Chapter Three: And on the Worst Night
of His Life, No Less…
Edgar stumbled down the western
slope of College Hill, his laudanum-besotted mind struggling to cope with
untamable passions that besieged his mind and heart. “She has rejected me…” the
whole of Apocalypse in those four words. The only woman he had ever loved
(well, there was also dear Virginia, but she had had the gall to up and die on
him, leaving alone and adrift in the cruel world. Sarah was, alone, the only bright and shining
thing left in his desolate and storm-ravaged world. But like a cruel and false
island to a drowning sailor, she had tossed the flotsam and jettison of his
love back into the merciless tides to inexorably drown.
All of his heart, letter after
several thousand-word letter, all of it had been so many feeble, ineffective
waves dashed against her granite resolve. She would not be moved by anything he
could say, and deed he could perform. Save one. Perhaps if he threw himself in
to the river, then, then she would know how true his love was. Or had been. But
what if then she realized what a prize she had passed on? What if his death
broke her sanity and she joined him in suicide, hoping against hope they would
find reunion in Heaven? No, for all his heartbreak, he could not consign her to
such a fate. Her mother, yes. She could be thrown to the ravenous dogs for all
he cared, or…or…walled up inside a remote dungeon!
Torn between visions of deepest love
and rabid dogs, Edgar was quite unready for the great machine that pulsed into
view before his eyes. He looked furtively, up and down Angel Street for anyone
whom he could call to for aid, but he was alone in the dark and rain-dampened
night.
The thing… (machine?) slowly came to
fully inhabit the reality into which it had strobed, with a sound that could
only be described as time and space reduced to sections and reassembled, only
this time with a machine sitting in the middle of the street, at the top of the
hill. It resembled a carriage of sorts, if such a vehicle was built to not go
anywhere, for it lacked wheels or even sled rails. It had brass pipes and
levers, flashing lights and tubes of all manner and otherwise creaked and
groaned like a steam engine. A steam engine that slid sideways into reality,
that is. At the, Edgar guessed, helm of it sat a man in clothes that were not
the fashion of the day. More over his right sleeve was rolled up and his
forearm bandaged from some great wound.
“You are Edgar Allan Poe, yes?”
shouted the man, in English, a fact that simultaneously comforted Edgar and
yet, comforted him not at all.
“Are you Edgar. Allan. Poe?” the man
repeated, Edgar thought as if talking to an idiot. Sadly, all he could bring
himself to do was acknowledge it with a shaky nod and an utterance that sounded
more like “WUH?” than “Yes.”
“Then get in,’ the man said, indicating the seat next to him.
“Then get in,’ the man said, indicating the seat next to him.
Edgar again said (sort of) “WUH?”
“Do you wish to live? You are
pursued by enemies you do not know.
This took Edgar aback. Not that he
had unknown enemies (he always had suspected so, but assumed they were jealous
writers and dull editors), but that someone asked him a question about himself
to which he did not know the answer. “I… uh, don’t know. If I want to live or
die, that is” he tried to explain over his sudden feelings or great
embarrassment.
“Let me put it this way, then,” said
the exasperated man, “Do you want your stories and poems to live on after you
are gone?”
“WUH, I mean, yes. Yes, I do want
that.”
“Then get it, man! There are unknown demons on our trail and we must be away!”
“Then get it, man! There are unknown demons on our trail and we must be away!”
Edgar wanted to ask how they would
get away, or anywhere, without wheels, but then felt himself, for lack of
better words, being sectioned and slid sideways across Time. He had managed to
lean over the railings before throwing up his dinner into the swirling eddies
of… whatever. The swirl was like the spinning of a room when Edgar drank too much,
except not just the room, but the whole universe was spinning. Edgar threw up
again. When he looked up, wiping his face on his sleeve, the man was looking at
him with a grin and the strangest goggles Edgar had ever seen. The man had his
hand out to him in greeting.
“Nice to meet you, sir. My name is
H.G. Wells.”
Interlude No. 2
The Year is 1978 and Neil Perry has
just had a series of dreams over the previous few days, each worse than the one
before. It’s not even the lucidity of the dreams that plagued his nerves so, nor
was it entirely due to the undeniable presence of some vast deity, its
hideousness hidden behind a veil of stars, that caused him to urinate in his
bed just to think of the dark, bat-wings that spanned the distance between
galaxies. This was followed each night by the gaining of massive erection,
followed by orgasms that shook his entire frame, his thrashing limbs sending
waves of bed sheets in various directions. The orgasms kept happening until he
was ejaculating blood. On the third morning, he didn’t even bother to
disentangle his legs from the ruined sheets, but dragged them behind like some
lunatic wedding dress, until they fell off and away. He then stepped up on a
chair, looped the wire around his neck, which was attached to the top of the
door jamb, and fell to the side, off the chair and barely felt the wire
separate his head from his body.
In
2002, Alexander Hartdegen is found slumped over in the driver’s seat of his own
time machine. It appears he simply passed, perhaps from a heart-attack (though
he was so young) but an autopsy is performed at the insistence of the insurance
company. He is found to be quite empty of all his organs.