectorate doesn’t know that.”

“It was dishonest of us to make such a claim.”

“Possibly, my boy, but the ends justify the means.”

“But you are unaware of what this end is and thus cannot conclude that it justifies the dishonesty utilized in achieving it.”

“You are quite right again. Now that the NeoEpoch is complete, or should be after those diagnostics are done, it may be time I started studying Gaspar’s old field of temporal informatics. Perhaps then I can deduce the purpose of building a city of time.”

“The Ashtear’s have Lucca’s old research files on hand. I believe she studied and attempted to replicate his Time Egg. Her research may be of help in this particular matter, then.”

“Good idea. Perhaps it is time for you to visit them and see what you can obtain.”
« Last Edit: October 21, 2009, 01:46:39 pm by Thought »

rushingwind

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Re: Chrono Pause: An Intermission
« Reply #1 on: March 29, 2008, 02:08:33 am »
Very nice.  I loved the interaction between the Guru and Robo!  :)

XcyrusX

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Re: Chrono Pause: An Intermission
« Reply #2 on: March 29, 2008, 03:19:49 pm »
Great Fanfic. I really like the way you made the Guru talk!

Thought

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Re: Chrono Pause: An Intermission
« Reply #3 on: October 21, 2009, 01:45:27 pm »
"Ancient spirits of evil, transform this decayed story to Chrono Pause, a complete fan-fic!”

Ahem. It only took me over a year and a half, but I finally finished it. I'm sure there will be more revising and tweaking (particularly for spelling and grammar), so I haven't put this in submissions yet. The already-posted bits have been altered, so I'll just post the full version here, rather than just the remaining parts.

Enjoy.

Chrono Pause
An Intermission

By Thought

“Excuse me sir? You have a visitor.”

The old man nodded to the messenger, being careful not to take his eyes off his work. Sparks flew from his finger and onto a cube-shaped construct. A dented side popped out and it looked good as new. Carefully, he slid the device into its socket in a larger mass of metal and wires, which sprawled across his workbench and most of the floor. The tangle made sense to him and no one else.

“Who is it, Mr. Smith?” he asked.

“It is not so much a ‘who’, sir. It’s a robot.”

“Yes, yes. But who sent it?” the old man asked, holding a lens to his eye as he inspected the details of his work. He leaned so far forward that his bushy white eyebrows got grease on them.

“No one, sir. The robot is here on its own behalf. It claims that it has some information that would interest you.”

Not taking his face away from the machine, the old man reached out with one hand towards a component on the far side of the room. It wobbled for a moment then floated into the air and it drew itself towards him. As his fingers closed over it he spoke again, “I’m sure it does, my boy, but I don’t have time to listen to everyone that stops by, as much as I want to, even if the person in question is technically not a person at all. Unless there is something more important…”

“Yes sir. Shall I dismiss it then?”

“Please.”

“Very well.” The messenger turned and made to leave the room. He pressed his hand to the wall and a door slid open. However, he stopped for a moment on the threshold and turned back to the old man. “He did say it was about something called ‘the Ocean Palace,’ if that is significant.”

The old man stopped dead, a circuit spinning lazily in the air between his thumb and forefinger. Carefully he put it down and pulled a cloth over the entire project. “Did he now? Well, that means he has either traveled a very long way or knows someone who has. It would only be polite that I meet with him, then.” He stood, smoothed out his blue and white robes, and adjusted his rather odd hat. With a snap of his fingers the dirt and grime that had covered them fell off. “Lead the way, if you please, Mr. Smith.”

“Very good, sir. He is in conference room 23A.”

The two left the workshop behind and walked down the gleaming corridors of the complex. Holographic projections were situated at regular intervals, displaying various scenes of natural beauty whereas windows would have shown only rock and soil. After a few minutes the messenger stood to the side of a seemingly random door, opened it, and motioned for the old man to enter. The door slid shut after he did so, leaving him alone in the room with a robot.

The machine was mostly humanoid in its form with a nice copper finish and two brilliant blue eyes. “You’re one of the R series, aren’t you?” the old man asked.

“That is correct, sir. My name is Prometheus.”

The old man raised a white bushy eyebrow at the name. “Well, Prometheus, they call just call me the Old Man around here.” He paused for a moment in thought. “I didn’t think most of the R series were given names.”

