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Authors: David Kowalski

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BOOK: The Company of the Dead
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“What do you make of it, Doctor Wells?”

I was light-headed. Dazed. I glanced out the doorway at the machine and returned my gaze to its pilot’s wound. “There’s been some secondary hemorrhage,” I said. “The initial surgery might be about two weeks old.”

I asked for a sucker and removed the clot. An arteriole was pumping away steadily, forming a new pool of blood where the clot had been. I asked for a diathermy wand and coagulated the vessel. Gershon dabbed the wound. There was no fresh bleeding. He wouldn’t meet my eyes.

“Nice work, Doctor Wells.” Jenkins was still by my side. “You will need to be debriefed, of course.”

“I’m fine,” I replied. “I’m okay. I just need to go. I need to go home now.”

“Of course, Doctor. Everything has been organized for your departure.”

Gershon was pale. He looked at me now and the meaning was clear. I’d seen something I wasn’t supposed to see and my ongoing silence had to be ensured. I wasn’t going anywhere.

I had to do something.

“Knife.”

The nurse handed me the scalpel with a curious look. I moved fast.

Jenkins said, “What do you think you’re doing?”

“You’ve seen me use one of these.” I had the blade up against his throat. Ran it shakily along the side of his neck, opening the skin. “With my next cut you bleed out. I get it wrong and you drown in your own blood.”

The nurse stepped back from the table, knocking a tray of instruments to the floor. The anesthetist and the other nurse had their backs up against a wall, as far away from me as possible.

“Doctor Wells,” Jenkins rasped, “such melodrama.”

“Jonathan?” Gershon was staring at me, dumbfounded.

“Doctor Wells, what happens after you kill me?”

“That won’t be your problem.” The four guards were framing the doorway; they leveled their weapons in my direction. “I mean it, they shoot and I take you with me.”

“I believe you,” he said. “Guards.”

Keeping the blade close to the skin I looked in their direction.

“If he does anything to me, shoot Gershon—kneecaps, balls, then abdomen. Then do the same for our guest.”

“Greg?” Gershon said.

The guards swung their weapons toward Gershon, who edged back toward the ventilator.

Jenkins said, “Your move.”

“Greg, please,” Gershon was saying. He collided with one of the oxygen cylinders, then put his hand on it to support himself.

“Clock’s ticking, Doctor. I thought you were a gambling man.”

I was about to drop the knife when Gershon spoke.

“Greg.” His voice sounded different. There was the hiss of escaping gas coming from one of the oxygen cylinders. “Anyone shoots, and we all die,” he said.

The guards looked at each other and lowered their weapons.

“You heard the man, Jonathan,” Gershon said. “Your move.”

He nodded toward the doorway. I shoved Jenkins over to the exit.

“Get out of the way,” Jenkins snarled at the guards. The veneer of his composure slipped away.

Gershon elbowed his way past the guards to join me in the main chamber.

“Director,” someone said. It was the fucking anesthetist.

I twisted around and shoved Jenkins away from me, back into the room. I should have cut him while I had the chance.

“Director, they’re bluffing.”

I threw the scalpel wildly in Jenkins’ direction. The blunt end caught him in the eye. He reeled backwards, both hands clasped to his face.

Gershon sprinted toward the machine.

I didn’t know where else to go.

“Shoot them,” I heard Jenkins cry. “Shoot the fuckers.”

Two more men stepped out from behind the machine. Flashes leapt from their guns. The room filled with thunder.

“Not the carapace,” Jenkins yelled from behind me. “Don’t fire at the carapace.”

There was the sudden screech of an alarm. Clouds of pale green gas wafted from unseen vents. I’d somehow fallen near one of the machine’s supports. Gershon, hunched over, was by my side. The firing stopped. The air was burning in my lungs.

Jenkins’ voice crackled from inside a mask. “Let the gas do its work.” He was crouched by the entrance to the operating room. Behind him, the anesthetist and nurses were writhing on the floor. I felt an arm grab me as gray film seeped over my vision. I felt myself being dragged. It was cold. Intensely cold. I was being lifted, hauled into the belly of the machine. And that’s the last thing I recall.

