Read The Cutting Room: A Time Travel Thriller Online

Authors: Edward W. Robertson

Tags: #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Science Fiction, #Adventure, #Cyberpunk, #Dystopian, #Futuristic, #High Tech, #Post-Apocalyptic, #Sci-Fi Thriller, #serial novel, #science fiction series, #Thriller, #Time Travel, #Sci-Fi, #dystopia, #The Cutting Room

The Cutting Room: A Time Travel Thriller (17 page)

We advanced down dusty tunnels, exploring windowless offices and labs. In addition to the bodies lying every which way, something was very wrong: everything with a microchip was gone. Computers, tablets, phones, watches, even business cards. I came to a stop in a dark lab, gazing over the desks and ceiling-height machinery. Bodies sprawled on the grimy floor, callously left behind to be claimed by time and decay, but the equipment had been meticulously stripped of any part that could store information.

"They scrubbed the place." Vette's voice echoed off the walls. "Could they have known we were coming?"

"Could be. Or if this was a war, they might have been hiding sensitive data." I gazed down at the bodies. "But they forgot something."

I turned in a circle, passing my light over the room. It glinted off something on one of the desks, a large metal paperweight shaped like a whale. I picked up the cool object, knelt beside one of the bodies, and pulled the desiccated scalp and hair away from the skull.

"What are you
doing
?" Vette said.

I replied by bracing my boot on the skull like a croquet ball and then bashing it with the paperweight. The bone was tougher than I expected; the impact made a sharp crack, but left just a hair-thin fracture. I tried again. Two more whacks, and the bone caved in. I set down the weight and fished inside, removing a wetware memory chip, its attached datajack, and a bit of attached skull.

"Oh my god," Vette said.

"Hope you don't mind getting your hands dirty." I deposited the hardware in one of my inner pockets. "Seen any hammers around here?"

She shook her head. "Oh man, the negative karma. I'm going to come back as a snake's colon."

She complained the whole time, but dove in regardless of her many qualms. We went room to room, examining every corpse for brain chips and smashing their skulls as carefully as skulls can be smashed. There were eighteen different buildings on the campus, as well as several tunnels linking them together, and gaining entrance to and scouring them all took us the better part of two days. We slept as necessary, retiring to a groundskeeper's shed that was blessedly free of bodies. We still hadn't seen any living creatures bigger than birds, squirrels, and a couple feral cats, but I had us sleep in shifts anyway.

While Vette snoozed, I attempted to tap into the chips, but immediately hit a brick wall. The Pod had fitted my tablet with jacks to match the equipment from the prior incarnation of 22nd century Brownville, but in this version, the plugs no longer fit. Some of the chips were wireless-capable, but interfacing meant rigging up software compatible with their OS. My period-appropriate tablet was capable of writing most of its own code, but I had to put in several hours of troubleshooting before it was even capable of reaching the chips' encryption. Around dawn of our second morning in Apocalypse Brownville, I set my pad to work on the chips' security, rousted Vette, climbed over the campus walls, and headed for the river.

We'd been rationing food and would be good for another couple days, but our water was down to the last swigs. Trees paneled the rocky banks. We made our way to the shore, rocks scraping and groaning beneath our feet. Vette drank what was left in her bottle, dipped it in the gray water, then brought it to her mouth.

"Don't," I said.

"Oh, I'm sorry, was this your water?"

"It's a bad idea."

"To drink water? I'm thirsty."

"For dysentery?"

She frowned. "What's that?"

"One of the many things that lives in untreated water. Why do you think the only things we drank back in the 19th century were coffee, tea, and beer?"

"Because we could? Wait, how do you treat water? Do you have something in your kit?"

I shook my head. "We'll have to boil it. That's why I brought this tub from the lab. Now help me gather wood. Dry stuff burns best."

"You don't say." She rolled her eyes and stood up from the bank. "I'm not
that
much of a city girl."

"It's not the city that leaves us clueless," I said. "It's Primetime."

