Chapter I
Leo was barely two years old when he saw his first Dalek. Dr Who was
on the telly and he was crouching behind his parent’s settee as usual. He
always half-watched Dr Who this way, ready to spring to the door at a moment’s
notice.
How his older brother’s and sister would tease him about it.
Dr Who was fighting the Daleks again. Dr Who was always fighting the
Daleks back then, so little Leo thought. The Doctor was back in the ‘olden
days’ when Leo had his first sighting. On the telly a woman in white dress
was hiding as a Dalek whirred through the wood paneled corridors of an old
house. Leo remembered this big mass of bumpy things and a mean looking grill
for a face topped off by a head like a saucepan with a flash lights attached.
He was so mesmerized by it all he forgot to run for the door.
___________________________________________________
The particular Doctor for this adventure was the one with the sharp
looking nose and black hair. He reminded Leo of a pixie or an elf with
his funny little mannerisms. He seemed to sit around all the time playing
the flute.

As Leo remembered it the story ended with a big battle where all the
Daleks were fighting each other. He had graduated to sitting on the settee
with a cushion on his lap. Daleks were exploding all over the screen and
foam was shooting out of their tops. Leo would have never guessed that the
Daleks had foam inside them. They reminded him of his mum’s old twin tub
as they boiled around, zapping one another with their exterminators, the
emperor Dalek shouting at them- “you must not fight in here!” It sounded
like his mum breaking up his brothers many rows. He felt strangely sorry
for the poor emperor-it must really hurt to see all your children fighting,
even worse when they were killing each other.
These crazy images of Dalek destruction remained in his consciousness
for a long time afterwards. He became a big Dr Who fan and watched it avidly
throughout the rest of his childhood. He always looked forward to the episodes
with Daleks in them most of all.
_________________________________________________
He remained a fan up until his late teens, by that time Dr Who had long
sunk into camp silliness and Leo wondered what he had ever seen in the programme
in the first place. He looked for whatever that was elsewhere, in grown
up things like sex and drugs and rock ‘n’ roll and left behind such childish
things. He still retained some vestige of his earlier passion in that he
excelled in science subjects at school. When he went on to university he
majored in physics, although socially he preferred the Arts faculty. He met
Judith there and within a year of graduating they had married. Leo became
a specialist in advanced astrophysics and worked towards a Ph.D. in the
realm of quantum mechanics.
There he learnt about worm-holes and negative energy and first became
aware of the controversy in astrophysical fields around the subject of time-travel.
Leo was amazed to find that some physicists thought it was theoretically
possible as he had not thought of such things since he watched Dr Who all
those years before. Personally he was unconvinced and tended to side with
Stephen Hawking’s view that the universe just couldn’t permit such things
to take place.
Nevertheless, he couldn’t help but wonder.
Chapter II
Leo and his wife held a dinner party in honour of Professor Enrico, Leo’s
mentor for the Ph.D. Their daughter was barely a year old and Judith had
to juggle roles between being the perfect hostess and tending to Harriet’s
constant demands. Judith did her best not to let the strain show.
“Well Professor, it looks like our little darling’s decided to join us
for dinner,” she said with exasperation as Harriet bounced on her knee,
giggling mischievously. “I’m ever so sorry!”
“Oh, do not worry my dear,” said the Professor kindly. “I’m sure the
little bambino is welcome!” The Professor was a handsome, older Italian
man with an intensely serious face and half-rimmed spectacles. He was like
an indulgent grandparent when it came to the bambino.
Harriet grabbed at one of her mummy’s dangly ear-rings. She was a boisterous,
clever girl, far more advanced verbally than other girls, let alone mere
boys.
“ ‘ret play with Daddy’s ‘lek!” she ordered.
“Daddy’s ‘lek?” asked the Professor.
“Oh, she means the toy Dalek!” said Leo with delight. “Yes, Daddy will
go and get his Dalek!” He left the table briefly and returned with a silver
toy with flashing lights that lit up when you ran it along the table top.
“Daddy brought ‘lek!” lisped Harriet excitedly. “ ‘xterminate! ‘ xterminate!”
she said in her best imitation of a Dalek.
“I didn’t know they still make those old things!” said the Professor
with surprise.
“It’s one of my old toys,” muttered Leo with a certain coyness.
“Yes, that’s my husband’s way of reliving his childhood through our daughter,
I’m afraid!” laughed Judith only half-jokingly. “Now you be careful with
that thing Harriet, I don’t won’t you poking it in your eye!”
___________________________________________________
After Judith had eventually got Harriet off to bed, Leo and Professor
Enrico retired to the patio. Tonight was a warm summer evening, the end of
another long balmy day. They sat down on Leo’s garden chairs with their drinks.
