COSMIC CORKSCREW
by
Michael A. Burstein
Copyright
© 1998 by Michael A. Burstein. All rights reserved.
First appearance in
Analog, June 1998.
Stasis felt unreal.
Dr. Scheihagen had warned me about that when I volunteered
for this mission. "Remember, we don't know what it'll be like
for you inside," he said in his German accent. "We've never
sent a human so far back before."
Scheihagen himself had been the volunteer for the first few
experiments, but he had only gone back in time on the scale of
hours, not years. So he was little equipped to prepare me for
my experience.
Even now, I can't describe it. How does one describe the
passage of imaginary time in a box of Stasis, of timelessness?
I felt frozen in time, while events passed around me
in a blur of color. Throughout, I worried that I might get
trapped in Stasis, and never emerge into normal time again. But
I had been willing to take the risk for this literary mission of
the utmost importance.
Finally, after an eternity of nothing, the Chronobox and I
materialized in a small, isolated alleyway. I jumped out of the
Chronobox, gulped down a few breaths of air, and closed the
door. The sunlight passed through the glass cubicle, rendering
it almost invisible. Only once I felt safely back in normal
time did I check my wrist chronometer.
Its digital display of the date read 06:20:38. Monday,
June 20, 1938. Afternoon.
Perfect. I had managed to reprogram the Chronobox right
under Scheihagen's nose.
#
Scheihagen had warned me about it when he set up the
controls.
"Remember our agreement," he had said to me. "I'm sending
you back on June 23, when the story has already been rejected,
so there's no chance of interference with the main event. You
make one copy of the story, then get back into the Chronobox and
come home. Do not interact with anyone, most of all, with him.
Ist das klar?"
I nodded my agreement, not bothering to point out to
Scheihagen that one of our subject's own short stories showed a
timeline changing over just such a mission, even after the
original work in question had been rejected. After all, the
last thing I wanted to do was give Scheihagen a reason to
suspect me.
Then, while his back was turned and he fiddled with the
last few controls, I used the wrist chronometer -- which was
much more than a simple watch -- to reprogram the date of
arrival. I had to time this perfectly, making the change before
Scheihagen sent me back, but not early enough in the launch
sequence for him to notice.
Why did I do this? Because, despite Scheihagen's warnings,
I wanted to make contact with the subject. When he was alive,
whenever I had met him, I had always been a fan; by the time I
had made a name for myself in his field, he was long gone. I
wanted to meet him right at the start of his career, and as far
as I was concerned, that beginning was right after he finished
writing his first story.
I looked back at the Chronobox, then checked my clothing
and patted my pockets. I was dressed in a jacket, tie, and
overcoat, perfect to blend in with the natives of this era. In
my pockets I had my scanner and my disorienter. The scanner was
vital to my mission; the disorienter was for repairing the past
in case I made a mistake. Feeling confident, I turned around
the corner and walked to my destination: the candy store at 174
Windsor Place in the Park Slope section of Brooklyn.
I had memorized the route in the future, and here in the
past I found my way quite easily. The candy store stood in the
middle of the block. A newspaper rack sat outside, with the
day's papers and more popular magazines of the era prominently
displayed. I pushed the door open and went in.
The details of this store were important to me, and I
wanted to take in everything I saw as perfectly as possible, so
I could remember it once I had left. The first thing I noticed
was that the store was broader than it was deep. To the left,
near the wall, I saw a cigar counter and a cash register.
Behind the register were vertical slots against the walls,
crammed with cigarette packets. At right angles to the cigar
counter was a candy counter, with three rows of penny candies
(penny!) and one row of nickel candies. The sweet smell of the
cigars wafted through the store, permeating it with a pleasant,
musty odor.
On the right side of the store was a soda fountain, and
right along with it a refrigerator, containers of syrup,
electric stirrers, faucets for carbonated water, and a sink.
Four stools sat below it, currently empty. I was the only
customer in the store.
On the right wall was a magazine stand. Next to it, a
rotary telephone, and a table with four chairs. And then,
coming around to the right side of the door, an ice container.
And back behind the cigarette counter stood a young man,
only 18 years old, wearing glasses and showing an impossible
grin. He looked at me, and with an unmistakable Brooklyn
accent, said, "May I help you?"
I was in the right place, the right time. Standing behind
the counter was the young Isaac Asimov.
#
I told him I was just looking, which seemed to strike him
as odd; I guess most people in this era came into a candy store
intent on one or two particular items. But he seemed to relax
when I headed to the magazine stand and began studying the
titles.