“We were not, sir. I chose the name of my own accord.”

“Well now, you are a bit of an enigma. Most the R series were retired about two hundred years ago, after some nasty business with that renegade computer. It is most unusual for any robot, particularly ones from that era, to have a name given to them, and the list of those who have chosen one for themselves is rather infamous.”

“It is,” the machine said.

The old man knitted his equally white and busy mustache in through. “And you know something about the Ocean Palace. That is a name I haven’t heard in many years and in another life. But perhaps you are not referring to the same place I am. Please, tell me what you know of it.”

Prometheus bowed an affirmative. “Allow me to be direct, sir. I have been to Zeal and I have walked the halls of the Ocean Palace. I have seen the Mammon Machine, I have seen the earth from the floating continents, and I have ridden the Blackbird. I have looked into the eye of the Queen and seen madness. And I have talked with Schala.”

The old man grabbed the back of a chair to steady himself. He barely whispered the name, “Schala?” With a great weariness, he slumped into a chair and gazed intently at the table, his eyebrows falling so low as to nearly cover his face. He sat silently as the minutes ticked by. Prometheus waited with clockwork patience.

At last the old man found words again. “How did you get here? Does it work both ways? Can I go home?”

If the old man didn’t know that robots were immune from emotion, he would have thought that this Prometheus fellow was pausing to choose his words delicately. “I arrived in the present era by living through the past. Yet, I believe I also arrived in the present era through a temporal distortion that is now nullified. I do not fully comprehend the implications of this duality, but I am confident in stating that my methods of time travel are currently inaccessible..”

“Hmm,” the old man mused. “I was once known as the Guru of Reason. Except perhaps for two men, friends and associates of mine, I know more about the ebbs and flow of time than any living or dead creature in this world. Like you, I have been in Zeal, but through an unfortunately incident I was sent to this time period. Ever since I came here my mind has seen two timelines unreel. One is this world, a civilization to contend with Zeal at its height. The other is a world of ruin that exists only in my mind. I suspect that you are familiar with this feeling.”

The robot nodded an agreement. “It first started in 1999; memories of an apocalypse began to enter my databanks. But then, nothing. While no new memories surfaced, I had the distinct impression that memories should have been there. I underwent several diagnostics but found no fault with my systems or programming. I placed that incident in my memory archives and did not access it again until recently. About two months ago I again began to experience odd memories; I can remember a world in which friends that I have never seen saved me from ruin and stopped the apocalypse from ever occurring. It is my belief that these are not just fantastical data corruptions but rather real memories. I cannot explain them.”

“I had a friend, long ago, who studied this sort of problem,” the Guru stated. “What would happen when a time traveler causes the timeline to change? Would he be affected by his own change and thus be unable to travel in time in the first place to cause that change? That is sometimes known as the Grandfather paradox.”

“I am familiar with it,” the robot said.

“Good. Well, my friend hypothesized that, to an extent, time can’t actually be changed, not in that sense of the word. The information that represents how things ‘used to be’ would still exist, somewhere, but not in the new timeline. He thought that perhaps there might be a universal depository where these discarded timelines are relegated to; thus time isn’t changed, only replaced. From that depository, with the proper applications of force, a timeline or part of a timeline might be retrieved and restored.”

“And from this he constructed a device to do just that, a sort of ‘Time Egg’ to restore these lost timelines,” Prometheus said.

“You’ve met him, I see.” The Guru continued, “So when a time traveler changes the past, the original timeline would be discarded to this location, this… darkness beyond time, thereby preserving the information, and a new timeline would essentially be created in the exact same moment. The problem, then, is with the time traveler himself. No longer a part of the timeline that was discarded, he would remain as he was. But, with the new timeline there might be an individual who takes the place of the time traveler, an alternate version of himself. Alas, this violates basic principles of the universe; matter cannot be created.”

Prometheus nodded as the Guru stopped to take a breath. “My friend therefore concluded that a new incarnation of the individual wouldn’t be created but the information of that incarnation would still exist inside the time traveler’s mind. He would have memories of both the old time line and the new and for all intents and purposes there would be no distinction between the two versions; both would be as real as is relevant.”

“So,” the robot prompted, “it is your belief that these memories we have are the results of timelines no longer in existence?

“That is correct. Which, alas, does mean that your means of time travel is beyond my reach.” The old man looked towards the ceiling, “Just one more dream that the morning winds have scattered.”

