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Thomas Carlyle
„Cailinn
and I studied Babbage's house for several days, but in the end we
really couldn't do much“, Mr Tuniak told me. „Cailinn decided to
travel back to England, but she wanted to return as soon as
possible.“
“You
did not go with her back to England?”, I asked.
“No,
I claimed that I had other things to do somewhere else, business
deals, and we parted in Italy”, Mr Tuniak said.
“What
kind of business deals?”, I wondered. “What did you say you had
to do?”
“I
can't remember any more”, Mr Tuniak admitted. “But whatever it
was, Cailinn accepted it without further questions. She had already
guessed a lot about where I came from, a lot more than I suspected.
Maybe that was the reason, why she didn't ask any questions...
Whatever the reason, we agreed to meet in London again, a few months
later. At that time Cailinn was sure that she would have managed to
go a second time to Babbage's house and return.”
“Where
did she get the money for the second journey?”, I asked. “I know
you payed for the first one...”
“I
payed for the second one as well”, Mr Tuniak said. “Or, to be
more accurate, the money came from Philip both times. And Cailinn's
second journey was quite a disappointement.”
They hadn't
agreed to a certain date, but when Alexander returned to London, a
telegram was already waiting for him. He had given her the address of
a friend and that friend told him that the telegram had arrived a few
days before. Alexander read it quickly. Cailinn had written that she
was staying in a small hotel for a few days, before returning to
Scotland. She didn't mention anything about her second journey.
Alexander
went to the hotel the very next day. It was really quite small, run
by a family, but Cailinn couldn't afford a room in one of the bigger
hotels in the city. He knocked at her door, which was opened a few
moments later.
“Miss
Noneach”, Alexander greeted her.
“I
did tell you to call me Cailinn, didn't I?”, she returned, before
stepping aside to let him enter.
Alexander
immediately saw that he had pretty much come at the last possible
moment. Two full suitcases were lying on the bed, a train ticket on
the table. A few hours later and she would have been gone.
“You
took your time”, Cailinn said, closed the door and sat down on the
bed. Alexander remained standing in the middle of the room. He felt
that something had happened and whatever it was it had changed
Cailinn's opinion of him.
“How
was it in Massa di Somma?”, he asked.
“What
do you think?”, Cailinn said angrily. But when she saw that
Alexander had no idea what she was referring to, her mood changed
immediately. “Oh, you really don't know what happened.”
“What
did happen?”, Alexander asked confused.
“Mount
Vesuvius erupted”, Cailinn told him. “Three weeks after we left
there. The whole town got destroyed and there is nothing left of
Babbage's house. I went there, in spite of that, but I couldn't do
anything.”
“I'm
sorry”, Alexander said and sat down on one of the chairs at the
table.
“Ah,
well, it isn't your fault”, Cailinn said. “You couldn't know what
would happen, now, could you?” She laughed, but Alexander wasn't
sure if the last question had really been just a joke or if there
were more serious implications behind it.
“What
are you going to do next?”, he asked, to change the subject.
“For
now, I will return to my grandfather”, Cailinn said. “I will
write you down, where he lives, you should come and visit us some
time. I think I will take some time to write everything down I can
remember about Babbage's place... I have a few sketches... After
that...” She looked out of the window as if she could look into the
future. “I don't want something like that to happen again. But I
don't know how it could have been prevented. Do you have any ideas?”
“I
decided to let two years pass, before I went to visit her again”,
Mr Tuniak said.
“Two
years from her point of you, right?” I wanted to be sure.
“Yes,
for me it was only a few weeks or maybe months”, Mr Tuniak said. “I
had to make sure of course that Cailinn would be at her
grandfather's, so I did not go there directly, but went to Edinburgh.
There I asked around, until someone told me that she had gone to the
south of England. So I went back to my time machine, travelled a few
weeks into the future and asked again. This time, people assured me
that she was at home, so I could finally visit her.”
There were a
lot of open fields around Cailinn's grandfather's house. Because of
that Alexander judged it to be too risky to land the time machine
close to the building. Instead he hid it in a nearby forest and
rented a carriage.
As he
knocked on the door of the big mansion, it took several minutes,
before a servant came and opened it.
“Whom
may I announce?”, the servant asked, after having greeted Alexander
as if he belonged to the high aristocracy.
“Alexander
Tuniak, I'm here to see Miss Noneach”, Alexander said.
“She
hast just left to meet someone at the train station, but...” The
servant hesitated a moment, before he continued. “I'm sure she
would want you to wait for her in the library.”
Alexander
thanked him and agreed that he would wait there. An old man was
sitting in the library, as old as Alexander himself, but with less
hair on his head. He was reading a newspaper. He stood up to greet
Alexander and introduced himself as Lord Noneach, Cailinn's
grandfather. They talked with each other, until Cailinn returned.