Leo fetched his mentor an ash-tray from the kitchen. He had given up many
months before but didn’t mind smoking a cigar with the Professor tonight.
This was a special occasion after all. They admired the night sky as the
blue smoke of their cigars rose on the warm evening air. Upstairs Leo could
hear his wife reading a bed time story to their precocious daughter. The
Professor took in a deep breath.
“Have you heard of the student paradox yet Leo?” he asked, his grey eyes
beaming with amusement.
“No, what’s that?” asked Leo, coughing copiously on the cigar.
“Well, it goes like this. Assume for the moment that all this talk of
traversable worm holes and time travel is true. Now imagine a Professor who
decides to use such a device to travel into the future. He goes forward in
time, 20 years or so, let’s say to 2023,” he paused to blow some more smoke
rings. “Anyhow, in the future he looks around his University Library and
finds an article on a brand new theorem, completely unknown to science in
his own time. So, being a good academic, he takes a few notes and zips back
in time to 2003 and gives the notes to one of his student. The student takes
the notes and works them into a paper on the brand new theorem, the
same paper that the time travelling Professor saw when he went forward to
2023.”
Leo took a few moments to appreciate the full importance of what
his mentor was saying. “So, you’re saying that the knowledge in the paper
effectively came out of nowhere?”
“Precisely!”
“Because the Professor only read the result of his own student’s work,”
said Leo in wonder. “So he got something for nothing!”
“Yes, I’m afraid so,” said Professor Enrico. “That paradox in particular
is very worrying for the time-travel camp. It makes such a mockery of the
laws of physics, indeed of the whole idea of a universe that makes sense,
that many people are convinced that this is reason enough to side with
Hawkins and agree that Mother Nature just couldn’t tolerate such things.”
“Do you agree with them?”
The Professor allowed himself a wry smile. “Well, I take the view that
just because something isn’t desirable that doesn’t necessarily mean Nature
should pass a law forbidding it. The Universe just doesn’t work that way.”
“So, you think time-travel might be possible?” asked Leo in astonishment.
“If pushed,” said the Professor, “I would say it is pretty improbable,
which is not the same as saying it is impossible. For me it is, as you
say, a case of the jury still being out.”
___________________________________________________
That night Leo drove the Professor home. Although he’d had a few drinks
Leo felt confident enough to drive. He was very excited about the prospect
of his Ph.D. The Professor continued extrapolating on time-travel.
“Another thing is about the ‘student paradox’ is that in a way it may
help to explain the greatest mystery of all,” he mused.
“Which is?”
“Why there is something rather than nothing.”
“How can it do that?”
“Well, if you can get something for nothing in that way, than given the
right conditions one could produce a whole universe in the same manner.”
Leo’s frowned as he simultaneously tried to concentrate on the heady
conversation and driving. “Something for nothing? But are you saying God
used a time-machine to create the universe?”
“God? No! Not God- maybe the universe is a massive time-machine, well
we know it is since time and space are indivisible. That way it could be
endlessly creating and recreating itself in a never-ending cycle.”
“A cosmic self-progenitor!”
“Exactly, just like the Midgard serpent from Norse mythology-endlessly
devouring itself as it gives birth to itself. The universe is spewed forth
from the guts of the cosmic singularity and in the end it returns to that
state of singularity when gravity overcomes all the other forces in the
universe. Then there is another big bang and the whole process starts again.
It is a cycle you see, something I feel the human race has known all along,
right throughout history.”
There was an awe filled silence as Leo ruminated over the subtleties
of the Professor’s intellect.
“How wonderful it is to contemplate,” he said at last.
He was thinking of the cosmic serpent endlessly devouring itself and
giving birth to itself again and again. The thought made him feel at once
god-like and insignificant. So when the lorry jack-knifed in front of them
he barely had time to drag himself back to earth before his car connected
with metal.
Chapter III
Leo was in an endless nothingness. Before him the cosmic singularity
opened up and he found himself drifting towards an infinitesimal point
of light. How beautiful it looked. He felt an immense feeling of
relief that it was all over and he was returning to the source of everything.
But then a familiar theme tune started playing:
Dum-dum, Dum-dum, da-da, dum-dum! Dum-dum! Dum-dum! Dum-dum!
Little Leo was watching Dr Who from behind the cushion again. His family
teased him about the cushion endlessly, but he couldn’t do with out it.
The Daleks were fighting each other on the telly because the Doctor had
tricked some of them into becoming human. Little Leo didn’t know why, but
he couldn’t tear himself away from the screen.
