(His
letters are the most beautiful mementoes I own of him...)
-
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
„After
what I told you last week, I'm sure you can guess that the time when
my legs had healed again couldn't come too soon for me“, Mr Tuniak
said. “And once I was able to walk again, I actually started
several projects, more or less at the same time.”
“You
wanted to make up for the time you had lost lying in your bed?”, I
asked.
“You
can put it that way”, Mr Tuniak agreed. “The first thing I
decided upon was to return to Leviathan more often and on a regular
basis, so that I could teach the new children there.”
“You
mentioned that last week”, I remembered. “You also mentioned one
of the children in particular... Ethan.”
“Yes,
I know”, Mr Tuniak said. “About Ethan... well, maybe we will get
to him later today. The other thing I wanted to do was work some more
with Gemini. Shortly after my accident, my mothers joined that
organisation and to my surprise they told them right from the start
that they were time travellers. As for me... Even if I could walk
again, I had to take care for the first few weeks, so any exhausting
expeditions were out of the question. So, Gemini had to wait for the
moment. This, of course, doesn't mean that I didn't travel a lot.”
“With
the children from Leviathan?”, I asked.
“Exactly”,
Mr Tuniak said. “When I was a child my mothers took my friends and
me around the world and through time to anyplace and anywhere that
might be interesting and now it was my turn. We travelled a lot and
sometimes one of the other teachers came with us. Alice, for
instance, joined us quite often.”
“Alice
had returned to Leviathan as well?”, I asked.
“Yes,
she had quit her job as a narrator for audio books and started
writing herself”, Mr Tuniak told me. “Both fiction, like
historical novels and non-fiction, like travel guides. Quite unusual
guides too, they don't list facts, but tell stories and legends...
Anyway, her new work had the advantage that she could write wherever
she wanted and didn't have to live at one particular place.”
As I had
entered the office today, I had immediately seen that Mr Tuniak had
put a box on his desk. It wasn't big or in any way impressive
looking, but once I had seen it, I had wanted to know what was inside
that box. Now, just as my curiosity threatened to get the better of
me and moments before I could ask, Mr Tuniak opened the box. It
contained several letters.
“We
didn't travel around the world just for fun, of course, the children
were supposed to learn something with every trip”, Mr Tuniak
explained. “After we returned, we always asked them to write down
what they had seen and experienced. But Carla did something else as
well: Your remember Carla?”
“The
daughter of Cate, right?”, I said. “We met her on Leviathan and
she took us in that little submarine down to the Gemini station in
the ocean.”
“Yes,
that's her. She had the idea of writing letters about our trips”,
Mr Tuniak said.
“To
whom?”, I wanted to know. “Her parents?”
“No,
her parents were visiting often and well informed about what she
did”, Mr Tuniak said. “No, she was sending letters to randomly
chosen people. She looked up names and addresses on the internet and
wrote the people she found, people she didn't know and had never met
in her life, her letters.” He put some of those letters on the
table between us. “When I thought about it, I asked her to copy
those letters. I thought they would be a nice reminder of all the
things we did. Normally, they are kept on Leviathan.” He pushed the
letters over to my side of the table. “I went there yesterday and
brought some back. Do you want to read them?”
Of course I
wanted to. Here are three excerpts:
We
were visiting your city yesterday. Are the thunderstorms there always
so loud? I reminded me of the time we were in Catacumbo. Have you
heard of it? It's in Venezuela. In South America. There is a
thunderstorm that has existed for several centuries. The only time
that it stopped was about a hundred years ago and even then only for
about three weeks. And then it started again and hasn't stopped yet.
Yesterday,
I felt as if I was back there.
We
came to your city and went to the place where all the old factories
are. At school we learned how animals and plants adapt to fit their
environment. Last week we saw a moth that had changed the colour of
its wings to resemble ash instead of the bark of trees. That way it's
more difficult for birds to see them in polluted areas.
Today
we saw that plants can take waste products and make something useful
out of them. We went to a metal factory that for a long time didn't
properly clean its waste water. Because of that, metals contaminated
the ground. A lot of people had to leave their homes. But you
probably know that.
