(The sea
is only a space for supernatural and extraordinary existence; it is
only movement and love. It is living infinity, as one of your poets
said.)
- Jules Verne
„Vingt
mille lieues sous les mers“
When I met
Mr Tuniak in front of the Raben Consulting building today, it was the
first time I saw him with a cane. He was leaning on it a bit, but it
was clear for everyone to see that he was not really needing it.
We got into
the limousine and drove to the time machine.
“Are
you wearing the right shoes?”, he asked me.
I answered
in the affirmative. Yesterday he had sent me an SMS, telling me that
water proof shoes would be of advantage today.
“We
will be staying in the present, your present”, Mr Tuniak explained
as we entered the time machine. “The Gemini Foundation rented the
RP Flip
to search for a location for their planned research station.”
“A
station like an oil drilling platform?”, I asked.
“No...
although Gemini is owning something like that as well. No, today we
are going to visit their underwater station.”
But when we
exited the time machine we were still above water. We had landed on a
platform that was swimming on the surface of the ocean and was big
enough to put ten time machines on it. But you could still feel the
waves heaving it up and down and on the edges water was spilling over
from time to time. It also became clear now, why Mr Tuniak had taken
his cane. Here on the platform he actually needed it, otherwise he
very likely would have fallen down. I hope he doesn't take it the
wrong way, but today – for the first time – he actually looked
old to me. Standing next to the time machine, above him the grey and
clouded sky, surrounded by a similarly grey sea he looked like a man
who had seen a century pass by.
“Where
are we?”, I asked.
“The
North Atlantic”, he answered. He pointed at the horizon. “The
north pole lies that way.” He glanced at his watch. “Don't worry,
we will be picked up. I called ahead. Ah, here it is!”
The water
right next to the platform seemed to boil. Bubbles of air were rising
in quick succession to the surface, followed closely by a small
submarine. A porthole opened on its top and Carla looked out. I
recognized her immediately, having last seen her when I had visited
the Island Leviathan several weeks ago.
“Ahoi!”,
she called. She moored the submarine with two ropes to the platform.
Then we helped Mr Tuniak on board. The submarine seemed quite modern,
but it was very small. Officially four people were supposed to be
able to crew it, but the three of us already had difficulties finding
enough space for our arms and legs. “Dad has taken the big boat”,
Carla said, once we had settled in. “Shall we take the short route
or the scenic one?”
“The
scenic one, of course.” Mr Tuniak pointed at me. “We want to
impress our guest.”
We dived.
The
submarine had four bull-eyes, through which I could look out into the
ocean. But the light diminished rapidly and soon we were moving in
complete and utter darkness. Carla navigated the boat as if she had
done nothing else in her entire life. I don't think she even looked
once at her instruments during the whole dive.
“Five
hundred metres”, Mr Tuniak said. “Halfway.”
I had no
idea how quickly we were moving. With no point of reference and with
constant speed it was difficult to tell how fast we were.
Carla
switched off all the lights inside the submarine. They had already
been dimmed, but now the darkness outside also found its way inside.
“Look
out on the left”, Carla said. “We are lucky. Long John Silver is
around.”
Looking
through a bull's-eye, I was surprised to discover a faint glimmer of
light outside. It was very weak, but the closer we got, the stronger
it became. It was a jellyfish with what seemed to be tentacles of
infinite length. At first I had no idea how big the animal was, since
there was nothing else out there to compare it to. Thankfully, the
jellyfish took care of that problem for me. It was swimming close to
the bottom of the sea and suddenly its light illuminated parts of a
sunken ship. I drew back in shock. The jellyfish must have been over
thirty metres long.
“That's
Long John Silver?”, I asked.
“Yes”,
Carla answered. “He sometimes comes for a visit.”
The
jellyfish continued on its journey, completely ignoring our little
submarine.
“We
are nearly there”, Carla promised.
According to
the instruments of the submarine we were about a thousand metres
under the surface as we reached the underwater station. Carla put the
submarine on a platform under it. The platform moved upwards and into
the station. Then we had to wait, because the water had to be pumped
out of the airlock.
As we left
the submarine, a woman was waiting for us. Mr Tuniak introduced her
as Cate. She must have been around 60 and like her daughter her skin
was extremely pale.
“My
daughter has told me about you and Xander's little project”, she
said to me. Then she turned to Mr Tuniak. “Although I still don't
know why you decided to do it. When you were a child, you couldn't
even sit still long enough to tell anyone what you did in the
afternoon.”
“I'm
getting old”, Mr Tuniak said.
The inside
of the station looked as if Jules Verne had had a hand in designing
it. Only the airlock for the submarines looked the way I had expected
it, with metal walls, steal beams on the ceiling and touch-screens.
But everything changed as we entered the main part of the station. A
dark red carpet was lying on the floor (we had to leave our shoes in
the airlock) and the corridors were round and made using wood
panelling. There was electric light, but the lamps were made of a
golden metal and shaped into various forms, no two alike; with very
few modifications they could have been used for gas lights as well.