I had to take a few deep breaths just to calm myself down.
Part of me was worried that at any moment, Scheihagen might
appear to drag me back to the future, or perhaps the universe
might collapse around me for having already violated his
protocols by slightly altering the timeline with my brief
contact. But most of me was feeling simple awe at being in the
presence of one of the greatest writers of the twentieth
century.
I considered my next move. I really wanted a chance to
talk more with the young Asimov, and it seemed to me that I no
longer had to worry about disrupting the timeline. After all, I
had already made contact, and I was still here. I convinced
myself that it meant that my actions were harmless.
But that still left one question: how could I get him to
talk to me? What could I do to get him to want to strike up a
conversation with just another anonymous customer?
And then my eyes, wandering over the titles of the
magazines, fell upon the current issue -- that is, June 1938 --
of
Astounding Science-Fiction. It was perfect; the
obvious way
to hit it off with the young Isaac Asimov. I studied it for a
moment as I gathered my resolve. The cover illustration was a
painting of Mars as if seen from Deimos. Quite good, given the
fact that no one in 1938 had set foot on the Moon, much less on
Mars. Of course, even in my time, the three human figures
standing on the Martian moon's surface and their silver cigar-
shaped spacecraft were still the province of science fiction,
not of science fact.
I grabbed a copy and brought it over to the counter.
Asimov had been staring into space; now he came out of his
reverie and prepared to take money from me.
He looked down at the magazine, then gave me a quizzical
glance. "Pardon my asking," he said, "but you read science
fiction?"
I nodded; I felt a lump in my throat and it took me a
moment to find my voice. My ploy had worked. "Yes. Why?"
He looked around for a moment; we were still the only two
in the store. "I do too. And I haven't met too many other
readers of science fiction."
I thought for a moment; at this point in his life, Asimov
was writing letters to the magazines, but he hadn't yet hooked
up with the Futurians.
"Well," I replied with a smile, "I've been reading
Analog -
-" oops "-- I mean
Astounding -- for a while now."
"Really? What's your name? What do you do?"
"Um --" I didn't want to give him my real name.
"Schwartz," I said after a moment of thought. "Joseph Schwartz.
I'm a -- a teacher."
"I'm Isaac Asimov. My family owns this store, but I'm a
chemist." We shook hands.
"Dr. Asimov --" I began.
He laughed. "Doctor? Call me Isaac! I'm nowhere near to
a Ph.D. yet."
I felt sheepish; I had just addressed him as I always had,
whenever I had met him in his later life.
"Sorry. Isaac," I said, which felt strange. "Tell me, um,
have you read this issue yet?"
"Have I!" He turned the issue around so the cover was
right side up for him. "I finished this one a few days ago."
His fingers traced the banner at the top of the cover which
proudly boasted "THE LEGION OF TIME by Jack Williamson." His
eyes were filled with enthusiasm. "I've been enjoying the
Williamson serial. How do you suppose he's going to end it?"
"Um," I said. I had never read it. "I'm really not sure."
"Well, I think..." Asimov began, and he launched into a
detailed plot, based on his own extrapolation of what he felt
would come next.
When he finished, I said, "You know, that sounds pretty
good. Have you ever thought of writing the stuff yourself?"
He looked away for a moment, then said, "Actually, I have."
I knew that, of course. "Really?"
He hesitated. "Yes. I just finished a story yesterday.
My first."
"What's the title?" I asked.
"'Cosmic Corkscrew.'"
This was the pivotal moment. "May I see it?"
He got a wary look on his face. "What do you teach?"
"Physics," I said.
His look changed to one of relief. "As long as it's not
writing."
Isaac reached under the counter, and pulled out a sheaf of
papers. With a slight tremble in his hand, he handed the
manuscript over to me. I flipped through it eagerly. Years
later, in his autobiography, Isaac himself had admitted that the
story must have been utterly impossible.
And yet, as far as I and many others were concerned, it was
the most valuable thing in the world.
"It's a time travel story," Isaac said as I flipped through
it. "You see, I call it 'Cosmic Corkscrew' because --"
"-- time is a helix," I murmured to myself, but a little
too loudly.
"Oh, you saw that part already? I decided to use the
neutrino as the explanation for time travel, since they haven't
been discovered yet, only theorized."
I nodded my head, remembering comments he had made about
this story in his autobiography. And then I made a blunder, but
I couldn't help myself. "You know, you got it wrong," I said.