Most
plants, because they could not leave, died, but there are a few trees
that survived. We drove to those trees during the thunderstorm. We
wanted to observe them. Of course, we stayed in the car, it would
have been too dangerous outside. We watched as lightning hit the
trees several times. By the way, did you know that most lightning
stays in the clouds and only a small part of it hits the ground?
The
lightning strikes hit the trees, but the trees did not splinter,
burst apart or start to burn. We waited until the thunderstorm was
over and then went over to the trees. The bark of those trees is not
brown, but there are very thin silver and grey lines running from top
to bottom. They are metal lines, made using the metal in the ground.
The trees took that metal and used it to make lightning rods along
their trunks. If lightning strikes them they can harmlessly channel
the whole energy into the ground. The trees only get a little bit
singed.
You
definitely have to take a look at those trees as well.
Have
you ever worn protective clothing?
We
had to do that today during our field trip. The things we wore were
big and looked a bit like the suits astronauts wear. We had to walk
very carefully and very slowly, because they were heavy and they were
also covering our heads. We only had a small window to look through.
We
needed those suits because we very going to a very dangerous lake.
The lake is called Laguna Caliente. There's no normal water there,
the water is like acid! There are no fish or other animals that can
live in that lake. And it's right on top of a volcano. Sometimes the
lake is spitting its water into the air where it becomes a dangerous
fog. The lake is in the middle of a rain forest, but all around it
there is only stone. That's because the acid fog has killed all the
plant life. If you stay there for only a very short time, you don't
need protective clothing. But we had wanted to stay there for several
hours.
We
were told about the lake by a man who lives in a city near by. I
can't remember his name, because when he introduced himself, I was
distracted by his finger nails. No two of them were the same length.
I asked our teacher to ask the man why. The man said that his fingers
were tools and if his nails were all the same length, then he would
have ten identical tools. And he didn't need ten of one kind, so he
cuts them different lengths.
The
man also told us that the lake can change its colour. That's why we
stayed there for so long. We wanted to see if that was really true.
When we first saw it, the lake was green and blue. Like a normal
lake. We waited. We waited several hours, before we saw that the
water was slowly changing its colour. It got more and more grey. It
even started to bubble.
When
our teacher saw that, he said that we had to go. The bubbling meant
that the lake would shortly be spitting its water into the air again.
And it can spit very high, nearly a kilometre. We didn't want to stay
for that.
I
want to tell you something that may sound like a joke:
In
Australia there is a boat race that takes place in a river. It's a
big event and lots of tourist come to see it every year. But one
year, the race had to be called off. “Why is there no race this
year?”, a tourist asked the mayor. The mayor replied: “Because
there is water in the river.”
That's
not a joke. That really happened about ten years ago in Alice
Springs. That's in Australia. One of my fellow pupils suggested that
we visit the race this year.
It
takes place in the dried up river channel of the Todd River. And it
is important that there is no water in the river. At the “banks”
signs are put up. They say “Don't Angle Here” and similar things.
There are lifeguards and live buoys. It's like a real boat race, just
without the water.
Everyone
can join in the race, if he has a boat. You can built the boat
whichever way you like to. It should be light enough, so that you can
carry it through the river channel. All the boats are carried. That's
why none of them have any bottom. But some people don't come with
boats. I have seen a man who joined in the race with his modified
bath tub.
During
the race, you can attack your competitors. You mustn't hit them with
your fist or and hard object, but you can use water pistols and water
balloons. Some of the boat crews are very good at it and they call
themselves “Vikings” and “Pirates”. But some are not so good
and miss their targets. We were standing right at the “banks” to
get a good view at the race. We were hit by two water balloons there.
But fortunately, it was very hot and our clothes got dry very quickly
again, although mine took the longest.
“I
wish our school had done field trips like that”, I said and gave Mr
Tuniak back the letters. “You must have been a very popular
teacher, I'm sure.”
“Most
of the time”, Mr Tuniak said.
“The
pupil who wanted to visit this race... was it Ethan?”, I asked.
“Yes.
He was born in Alice Springs and therefore knew the race very well.
Although I should have noticed that during all our travels, he never
seemed to pay that much attention to the places we visited, but a lot
more to the time machine itself. But such things really only ever
become clear in hindsight.”
NEXT WEEK
There must
have been a moment, at the beginning, were we could have said -- no.
But somehow we missed it.
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