There was plenty of good wood lying around the grassy banks, which was more proof this place was uninhabited, but as the harsh-smelling smoke wound up through the canopy, I kept a careful eye on the strip of forest lining the river, ears sharp for the snap of twigs, the shuffle of leaves. After ten minutes, I donned gloves and muscled the tub off the platform we'd rigged up over the fire. Steam flourished as it cooled.

Vette poked at the smoldering logs with a long, narrow branch. "What do you think happened here?"

"Don't know."

"Don't you care?"

"Should I?"

She laughed in disbelief. "Brownville's gone! Maybe the whole
world
ended!"

I glanced at the still-steaming tub. "All that matters to us is Hockery's group. G&A. It appears they went back to Old Brownville to get the money to fund this place. The answers to the next question—what's this place for?—are probably in the memory chips. If we find out what's on them while we're here, Mara can act the instant we get back to Primetime."

"And decoding them is a one-person job. Why don't I check out the city while you crack away at the chips? Looks like everyone's dead to me."

I blinked at her. "Because even if everyone's gone, and so is whatever killed them, that means the city's a wilderness. We explore it together or not at all."

She rolled her eyes, but the issue was settled. I filled our bottles, two gallon-sized jugs, and a big waterproof sack I'd scavenged from the campus. I set the sack beside the trees, grabbed a few oranges from a tree beside the river, and headed back to the facility.

In the time we'd been out, my pad had cracked the encryption on a couple of the chips. While it worked away at the rest, we set Vette's to analyzing the contents of the decoded files. Initial results were disappointing: reports on employment numbers, discussion of a more robust paternity leave, tens of thousands of pages on the world's competing hardware companies. Nothing deeply proprietary or revelatory. I had the sinking suspicion anything along those lines would be secured inside the chips that lacked wireless interface.

Those would have to wait until our return to Primetime. The only alternative would be heading into the city for parts, and even if we could find the right equipment to jack in to the chips, and it wasn't too corroded by the sea air to be useful, I'd have to patch the parts into my own tablet's power supply. That was beyond me. If I made a go at that, all I'd wind up with was one more piece of busted electronics.

With both tablets in use, Vette didn't have the light to explore the tunnels or the windowless main building, but she was still able to poke around many of the other shacks, warehouses, labs, and dorms. She said she was looking for food and any bodies we may have missed, but I thought she was looking for clues about the past. I wasn't surprised when she brought none back. This world's breaking news had been stored electronically. Records of its most recent history had died with its networks.

She did rustle up a few packages of freeze dried noodles, which we boiled and seasoned with their single-serving spice packets. After finishing the noodles, I licked the empty packet. The oranges from the river were sweet and pure, but far from filling. Not that the noodles were much better. My stomach grumbled an hour later.

As I worked with the pads, I found myself straining my ears. It took me a couple days before I understood what I was listening for: anything at all. Gunshots. Car engines. The drone of a plane. These things never came.

I worked my way through every chip with wireless access, but it was all day-to-day business material—human resources decisions, plans for an overseas acquisition, logistics of office supplies. If I'd had a network to tap into, I could have cross-referenced names against backgrounds to try to tease out the deeper meaning of this facility, but that door was closed to me.

Yet I was placid about our apparent lack of leads. Back in Primetime, the Pods would take mere minutes to spit out the proper equipment to reach the non-wireless chips. They'd tear through the encryption like tissue paper and root out G&A's deepest secrets before I had time to blink. Even if the info on the chips turned up incomplete, we could return to a point before Brownville and its world went apocalyptic and find the answers there.

When I finished with the chips, we still had a full day before the Pods were due to return us to Primetime. To humor Vette, and because I'd built up a little curiosity myself, I agreed to go into the city and see what there was to see.

A couple miles of open land separated the campus from Brownville. Wind ruffled the grass. The outskirts waited under a pointless sky. We followed the road, taking everything vital with us in case we got delayed and couldn't return to campus: water, oranges, weapons, tablets, memory chips.

There was little to see. Cars clogged the outgoing roads. A few held bodies. Other dead rested here and there on sidewalks, across doorways, in parks. Dirt and grime blinded the windows. Pigeons shuffled on eaves. There were no obvious wounds to the bodies, which had mostly been reduced to bones and hair. Could have been a virus, chemicals, nanobots. The city's one newspaper held no clear clues. No bold headlines about impending war or asteroids. It was all gone, as simply and as cleanly as that.

