Time Past

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Authors: Maxine McArthur

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WARNER BOOKS EDITION

Copyright © 2002 by Maxine McArthur

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer who may quote brief passages in a review.

Published in arrangement with the author.

Cover design by Don Puckey

Cover illustration by Jim Burns

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First eBook Edition: May 2002

ISBN: 978-0-446-55649-1

Contents

Acknowledgments

One

Two

Three

Four

Five

Six

Seven

Eight

Nine

Ten

Eleven

Twelve

Thirteen

Fourteen

Fifteen

Sixteen

Seventeen

Eighteen

Nineteen

Twenty

Twenty-one

Twenty-two

Twenty-three

Twenty-four

Twenty-five

Twenty-six

Twenty-seven

Twenty-eight

Twenty-nine

Thirty

Thirty-one

Thirty-two

Thirty-three

Thirty-four

Thirty-five

Thirty-six

Thirty-seven

Epilogue

About the Author

BODY OF EVIDENCE

Eleanor said, “I hope you’ll tell me I’m making a ridiculous mistake.”

“If it’s about where Murdoch and I have been recently, no, it’s not a mistake,” I said.

She reached for her chair and lowered herself carefully into it, her eyes not leaving mine. “In your blood I found antibodies to viruses that have not existed for decades. Your lungs held traces of exhaust products of machines that haven’t been used in a century.”

“Could you date these phenomena?”

“I’d say about the time the Sleepers were from. Or even before. Your results overlapped with theirs.”

“Pretty good. Would you accept 2023?”

She closed her eyes for a moment. “I don’t want to. But the facts are there... ”

PRAISE FOR TIME FUTURE

“Rich in detail... Time Future shows that Maxine McArthur has an astute mind, a ferocious sense of detail, and the capacity to become one of the world’s most distinguished SF writers.”

—Nova Express magazine

“With considerable talent, McArthur blends a well-researched technological and cultural background with elements of mystery and crime drama, and characters that leap visually off the pages all into a gripping experience.”

—fictionforest.com

“Time Future is fascinating and Ms. McArthur’s aliens are truly not human.”

—sciencefiction.com

By Maxine McArthur

Time Future

Acknowledgments

Thank you to the following people: My agent, Garth Nix, and editors, Kim Swivel and Jaime Levine; readers Michael Barry (who remembered the implant), Jennifer Bleyerveen, and Viki Wright; relativistic adviser Antony Searle; the Canberra Speculative Fiction Guild—thanks everyone; Bruce Missingham, for the inspiration of his thesis on the real Assembly of the Poor; Marianne de Courtenay, always there; Brad, “Fixing it is only a way to show you understand how it works”; my family, who never complained; and all my other friends who helped in ways they probably don’t want to know about. Most of all, thank you to Tomoko, for showing me what had to be written.

Life can only be understood backwards, but it must be lived forwards.

—Niels Bohr

One

T
he maze of paths stretched around me. I was lost. Tents and shacks crowded onto narrow dirt tracks. Piles of decomposing rubbish blocked some tracks. I tried to pick up my direction by the sun blazing across the river, but it was too late in the day.

In this month of April 2023 tent cities occupied river banks all over Sydney. The out-towns, as they called these barrios, also sprouted in the former parks and sports fields of the suburbs as the poor and homeless were forced out of the inner city by rings of police checkpoints that kept the rich and privileged safe.

If you walked from the out-town through the factories of Rhodes, across the murky Parramatta River, through the red-roofed, drug-sodden streets of Meadowbank, and up the slope; if there was enough wind to disperse the brown blanket of pollution, then above the hills and roofs of the suburbs you might see the city towers penciled against the sky. Over there lived the people who said in opinion polls,
illegal immigrants deserve to live like animals.

Illegal immigrants like myself. I’d bet nobody had come as far as I had—in time, or in space.

As I retraced my steps, hoping I was heading east, people began to wander out of shacks to sit in front of them or stand chatting in the cooler evening air. A child struggled with a half-full bucket of water as she crossed the lane ahead of me. Three men standing beside an open doorway watched me all the way down that lane. I felt a prickle of fear between my shoulders until I left their gaze behind.

I didn’t stand out physically—we all wore ragged T-shirts and either trousers or sarongs, and my space-pale skin had tanned in five months of exposure to the savage sun. What worried me was that I was carrying cash, with which I’d intended buying a black market laser, only the seller hadn’t shown up at our rendezvous. I felt everybody could see the tattered plastic notes in my pocket.

I wasn’t used to carrying money. In my century, food, water and shelter are basic rights, not something that must be bought.

This part of the out-town stank of petroleum. It was built on concrete slabs that used to house a refinery. The slabs were stained with dark grease and even the soil between them was hard with it.

Oh hell. My stomach rose as the smell of garbage and open drains mixed with oil. Have to be sick. I bent over a drain and threw up into it. Full of rubbish. Bones, shit, scraps of unrecyclable plastic. Stiff, bloated rat.

I wiped my mouth on the hem of my shirt. Didn’t feel better. Mouth dry and foul, head pounding. I should have known the black market dealer wouldn’t bother to turn up. Should have listened to Grace, who told me to stay in bed when I got sick. “Haven’t got a clue, have you? How to look after yerself when you’re crook,” she’d said.

Of course I didn’t have a clue. In my century we didn’t get sick.

