Irrevocable

IRREVOCABLE

L.J. Hick

He did not accept finality. All he knew was that he had to change the impossible.
The car rolled to a halt by the side of the trees, its engine and lights switched off.
Not that there was anyone around to observe its approach in the dark, but the driver felt the
need for caution. He left the vehicle, closed the doors gently and quietly opened the boot to
retrieve a heavy cloth bag and a cylindrical sling. Once he had closed the boot of the car, he made his way into the woods.
He paused to put on what looked like a pair of ski goggles before continuing on his way.
The glasses that now adorned his face lit up the woods like a summer day. He made his way through the thick barrier of branches, bushes and foliage before stopping some hundred yards from the boundary of a heavy wooden fence topped with barbed wire.
He opened the sling and withdrew the sleek black metal shapes from within. He locked the
different sections into place, carefully checking his work before adding the sight and silencer. He crouched down, pulled the rifle into position and put his eye to the sight, slowly bringing it through an arc to survey his surroundings. When he had done this a dozen times, he slung the rifle across his back and took a position at the fence itself.
He used the wooden fencing as a support and once more took the rifle in an arc in front of
him. There was no gate here, just the fencing, and on the other side there were small trees and
bushes that served to mask the area beyond. The house that stood beyond was a huge
Victorian building. The moon shone brightly, illuminating its roof and the brickwork and tiles
that had seen better days.
He ran his scope along the contours of the building, playing with the top of the roof before
using the chimney as a guide to drop to the first bedroom window. There were four windows
with lights on downstairs and two of the bedrooms were lit, including the first one. He knew
his target would pass by one of the vantage points, but it could be some time.
He placed the rifle to one side and used a more manageable pair of binoculars instead of
the rifle’s sight. The night was young. He decided to give it until one hour before daylight
before abandoning his task if the opportunity to complete it did not arise.
Patience was a virtue that he possessed and prided himself on. When the hours passed and
the slight drizzle of rain fell upon him, he never cursed or moved for shelter, he just held his
position and waited for his chance. A third light came on from one of the upstairs bedrooms
and a shape shuffled across to pass quickly in and out of view. He picked up the binoculars
and held his view on the window. Sure enough, there was his target, adjusting his tie and
briefly glancing through the window itself. When the light disappeared from the bedroom, he
picked up the rifle and focused it on the first window to the left of the building, then scanned
the room as best he could. He could make out the medium-sized portrait on the wall and the
shelving that stood to the right of it. The windows were narrow and decorated with strips of
metal. He knew the windows were indented with thick glass, which at this distance made his
target very difficult to hit. He hoped and prayed that when the time came he did not miss.
He focused the sight on the portrait. His target entered the room and moved from one side
of the window to the other, seemingly laughing and chatting to other people in the room who
must have been seated. His target reappeared with a drink and paused to look at the portrait.
This was the opportunity, the area was too narrow to wait any longer and he might never get
another chance. He squeezed the trigger slowly and deliberately.
The bullet shattered the window and fizzed into the portrait, narrowly missing the man’s
head and embedding itself in the wall behind. There were screams as it dawned on the rest of
the occupants what had just happened. The man who had nearly taken a bullet dropped to the
floor. Lights came on in the rest of the rooms of the house and the alarm sounded, shrill and
whining. It would not be long; the police would arrive and check the immediate vicinity
before extending their search beyond the grounds and into the woods.
He calmly took the rifle to pieces, put the main body back into the sling, and placed the
sight, magazine and silencer back in the bag together with the binoculars. Using the night
vision, he made his way back to the car and placed the bag and sling beneath the covering in
the boot. He started the car and lit up a cigarette before winding the window down and driving
back onto the road. He travelled a little way down the road before putting the lights on and
increasing his speed. The narrow country lanes lasted another two miles before he took the
slip road that fed onto the main road. He pushed down the accelerator and drew deeply on the
cigarette, smiling widely as his car found other cars and lorries to mingle with on the
highway.
* * *
Ronald Mason was tired of the endless questioning by the police. Yes, someone had tried to
put a bullet in him, but what he really wanted to know was whether they were going to catch
the would-be assassin and why had someone made an attempt on his life.
