As Kato marched down the hall, the chains that bound his hands and feet clinked. The jingling was the only sound, and with that melody calling out, gut-wrenching questions weighed on his mind.
He wondered if he would ever see his wife and child again, if he would grow old and die on this bizarre world, this battlefield he couldnโt have even imagined a few days ago.
Would his family look for him?
Would they be told what had happened to him? Would his son grow up without a father?
*
In the turbine hall, the band played, and Maria sang the second stanza of โA Hymn for The World After.โ Singing again was bliss, but she knew that with each line, this world crept closer to oblivion.
And in the darkness, I saw a light Twinkling in the night
Shining all around me
Counting down to the end of all things
*
In the primate facility, Helen marched out with Tyโs hairs, and when she returned, she seemed more composed.
โThe results will take a minute or two. In the meantime, I have questions.โ
Ty nodded. โI bet.โ โWho are you?โ
โOne of the ways men and women are differentโone of the many ways
โis that a woman canโt have a child without knowing it. Well, unless her eggs are removed, and people are generally aware of that. Which begs the question: if youโre confronted with DNA results that confirm you have a thirty-five-year-old son, what does it mean?โ
โIndeed. What would that mean?โ
โIt would mean that the son youโre staring at right now was born to a Helen Klein very, very similar to you in an alternate universe.โ
โImpossible.โ
โThe DNA sequence will confirm it.โ
โHow is this possible? How are you here? Why?โ
Ty pointed at the quantum radio medallion hanging around her neck. โOn my world, I made a discovery: that there was quantum data being broadcast into our universe. The data stream included schematics to construct a quantum radioโone very similar to the one hanging around your neck. I used that device to travel here with three others.โ
Helen stared at him, eyes wide.
Ty pressed on. โIn the world Iโm from, I grew up in Washington, DC, in a quaint neighborhood where my single mother raised my brother, my sister, and me. She was a very hard-working woman. A professor at Georgetown
โof evolutionary biology. The Helen Klein that raised me had a lot of rules in her house, but there were a few above all others. One: you treat people the way you want to be treated. And two: if you do something wrong, thatโs on you, and if you see something wrong and donโt tell someone or do something about it, thatโs on you as well. Iโm betting that there is some part of those principles in you. If not, I fear for this world. Those values might be the only thing that saves us.โ
Ty smiled. โYou just asked me why Iโm here. Until a few minutes ago, I didnโt know exactly why my quantum radio brought me to this world. I thought there was a reason, but I couldnโt quite see the whole picture. But I see it now.โ
โSee what?โ
โI see a way to save your world.โ โMy worldย is in no danger.โ
โIt is. You think the Reichโs A21 missiles will end the war, but youโre wrong. The Pax has a superweapon too. A biological one. Theyโre ready to release it. You canโt stop it. Not with missiles. Not with any army. And certainly not in the time you have. Maybe not ever.โ
โWhat do you want?โ
โI just told you. My mother taught me that if I see someone doing something wrong, itโs my responsibility to stop it or report it. Iโm here to stop it. I didnโt know it until now, butย Iย am here because of you. If Iโm right, youโre the only person in this entire world who can stop whatโs about to happen. Our mission here was about one thing: this moment. Me reaching you in time to stop a mistake that canโt be undone. A mistake you can prevent.โ
*
In the turbine hall, Maria sang the next stanza, her eyes moving across the enraptured audience.
A true north calling us home
Out of the shadows of The World Before Crumbling all around us
Counting down to the end of all things