We entered
the common room. It looked like a captain's cabin from the early
1800s, but much bigger. Through the ceiling I could see the ocean.
Colourful fish were swimming around the station. I paused for a
moment. The ocean outside had been so dark, it would have been
impossible to even see the tip of your own nose.
“It's
a projection”, Mr Tuniak explained.
“Today
the theme is the ocean, other times it is just a clear sky, sometimes
a forest... whatever we want it to be”, Carla said.
In one
corner were several bookshelves, with two sofas in front of them and
several chairs that were just this side of not being thrones.
There were
also two computers, although at first, I didn't recognize them for
what they were. The screens were framed in wood, the keyboard looked
as if it belonged to a typewriter and instead of a mouse, there was a
marble ball embedded in the table surface (it was not real marble, of
course, but that's what it looked like).
“It's
called steam-punk design”, Mr Tuniak explained.
On one wall
a huge medallion was hanging. It was made using two marble plates
(this time it was real marble), a light one and a dark one and at
first glance I thought it was the yin-yang-symbol. But then I saw
that each side was actually a face, the light one that of a woman,
the dark one that of a man.
“What
is that?”, I asked.
“The
symbol of the Gemini Foundation”, Mr Tuniak answered.
“Are
you a member?”
“No”,
he said. “You can't join alone, it always has to be two people.”
“They
offered you membership, you just would have had to nominate a
partner”, Cate said. Turning to me, she continued: “His mothers,
for instance, are members. Kim and I as well.” Kim was her husband
and Carla's father.
“And
what are you doing?”, I asked. “What is the Gemini Foundation's
purpose?”
“It
probably would be easier to tell you what it doesn't do”, Cate
said. “They finance countless scientific projects all around the
world. That's probably the simplest description I can give you.”
“The
aim of Gemini is scientific research”, Mr Tuniak added. “It's
mainly about theories and not really about practical applications.
First and foremost is the accumulation of knowledge. The practical
uses for that knowledge usually present themselves afterwards.”
“And
what kind of research are you doing here?”, I asked. “Marine
biology?”
“That
too”, Carla said. “That's my project, mine and Henrik's. Mum and
dad are more interested in outer space.”
“Down
here?”
“Oh,
no”, Cate said. “For that you have to go even further down.”
A lift took
us down to the lowest part of the station. Here, its appearance
changed again, this time into that of a factory. Countless pipes were
running through the open spaces, accompanied it seemed by thick
bundles of cables. We went to a control station, which I can best
describe as several computers put together on a balcony. Below that –
and therefore below us – was something that looked like a huge safe
door built into the floor.
“What
is that?”, I asked, feeling that I was repeating myself.
“A
water tank”, Cate said. “Our neutrino detector.”
Neutrinos,
they explained, were very small particles, even smaller than atoms.
They had the ability to travel through practically everything. Stars,
planets and moons were no obstacles for them and thus they could
travel unimaginable distances through the universe. Every second
billions of these particles are passing through our bodies without us
noticing. To detect even a single one of them is extremely difficult,
but if you are very patient and have something like a huge tank of
water at your disposal, it is possible.
“When
we got enough money again, we want to install these detectors on the
outside of the station as well and then use the ocean as our
detector”, Cate explained.
“And
why are you interested in these neutrinos?”, I asked.
“Well,
that depends on whom you are asking”, Cate said. “I'm interested
mostly because they can tell us a lot about what is going on in stars
like our sun or what is happening during a supernova.”
“And
dad's interested, because he thinks this way he can make contact with
aliens”, Carla added. “Look at this!” She pushed a few buttons
on the computer and the screens showed a long row of numbers.
“What
is that?”, I asked like a broken record.
“Nobody
knows”, Cate said.
“But
it is too regular to be a natural phenomenon”, Carla said. I had no
idea what was regular about those numbers, but I took her word for
it.
“I
have to admit that if you want to communicate through interstellar
space, neutrinos would probably be the best way to do it”, Cate
said.
“But
in the finest tradition of Gemini, you would never admit that in
front of dad, would you?”, Carla asked with a smile.
“I
didn't know about this”, Mr Tuniak said. He was looking very
interested. “Did you show it Fedor? Maybe he can find something.”
“No,
since we have no idea where he is at the moment”, Cate said. “I
wanted to call you because of that anyway. But we have been receiving
this signal only for the last seven months and at first were sure
that there was a natural source behind it.” She didn't have to add
that she hadn't changed her opinion on that subject.
“And
even if dad is right... the signal must have been sent several
thousand years ago, our response would come far too late”, Carla
added.
“It
probably would”, Mr Tuniak agreed. “But such signals may not only
be for communication. They can also simply be a mean to tell everyone
who listens: We were here.”
NEXT WEEK:
The universe is one big coincidence. Cosmically improbable coincidences happen all the time. We just don't notice them all.
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