Ron was a renowned physicist and when the funding he had been so dependent on to
continue his studies was withdrawn, he did not hesitate to borrow the money to fund his own
research. With a couple of breakthroughs in particle physics, his company grew and attracted
bigger and wealthier investors. At the age of thirty-five, he was rich beyond his wildest
dreams, but that meant nothing to him. It was the research and the advancement of science
that fulfilled him. Dancing on the cutting-edge of science was the lifeblood for him.
His wife Carol made yet another coffee for the detectives, mumbling that nobody seemed
to drink tea nowadays, and only sat down when the last of them had left and the man who
actually was going to do something arrived. She was still shaken by the events of the previous
night and for the first time in her life was grateful for not having children yet.
Gary was a detective of some thirty years and the owner of his own private security firm
for the last ten. The police had offered them protection and Ronald had agreed to the standard
hotline and the car parked outside the house, but nothing else. Gary had looked after security
for a while now at Ron’s firm and he had never let Ron down, made any mistakes or failed to
respond when the situation demanded it.
“So what did the police say?” asked Gary.
“They said they’ll find the man who did this and have a car sat outside to keep an eye on
me and Carol,” said Ron.
“Well that’ll stop a guy with a sniper rifle. They don’t even know where he took the shot
from yet,” said Gary, shaking his head.
“I heard one of them say that the shot must have been taken from behind the fences in the
woods, but the others reckoned it was impossible for the sniper to take the shot accurately
from there. The windows here are small and when the shot was taken I was not standing still.
The sniper would have known that he would have to be incredibly lucky to hit me from there,
so he would not have taken the shot,” said Ron.
“But he did take the shot and missed,” said Gary. “You know the police seem to think that
everyone’s an expert these days but maybe this guy isn’t as good as they think. Maybe he’s
just someone with a grudge who unfortunately has a sniper rifle.”
“I see what you’re saying, but where does that leave us?” asked Ron.
“It leaves you in a position where you can’t take any chances,” said Gary. “So if it’s
alright with you I’m going to put two of my best people here with you. They will watch you
closely every day. When you go to work, one of them will go with you and the other will stay
with Carol.”
“I’m not sure Carol will be comfortable with being alone in the house with another man,”
said Ron.
“I said people Ron, not men. One of them is a woman. They are on their way here right
now. Trent and Karen are their names. They will make sure you are never alone until either
the police or my guys catch this man.”
It was not long before the two bodyguards arrived, who turned up in separate cars. Trent
had a sleek black BMW and Karen a silver Audi. Trent was a blond, youthful-looking man.
Clean-shaven and with bright blue eyes, he could have been the postcard American surfer.
Instead, he had no discernible accent but spoke softly and precisely. Karen had long hair that
was bunched in a bob at the top. Dark brown eyes stared from beneath her auburn hair and
once again, she appeared to have no accent.
“Where are you two from?” asked Ron.
“We’re not allowed to tell you that, sir,” said Trent.
“Well I can’t place either of your accents,” said Ron. “Don’t think you’re American
though.”
“We are both multi-lingual,” said Karen. “That’s probably why we have no accent to
speak of.”
“All that phrasing hey?” said Ron.
He introduced them both to Carol and when Gary left, the pair of them did a grand tour of
the house and arranged things a little differently outside. They erected screens just off the
windows to deter any further sniper attack from a distance and placed a series of electronic
alarms and sensors at different access points to both the house and the grounds.
“That’s everything secure now Mister Mason,” he said. “We’ll leave you alone now. You
won’t see us as such but we will be watching. If anyone tries to enter the grounds, we’ll know
about it. Gary has patrols on the property and in the morning I will come with you to work
and Karen will stay with your wife.”
“Oh, I thought you were going to stay overnight as well,” said Ron.
Trent shook his head. “No need. Once you are in here, you are safe. When you leave the
house though, that’s when we need to know. So don’t even put a toe out of that door if we
don’t know about it,” he said.
“Okay. We’ll remember that,” said Ron.
“Is there ever a time you can think of when you are completely alone?” asked Trent.
Ron looked at Trent for a minute or two without speaking.
“Not really. Not if you include me and Carol being together. Why do you ask that?” asked
Ron.
“Should that be the case for any reason, you need to let me know so I can be with you,”
said Trent. “If you had an accident or something, how would we know? It’s a bit like health
and safety at your work.”
“Ah, of course, that makes perfect sense,” said Ron.
Trent and Karen left the property. With the doors and windows locked, Ron and Carol
went to bed, safe in the knowledge that the army of dogs and flashlights that patrolled the
grounds were their army of dogs and flashlights.