Prometheus watched the Guru for a moment before proceeding, “I have… friends. They gave me information and told me to come seek you, in order to repay a debt owed. They asked that I help you get home. My databanks contain information that should advance your temporal research significantly.”

“These friends wouldn’t happen to have been with you on your memories of time travel, would they?”

“No.”

“Ah,” the Guru said.

“But,” Prometheus offered, “their ancestor was. This ancestor left her family a legacy; they have watched over me and now watch over you. I believe you already know of them. Indeed, the family helped establish you in these workshops.”

The Guru smiled, “Ah, the Ashtears. A splendid family.”

***

“Excuse me, sir, you have a visitor.”

Prometheus nodded but did not move from his position, the chaise of an oddly shaped craft held firm and well off the ground. The Guru worked beneath it, the sounds of sparks and irklings of unscientific forces reverberating from there as he made adjustments to the engines. “Thank you very much, Mr. Smith, but I am unable to attend to them currently. Could you please ask them to return later?”

“Very good sir.” The messenger turned and left the workshop.

“My,” the Guru said, “you seem to be quite the popular one as of late.”

“Yes. It touching, though strange.”

“The Ashtear boy again?”

“Presumably.”

“Well, I think I’ve just about finished here,” the Guru said, crawling out from underneath the craft. “You can set it down now.”

Prometheus obeyed.

The Guru rubbed his hands eagerly. “Well, I must say, you are certainly speeding things along. Thank you. And, of course, please pass my thanks along to the Ashtears. That ancestor of your friends, Lucca was it?” The robot nodded. “Lucca has an impressive understanding of the temporal sciences. Or had… talking relativistic time is always a linguistic nightmare. I’m afraid I never was one for the humanities. Another friend of mine that you met, however, was much better at those sorts of things.”

Prometheus moved to the rear of the craft and began making forcible adjustments to the rigid frame. “Yes, this Lucca was an amazing young lady,” the Guru commented as he came along side the robot and used magical forces to aid him. “Though I suppose it helps that she actually traveled through time and studied my own little bird here.”

Finished, Prometheus moved away from the craft and visually scanned it. “This craft, though not this craft. The alterations we have made deviate significantly from the Epoch’s design and function… Shall I activate the diagnostics, sir?”

“Yes, please.”

External computers set up around the craft began to hum with life as they tested the various capabilities of the device. The two figures watched in silence for a moment. The Guru glanced at one of the monitors and nodded. “It looks like that might have taken care of the anomaly.”

“That may be so but the fact that the anomaly arose in the first place does not sit well with my systems. My memory banks were not corrupted; the previous incarnation of the craft’s temporal drive should have functioned within pre-tested parameters.”

“Yes, it is odd,” the Guru said. “It is almost as if the very fabric of creation changed in the ‘time’ -- if we can use such a word -- between when other-me finished the other-epoch and when we tested this one. But come, the diagnostics will take quite several and we have a meeting with the Central Regime. No rest for the weary, and all that.”

“I must once again recommend against this course of action, sir,” Prometheus said. “My goal was to help you return to your home. You are not meant to be in this time period.”

“I would return home if there was a home to return too. You’ve told me that the floating continents have fallen, Schala is missing, the Queen is dead, Janus is on a ‘journey,’ and my two friends remain where they are. The only good of the situation is that Lavos is dead and gone,” the Guru reasoned.

“Even at that, sir, there is a difference between living your life at this Time Research Laboratory that the Ashtears constructed for you and building an entire city focused on time research. Time is not so hardy as to withstand the possible results from such an undertaking.”

The Guru looked straight into the robot’s eyes and smiled. “You are correct, my friend. This ‘City of Time’ idea is quite dangerous. But do you know how we three Gurus of Zeal came to understand time so well? We have a sixth sense about the matter, as did the royal family. We can feel time; we can feel where it is heading and where it came from. I don’t understand why I need to build this city, but I can feel that time is flowing in a direction that will make us glad we have it. I can hear it, smell it, taste it.”

“As you say, sir.”

***

“Excuse me sir, you have a visitor.”

The Protectorate nodded and waved for the man to bring the visitor in. An old man robed in blue and white shuffled in with a robot in tow. Not exactly “a” visitor, then, but robots barely merited the use of a plural.

