When I was six, the first time machine was created. My parents, along with billions of other people, were ecstatic. It was a wonderful new invention, absolutely perfect! It sort of looked like a really, really big computer attached to a door? Not very sightly, it did not make sense to me why my parents were so excited about this, it looked absolutely terrible! But that did not matter, it was supposed to be really interesting and my parents promised ice cream so I watched it. As my parents and I watched the first time traveler enter the machine, I remember thinking it really funny that so many people would want to waste their time on this, I mean, watching someone enter a huge door? I did not understand how revolutionary traveling through the restraints of time was. Her name was Kali Perdita, the very first time traveler. She made a speech, something about how she would return with so much new information, and that no matter what happened, it would be revolutionary for humanity. And so we watched as Perdita entered the time machine. And we watched as she exited it only moments later. My parents later told me that this was because she would return to the time she went into the machine no matter how long it was for her. She was in her twenties when she entered the time machine, she came out fifty, years lost to time. She did not actually spend thirty years of her life traveling through time, she spent around a day or two but the time machine took away more of her time. No one knew why. In the end, my parents did not get me ice cream.
Protests began to rise, people were angry, they did not want to play with time any longer. They were right, no one should play with time. Many protests were based on the unexpected and unexplainable things that happened to Perdita. And while many thought that it was absolutely unacceptable to continue to risk years of other time travelers, others believed that it was worth it as once they were able to time travel safely, everything would be all the more wonderful.
Protests were silenced, and time travel continued. It was even more exciting for many people, they would get to see how much the time machine grew, how much better it became. So much work was put into the next time machine to assure that what happened to Perdita would happen to no one else and they did that well, there was never a repeat of what happened to Perdita. I was eight when the second time traveler stepped into that time machine. My parents were so delighted, this time machine was going to be safe, this time there would be no loss of time. But their hopes and dreams were crushed when she never came out. I would think Perdita lucky, she lost to time, she was not lost in time.
Everyone was baffled, no one expected that to happen to anyone, no one could explain what happened. Most everyone thought that the time machine was safe, that it would soon be used for many more things. The third and fourth time travelers both went in and never came out as well. Two more unlucky souls lost, forever.
My parents were devastated, they had put so much hope into time machines only for it to come out this way. I did not really know how to feel, time travel was still quite new, and almost completely untested. It was too dangerous to continue. And it seemed that the government agreed with me. At this point, the government was going to ban time travel forever. Deeming it to be much too dangerous for humanity to meddle with. This made scientists desperate, they needed a way for time travel to remain legal, and safe although as it was soon made obvious, that was much less important. So they studied, and studied some more. The government prohibited testing so they had to think of much more creative ways to continue time traveling.
One man created laws, with the idea that if they were not followed, time travel would be increasingly dangerous. They became known as Williams Laws and went something like this:
In the past, one is but a ghost, they are not seen nor heard. No matter the case, one must never reveal oneself
Anything seen in the their future must never be spoken of in the past nor the present
To travel to the past is to write history, to travel to the future is a means of death
Because it was too hard for many people to understand, Williams Laws were shortened and simplified into:
In the past, you must never be seen, cause no impact
Do not talk of the their future (your past or present) in the past
Going into your future is suicide
Three simple rules that if broken would cause devastation.
No one knew how Perdia was freed from the restraints of time, it was strange. Did she not break any of the rules? Was she lucky or was it something else? I thought it interesting that these laws specifically were the ones that time obeyed when time follows no true laws.
My parents would always tell me that time is relevant to the person but when it came to time travel, they would always be the first to get in line and go to see some time traveling. So I too came with them and by extension of that, learned much about the science of time travel. There were many interesting things that had to happen in order to make time travel possible, but companies would refuse to tell the general public anything about what was really happening. My parents wanted to work in one of these companies but it did not work as when they tried to get in, the company, yes every single one, told them that they were not hiring at the moment. But still, my parents would refuse to give up on their dreams. Normally, this is something that everyone always tells you to do but my parents are different, they took it much too far.
The one thing that I remember from most of these little adventures that my family and I would go on was the huge protests that would always be there on the sides. Protesters would shout that we are dooming them all, that time travel is not something that should be played with. I remember my parents rushing inside, trying to avoid the conflict. My parents would hear nothing of what the protestors said, would refuse to listen when I tried to bring up all the horrible things that have happened because of time travel. And so we would continue to support time travel, continue to spend time at every little thing that happened.
The first time travel after Williams Laws was a huge success! The time traveler, who's name is neither relevant nor of any interest, came back unscathed from the past! A giant step forward with only a little step or two back. Everyone was so interested in what happened, what did he learn? What new knowledge could be acquired with the help of time travel?
And it was truly amazing just how many new things were learned from the expeditions into the past. Mysteries that were long forgotten, solved. History books were rewritten, every great event in history was fact checked with time travelers coming from the past. It became a reliable career, children at my school when asked what they wanted to be in the future would respond with a very excited "TIME TRAVELER!"
Then, when I turned twelve, the huge time travel companies announced that they would hire anyone fourteen or older. It was strange, do you not need any other qualifications? Is there no training that needed to be done? None of that mattered to my parents nor millions of others, they began to send all their children to these companies. The very day I turned fourteen, my parents begged me to go to one of these time travel companies and try to become a time traveler. So I complied, I went to the company and I submitted an application.
I made it, I was accepted into the company. My parents threw a huge party as a celebration. I was excited, there were so many possibilities. And although I didn't think that time travel was a great idea, I began to work, I went through a year of training and then, I was assigned my first mission! Perhaps they would send me to solve a mystery, or maybe they would send me to find something! Who knows, the possibilities are endless!
I was not sent to the past, they told me that I would be going into the future. I would be the first person to ever travel far into the future. I was unsure, was there not a law about this? But it did not matter, it was a general rule that you cannot refuse a mission. Maybe the biggest mistake of my life. I should have at least tried.
When my time came, I braced myself, breathing deeply. I knew that I may not come out of this alive, that there was a chance that I would die when I went to the future. None of it mattered, I would go into the future, and I would figure it all out. I took a breath in and stepped through the time machine.
Immediately I felt a horrible feeling in my stomach. This was more than a mistake. This was more than a mistake. The travel into the future was so much worse than what they described in my training, my limbs felt as though they were tearing apart from my body, my head like breaking glass. But I made it into the future. I fell onto the ground. It was cold, so cold. But I stood up, looking around and I saw…nothing? There was absolutely nothing there. There was no future, it had not been created. The future had not been set yet, there would never be any real future.
So I had no choice but to wait, and wait, and wait. In that moment, I understood what Williams Law truly meant, the future did not kill you but to stay there, with no one else around for years, that was its own sort of torture. Worse than death.
I found that in that time, I didn't age. I didn't need food nor sleep nor anything else. I could not die and that, by far, was the worst. I had been prepared to die, I knew it might happen but then, I would not die. I knew that I was sent around ten years into the future.
I would now wait ten years.