Time is fixed, he had always said; even if a person could go
back in time and tried to change the variables of a specific event in the past,
the outcome would always end up being the same.
And even if you did manage to change the outcome of a
specific event in time, resulting in a change in the history of events, the
future version of the time traveller would then have no need to change events
leading up to the event, thus the trip back in time would never have happened
to change anything and the outcome would then of course, end up being the same.
He had always said that, that is until the day he had
stepped out of the time portal and into past; trying to change the outcome.
All he had to do was to stop himself from leaving the house
that day and everything would be fixed. None of the terrible things he had gone
through after that day would have to happen and the world would not have to
suffer from his mistakes.
It had taken so many years to pinpoint exactly when and
where things had gone wrong, obsessively back-tracking events through the
timeline until finally, he was certain that this one day, one ordinary moment,
would set in motion the chain reaction that would bring about the destruction
of the entire world as we know it.
Then there was only the impossible task of creating the ability
to open the rift in time and space to be able to go back and undo all that he
had done to contribute to the world's end.
Yet, he had done it, almost stumbling upon it, he had
uncovered the way to shift the fabric of space-time and open a portal to the
past.
Now, after so many lost decades, he was through and standing
in front of his old home; looking just as he had remembered it, an unassuming
house on the wooded street of an exclusive neighbour in western end of the
city.
At that moment, he knew the past version of himself was just
making his way down the stairs to the kitchen to make himself breakfast before
heading to work at the lab only a few short minutes away down the road.
However, this time, he would make sure he never did.
Looking like a gaunt and ghostly version of himself, he
gripped the handle of the pistol tightly to make sure it was still there and
started to make his way to end things before they ever began.
As he went to step away from the shimmering portal, a hand
grasped his arm from behind and he jerked around to see who had grabbed him. A familiar
looking arm was protruding out from the portal and he looked up from it in
shock to see a cleaned-shaven and healthier version of himself staring back at
him through the portal.
"I'm sorry about this." His other version said in
a sincerely apologetic voice just before he heard the squealing of car tires to
his right.
He was barely able to comprehend that the driver of the car
was also him, though an even more dishevelled and crazed version then himself,
before the car struck him and he flew into the air like a ragdoll.
Screaming like a madman as he swerved the car wildly, he
watched as his other self landed with a sickening thud, his neck twisted and
broken, onto the pavement in his rear-view mirror.
Looking back ahead, he saw another version of himself standing
in the dead center of the road and he yanked hard on the steering wheel to swerved
and avoid hitting himself on instinct. The tires skidded out of control on the
wet road from the previous night's rain, and the car careened off the road and
crashed headlong into an old, unyielding oak tree.
The other version of himself stood calmly in the center of
the road and watched the car crumple and explode with the impact, then turned
to see the past version of himself coming out of his house to see what all the
commotion was about.
As he rushed out of the house in his housecoat, he saw the
flames of the wreck in the trees just to the east of his front yard and then
scanned back along the road to see himself standing there looking back at him
from the middle of the road.
He nodded at himself just as he faded out of existence, as
did the other him laying prone on the pavement a few steps away from the first.
The noise of the fiery wreck suddenly stopped and looking over at where it had
been, he saw only the tall trees standing undisturbed as the birds chirped
their morning songs to each other.
Stunned, he went back inside and sat down on one of the kitchen
bar stools. After a long while just sitting, thinking about what he had just
seen, the toaster on the counter dinged and popped out two well-done pieces of
bread, startling him from his thoughts.
What had he been thinking of? He could almost remember, but
it slipped away from him. Oh well, he was going to be late for work at the lab
if he sat around too long. No time to waste!
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