I woke in the desert.

I was lying on my back, in shadow. It hurt to raise my head, but looking past my feet I could see the furrow my body had made in the sand. The trail was laced with streaks of drying blood. I patted myself down; it wasn’t mine.

Above me towered a huge rock formation, tinged red in the last of the sun’s rays. It looked familiar. My head throbbed with a dull, heavy ache.

Gershon was sitting next to me, propped up against an abutting shelf of the rock. He said, “You owe me one.” His eyes had a partially glazed look.

I asked him where he was hit. He spread his fingers slightly. His gown had an ugly tear across the mid-section. Near its hem were speckles of blood and bone from the operation, but above was a slowly spreading stain.

“I think they nicked one of my renals,” he said. “I’ll be pissing blood for a month.” He smiled wanly. Unconvincingly. He wasn’t going to survive the night outside of a hospital.

“Where are we?” I asked.

“The Waste Land,” he said, looking around.

The desert was ochre-red in the last of the light. Long shadows stretched across its undulating expanse. I could now make out the enclosing perimeter of low mountains to all sides. I scanned out toward the horizon, past the long, flat surface of the lakebed. No buildings, no hangars, no runway.

“Where’s the base?”

“It’ll be here in, say, another forty years.”

“I really have to get you to a hospital.”

Gershon laughed. The laugh turned into a cough that racked his body. The spittle on his lips was flecked with blood. “No hospital here can help me,” he said. “Listen carefully, there’s a few things you need to know.”

Despite my protests, he spoke, and I finally gave in and listened. He continued talking as dusk turned to night, and the desert sands cooled, and I learnt many things.

“The base will be constructed in 1955,” he said. “Eight years after Roswell.”

“Roswell?” I rolled my eyes and ignored Gershon’s use of tense for the moment. Soon I would learn a new way of thinking about time. About cause and effect.

“You must know the story. In July 1947 something crashed in Roswell, New Mexico.”

I nodded, though it hurt like hell.

“Roswell is the only documented case where the government ever claimed to have found a flying saucer.” He caught the frank disbelief in my expression but pressed on. “An intel officer from the 509th, one of the first on the scene, said that an object had crashed onto a farm, that it had been recovered and shipped away. It made the front page of the
New York Times
but the headlines didn’t last too long. The 509th was a special unit. Heard of it?”

“Can’t say that I have,” I replied.

“They saw some interesting action in the war. I’m talking about Hiroshima, Nagasaki. They were the only unit in the world capable of delivering an A-bomb. And then this thing crashed in their backyard. Anyway, the official story was revised to state that it had been a weather balloon, of all things, that had crashed.”

“Was it?” I asked.

“You saw what it was.”

“The machine? The thing Jenkins called the carapace?”

“No.” Gershon coughed. “It was the thing you saw behind the carapace.”

The partially dismantled object, seared and sliced.

“That’s what they found?”

He paused, wiped phlegm from his lips, and tried to find a more comfortable position. I took off my gown and wrapped it around him.

“What was it?” I asked.

He looked at me wide-eyed. I supposed then that I could admit what it was. I just couldn’t say the words.

“It was a time machine, Jon,” he said.

While he spoke I fashioned a dressing from strips of his torn theater gown, which he pressed firmly against his abdomen. “Where,
when
did it come from?”

“No one was sure. One of the project’s top consultants said that though most of the working parts could be assembled with current technology, it’s impossible to imagine how such a design might have been conceived in the first place.” Gershon shrugged. “As to where it was from, all I can say is that the operating interface communicates in English.”

“How do you know all this?”

“I was base doctor for ten years. These guys had to talk to someone or go insane. Before I did med I was a physics and math major, so I could relate to some of the shit. And I wasn’t going anywhere.” He smiled. “The way I see it, it was one of ours, from the future.”

“So there was no crash?”

“There was a crash alright. I guess you could call it that. The machine partially materialized inside one of the ranch’s stables. There was some kind of explosion. Only one body was recovered from the wreckage. Quite dead.”

I looked at him meaningfully.

He smiled again. “The body was human, Jon. I don’t know anything more about him than that.”

“So why the stories about the flying saucer and the weather balloon?” I asked.