"What?"
"That isn't how time travel really works," I said, and then
I clamped my mouth shut.
"What are you talking about?"
In for a penny, in for a pound, as they say. I had already
started to tell him the truth; I might as well finish it.
"Isaac, if there's anyone in 1938 who can believe my story, you
can."
"What story?"
"I'm a time traveler. I've come back from the future for
this." I lifted the manuscript.
Isaac looked around for a moment, then looked back at me.
"This is a joke, right? Someone put you up to this?"
I sighed, and put the manuscript onto the counter. "It's
not a joke. You've been thinking about how to deliver this
story to Astounding, and you're planning to talk with your
father about it."
"How --"
"Tomorrow you're going to take the subway to the offices of
Astounding, and meet with John W. Campbell, Jr. for the
first
time. He's going to take your manuscript, read it, and reject
it. But you'll begin a working relationship with him that will
change the face of science fiction."
Astounding, at the offices of Street & Smith tomorrow.
I
told him how his friendship with Campbell would lead to a career
as a full-time writer. I told him that his first published
story, "Marooned Off Vesta," would appear in Amazing next
March,
and that his first sale to Campbell, a story he would call "Ad
Astra" but which Campbell would change to "Trends," would appear
in the July 1939 Astounding.
We talked, of space, and galaxies, and tesseracts, and time
travel, and rockets to the Moon, and of all the dreams that were
yet to be. I wanted to stay forever, but every millisecond I
stayed increased the possibility of disrupting the timeline.
Isaac noticed me glancing at my watch every so often, and after
a while he got the idea.
"You need to leave, don't you?"
I nodded. "This is it, Isaac. I have to go now."
Isaac smiled at me. Then he got a worried look on his
face. "What happens now? Do you erase my memory?"
"No," I lied. "Just -- do me a favor. When you write your
autobiography --"
"I'll leave you out of it, I promise."
"Good."
But he got a twinkle in his eye. "Although -- you know,
that gives me an idea for a story. What if I put something in
print here in the past that can only be recognized in the
future?"
I thought for moment. "It does sound like a good idea for
a story, but don't start it until late 1953."
A second later, Isaac laughed. "I guess I do use the idea,
then."
"Yes, but don't do it before then. Otherwise it'll be the
end of -- of everything."
He nodded, letting me know that he was aware of the dangers
of disrupting the timeline. "Thanks for telling me about my
future. It's nice to know that I'll succeed."
"You're welcome," I said sadly. "Farewell."
As I walked to the door to leave, I turned back to look at
him one last time. He was already looking away, staring into
space. I wanted both of us to be able to treasure this
conversation forever, but I knew that I couldn't let that
happen, despite his assurances. So I pulled the disorienter out
of my pocket and fired it at him. It made no noise, displayed
no light, but I knew it had worked. His face took on an air of
bewilderment and confusion, and then readjusted to normal. I
dashed out before he could notice me, and left him to dream the
daydreams of the idle shopkeeper.
#
I headed back to the alleyway where I had left the
Chronobox, clutching the manuscript in my hands as I walked. I
shook with fear over the possibility that I might have disrupted
the timeline; but no, I was still here, meaning that my
interference had been negligible.
The Chronobox was undisturbed, and the alleyway was as
empty as before. All that I needed to do was enter the
Chronobox, set the date for the present, and return home.
But I hesitated.
I wanted to stay here, in 1938. I knew what was about to
happen: the golden age of science fiction. I could hang around,
watch the greatest writers of the genre come of age. I could
attend the first Worldcon, read the stories and novels as they
first appeared, and own a collection of works to rival that of
anyone. Living in the United States through World War II would
be a small price to pay, as far as I was concerned.
I could be a part of it all. I would just have to make
sure that I remained a small, insignificant member of science
fiction fandom, so as not to disturb the future in which I would
eventually be born.
I looked at the copy of "Cosmic Corkscrew" I held in my
hand, and I looked at the Chronobox. I owed something to the
future, I knew that, but I wanted something that was only
available to me here in the past.
I knew what I had to do.
I gently placed the manuscript inside the Chronobox, closed
the door, hit the button on my chronometer and punctured Stasis.
Immediately, the manuscript disappeared and the Chronobox
appeared empty. A moment later, the Chronobox itself vanished.
I turned on my heel and left the alleyway, readier than any
other man in 1938 to face the future.
Except, perhaps, for Isaac Asimov.