We headed back to the campus, pursued by the fall of night. A strong wind surged from the north and I had to lock our shed's door to keep it from flying open. The angry gale blew itself out by sunrise. We ate more oranges, which I was growing mightily sick of—I'd started nibbling the peels just to get a different flavor. After gathering up everything we'd brought in with us—a useless gesture, considering there appeared to be no human timeline left to ruin, but habits die hard—we sat in the grass and waited for the Pods.

The moment came and went. We stayed.

Vette gazed up at the gray clouds. "Is it late?"

"Yeah."

"Are they ever late?"

"No."

"So," she said slowly, "this is the point where you explain what it means that the thing that's never late is late."

"It means we wait," I said. "And tomorrow we get more clean water."

"Tomorrow? How long do you think it's going to be?"

"I don't know, Vette."

"Jesus. I'm just asking."

I knew that, and I was sorry, but I knew something else, too. The Pods would never come. I waited another 24 hours, just to be sure, just to let the reality soak into my brain. The following afternoon, as we sat in the woods around the boiling pot, thick white smoke in the air, dirt under our fingernails, I leveled with her.

She gave me a blank look. "I don't understand."

"They're not coming. Not ever."

"I don't get it."

"The Pods never miss their time," I said. "Not by a second. Not by a second of a second. If they're not here, then something went wrong."

"In Primetime? Can't they just reset the Pod? Send it here tomorrow instead?"

I gazed at the dirt. "When we came here, we interrupted the past. Primetime is what—six hundred years ahead of this place? Seven hundred? Those seven hundred years of interrupted future have to play out before Primetime can touch it again."

"But that makes no sense," Vette said. "They're all separate worlds. Separate timelines."

"And they all exist on the same grand continuum. I told you before, when you go back, you create a closed loop. Until this timeline catches up, reaches the same point in the continuum as when we last left Primetime, it's closed off to Mara and anyone she's going to send back for us."

"My brain's about to pour out my nose. So they're going to come for us—"

"Probably."

"—but not until this present has caught up to their future. What does that mean for us?"

"We go back to the drop point," I said. "Leave something telling them we're here at the campus so that when they travel to this time they can be sure to find us."

Vette rubbed her fist across her forehead. "Which will happen, but hasn't happened yet, because we have to live it out first before they come make changes to it."

"Right. So we'll stay at the campus for a month."

"What then?"

"We have a choice to make." Maybe it would have been kinder to spare her this. To never raise the question at all. But she deserved to make it for herself, and I wanted her to have the time to make it right. "Either we live out these lives, or we kill ourselves."

She gaped. "
What?
"

"We don't have to stay here forever. Just a month. That will give them a wide enough window to find us. After that, there may not be a point."

"But how can we just kill ourselves?"

"Because it might be better than going on." I gestured vaguely toward the dead city, then stood, brushed the grass from my pants, and gazed at the silent, swirling sky. "You don't have to decide now. But I want you to think about it."

I could feel her stare, her eyes filled with rejection and defiance, but already displaying the seeds of doubt, the hardiest weed of them all.

It was too late in the day to head back to the mountains to leave the CR a sign, so we spent the few remaining hours of light wandering the labs and cafeterias in search of something that could be written on and was sturdy enough to survive whatever weather battered it over the next month. This was surprisingly difficult. In the end, I used a kitchen knife to scratch directions into the side of a large copper kettle and wrote a longer message on paper, which I rolled up, inserted through the neck of a wine bottle, and sealed with a rubber cork.

In the morning, we hiked through the damp, grassy hills, guided by the map on my pad, until we stood in the same rocky thrust where the Pods had dropped us off. On a flat patch of ground, I yanked up grass, dug a small hole, and screwed the base of the bottle inside. Thus secured, I covered it with the copper kettle.

"They are totally going to miss that," Vette said. "We should plant a neon flag. Record a message on my tablet and set it to repeat at max volume."

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