Over the coming days, the security arrangements for the couple remained consistent. Trent
and Karen arrived every morning and Trent would accompany Ron to work whilst Karen
remained with Carol. The women would discuss everything from houseplants to world
politics and Carol was amazed at the level of knowledge of world affairs Karen displayed.
Trent stuck tight to Ron’s side and always asked whether Ron would be alone at any point.
This was never the case, however. This was Ron’s company and there was always someone
with him. In the evenings, Ron and Carol would relax with a glass of wine after their evening
meal. Ron had started to look at the damaged portrait regularly, rubbing the bullet hole with
his finger.
“What is it about that picture that fascinates you so much?” asked Carol.
“It’s not the picture, it’s the bullet hole. They keep saying the man who did this had to
take an impossible shot, but if he was a professional, why take an impossible shot?” asked
Ron.
“Perhaps he panicked,” said Carol.
“Why would he panic? Neither the police nor Gary have found any clues as to who he
might be. They haven’t been able to pinpoint the position he took the shot from and there are
no tyre tracks nor footprints anywhere in the area other than ones we can account for,” said
Ron. “That’s not what bothers me the most though.”
He beckoned Carol over to the portrait and pointed towards it. It was a portrait of his
father and remained hung on the wall despite the damage, waiting to be repaired once the
police gave him the okay to do so.
“Look where the bullet went,” said Ron.
The bullet hole was in the dead centre of his father’s forehead.
“It’s almost as though he was deliberately aiming for that place,” said Ron. “How could
that be and why would he want to do that?”
* * *
The next morning Trent stood outside, leaning on the car, waiting for Ron. The sun was
already oppressive and the glare made it difficult to see. Trent wore the sleekest-looking pair
of sunglasses Ron had ever seen and seemed to have no trouble with the sun, even if it
involved looking directly at it.
Ron was hurrying to the car and as Trent opened the door, he accidentally caught Trent in
the face, sending his glasses crashing to the ground. Trent cursed, but not in English. Ron
looked at him for a moment and then found his words.
“What was that? Mandarin? Japanese?” asked Ron.
“I spent some time out there and had to learn some,” said Trent.
“Are you fluent?” asked Ron.
“It’s more of a dialect to be honest. I’m not sure most of it is spoken correctly. Some of
the cursing has stuck with me. That wasn’t directed at you by the way, just the glasses.
They’re sort of one of a kind,” said Trent.
“That’s okay, don’t worry about it. Shall we go?” asked Ron, smiling.
He climbed into the back seat. Trent walked to the front passenger seat as the driver
started the car. As he turned to face the house, he caught the glare of Karen who stood in the
doorway staring hard at Trent. He smiled and waved but Karen just kept staring.
That night as Ron and Carol were relaxing, watching television, they heard the sound of a
muted argument outside. Ron dimmed the lights and peered cautiously through the window.
There, standing by their cars were Trent and Karen. They had both left the house a good ten
minutes earlier but had not yet left the grounds. Trent seemed to be apologising for the most
part, with Karen poking him in the chest every now and again. She never stopped her verbal
assault on him, pausing only once to turn in an angry circle wagging her finger before
plunging it into his chest.
Ron turned to call Carol but she was already behind him, watching the couple arguing.
“What the hell do you think is going on there?” asked Ron.
“Don’t you know? Don’t you see it?” asked Carol.
“See what?” asked Ron.
“They’re a couple, Ron. Look at them, they argue like a married couple. She cares a lot
about what he says and does,” said Carol. “Look how guilty he looks.”
“Says the woman,” said Ron, smiling.
The next day Carol stood in the kitchen, making herself and Karen a strong cup of coffee
and burning a couple of rounds of toast. She spread the butter thinly on the toast and turned
back to Karen, speaking as she munched.
“How much longer do you think you two will be here for?” she asked.
Karen shrugged her shoulders. “Until the job is done. Whenever that is,” she said.
“Gary seems to think that whoever did this won’t be back,” said Carol.
“Thinking is not enough, we have to be sure,” said Karen.
“What if we are never sure?” asked Carol.
“We will be. Trust me, we will be,” said Karen.
“Are you two a couple?” asked Carol, suddenly.
Karen looked startled by the question and responded in a defensive manner.
“No, not at all. Why do you ask?” she asked.
