"So much collected wisdom
and still no answers!" observed a very familiar male voice behind
him. The hair on the back of his neck
rose. No, it couldn't be! That was yesterday in another reality. He shivered involuntarily, hoping he was
wrong about the voice.
"I was just leaving,"
explained the Traveler abruptly, blinking his eyes and moving to gather up his
notes, without directly addressing the speaker.
"The librarian said it would be all right if I just left these
here," he added, gesturing toward the book collection. He paused, handling a thin black book on the
translation of the Rosetta stone, a marvelous find in an Egyptian archeological
dig in the late eighteenth century. That
single stone tablet translated Egyptian hieroglyphics into ancient Greek. The ancient Greek was then translated into modern Greek by historians, modern Greek into English. Suddenly a modern man could read the thoughts
of the ancient Egyptian - a whole world rediscovered.
"That's what I need! I need a translation from one language to
another," he said beneath his breath.
"Asked and answered, a very
long time ago!"
The Traveler's eyes widened! He stared at the table top before him, unable
to turn and face the speaker. Asked and
answered? No! That was another time and place! He was never part of this reality. His reality!
A cold fear gripped his heart.
They had found him.
A tall young man came out from
among the assembled book racks, thumbing through the opening pages of some
ancient leather-bound text he had found there, and sat down opposite him at the
table. The stranger could have been
twenty or ten thousand years old, the Traveler could not tell his real age. These creatures were timeless.
"Yad'el?"
gasped the Traveler.
"Also asked and
answered! Have you found what you are
looking for?"
"You're not supposed to be
here. This is the future."
The companion looked about him
with a sincerely puzzled expression, examining the surroundings carefully
before responding. "Time
still runs on, Traveler. I can be
anywhere you are!"
"No! I mean, you are just a figment of my
imagination, part of that other reality," argued the Traveler, unsure of
his own reasoning. He licked his lips
and scratched his eyebrow nervously.
"You are part of another world.''
“Said not!” The young man sitting across the table slowly
shook his head. "No one ever said
it was another world. The Counselor said
you were returning home and so you did, and so you are, and so you shall. Only the time and location have
changed."
"Only the time and
location!" shouted the Traveler tensely, leaning forward across the
table. Another library patron shushed
him from an adjacent study carrel. He
lowered his voice and leaned further toward his companion. "Only the time! I almost died in that other reality of
yours. Tell me that wasn't real! It couldn't be! That ancient past you
showed me had nothing to do with this time and place. Did it?
Tell me what it all means!"
His voice broke with tension and
he began to sob, surprised at his own ragged emotions. The pressure of the last twenty-four hours,
or was it six months, was telling on him.
Too much coffee and too little sleep. A desperate search for some
sane explanation to yesterday's insanity. He dropped back into his chair, staring at
the peaceful face before him. He
recalled the awful battle with Ba'yel the Terrible
that ended his last adventure and how this calm young man before him had become
something . . . something . . .
"You fought Ba'yel! You became
something else."
"Yes, Traveler,” affirmed Yad’el. “It all
happened, just as you remember it. Not
as some alternate reality, some dreamlike metaphor, or some mere idle
speculation on your part; it is part of the history of your world."
"Yad’el,
I've read all the histories I could find," retorted the Traveler, pushing
a copy of some ancient text toward the mysterious creature sitting across from
him. "It never happened. No one reports it that way!"
"That particular book is a
product of the distorted timeline,” said Yad'el
calmly, gesturing toward the volume being pushed across the table without
touching it.