-- for my father Joel David Burstein(1929-1990)
Return to the Michael A. Burstein
webpage
COSMIC CORKSCREW
by
Michael A. Burstein
Copyright
© 1998 by Michael A. Burstein. All rights reserved.
First appearance in
Analog, June 1998.
Stasis felt unreal.
Dr. Scheihagen had warned me about that when I volunteered
for this mission. "Remember, we don't know what it'll be like
for you inside," he said in his German accent. "We've never
sent a human so far back before."
Scheihagen himself had been the volunteer for the first few
experiments, but he had only gone back in time on the scale of
hours, not years. So he was little equipped to prepare me for
my experience.
Even now, I can't describe it. How does one describe the
passage of imaginary time in a box of Stasis, of timelessness?
I felt frozen in time, while events passed around me
in a blur of color. Throughout, I worried that I might get
trapped in Stasis, and never emerge into normal time again. But
I had been willing to take the risk for this literary mission of
the utmost importance.
Finally, after an eternity of nothing, the Chronobox and I
materialized in a small, isolated alleyway. I jumped out of the
Chronobox, gulped down a few breaths of air, and closed the
door. The sunlight passed through the glass cubicle, rendering
it almost invisible. Only once I felt safely back in normal
time did I check my wrist chronometer.
Its digital display of the date read 06:20:38. Monday,
June 20, 1938. Afternoon.
Perfect. I had managed to reprogram the Chronobox right
under Scheihagen's nose.
#
Scheihagen had warned me about it when he set up the
controls.
"Remember our agreement," he had said to me. "I'm sending
you back on June 23, when the story has already been rejected,
so there's no chance of interference with the main event. You
make one copy of the story, then get back into the Chronobox and
come home. Do not interact with anyone, most of all, with him.
Ist das klar?"
I nodded my agreement, not bothering to point out to
Scheihagen that one of our subject's own short stories showed a
timeline changing over just such a mission, even after the
original work in question had been rejected. After all, the
last thing I wanted to do was give Scheihagen a reason to
suspect me.
Then, while his back was turned and he fiddled with the
last few controls, I used the wrist chronometer -- which was
much more than a simple watch -- to reprogram the date of
arrival. I had to time this perfectly, making the change before
Scheihagen sent me back, but not early enough in the launch
sequence for him to notice.
Why did I do this? Because, despite Scheihagen's warnings,
I wanted to make contact with the subject. When he was alive,
whenever I had met him, I had always been a fan; by the time I
had made a name for myself in his field, he was long gone. I
wanted to meet him right at the start of his career, and as far
as I was concerned, that beginning was right after he finished
writing his first story.
I looked back at the Chronobox, then checked my clothing
and patted my pockets. I was dressed in a jacket, tie, and
overcoat, perfect to blend in with the natives of this era. In
my pockets I had my scanner and my disorienter. The scanner was
vital to my mission; the disorienter was for repairing the past
in case I made a mistake. Feeling confident, I turned around
the corner and walked to my destination: the candy store at 174
Windsor Place in the Park Slope section of Brooklyn.
I had memorized the route in the future, and here in the
past I found my way quite easily. The candy store stood in the
middle of the block. A newspaper rack sat outside, with the
day's papers and more popular magazines of the era prominently
displayed. I pushed the door open and went in.
The details of this store were important to me, and I
wanted to take in everything I saw as perfectly as possible, so
I could remember it once I had left. The first thing I noticed
was that the store was broader than it was deep. To the left,
near the wall, I saw a cigar counter and a cash register.
Behind the register were vertical slots against the walls,
crammed with cigarette packets. At right angles to the cigar
counter was a candy counter, with three rows of penny candies
(penny!) and one row of nickel candies. The sweet smell of the
cigars wafted through the store, permeating it with a pleasant,
musty odor.
On the right side of the store was a soda fountain, and
right along with it a refrigerator, containers of syrup,
electric stirrers, faucets for carbonated water, and a sink.
Four stools sat below it, currently empty. I was the only
customer in the store.
On the right wall was a magazine stand. Next to it, a
rotary telephone, and a table with four chairs. And then,
coming around to the right side of the door, an ice container.
And back behind the cigarette counter stood a young man,
only 18 years old, wearing glasses and showing an impossible
grin. He looked at me, and with an unmistakable Brooklyn
accent, said, "May I help you?"
I was in the right place, the right time. Standing behind
the counter was the young Isaac Asimov.
#
I told him I was just looking, which seemed to strike him
as odd; I guess most people in this era came into a candy store
intent on one or two particular items. But he seemed to relax
when I headed to the magazine stand and began studying the
titles.