“We saw the two of you arguing outside last night,” said Carol. “I’m sorry, I don’t mean
to be intrusive but you looked just like a married couple out there.”
Normally, Karen would laugh at a suggestion like this. In all her time with Carol, she had
been amiable and had shared a similar sense of humour but this time there was no change in
expression, just a stony face.
“It was just about work, that’s all. Nothing you need to know,” said Karen.
Carol decided to stop the conversation there and pursue another subject. Karen plainly was
not happy with this line of questioning, whether she and Trent were a couple or not.
“You know Ron and his team are on the verge of some breakthrough at work. He says that
the world will never need to dig for coal or drill for oil again. That energy will be free for all.
Do you think that’s why someone tried to kill him?” asked Carol.
“What sort of breakthrough?” asked Karen.
“I don’t know. Don’t get me wrong, he does tell me these things, he tries to explain it but I
don’t understand. All I know is that he says it will change the world. Things will change for
the better,” said Carol.
“Did he say when he is likely to complete this breakthrough?” asked Karen.
“Well last night he was waxing on about how in a month or two they’ll be ready to go,”
said Carol. She thought that the conversation might bring back her amiable friend but instead
the stony-faced one remained.
“In a month or two,” said Karen.
* * *
Trent had become accustomed to Ron’s infatuation with routine on the car journey and never
thought to ask why they had to stop at a certain shop to get his newspaper. The regular stops
at the small terraced house, where Ron would enter the house to spend an hour in there at
least every day on his way home from work, finally got the better of Trent’s curiosity.
“You can tell me to mind my own business if you like, but why do we stop here every
day?” asked Trent.
“In that house is someone very important to me,” said Ron. “I always said I would look
after him and I keep my word. He’s a good friend.”
“You never come out of the house with him though and he never comes to yours. Hell, we
could give him a lift there and back if it’s that important to you Ron,” said Trent.
“You don’t understand. He’s severely disabled,” said Ron. “He can’t leave the house. I
wish he could but he can’t.”
“Can you trust him?” asked Trent.
Ron turned and stared at Trent. The anger in his face was barely disguised. It was as
though the question was unforgivable.
“I guess that answers my question,” said Trent. “I’m sorry I asked.”
* * *
That night, Ron and Carol were looking through the window again. Ron was beginning to
wonder whether the two of them were beginning to lose the plot. The argument took the same
format once more, with Trent on the defensive and Karen pointing and doing most of the
talking. This time she pointed towards the house every now and again. Was she pointing
towards the house though, or was she pointing towards Ron and Carol?
“For a couple of bodyguards they seem to have let their own guard down a little too
much,” said Ron.
“She said they weren’t a couple, but was incredibly defensive about it,” said Carol.
“Perhaps we should tell Gary about this,” said Ron. “I have to admit, it’s beginning to
disturb me a little.”
As he spoke, Trent moved towards Karen and grabbed her by the arm as if trying to calm
her. The struggling Karen continued to point with her one free arm and protest but relented
when Trent pulled her close and hugged her warmly. Ron and Carol both smiled as Trent
lifted Karen’s head to his and kissed her passionately.
“Well I guess that allays my fears,” chuckled Ron.
“I did say,” said Carol.
“Yes, you did sweetheart,” said Ron. “Let’s respect their privacy.” The couple both moved
away from the window as Trent and Karen continued their kiss outside.
* * *
Their secret observation of the bodyguards made their personal relationships with them much
closer. Trent would go into the newsagents with Ron and got to know the shopkeeper. They
would even stop off for a drink together at a nearby pub on their way home, but Ron never let
Trent come into the terraced house with him. Carol and Karen had now started to go shopping
together, interrupting their spending to take lunch. They also had a regular planned diet of
television that they adhered to religiously. Carol never broached the subject of Trent and
Karen’s personal relationship again, however.
One night as Ron looked out of the window, he noticed that Karen was gone but Trent
remained outside gazing at the night sky. Ron pulled on a coat and ventured outside to join
him.“
You should not be outside,” said Trent, his gaze not leaving the sky.
“Am I not safe with you and the flashlight army out here then?” asked Ron.
Trent smiled and Ron walked towards him. Ron stopped and gazed at the night sky along
with Trent. The stars twinkled in the clear sky. Trent pointed towards what seemed a
particularly bright one.
“Looks like a star, doesn’t it. It’s a planet though. Venus,” said Trent.