Grace Chenin helped me when I first arrived in the out-town, and I’d lived most of the time with her. As far as she knew, I was Maria Valdon, a political refugee who’d paid to be smuggled into the country then, like many residents of the out-town, been abandoned without ID or money and drifted into the out-town. It was such a common story here, nobody gave me a second thought.

Who would believe my real story? That I was Alvarez Maria Halley, space habitat systems engineer, flatspace drive mechanic, and head of a space station orbiting a planet thousands of light years away and nearly a hundred years in the future. That I arrived in the out-town because the ship I was testing malfunctioned and marooned me here on Earth.

I couldn’t tell them I was stuck in this time and space unless I re-entered the jump point I came through. That would involve explaining the use of hyperspace to a species that couldn’t even provide all of its members with clean drinking water, let alone devise a unified field theory.

To re-enter the jump point I needed a jump-capable ship. None existed on Earth in April 2023. But in three weeks this would change.

On May 1, the Invidi will arrive on Earth and identify themselves as peaceful aliens. They’ll bring medical and agricultural technology that will allow humans to transform this world into a better place. In 2060 the four alien species of Invidi, K’Cher, Melot, and Bendarl will form the Confederacy of Allied Worlds. Twenty-five years later, Earth will join that Confederacy, which by my time, 2122, will have grown to thirteen members.

It must happen, because I’m here. The fact that a human traveled to the past in a ship using Invidi technology proves that the future will happen as it’s supposed to.

Doesn’t it?

I shook my head to clear it of useless speculation, and stubbed my toe on a piece of loose concrete. Leave the theory for later. Right now I needed to get back to my work place and put this money away safely.

The sun had dropped behind the uneven line of buildings. Hope I’m on the right track now.

I’d gone looking for a black market laser because I needed it to contact the Invidi once they arrived. I was planning to use a reflecting telescope’s dish, inverted, to send a pulse along the short-range channel that the Invidi ships use. For tracking control, I used the computer in my work place, and an antique digital processor. The only component I hadn’t been able to find was the laser.

I couldn’t buy one openly because I didn’t have a National Identity Card or a police registration certificate. The former would prove I was a permanent resident, and the latter would show my arrest record, if any.

Someone yelled something unintelligible at me. A small woman in a scrap of bright dress. She shooed me over to the other side of the path, then bent down and chucked a bucketful of dirty water where I’d been walking. All the voices in these lanes spoke a language unknown to me, although I’d been here long enough to recognize it as either Vietnamese or Laotian.

These people probably had the same problem as me— no official identity.

In the first decade of the twenty-first century millions of refugees and illegal immigrants tried to find a new home in Australia after unexpected climate change and a series of natural disasters damaged Western European economies, and the ascent of fundamentalist politics in the USA made that country less accessible. In Australia, the Residential Restriction Law of 2010 originally proposed settling the tens of thousands of illegal immigrants in restricted residency areas.

It was at this time, Grace told me, that the new ID card system was brought in.

“It wasn’t the card so much as the zoning that pissed people off. They shouldn’t have cut us off from the harbor,” she’d said.

She resented it, but that was the extent of her resistance. Her own fragile links to social services depended on her job and keeping out of trouble.

As soon as I arrived in the out-town I learned that, if caught, I would be sent to a holding center, where I could be detained for up to a year, then processed—my details, including DNA, would go into the official database as “illegal,” and unless I could prove refugee status, I’d be sent either to a restricted area or to some far-off part of the country to work. Many people in this position simply ran away from their enforced work, but they had no ID card and dared not apply for one because a record of their DNA was already in the official database. Better to evade capture upon arrival and then make enough money to buy an ID made on the black market. In my case, all I wanted to do was evade capture, period.

It wasn’t hard to remain free, providing I stayed in the out-town. Which left me without access to reasonable health care, money, and what passed in this era for advanced technology. Some tradeoff.

The hum of traffic was louder now, but I couldn’t see from which direction. The out-town was so flat that you came upon things suddenly.

Judging by the way my feet hurt in the cracking rubber sandals, and how dry my throat was, I’d been walking long enough to get home twice over. I didn’t care now if people stared. Maybe I’ll ask someone and hope they don’t take advantage of me.

I’d never get lost on the space station. If you walked for long enough, you came back to where you left. One of the advantages of living inside a torus.

I snorted at myself. Funny thing to get nostalgic about. The station, Jocasta, had problems of its own, many of them similar to the out-towns. We’d always had refugees there too.

Jocasta orbited an uninhabitable planet on the edge of Confederacy space. Because we were an Earth-administered station, and because Earth was a minor member of the Confederacy and humans were not allowed to use the jump drive in their ships, we relied on the Confederacy for trade and defense. Which was fine when the Confederacy was feeling obliging. When they were not, we were thrown back upon our own resources. Jocasta had a large population of free labor, many of whom stayed when their contracts ran out because they couldn’t afford the passage back to their home stations or planets.

We also had a significant population of refugees, who’d stowed away through the jump point at some stage on Confederacy-registered freighters. Many of the masters of these ships were as unscrupulous as the people smugglers who moved groups of people from country to country in this century. Some of the refugees were fleeing from persecution or war in their home systems. They made it to Central and then had to keep going to avoid being sent home again. Others just wanted a better life somewhere else.

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