I had to take a few deep breaths just to calm myself down.
Part of me was worried that at any moment, Scheihagen might
appear to drag me back to the future, or perhaps the universe
might collapse around me for having already violated his
protocols by slightly altering the timeline with my brief
contact. But most of me was feeling simple awe at being in the
presence of one of the greatest writers of the twentieth
century.
I considered my next move. I really wanted a chance to
talk more with the young Asimov, and it seemed to me that I no
longer had to worry about disrupting the timeline. After all, I
had already made contact, and I was still here. I convinced
myself that it meant that my actions were harmless.
But that still left one question: how could I get him to
talk to me? What could I do to get him to want to strike up a
conversation with just another anonymous customer?
And then my eyes, wandering over the titles of the
magazines, fell upon the current issue -- that is, June 1938 --
of
Astounding Science-Fiction. It was perfect; the
obvious way
to hit it off with the young Isaac Asimov. I studied it for a
moment as I gathered my resolve. The cover illustration was a
painting of Mars as if seen from Deimos. Quite good, given the
fact that no one in 1938 had set foot on the Moon, much less on
Mars. Of course, even in my time, the three human figures
standing on the Martian moon's surface and their silver cigar-
shaped spacecraft were still the province of science fiction,
not of science fact.
I grabbed a copy and brought it over to the counter.
Asimov had been staring into space; now he came out of his
reverie and prepared to take money from me.
He looked down at the magazine, then gave me a quizzical
glance. "Pardon my asking," he said, "but you read science
fiction?"
I nodded; I felt a lump in my throat and it took me a
moment to find my voice. My ploy had worked. "Yes. Why?"
He looked around for a moment; we were still the only two
in the store. "I do too. And I haven't met too many other
readers of science fiction."
I thought for a moment; at this point in his life, Asimov
was writing letters to the magazines, but he hadn't yet hooked
up with the Futurians.
"Well," I replied with a smile, "I've been reading
Analog -
-" oops "-- I mean
Astounding -- for a while now."
"Really? What's your name? What do you do?"
"Um --" I didn't want to give him my real name.
"Schwartz," I said after a moment of thought. "Joseph Schwartz.
I'm a -- a teacher."
"I'm Isaac Asimov. My family owns this store, but I'm a
chemist." We shook hands.
"Dr. Asimov --" I began.
He laughed. "Doctor? Call me Isaac! I'm nowhere near to
a Ph.D. yet."
I felt sheepish; I had just addressed him as I always had,
whenever I had met him in his later life.
"Sorry. Isaac," I said, which felt strange. "Tell me, um,
have you read this issue yet?"
"Have I!" He turned the issue around so the cover was
right side up for him. "I finished this one a few days ago."
His fingers traced the banner at the top of the cover which
proudly boasted "THE LEGION OF TIME by Jack Williamson." His
eyes were filled with enthusiasm. "I've been enjoying the
Williamson serial. How do you suppose he's going to end it?"
"Um," I said. I had never read it. "I'm really not sure."
"Well, I think..." Asimov began, and he launched into a
detailed plot, based on his own extrapolation of what he felt
would come next.
When he finished, I said, "You know, that sounds pretty
good. Have you ever thought of writing the stuff yourself?"
He looked away for a moment, then said, "Actually, I have."
I knew that, of course. "Really?"
He hesitated. "Yes. I just finished a story yesterday.
My first."
"What's the title?" I asked.
"'Cosmic Corkscrew.'"
This was the pivotal moment. "May I see it?"
He got a wary look on his face. "What do you teach?"
"Physics," I said.
His look changed to one of relief. "As long as it's not
writing."
Isaac reached under the counter, and pulled out a sheaf of
papers. With a slight tremble in his hand, he handed the
manuscript over to me. I flipped through it eagerly. Years
later, in his autobiography, Isaac himself had admitted that the
story must have been utterly impossible.
And yet, as far as I and many others were concerned, it was
the most valuable thing in the world.
"It's a time travel story," Isaac said as I flipped through
it. "You see, I call it 'Cosmic Corkscrew' because --"
"-- time is a helix," I murmured to myself, but a little
too loudly.
"Oh, you saw that part already? I decided to use the
neutrino as the explanation for time travel, since they haven't
been discovered yet, only theorized."
I nodded my head, remembering comments he had made about
this story in his autobiography. And then I made a blunder, but
I couldn't help myself. "You know, you got it wrong," I said.