“What would
you
tell the public?”

“I don’t know.”

“You’d lie, that’s what you’d do,” he said. “And you’d lie like a mother fucker. 1947—World War Two barely finished, and the Cold War just brewing up. What are you going to tell the people? That we found a time machine? What the hell are they going to think?”

“They’re not going to think it was a weather balloon.”

“Damn straight, they’re not,” Gershon said. “Government couldn’t keep the crash a secret. So they had to construct a lie and then wrap it within a more elaborate one.”

“And then spend the next fifty years denying the existence of flying saucers,” I said. “And no one bothers to guess what else it might have been.”

“Uh-huh.”

“Why flying saucers?”

“Flavor of the month, I guess. The term ‘flying saucer’ had only been coined a few weeks earlier. Some pilot had been flying around the Cascade Mountains in Washington and described seeing nine objects moving at nearly fifteen-hundred miles an hour. He said that they seemed to skip across the clouds like a saucer skipping on a pond. The idea of flying saucers can be frightening—forces beyond our understanding and the like—but the idea of contact with aliens has an optimistic side too. Significantly, any threat that contact with extraterrestrials poses is only a threat to the future.”

I saw where he was headed. I said, “A time machine, however, poses an entirely different threat to humanity. It doesn’t just affect the future—it threatens the past and present as well. It threatens our very existence.”

“Better to keep it a secret,” he said, and he began coughing again.

Gershon went silent. I did what I could to keep him warm.

Nightfall had transformed the desert. Stars, familiar yet strange, shone above us, yet they seemed slightly askew. Was the passage of little more than eighty years reflected in the movements of the galaxies beyond? I didn’t think so. Perhaps it was my imagination, some after-effect of the journey, or some residual disorientation from the machine itself?

I don’t know, but I never experienced that phenomenon again. I did not realize it but even then I was being synchronized, adjusted, slotted into the time I’d been transported to.

The moon had yet to rise and there were no discriminating shades. All was black. Gone were the shales and shelves of rock, the yucca and sagebrush that dotted the otherwise desolate perspective. The surrounding landscape appeared as though it had been carved from one single fragment. But not only that: the history, the ongoing narrative of our existence, that is revealed in every leaf and tree, every pebble and grain of sand, was concealed in that complete darkness. Time was held captive.

It felt as if the universe had in that moment been created.

When Gershon spoke again, we talked in hushed tones.

“Did they ever explain why the machine crashed in the first place? And why Roswell?”

“I don’t think they ever recovered anything like a ‘black box’, that they could identify or recognize, so they never learned what happened during its last moments. As for why Roswell, no one was sure. But the timing may have been important. That was the year that the armed forces were separated into army, navy and air force. It was the year the CIA was formed and Chuck Yeager broke the sound barrier. Who knows how significant these events might appear to the future? And less than an hour away from Roswell sat the repository of America’s first atomic weapons.”

“So are there UFOs?” I asked.

“I’ve seen plenty of things flying around that I couldn’t identify,” Gershon replied, “but they weren’t piloted by Little Green Men.”

I asked him what had happened after I’d passed out, back in that room.

The gas was everywhere, he said. He’d dragged me up a gangway and into the machine itself, shutting the hatch.

Within the carapace was a chamber. Six seats arranged in two tiers. The console was a low, narrow shelf that took up a third of the cabin. Above it, undetectable from without, was a window or viewscreen. There, concave screens that resembled a computer monitor, a keyboard that could be accessed easily from either forwards chair.

A single thick lever was set astride the central keyboard. To either side of it, beneath a sheet of rippled clear glass or plastic, were two palm-sized disks. The left one was bright green, the right one, a dull red color. User friendly.

Gershon could see what was happening in the room.

Jenkins was gesturing wildly. More men entered. The gas started to dissipate. There was a loud hammering from outside the capsule. Someone was working on the door.

Gershon thought he saw some of the men attempt to disengage one of the coils from the carapace, and that’s when he did the only thing he could think of. He shifted the lever. The transparent covers slid back and he slammed his fist onto the left switch, which was pulsing with green light.

BOOK: The Company of the Dead
6.71Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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