“The ‘Guru of Reason,’ I presume? And this is… an R series! Perhaps you are unaware, but those are inauspicious machines. There was a rather unpleasant uprising a few centuries ago and all of them were decommissioned.”

“I am aware,” the Guru responded, “but Prometheus here is-”

“Who?” the Protectorate asked.

“Prometheus, the metal man standing before you.”

The Protectorate frowned. The R series were unpleasant enough, but a named R series?!

“ Now,” the Guru continued, “he is something of an anomaly. I believe if you check your history books you will find that a small band of the R series, led by my good friend here, were instrumental in retiring the master control program. I believe it was called Mother Brain. They were certainly not decommissioned. But I did not come here to discuss history with you.”

“Yes, so your message said. You want my support in the oversight committee.”

“That is correct. Prometheus and I are advancing the temporal sciences but there is a limit to what one man and one machine working in a small laboratory can do.”

The Protectorate laughed. “Small? The Time Research Lab is the largest research center of its kind in existence or in history.”

“Known history, you mean,” the Guru mumbled. Louder, he continued, “Be that as it may, my resources are limited. With additi-”

“Limited?” the Protectorate interrupted again. “Limited? As far as I can tell, you have no resources. Your Time Research Lab just popped up one day, and you along with it. Indeed, I can’t even find where you get your power from!”

The Guru sighed and went into an explanation, as he could see that this bureaucrat wasn’t going to be reasonable. “The power is generated from a simple air-core coil that utilizes the phantom loop effect in order to induct energy from the Earth’s magnetic field and other radiant energy sources. It is all very last-millennium. There is a limit to the viability of this method, however. With additional resources we could develop practical applications of time manipulations.”

“For example,” the Guru offered. He paused, slightly surprised he hadn’t been interrupted again. “Ahem, for example it could be possible to expand the agricultural produce of the planet exponentially. Consider…” he motioned towards Prometheus, who opened up his body-covering to reveal a projector that thrust an image of a simplified urban community and a farm onto the far wall. The image followed the narration: “A farm that was temporally displaced, where time could run at an accelerated rate. Given proper modifications, such a farm could produce a year’s worth of crops every month, every day, indeed every minute. But that is only one probable and somewhat early result of temporal research.”

The Guru continued, “Consider a single apple…” Prometheus switched the display to the mentioned fruit. “With exact control over time, it might be possible for one apple to feed tens of thousands of individuals.” The image split into several identical apples. “All that is require would be to remove the apple from a second ago and bring it to the present, then remove the apple from two seconds ago, and bring that to the present, and so on and so forth. Mastery over time could provide endless resources.”

“Hmm…” the Protectorate said as he leaned back in his chair. “The timing of this presentation is most curious. Why, I have just come from a council meeting where the projected energy crisis was discussed. But… you wouldn’t know anything about that, would you?”

“Oh course not,” the guru said. He almost sounded sincere. “But since you bright it up, do allow me to note that this basic premise is not limited to food alone.”

“Yes,” the Protectorate said, greed gleaming in his eyes, “I am sure it isn’t… very well, this project seems highly profitable. Send me your formal proposal. I’ll help you build your ‘city.’”

The human and the robot bowed their way out of the politician’s office and headed to a public tram that would take them near-enough to the workshop. Along the way Prometheus thought over the meeting and was ultimately disappointed in the outcome.

“Sir,” he said to the guru, “to my understanding of temporal mechanics, it would not be possible to remove an unlimited or near unlimited number of specific instances of an object from the time stream and place them in a central location.”

“That is quite correct,” the human said. “At best you’d end up with just one apple, a lot of wasted effort, and potentially reprehensible damage to the very fabric of time. But the Protectorate doesn’t know that.”

“It was dishonest of us to make such a claim.”

“Possibly, my boy, but the ends justify the means.”

“But you are unaware of what this end is and thus cannot conclude that it justifies the dishonesty utilized in achieving it.”

“You are quite right again. Now that the NeoEpoch is complete, or should be after those diagnostics are done, it may be time I started studying Gaspar’s old field of temporal informatics. Perhaps then I can deduce the purpose of building a city of time.”

“The Ashtear’s have Lucca’s old research files on hand. I believe she studied and attempted to replicate his Time Egg. Her research may be of help in this particular matter, then.”

