Authors: John Wyndham
âI look on “difficult” as an understatement,' I said, coldly, and started to walk off.
âBut you don't
see
,' said his voice behind me. âIt's old Whetstone's machine, man. It
works
!'
My own house was evidently barred to us, and the only nearby place that I could think of at the moment was the upstairs room of the Jubilee Café. Most of the people who worked at the Institute would be knocking off about now, and still trickling out for an hour to come. I had no desire to confirm the impression of my private affairs that had already reached the Director, so I went ahead to the café, found there was no one in the upstairs room, and beckoned through the window to them. The girl who brought us tea was not a bright type. If she noticed our likeness at all, it made no perceptible impression on her. When she had left, Jean poured out, and we started to get down to things.
âYou'll remember,' said my double, leaning forward earnestly,
âyou'll remember old Whetstone's concept of time? He used to give that rough analogy about the sea freezing. The present was represented by the leading edge of the ice, gradually building up and advancing. Behind it was the solid ice that represented the past: in front, the still fluid water represented the future. You could tell that a given number of the moving molecules which represented the future would become frozen in a given space of time, but you couldn't predict which, nor in what relationship they would be to one another.
âAbout the solid stuff behind, the past, he thought you could probably do nothing; but he reckoned that somehow or other you ought to be able to find a way of pushing out a little ahead of the main freezing line, which is the present. If you could do that, you would be creating little advanced bridgeheads of frozen â that is to say, factualized â matter. This
must
, in due course, be overtaken by, and thus become part of, the advancing present. In other words, by going a little ahead you would create a bit of a future which would
have
to come true. You couldn't choose which molecules you would bind together, but those that you found would be solidified by your finding them, and therefore become inevitable.'
âYes, I remember that well,' I told him. âIt was cock-eyed.'
âCertainly it was cock-eyed,' he agreed promptly. âEveryone who ever tried to give him a hand came to that conclusion sooner or later, and cleared out. But he wouldn't see it. Obstinate as a mule over that, he was.' He glanced at Jean.
âIt's all right. I know,' she said, sadly. He went on:
âHe would keep on trying to make that machine of his support his theory â which, of course, it couldn't possibly do with a theory that was all up the pole. And because of that he wouldn't follow up the leads that the thing
did
give. Nothing would loosen him up on that theory, with the result that he overworked and worried himself by trying to pin down the impossible.
âAnd so he died â sooner than he need have done â and his stuff just stayed there, with no one quite liking to disturb it.
âNow,
shortly after Jean and I got married â'
I felt the fog beginning to come down on me again.
âBut Jean didn't marry you. She married Freddie,' I objected.
âWait a minute. I'm just coming to that. As I said, not long after we were married I had an idea, quite a different idea about this time business. Jean agreed that I should use her father's apparatus â as much of it as could be useful â to see if I could work the idea out, if possible. To some extent I have succeeded, and this is the result.' He paused.
âI'm in just about as thick a fog as I was before,' I told him.
âWell, here's the basis â mind you, I don't claim that it may not be misconceived in some ways, but the
empirical
result is that I'm talking to you now.
âNow, time is something similar to a quantum-radiation. The atoms of time are not dissimilar from radio-active atoms â that is to say, they are in a continual state of disintegration, or fission, and they throw off quanta. There must, presumably, be a half-life, but, so far, I've not been able to determine it. Obviously it has to be something very, very much smaller than a second, so let's just call it an “instant” for illustration.
âSo every “instant” an atom of time splits. The two halves then continue upon different paths and encounter different influences as they diverge â but they don't diverge as constant units; each of them is splitting every instant, too. The pattern of it is the radiating ribs of a fan; and along each of the ribs, more fans; and along the ribs of those, still more fans; and so,
ad infinitum
.
âSo, here we have Peter Ruddle. An instant later, that atom of time in which he exists is split, and so there are two Peter Ruddles, slightly diverging. Both those time-atoms split, and there are four Peter Ruddles. A third instant, and there are eight, then sixteen, then thirty-two. Very shortly there are thousands of Peter Ruddles. And because the diversion must actually occur many, many times in a second, there is an infinite number of Peter Ruddles, all originally similar, but all different by force of circumstances, and all inhabiting different worlds â imperceptibly
different, or widely different; that depends chiefly on the distance from the original point of fission. And, of course, there is also an infinite number of worlds in which Peter Ruddle never managed to get born at all â¦'
He paused a little to let me stop whizzing, and get the hang of it. When I thought I had, several points for argument immediately presented themselves. I shelved them for the moment, however, and let him continue:
âWell, then, the problem ceased to be that of travelling in time, as old Whetstone had supposed it to be. You obviously can't put split atoms together again to reconstruct a past: nor can you observe the result of fission among atoms that have not yet split â at least, I think not, though it would appear that multiple futures must be latent in the present.
âSo the place of that problem was taken by another â was it possible to move from one's own branch of descent to one of the, so to speak, cognate branches? Well, I went into that â and here we are to show that, within certain limits, one can â¦'
He paused again for me to take it in.
âYes,' I admitted, at length. âI see it in plan, all right. But what I'm finding it really hard to feel is that we â you and I â are both equally â er â valid. I have to accept the theory, at least in the rough, since you are here, but I still feel that I am the real Peter Ruddle, and that you must be the Peter Ruddle I might have been. I suppose that's a natural subjective view.'
Jean looked up and joined in for the first time.
âThat's not how I see it, at all. We are the
real
Peter and Jean. You are what might have happened to Peter â¦' She sat looking at me for a long moment, then: âOh, my dear! Why, oh why, did you do it? And you aren't happy with her, either. I can see that.'