Obey me! Your Emperor is ordering you. Do not fight in here! Do not fight
in here! Obey! I am your Emperor! Daleks, obey me! Obey! Obey! Obey!
_____________________________________________________
Leo awoke to find himself attached to a drip and with a tube down his
throat. Judith was standing over him, a look of concern on her face.
“I was in the singularity with the Daleks,” he muttered incomprehensibly.
“Leo, you must rest now,” said Judith.
“There was an accident,” Leo gurgled. “Was the Professor alright?”
Judith hesitated before answering: “Don’t worry about that now Leo, you
just concentrate on getting well.”
“But, the Professor, he is okay, isn’t he?”
Leo knew from her silence that he wasn’t, however he was still too drained
from his near scrape with death to probe any further. It wasn’t until he
had fully recovered a number of weeks later that he knew for sure that his
mentor was dead.
The implications of the crash were immense for Leo and his family. The
least of it was the postponement of his Ph.D. Although the physical insults
healed relatively quickly, Leo was far too psychologically fractured by
the whole episode to return to work. To make matters worse his insurance
wouldn’t cover the costs of writing off the car because although he
was within the legal limit to drive, he had consumed some alcohol that night.
The insurers for the other vehicle were putting in a claim for costs based
on the assumption that since he had been drinking he was obviously at fault.
Leo was unable to contest this and so he looked forward to increased premiums
next year. All of which was academic anyway for he was in no condition to
drive.
Judith found herself forced out to work to support the family whilst
Leo stayed at home looking after Harriet. Focussing his energies on his
precocious daughter helped him get out of himself for a while. Nevertheless
he felt terribly isolated and soon began to dip into a deep depression.
However just as things were beginning to seem unbearable, there was an unexpected
turn of events.
__________________________________________________
Leo was just sitting Harriet on the potty when the phone rang.
“Hello?” he said anxiously when he was able to answer it.
“Hello, Mr. Portnew?”
“Yes,” coughed Leo.
“My names Martin Vole of Smithwick, Symes and Vole, solicitors for the
late Professor Fernando Gustave Enrico.”
“Oh, right,” stuttered Leo in dismay. He’d been dreading something like
this happening for a long time, for he assumed that it was some kind of
legal action against himself.
“We’re the legal executors of Professor Enrico’s estate. Would it be
possible for you to drop by our offices in Loaded Terrace at 10.00a.m.
tomorrow?”
“Yes, it would, but could you tell me what this is all about first. I’m
going to have to organise child-care to come in you see.”
“That’s perfectly alright Mr. Portnew. We have arranged Child-care at
the nursery across the road. And there is no need to worry, although I cannot
go into details over the phone I can indicate to you that it is in your
interest to come to my office tomorrow.”
“Right, so you can’t give me any indication then?”
“Come to the office tomorrow Mr. Portnew and I shall explain all. Believe
me it will be to your advantage to do so.”
“Okay then,” muttered Leo, unsure of what to make of this summons. “Ten
O’clock it is.”
Leo was barely able to think of anything else for the rest of the day
and well into the early evening. Judith came home at seven, having just completed
another twelve hour shift at the hostel. She was full of work and needed
to unload badly so Leo pushed the news of the phone call to the back of his
mid for the time being. Judith wasn’t around for long, she had another shift
starting at six the following day, so after checking in on Harriet she retired
early.
“Don’t stay up too long,” she said to Leo as she hauled her tired body
up the stairs.
“Don’t worry, just a few things I need to check out on line,” he said
as she started cleaning her teeth. He heard her mumble something over the
buzz of the electric toothbrush. He ignored this and carried on with what
he was doing.
Ever since his odd experience during the crash he had become more and
more intrigued by the memory of watching Dr Who all those years before. That
had felt so real, almost like he was there, back as a two year old watching
the Daleks fight each other again. He had looked on the internet to try
and find out more about the episode he had been watching. The most likely
candidate was the last episode of Evil of the Daleks, starring Patrick Troughton
as the Doctor, first broadcast in July 1967. He would have been about two
and a half back then. He was astonished to realise how far back his memories
went. It also occurred to him that if that was an old memory he re-experienced
then it was a very vivid memory.
1967- so whilst revolution and war reigned supreme in the real world
the same was happening on Skaro. As students everywhere started to question
their teachers, so the Daleks had learnt to question their emperor after
ingesting the ‘human factor’. The result was civil war and the destruction
of the Daleks’ home world. Leo felt the story fitted in well with the sixties
zeitgeist.
Leo was disappointed to find the BBC had trashed all but one of the installments
of this particular story in a purge of their archives in the early seventies.