“Good idea. Perhaps it is time for you to visit them and see what you can obtain.”

***

“Excuse me sir? You have a visitor.”

The boy shoved his glasses up his face with the back of his hand and, with a finger marking his passage, looked up from his book. “Who is it?”

“Prometheus, sir.”

There was a clatter as the boy stood upright, knocking over the end-table that had been covered with books and papers. Even the text in his hand slipped and fell among the debris. The boy only spared a moment’s sorrowful glance for his lost place. “Show him right in!”

The servant stood aside and Prometheus entered. He walked lightly in an attempt to not unduly damage the wood floor. The boy, on the other hand, had no such reservations. He scrambled over to the robot and threw his arms around him.

“It’s good to see you again, Robo!”

“It is good to see you as well, Isaac.”

Releasing his friend, Isaac went to clean up the mess he made. “But what brings you here, Ro? Ever since you read great granny Lu’s message to you, you’ve been spending all your time at the research lab.”

Prometheus nodded, “It is an unfortunate necessity. Lucca had a great debt to repay the man, and I have a great debt to her.”

Isaac paused, “This isn’t a social call, is it?”

“I am afraid not.”

The boy’s expression feel for a moment, before once again bursting into a grin. “Well, no matter. I’m always glad to help a friend. What’s up?”

“We are in need of Lucca’s notes on temporal mechanics.”

“This ‘bout the anomaly that prevented the Epoch from working?”

“How did you become aware of that?”

Isaac’s grin grew even larger. “Come on, you don’t really think I wouldn’t know what’s going on there? I built it, after all. Well… okay, I designed it, but you know what I mean.”

“Indeed. Affirmative, this is about the distortion that required the Epoch’s redesign.”

“What does the old man think this is about?” Isaac asked.

“I am afraid I am not privy to his thoughts in these matters. He seems unsure himself,” Prometheus replied.

“So guess!”

“I…”

“Geesh, I’m not asking you to make me an invisible pink unicorn; just extrapolate based on current data, filling in the gaps with the most likely assumptions.”

“Very well… processing… something about the defeat of Lavos and the alteration of the timeline must have skewed the nature of time travel. Given that this alteration is consistent and appears to influence all time periods equally, it can be supposed that this is not merely an artifact of Lavos’ defeat. Rather, an conscious entity is altering the fabric of time. Building a major research center will give the Guru enough resources to hopefully pinpoint the anomaly and correct it.”

“Woah, that’s heavy,” Isaac said.

“Negative, weight and mass would not have an influence on this distortion,” Prometheus responded.

“It’s slang, Ro. It means that sounds very serious, important, and pressing. Anywho, let’s go get great granny Lu’s files. They’re in the corporation’s archives.”

Isaac headed towards the door and motioned for Prometheus to follow. “I think you two will be particularly interested in her notes from 1030.”

“Why do you believe this?” Prometheus asked.

“That was when she and great grampy Jake had a kid. They founded an orphanage soon after. Taking care of children turned her research to temporal ethics and sociology. She became worried as to what would happen if someone tried to change the timeline again. When granny Lu and the others saved the future, they destroyed the ruined one that we replaced. You know, I may have even been around in such a world, leading a horrible life. But… any life is better than no-life. What if someone from that ‘discarded timeline’ wanted revenge?”

“Impossible,” Prometheus replied. “For all intents and purposes, beings discarded from the timeline would be unable to influence the timeline itself.”

“Unless they had a connection with something from inside the timeline.”

“Interesting. What sort of connection might that be?”

“Dunno… maybe if someone that wasn’t supposed to be in a discarded timeline somehow got there?”

“Interesting indeed. While I cannot presently hypothesize how such an event might occur, it does imply potential I had not previously considered. I will pass this conjecture along to the guru. Thank you.”

Isaac shook his head, “Don’t thank me. Granny Lu was the one who came up with it. You’ll see more in her research itself.”

***

“Excuse me sir? You have a visitor.”

“Here? How in the world did I get a visitor here, Mr. Jones?” the guru asked as his companion backed away to allow him to receive the guest.

“It is a representative from the Central Regime, sir,” the messenger said.

“Ah, that would exp-” the guru started to say, but he was interrupted by a bulbous woman with green skin who pushed her way into the cabin.

 “The ‘Guru of Reason’ I presume?” she asked in an uncomfortably deep voice. The guru paused, then nodded.

