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Lord Byron "Childe Harold's Pilgrimage"
For
the last few weeks Mr Tuniak had been talking about his life on the
Island Leviathan and in the Villa Atterton. From time to time I had
asked him, if he could remember the exact date when an event had
happened. But his answers were not very exact. „It was the end of
the 60ies“ or „middle of the 19th
century“. Answers like that.
„Can
you remember the precise dates of what you did in your youth?“, he
asked me in return.
I
protested that I didn't consider my youth to be over yet, but he had
a point. When I think back to my childhood I can't say exactly when
something happened.
„And
you aren't even a hundred years old“, Mr Tuniak said. „And you
have the advantage that for you the years pass in a linear fashion. I
can't say the same is true for me.“
When
he remembered a precise date, it was usually due to other
circumstances.
„I
know when I got my first job as a photographer, for instance“, he
said today. „It was in 1978. The reason why I know that is that
this was the year when Thor Heyerdahl went on his last big
expedition. The Tigris
expedition.“
I
was surprised. I had thought that he had finished his „education“
to become a photographer in the middle of the 70ies.
„I
had expected the same thing back then“, Mr Tuniak said. „But I
actually spend more time learning to become a photographer than if I
had just visited a college. I didn't just need the time for my
education. I also had to put together my portfolio afterwards which
took me at least another six months.“
He
also wanted to age at the same rate as his friends, so if he spent
two days in the past, it meant that he would return to his present
two days after he had left.
„I
kept to this rule nearly all the time“, he added. „I cheated only
a little.“
„I
never met Thor Heyerdahl in person, but he still had a... a big
influence on my life“, Mr Tuniak said. „Once I had finished
putting together my portfolio, O'Jack helped me to get meetings with
the editors of several well known magazines. But none of them went
especially well.“
„Despite
your photos?“, I asked.
„Probably
because of them“, Mr Tuniak said. „I went a bit over the top,
when I put the pictures together. I'm pretty sure most of the editors
didn't believe me when I claimed to have taken all of them myself.“
„Why
not?“
„Because
it seemed impossible to them, that I had been able to find so many
rare motives for my pictures“, Mr Tuniak explained. „And without
the time machine it probably would have been impossible. At the very
least, it would have taken me a lot longer.“
„And
you didn't want to work as a freelance photographer?“
„No,
because I didn't want to spent a large amount of time going to
different magazines to sell my photos. Every time I would have had to
convince the editors to buy them.“ He shook his head. „But lucky
for me, Thor Heyerdahl decided to build the Tigris
in 1978. A magazine took the opportunity to publish a series about
unusual ships. The first instalment would be about the different
ships of Heyerdahl, the second would be about submarines.“
„And
what is that?“, the editor asked.
„It's
the first navigable submarine, built around 1620 by Cornelis Drebbel
in London“, Alexander said. “Don't you recognise it?”
The
editor looked at the five photos on his desk and then to the young
man sitting opposite him.
„A
reconstruction of it, of course“, Alexander added hastily. „But
as you can see, it can actually swim. It was tested on the
Mississippi.“ All of that was a lie. Alexander had travelled to the
past to take hundreds of pictures of this submarine, but only very
few of them he could actually present. Most of them showed the huge
crowds that had gathered on both sides of the Thames to see this
momentous occasion. Alexander was especially proud of a photo that
showed King James I. first entering the submarine and then, after a
short journey of several minutes, leaving it again. But he couldn't
show the editor these photos, without explaining how he managed to
get them.
„Mhm“,
the editor said. He did not seem convinced. Alexander had told him
that an American millionaire with a fondness for old ships, had
ordered the reconstruction. „What else have you got?“
„Another
reconstruction“, Alexander lied and put an additional seven photos
on the desk. „This time of the Nautilus,
originally built by Robert Fulton around 1800.“
„The
Nautilus?“,
the editor repeated.
„Jules
Verne gave Captain Nemo's ship in his honour the same name, you
know“, Alexander explained. He hadn't managed to shoot a photo of
the Nautilus
on water and had had to content himself with pictures of her in the
workshop.
„I'll
buy the Nautilus
photos“, the editor finally said. „And I may have an assignment
for you, if you want it.“
„Do
you know why he didn't buy all of your photos?“, I asked.
„The
old reason, I guess: He thought they were fakes“, Mr Tuniak said.
„He had probably heard of the Nautilus,
but maybe not of Cornelius Drebbel and his boat. He probably thought
I lied to him, at least that's what the job he offered me implied.“
„What
was it?“
„He
wanted me to go to the Arctic and shoot pictures of ships there“,
Mr Tuniak said. „Ships that supposedly were built with ice. The
editor apparently didn't really believe his source and didn't want to
send one of his photographers on a wild-goose chase. In his eyes I
was the perfect candidate for the job. And I was considerably cheaper
than his other photographers.“
He
was freezing. Alexander was standing on the deck of the ice-breaker
wearing a thick coat. He had pulled his hood down over his face and
his scarf was wound around his head, so that only the tip of his nose
could be seen. Against the wild snow storm and for the protection of
his eyes he was wearing darkened glasses. He also wore thick boots
and gloves. And still he was freezing.