He so much wanted to be able to compare what he saw in his ‘vision’ with
what was actually on the screen. Now he would never know.
Chapter IV
The following day he reported to the solicitor’s office in Loaded Terrace.
Collecting a docket from the reception he was able to deposit Harriet in
the care of the nursery just across the road. Finally he was shown into
a pale blue office at the top of the stairs where he met Martin Vole.
Mr. Vole was a lot younger than Leo had imagined, in his early thirties
with a full head of dark brown hair sitting over green eyes and a confident
smile.
What he had to say was even more of a surprise than his age.
“The Professor made me a beneficiary of his will? But I only knew the
man briefly, surely there has been some kind of mistake?” Although it was
not in Leo’s nature to look a gift horse in the mouth his recent experiences
had left him understandably wary of everything.
“Well it is all here in black and white,” said Vole. “Professor Enrico
has left you and your family considerable assets, including his house and
the contents of several savings accounts as well as various stocks and
shares in cybernetic industries.”
“But why, I don’t understand, were there any conditions?”
Vole coughed politely. “The Professor did stipulate one condition, but
before I explain that I need to show you this video recording he made before
his death.”
So without any more ado he reached over behind his desk and inserted
a disk in a DVD player and switched on the TV that was mounted on the wall.
An image appeared on the screen of the Professor sitting at his desk in
his study, surrounded by books with the sun streaming in through the window.
His eyes seemed fixed on Leo’s, which felt extremely odd.
“Hello Leo, if you’re watching this, then I must already be dead,” said
the Professor causally. “And doubtless you are wondering why it is that I’ve
agreed to make such a bequest to you and your family.” The Professor paused
for a moment to consider his words, his hands clasped together on the desk
in front of him. “What I’m about to tell you requires a leap of faith, but
the reason I chose you Leo is because I judged you capable of making just
such a leap.
“During the Cold War I worked for the British military on a project called
Distant Star. I am probably in breach of the Official Secrets Act telling
you this, but as you know, I am far beyond the reach of the British State
by now.” He allowed himself a dry chuckle at this before continuing. “I
digress, Distant Star was your country’s equivalent of the Remote Viewing
Project run by the CIA at the same time. I was one of the remote viewers,
trained psychics who would direct their energies towards the Soviet Union
in hope of being able to detect troop movements and military exercises by
use of telepathy. We had some very promising results and were able to verify
our observations with satellite surveillance.” His face contorted in disgust.
“But it was all too radical for the top-brass and within eighteen months
the funding had dried up! Many of my colleagues went over to the states to
work on the remote viewing project. I however chose a different path, as
I was no longer enamoured with the idea of letting the military have control
of what I had discovered.
“During my period with Distant Star I found that I was not only able
to view objects in distant space but objects at a different time. This had
been half-recognized by the project in that they had a sub-detail whose task
was to investigate powers of pre-cognition. However it wasn’t until after
the project folded up that I was really able to give it my full consideration.
“I started to experiment with what I came to call psychic temporal
displacement. My researches, as you can well imagine, took me to some strange
places. But I found I was able to distantly view different events in the
past and future with increasing accuracy. For example, I was able to help
police locate the remains of the body in a fifteen year old murder inquiry
in Hampshire. In Cambodia I was able to discover the buried remains of Pol
Pot’s killing fields after almost thirty years in the ground. Fine as these
small victories were I soon became aware of a major limitation of the temporal
displacement. Any displacement was limited to the life-span of the individual.
I began to theorize about why that might be so and experiment with ways
of getting around it. I did this because I could see endless applications
opening up before my eyes. It was then that I started to test out moving
forward in time, ironically because I was looking to see if I had found a
way round this difficulty later on. What I found instead was the greatest
shock of all Leo, and that is where you come in.”
Although it seemed likely the Professor was about to expand on this,
Leo signaled that he wished Vole to stop the machine there.
“This is total and absolute madness!” he exclaimed in dismay. “I just
do not recognize the man in that video! I feel as if someone has taken a
film of the professor and dubbed their own sound-track using voice samples!”
“Mr. Portnew I assure you that most certainly is not the case!” said
Vole somewhat testily. “And I agree that Professor Enrico’s ideas were
very extraordinary. Nevertheless, it is a point in his will that you continue
to watch the rest of the recording and then carry out the deceased’s instructions
as to the best of your ability.”
“Instructions?”
“Yes, all in good time Mr. Portnew. Now do you want to see the rest of
the recording now or not?”
Leo meekly nodded his head. He could see no other way out now and the
thought of spending the rest of his life struggling to finance his studies
was too much for him to bare.