“Good. Just what do you think you are doing?”

“I am afraid I do not understand the question, my dear… oh my, I don’t seem to have caught your name,” the guru said.

“Representative of Medina, Blon Fel-Fotch Pasameer-Day Slitheen,” she said curtly. “And what I mean is that you’re supposed to be building your little city in Medina. We had Blue Sun contracts lined up, but I was informed this morning that you canceled them! So what in the name of Magus’ short n’ curlies do you think you are doing in this El Nido no-place?!”

“Ah, well it turns out that Medina would not suit our purposes while this little patch of sea is perfect, from a scientific perspective.”

“I don’t care, you just put countless mystics – my supporters – out of work!”

“To be fair, they weren’t in work. Yet, at least.”

The impish woman glared. The guru smiled. She continued to glare.

“I am sorry, there is little I can do. I must go where the science leads me.”

Without another word the Medina Representative turned on her heels and marched out of the cabin.

“I suspect she will be a continual problem,” the guru said.

Prometheus moved away from the wall, where the woman had ignored him, and approached the Guru’s work station. “I agree. Query: why did you not tell her why you desire to build Chronopolis on this site?”

“You might remember a timeline in which Lavos erupted in 1999, but in this timeline that never happened. If I told her that this is where it rose up and destroyed Zeal, that this is where the Ocean Palace crashed, and that this is where your friends defeated that thing, she would think I was crazy.”

“Medical scans indicate that your mental functions are within acceptable ranges.”

“Perhaps, but I doubt she would be so easily convinced.”

“Might I suggest, then, a plausible fragment of the truth? The fabric of time in this particular region is unusually weak; the woman need not know that the cause of this is that it is here that time has been changed.”

“That is a fine idea. While perhaps it might not due to tell her, as I suspect Ms. Slitheen will make too large of a deal out of it, if other representatives of the Regime come around…” the guru mused.

“Shall we continue working, then?”

“Of course. Now, where were we?”

“We had just finished planning for the excavation of Lavos’ remains and had moved onto the postdiction/prediction computer algorithms,” Prometheus offered.

“Ah yes. Lavos’ power might be at the heart of this city, but we’ll need a brain capable of utilizing it safely.”

***

“Excuse me sir? You have a visitor.”

Isaac Ashtear nodded and waved for his servant to grant the guest entrance. Two young scientists entered. “Ah, Mr. Smith, Mr. Jones, how did things go?”

“Acceptable,” Mr. Smith answered. “The course of research at Chronopolis appears to be set and the replacement director is operating within predicted parameters. The Guru’s disappearance was unexpected, of course, and so the Regime has taken a keen interest in the running of the city. This turn of events has been lead by the Representative from Medina…”

“But,” Mr. Jones offered, “the Atropos Virus is distracting them enough to prevent undesirable meddling. Everything should be set for the next hundred years.”

“And the D-Lock?” Isaac asked.

“Nothing to it,” Mr. Jones answered. “Not even the postdiction/prediction program has been able to offer us a yummy, full on test.”

“Ahem,” Mr. Smith said, “that is correct, but it isn’t finished yet. A hardware failsafe may be necessary. Such a contingency was planned for and built in, though not implemented.”

“True, but I really hope it doesn’t come down to that. Ro’s a good friend,” Isaac said.

“Yup,” Mr. Jones commented. “But he’s a true hero. He’ll do what he needs to.”

“As will we all,” Mr. Smith added. “To each our own duty.”

“Aye… some of us get to skip across time like stones across a pond. And some of us get to take the long road,” Isaac said, the forlorn notable in his voice. He turned away from his guests and looked out the window. The two scientists nodded to his back and left the room.

Once outside, Mr. Jones paused for a moment to feel the wind on his face. “Helping grandpa’s friend is fun, but I still want to be the wind someday.”

“Oh you will be…” Mr. Smith said. “Our dreaming’s not done yet, not by a long shot. This is just an intermission until the real fun begins.”
« Last Edit: October 21, 2009, 01:51:16 pm by Thought »

Thought

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Re: Chrono Pause: An Intermission
« Reply #4 on: November 18, 2009, 02:33:56 pm »
Edits made, a few descriptions and dialogue expanded, and posted to the Submission forum.

http://www.chronocompendium.com/Forums/index.php/topic,8239.0.html