Lost In The Future
Fantastic Universe, January 1954
Did you ever wonder what might happen if mankind ever exceeded the speed
of light? Here is a profound story based on that thought—a story which may well
forecast one of the problems to be encountered in space travel.
They had discovered a new planet—but
its people did not see them until after they had traveled on.
Albrecht and I went down in a
shuttleship, leaving the stellatomic orbited pole-to-pole two thousand miles
above Alpha Centauri’s second planet. While we took an atmosphere-brushing
approach which wouldn’t burn off the shuttle’s skin, we went as swiftly as we
could.
A week before we had completed
man’s first trip through hyperspace. We were now making the first landing on an
inhabited planet of another sun. All the preliminary investigations had been
made via electronspectroscopes and electrontelescopes from the stellatomic. We
knew that the atmosphere was breathable and were reasonably certain that the
peoples of the world into whose atmosphere we were dropping were at peace. We
went unarmed, just the two of us; it might not be wise to go in force.
We were silent, and I know that
Harry Albrecht was as perplexed as I was over the fact that our all-wave
receivers failed to pick up any signs of radio communication whatever. We had
assumed that we would pick up signals of some type as soon as we had passed
down through the unfamiliar planet’s ionosphere.
The scattered arrangement of the
towering cities appeared to call for radio communications. The hundreds of
atmosphere ships flashing along a system of airways between the cities seemed
to indicate the existence of electronic navigational and landing aids. But
perhaps the signals were all tightly beamed; we would know when we came lower.
We dropped down into the airway
levels, and still our receivers failed to pick up a signal of any sort—not even
a whisper of static. And strangely, our radarscopes failed to record even a
blip from their atmosphere ships!
“I guess it’s our equipment,
Harry,” I said. “It just doesn’t seem to function in this atmosphere. We’ll
have to put Edwards to work on it when we go back upstairs.”
We spotted an airport on the
outskirts of a large city. The runways were laid out with the precision of
Earth’s finest. I put our ship’s nose eastward on a runway and took it down
fast through a lull in the atmosphere ship traffic.
As we went down I saw tiny
buildings spotted on the field which surely housed electronic equipment, but
our receivers remained silent.
I taxied the shuttle up to an
unloading ramp before the airport’s terminal building and I killed the drive.
“Harry,” I said. “If it weren’t
that their ships are so outlandishly stubby and their buildings so out-flung,
we might well be on Earth!”
“I agree, Captain. Strange,
though, that they’re not mobbing us. They couldn’t take this delta-winged job
for one of their ships!”
It was strange.
I looked up at the observation
ramp’s occupants—people who except for their bizarre dress might well be of
Earth—and saw no curiosity in the eyes that sometimes swept across our
position.
“Be that as it may, Harry, we
certainly should cause a stir in these pressure suits. Let’s go!”
We walked up to a dour-looking
individual at a counter at the ramp’s end. Clearing my throat, I said rather
inanely, “Hello—but what does one say
to an extrasolarian?
I realized then that my voice
seemed thunderous, that the only other sounds came from a distance: the city’s
noise, the atmosphere ships’ engines on the horizon—
***
The Centaurian ignored us.
I looked at the atmosphere ships
in the clear blue sky, at the Centaurians on the ramp who appeared to be
conversing—and there was no sound from those planes, no sound from the people!
“It’s impossible,” Harry said. “The
atmosphere’s nearly Earth-normal. It should be—well, damn it, it is as sound-conductive; we’re talking, aren’t
we?”
I looked up at the Centaurians
again. They were looking excitedly westward. Some turned to companions. Mouths
opened and closed to form words we could not hear. Wide eyes lowered, following
something I could not see. Sick inside, I turned to Albrecht and read
confirmation in his drawn, blanched face.
“Captain,” he said. “I suspected
that we might find something like this when we first came out of hyperspace and
the big sleep. The recorders showed we’d exceeded light-speed in normal
space-time just after the transition. Einstein theorized that time would not
pass as swiftly to those approaching light-speed. We could safely exceed that
speed in hyperspace but should never have done so in normal space-time. Beyond light-speed
time must conversely accelerate!
“These people haven’t seen us yet. They certainly just observed our
landing. As we suspected, they probably do have speech and radio—but we can’t
pick up either. We’re seconds ahead of them in time and we can’t pick up from
the past sounds of nearby origin or nearby signals radiated at light-speed.
They’ll see and hear us soon, but we’ll never receive an answer from them! Our questions will come to them in
their future but we can never pick answers from their past!”
“Let’s go, Harry,” I said
quickly.
“Where?” he asked. “Where can we
ever go that will be an improvement over this?” He was resigned.
“Back into space,” I said. “Back
to circle this system at a near-light-speed. The computers should be able to
determine how long and how slow we’ll have to fly to cancel this out. If not,
we are truly and forever lost!”
End
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