„Are
we there yet?“, he asked the similar clothed man standing next to
him. But it was impossible to hear anything out there. The other man,
Thomas Fielding, pointed to his ears and shook his head. They
continued to stand on deck for several more minutes, before they
returned to the warm belly of the ship. But in spite of the heating,
they kept their coats on.
„When
the storm lessens tomorrow, we will see them“, Fielding promised.
The
rest of the crew, Alexander included, was not convinced.
„They
were built using only ice”, Fielding repeated for what seemed to be
the thousandth time. “Churchill had them built, he wanted to be
prepared for a war against... well, I guess I shouldn't really talk
about that. They are so sturdy that you would think that they were
made of steel. Two were built. The third one – they never started
its construction – would have been so big that you could have
landed a plane on it.” Fielding claimed that he had gained his
knowledge by reading secret documents from the British government. Of
course, he couldn't prove any of it.
But
the next day changed everything. As Alexander was coming on deck, the
rest of the crew had already assembled there. Nobody had stayed at
his post. And Alexander saw immediately why: Not far from the ice
breaker was a huge wall of ice, at least forty metres high. And in
front of it were two big white ships. Ships made of ice. Ships that
looked as if the children of giants had become bored of snow men and
turned their creative energies to the sea. Both of them were partly
merged with the ice wall, but no one could seriously suggest that
these forms could be anything other than man made. No iceberg would
form like that naturally. Alexander was so fascinated by those ships
that he nearly forgot to take pictures.
“We
even climbed inside those ships”; Mr Tuniak said. “Most of the
corridors had collapsed – which was to be expected since we were
the first people in over twenty years to enter them – but some of
them had still survived.”
“And
where did those ships really come from?”, I asked.
“It's
quite probable that it really was Churchill who had them built”, Mr
Tuniak said. “It is known nowadays that he had played with the idea
of ships like these. He wanted to be ready for a war with the Soviet
Union. But it was always believed that he never actually acted on
this idea. His successors definitely never pursued his plans any
further.”
“And
this Thomas Fielding really had access to secret documents?”, I
asked.
“It
seems so, yes. Fielding was... well, I'll probably tell you about him
another time. But today I have to tell you about another thing that
happened during that voyage.”
There
had been a strong storm which had caused the ice-breaker to veer off
course. It took the captain quite some time to fix their new
coordinates and find the quickest way to their home port. But they
had just started their engines again, when an alarm sounded on the
whole ship.
“What
is that?”, Fielding asked. He shared a cabin with Alexander and
both of them were running on deck.
“A
warning signal”, Alexander answered. “Something must have
happened.”
They
reached the deck but there seemed to be no reason for the signal.
“What
happened?”, Alexander asked a passing sailor.
“Ship
capsized”, he answered in broken English.
“But
not us, right?”, Fielding asked, but the sailor had already
continued on his way.
“No,
them!” Alexander pointed with his arm out to the sea. Not far off
there was an unusual sight. A ship rose vertically from the ocean, as
if it was stuck in a piece of earth. As the ice-breaker swam closer,
they could see the crew of the capsized ship. But none of them seemed
to be especially distressed by their situation.
Alexander
was waiting expectantly about what would happen next. The captain
finally shut off the alarm. A dinghy was lowered and Alexander
managed to get a place on it, next to the captain and two of his
officers.
“Welcome
aboard the RP Flip”,
the other captain greeted them.
“What
happened to your ship?”, Alexander asked.
“Nothing”,
the captain of the Flip answered. “We are a science vessel and
right now in service of the Gemini Foundation.”
“Your
ship is undamaged?”, the captain of the ice-breaker asked.
“Of
course it is”, the captain of the Flip
answered. “We just... flipped it to get better readings on our
instruments. We are measuring the currents and conditions of the
ocean here. Which reminds me: I have to ask you to leave as soon as
possible, because the noise of your machines distorts our readings.”
“The
Flip
was a ship that was sunk on purpose?”, I asked.
“No,
it was never sunk”, Mr Tuniak corrected me. “Think of it as
putting a ship on its head. Turned ninety degrees. The floor is
turned into a wall, one wall is turned into the ceiling and the
ceiling itself is also turned into a wall.”
“And
it is still swimming?”
“Quite
well, actually. Only a sixth of it is above the surface. And once
they want to move again, they just pump air into the lower sections
and thus get it into the right position again.”
“And
what is the Gemini Foundation?”
“Oh,
Gemini is...” He stopped and looked at his watch. “It's late, but
we can visit Gemini next week. Well, a small part of it. What do you
say to that?”
NEXT
WEEK:
La
mer n'est que le véhicule d'une surnaturelle et prodigieuse
existence; elle n'est que mouvement et amour. c'est l'infini vivant,
comme l'a dit un de vos poètes.
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