"What?"
"That isn't how time travel really works," I said, and then
I clamped my mouth shut.
"What are you talking about?"
In for a penny, in for a pound, as they say. I had already
started to tell him the truth; I might as well finish it.
"Isaac, if there's anyone in 1938 who can believe my story, you
can."
"What story?"
"I'm a time traveler. I've come back from the future for
this." I lifted the manuscript.
Isaac looked around for a moment, then looked back at me.
"This is a joke, right? Someone put you up to this?"
I sighed, and put the manuscript onto the counter. "It's
not a joke. You've been thinking about how to deliver this
story to Astounding, and you're planning to talk with your
father about it."
"How --"
"Tomorrow you're going to take the subway to the offices of
Astounding, and meet with John W. Campbell, Jr. for the
first
time. He's going to take your manuscript, read it, and reject
it. But you'll begin a working relationship with him that will
change the face of science fiction."
Astounding, at the offices of Street & Smith tomorrow.
I
told him how his friendship with Campbell would lead to a career
as a full-time writer. I told him that his first published
story, "Marooned Off Vesta," would appear in Amazing next
March,
and that his first sale to Campbell, a story he would call "Ad
Astra" but which Campbell would change to "Trends," would appear
in the July 1939 Astounding.
We talked, of space, and galaxies, and tesseracts, and time
travel, and rockets to the Moon, and of all the dreams that were
yet to be. I wanted to stay forever, but every millisecond I
stayed increased the possibility of disrupting the timeline.
Isaac noticed me glancing at my watch every so often, and after
a while he got the idea.
"You need to leave, don't you?"
I nodded. "This is it, Isaac. I have to go now."
Isaac smiled at me. Then he got a worried look on his
face. "What happens now? Do you erase my memory?"
"No," I lied. "Just -- do me a favor. When you write your
autobiography --"
"I'll leave you out of it, I promise."
"Good."
But he got a twinkle in his eye. "Although -- you know,
that gives me an idea for a story. What if I put something in
print here in the past that can only be recognized in the
future?"
I thought for moment. "It does sound like a good idea for
a story, but don't start it until late 1953."
A second later, Isaac laughed. "I guess I do use the idea,
then."
"Yes, but don't do it before then. Otherwise it'll be the
end of -- of everything."
He nodded, letting me know that he was aware of the dangers
of disrupting the timeline. "Thanks for telling me about my
future. It's nice to know that I'll succeed."
"You're welcome," I said sadly. "Farewell."
As I walked to the door to leave, I turned back to look at
him one last time. He was already looking away, staring into
space. I wanted both of us to be able to treasure this
conversation forever, but I knew that I couldn't let that
happen, despite his assurances. So I pulled the disorienter out
of my pocket and fired it at him. It made no noise, displayed
no light, but I knew it had worked. His face took on an air of
bewilderment and confusion, and then readjusted to normal. I
dashed out before he could notice me, and left him to dream the
daydreams of the idle shopkeeper.
#
I headed back to the alleyway where I had left the
Chronobox, clutching the manuscript in my hands as I walked. I
shook with fear over the possibility that I might have disrupted
the timeline; but no, I was still here, meaning that my
interference had been negligible.
The Chronobox was undisturbed, and the alleyway was as
empty as before. All that I needed to do was enter the
Chronobox, set the date for the present, and return home.
But I hesitated.
I wanted to stay here, in 1938. I knew what was about to
happen: the golden age of science fiction. I could hang around,
watch the greatest writers of the genre come of age. I could
attend the first Worldcon, read the stories and novels as they
first appeared, and own a collection of works to rival that of
anyone. Living in the United States through World War II would
be a small price to pay, as far as I was concerned.
I could be a part of it all. I would just have to make
sure that I remained a small, insignificant member of science
fiction fandom, so as not to disturb the future in which I would
eventually be born.
I looked at the copy of "Cosmic Corkscrew" I held in my
hand, and I looked at the Chronobox. I owed something to the
future, I knew that, but I wanted something that was only
available to me here in the past.
I knew what I had to do.
I gently placed the manuscript inside the Chronobox, closed
the door, hit the button on my chronometer and punctured Stasis.
Immediately, the manuscript disappeared and the Chronobox
appeared empty. A moment later, the Chronobox itself vanished.
I turned on my heel and left the alleyway, readier than any
other man in 1938 to face the future.
Except, perhaps, for Isaac Asimov.
-- for my father Joel David Burstein(1929-1990)
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