âThis â' began the other Peter. Then he broke off as the door opened. Somebody looked in. A woman's voice said: âOh, I'm sorry!' and the door shut again. It was hidden from me where I sat. I looked inquiringly at Jean.
âMrs Terry,' she told me.
The
other Peter started again: âObviously we're all equally real: it's just that you and I normally exist on, well, different ribs of the fan.' He went on expanding that a bit, then he said: âAlthough I've done it, I've only a very crude notion of how I've done it. So I had this idea: you know how one's mind tends to work in a groove â well, it occurred to me that if I could start one of my “doubles” working on this thing, too, it might lead to a better understanding of it. Obviously our minds must be like enough to be interested in the same kinds of things, but since part of our experience has been different they aren't likely to run in exactly the same grooves of thought â that's obvious, really, because if our lines of thought were exactly similar you would have made the same discoveries as I have, and you'd have made them at the same time.'
Certainly his tracks of thought were very similar. I have never had a swifter, clearer understanding of what another person was attempting to convey. It was due to more than the mere words. I asked:
âWhen do you reckon, in our case, that this fission took place?'
âI've been wondering about that,' he told me. He held out his left hand. âIt must have been less than five years ago. We've both got the same watch, you see.'
I thought. âWell, it must be more than three years ago, because that's when Freddie Tallboy first showed up here; and, judging by Jean's question, he doesn't seem to have shown up at all on your level.'
âNever heard of him,' he agreed, shaking his head.
âYou're lucky,' I told him, with a glance at Jean.
We thought again.
âIt must have been before your father died, too, because Tallboy was here by then,' I said to Jean.
But my double shook his head. âThe old man's death isn't a constant. It could have occurred earlier or later in different streams.'
That point had not occurred to me. I tried again:
âThere
was a row,' I said, looking at Jean.
âA row?' inquired Jean.
âYou can't have forgotten that,' I said, incredulously. âThat was the night that finished things between us. After I said I wasn't going to help your father any more.'
Her eyes opened widely.
â
Finished
things!' she repeated. âThat was the night we got engaged.'
âOf course it was, darling,' my double supported her.
I shook my head. âIt was the night I went and got dead drunk because the world didn't have any bottom any more,' I said.
âNow we're getting warm,' observed the other Peter, leaning forward, with the light of the chase in his eye.
I did not share his enthusiasm. I was remembering one of the more painful occasions in my life.
âI told you I'd had enough of helping your father because he would cling pig-headedly to a demonstrably absurd theory,' I reminded her.
âAnd I said you must at least pretend to believe in it because he was getting to be an old man, and another disappointment might do him harm, and the doctor was worried about him anyway.'
I shook my head, decisively.
âI remember exactly what you said, Jean. You said: “So you're just as callous as the rest of them; you're just going to walk out on a poor old man and leave him in the lurch.” Those were your exact words.' They were both staring at me. âWe went right on from there,' I recalled, âuntil I said obstinacy seemed to run in your family, and you said that you were glad to have discovered in time the sort of selfishness and callousness there was in mine.'
âOh, no, Peter, never â' Jean began.
My double broke in excitedly:
âThat must have been it â that was the moment!
I
never said anything about obstinacy in Jean's family. I said I'd give it another trial and do my best to be patient with him.'
We sat silent for a bit. Then Jean said, in a shaky voice:
âJust
that! And so you went and married
her
instead of me!' There were almost tears in her eyes. âOh, how dreadful! Oh, Peter, my dear!'
âYou were engaged to Tallboy before I proposed to her,' I said. âAt least, I suppose I mean not you, of course. The other Jean.'
She stretched out her left hand and took her husband's.
âOh, dear!' she said again, in a half-frightened voice. âOh, think of that poor, poor other me â¦' She paused a moment. âPerhaps we oughtn't to have come at all. It was all right to begin with,' she added. âAnd, you see, we thought that if we went to our house â your house, on this level, I mean â we thought we'd find you and the other me there, and that'd be all right. I ought to have known sooner. The moment I saw those curtains
she's
put in the windows I had a feeling something was wrong. I'm sure I wouldn't have chosen them â and I don't think the other me would, either. And the furniture â that wasn't a bit like me. And then that
woman
⦠! And this has all happened wrong, just because ⦠Oh, this is dreadful, Peter, dreadful ⦠!'
She pulled a handkerchief out of her bag, dabbed at her eyes, and blew her nose; then she leaned earnestly towards me again, her eyes still swimming a little.
âYou
can't
, Peter ⦠It wasn't meant to be this way ⦠It's all
wrong
⦠That other me, the other Jean â where is she?'
âShe's still here,' I told her. âShe lives a little outside, along the Reading road.'
âYou must go to her, Peter.'
âNow, look here â' I began, with some bitterness.
âBut she loves you, Peter, and she needs you. She's me, and I know how she must feel ⦠Don't you see that I
know
?'
I looked back at her, and shook my head.
âWhat you
don't
seem to know,' I told her, âis how it feels to have the knife turned. She is married to someone else, I am married to someone else, and there's an end to it.'
âOh, no â
no
!' she said. Her hand sought her husband's again. âNo. You can't do that to her, or to yourself. It's â' She broke off
and turned in distress to the other Peter. âOh, darling, if only we could make him understand somehow what it means. He doesn't â he can't understand, how should he?'
The other Peter's eyes rested on mine.
âI think he does â well enough,' he said.
I got up.
âI hope you'll excuse me now,' I said to them. âI've had about as much of this as I can stand.'
Jean got up quickly, too. Contritely she said:
âI'm sorry, Peter. I don't want to hurt you. I only want you to be happy â you, and the other me. I ⦠I â¦' she choked a little. The other Peter put in quickly: