Part 1 (1/2)
A Traveler in Time.
by August Derleth.
[Sidenote: YOU CAN'T ALWAYS ESCAPE EVILS BY RUNNING AWAY FROM THEM...BUT IT MAY HELP!]
[Ill.u.s.tration]
”Tell me what time is,” said Harrigan one late summer afternoon in a Madison Street bar. ”I'd like to know.”
”A dimension,” I answered. ”Everybody knows that.”
”All right, granted. I know s.p.a.ce is a dimension and you can move forward or back in s.p.a.ce. And, of course, you keep on aging all the time.”
”Elementary,” I said.
”But what happens if you can move backward or forward in time? Do you age or get younger, or do you keep the status quo?”
”I'm not an authority on time, Tex. Do you know anyone who traveled in time?”
Harrigan shrugged aside my question. ”That was the thing I couldn't get out of Vanderkamp, either. He presumed to know everything else.”
”Vanderkamp?”
”He was another of those strange people a reporter always runs into.
Lived in New York--downtown, near the Bowery. Man of about forty, I'd say, but a little on the old-fas.h.i.+oned side. Dutch background, and hipped on the subject of New Amsterdam, which, in case you don't know, was the original name of New York City.”
”Don't mind my interrupting,” I cut in. ”But I'm not quite straight on what Vanderkamp has to do with time as dimension.”
”Oh, he was touched on the subject. He claimed to travel in it. The fact is, he invented a time-traveling machine.”
”You certainly meet the whacks, Tex!”
”Don't I!” He grinned appreciatively and leaned reminiscently over the bar. ”But Vanderkamp had the wildest dreams of the lot. And in the end he managed the neatest conjuring trick of them all. I was on the Brooklyn _Enterprise_ at that time; I spent about a year there. Special features, though I was on a reporter's salary. Vanderkamp was something of a local celebrity in a minor way; he wrote articles on the early Dutch in New York, the nomenclature of the Dutch, the history of Dutch place-names, and the like. He was handy with a pen, and even handier with tools. He was an amateur electrician, carpenter, house-painter, and claimed to be an expert in genealogy.”
”And he built a time-traveling machine?”
”So he said. He gave me a rather hard time of it. He was a glib talker and half the time I didn't know whether I was coming or going. He kept me on my toes by taking for granted that I accepted his basic premises.
I got next to him on a tip. He could be close-mouthed as a clam, but his sister let things slip from time to time, and on this occasion she pa.s.sed the word to one of her friends in a grocery store that her brother had invented a machine that took him off on trips into the past.
It seemed like routine whack stuff, but Blake, who decided what went into the _Enterprise_ and what didn't, sent me over to Manhattan to get something for the paper, on the theory that since Vanderkamp was well-known in Brooklyn, it was good neighborhood copy.
”Vanderkamp was a sharp-eyed little fellow, about five feet or so in height, and I hit him at a good time. His sister said he had just come back from a trip--she left me to draw my own conclusions about what kind of trip--and I found him in a mild fit of temper. He was too upset, in fact, to be truculent, which was more like his nature.
”Was it true, I wanted to know, that he'd invented a machine that traveled in time?
”He didn't make any bones about it. 'Certainly,' he said. 'I've been using it for the last month, and if my sister hadn't decided to blab n.o.body would know about it yet. What about it?'
”'You believe it can take you backwards or forwards into the past or the future?'