During their talk, Alexander noticed that Lord Noneach often looked
to the door and was obviously relieved when his granddaughter
returned.
“Alexander,
you should have written that you planned to visit us”, Cailinn
said, after having greeted and hugged him. “May I introduce: Hugo
Delake.” The young man, who had accompanied her, shook his head. He
was a detective for the police and it turned out that Cailinn had
been able to help him solve two strange cases, which everybody else
had declared unsolvable.
“In
the first case, it turned out that a huge mirror had been used to set
fire to warehouses”, Cailinn said. “You know the story of
Archimedes and the siege? Well, what we found was that...”
She was
interrupted by a servant who entered the library and announced that
dinner had been prepared.
“I
turned out to be a long night”, Alexander remembered. “Her...
grandfather was the first to go to bed. He excused himself, claimed
that he was not feeling well and that he would go to his room. But he
urged us to stay as long as we liked. Hugo had go leave shortly after
that, because he had to catch an early train the next day to get back
to London. So, in the end only Cailinn and I remained in the
library.”
“What
are you thinking about?”, Cailinn asked. “And I want an honest
answer.”
Alexander
looked over to her. They had spent several minutes in comfortable
silence. The servants had already gone to bed. “An honest answer?”,
Alexander repeated the request. “All right. I was wondering who the
man who introduced himself as your grandfather really was. I know
that he is not your grandfather, but I can't figure out who he really
is and why he didn't tell me his real name.”
“Why
do you think I know?”, Cailinn answered with a smile. “But yes, I
was curious how long it would take you to ask that question... What
tipped you off?”
“When
he told me his name, he said that he was Lord Noneach”, Alexander
said. “But I know that that is not your real name. So, why should
it be the name of your grandfather?”
“My
real grandfather died several years ago”, Cailinn said. “Before
he died, he wanted his servants to take over the estate. That's of
course impossible, so we kept his death quiet. The man who claimed to
be my grandfather is really the butler. He impersonates him whenever
guests are expected. If friends of my grandfather show up or people
who might have known him – which is thankfully not that often –
then I am greeting them and tell them that my grandfather is
unfortunately not here at the moment and we are not sure when he will
be back.” She looked back at Alexander. “You owe me a secret
now.”
“I
do?”, Alexander asked amused. “What do you want to know.”
“Who
are you? You were not born in this society. I noticed that the first
time we met, the very first instance, but...”
“How?”,
Alexander wanted to know.
“You
never seemed surprised by the fact that I am wearing trousers”, she
said. “A woman wearing trousers seems to be common for you. Even
Hugo... I like him a lot and he is thankfully a lot more modern than
most men I know... but even he can't help it and sometimes has to say
something about the way I dress. Or that I like to travel alone.”
She pointed at Alexander. “Or be in a room alone with a strange
man. For you it seems to be quite normal. And you were not surprised
by Babbage's house. Fascinated, yes, but not surprised. I had a
theory about who you are and were you come from, but then you didn't
know about the eruption of Mount Vesuvius. And according to my
theory, you should have know, which reminds me...” She stood up and
went over to the desk that was standing in one corner of the library.
There was a thin pile of papers lying on the desk. She took it and
gave it to Alexander. He saw that the sheets were pages of a
manuscript. There were also sketches, tables and charts. Alexander
read several of those pages and found a description of Babbage's
house. “Those are all things I have seen and experienced in the
last few years. I hope to write several such books in the future.
About things that should not be forgotten.”
“I
am sure you will write a whole bunch of those”, Alexander assured
her. He remembered the books Sean had shown him in this very library,
about a hundred years in the future. Cailinn had written dozens such
books and their existence and the idea that had born them was what
had led to the creation of Gemini.
“Are
you?”, Cailinn asked. “But why didn't you know about Mount
Vesuvius?”
“Because
I didn't think about it”, Alexander admitted. “I forgot to check
when the next eruption would be.” And thus, without actually saying
it, he had admitted that he had come from her future. But it was no
surprise for Cailinn, it was just the confirmation of something she
had suspected for quite some time.
“Then
I'll take it, that this will not be our last meeting”, she said.
“Definitely
not”, Alexander promised.
“But
if Cailinn knew that you came from the future and that you had a time
machine, why didn't you take her back to Babbage's house before it
was destroyed, so that she could take pictures and so preserve it for
the future?”, I wanted to know.
“I
did take pictures”, Mr Tuniak said. He showed them to me. There
were two kinds of them: Those that were taken with a camera from the
nineteenth century and those that were taken with a modern camera. “I
offered the old photos to her, but she refused to take them. She said
that she was glad that I had them, but that she didn't want them for
herself, because this way she would always be reminded of the fact,
that things can get easily lost, if we are not careful.”
NEXT
WEEK
On
se demande parfois si la vie a un sens, et puis on rencontre des
êtres qui donnent un sens à la vie.
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