“Is this a particular passion of yours?” asked Ron.
“I have not seen the stars in such a long time,” said Trent, suddenly in a world of his own,
his face drawn with remorse.
“I’m sorry?” asked Ron.
Trent turned from his watch and smiled at Ron.
“I meant I don’t have the time to watch the skies these days. There was a time when that
was all I used to do,” said Trent.
“Really?” asked Ron. “Was that as a child?”
Trent shook his head and gazed towards the sky once more.
“As a child and as a man. I shouldn’t tell you this but I was a scientist as well. Events
caused me to take a different path and so I find myself here, far from home, doing a task I
should never have had to,” he said.
“A scientist? What was your specialisation?” asked Ron.
“Geology. I was concerned with the environment,” said Trent.
“So what on earth made you become a bodyguard?” asked Ron.
“I worked with a man called Johnson. He was a physicist. We argued about everything.
The state of this planet suited Johnson. He became very rich by suggesting alternatives to
conventional ideas about cleaning up the environment,” said Trent.
“What alternatives?” asked Ron.
“You’re a physicist. You know that if you could put a mirror on the moon that the image
in the mirror would be two or three seconds in the past?” asked Trent.
Ron nodded.
“Johnson believed that you could open a window in the mirror. That you could talk to
people in the past,” said Trent. “He thought that you would be able to guide them and tell
them what they needed to do to keep the planet clean. A few of us helped him in his research.
The problem was that you would need to be looking in that mirror from light years away to
talk to people from many years ago.”
“It’s impossible,” said Ron. “You would need to be 20 light years away from Earth just to
see ten years ago.”
“Not if you viewed it for a short period of time from another dimension. A dimension
physically close to ours,” said Trent. “Johnson viewed it as a series of mirrors and windows.”
Ron laughed and slapped Trent on the back.
“Conjecture and fantasy, I’m afraid Trent,” said Ron.
“Only, Johnson said that he had achieved it. He could talk to people in the past,” said
Trent. “We dismissed it as first but then Johnson suddenly started to inherit large amounts of
money and he became an expert on historical events.”
“So you think he was planting seeds and actually talking to people from the past?” asked
Ron.
“Sounds crazy, doesn’t it,” said Trent. “But something had changed. Johnson became
more and more powerful as well as rich. I asked him whether it would be possible to actually
step back in time and change the past. Put the Earth right. He just laughed at me. He said that
even if we could go back in time, we would change nothing in the present because the past
had already affected it,” said Trent.
“Well it is the obvious conclusion,” said Ron.
“Didn’t stop us from trying to time travel though,” said Trent.
“Did you succeed?” asked Ron.
Trent shook his head.
“Johnson made it public knowledge. He blamed us for wasting huge amounts of public
money. I couldn’t get a job cleaning test-tubes after that,” said Trent. “Johnson didn’t want
anyone going back in time for some reason. It was as though his wealth and power came from
his monopoly on the subject.”
“So what made you become a bodyguard?” asked Ron.
“You don’t need to know that,” said Trent.
“Well if you have qualifications, you can still do the thing you love. After this has finished
why don’t we see if we can find a place for you in my company? It’s never too late, Trent,”
said Ron.
“It is too late, Ron,” said Trent, smiling at his friend. He climbed into his car and wound
down the window to wave a hand at Ron as he drove away from the house.
Ron watched Trent drive his car through the gates. Once the car had vanished from sight,
he turned to go back towards his house. He stopped and looked up at the night sky. There,
shining brightly in the night sky was Venus. Ron suddenly felt cold and very alone. He
hurried back inside quickly to embrace Carol.
* * *
Trent’s revelation that he too had been a scientist cemented his friendship with Ron. Their
relationship continued to flourish, although Ron did not broach the subject of Trent’s previous
occupation and Trent never spoke of it either. Their stops at the pub became more frequent
but did not interrupt the regular visits to the terraced house.
Gary and the police were no nearer to solving the identity of the mysterious sniper. In fact,
the police now seemed to have no interest in Ron and Carol at all. Even Gary was beginning
to doubt the wisdom of keeping so many men at the property, to the extent that he was
considering withdrawing Trent and Karen from the job. Trent had protested however, stating
that this could be exactly what the assassin was waiting for. Gary agreed, not least because he
could not afford to take the risk.
The weeks passed without incident and the winter set in, making the days shorter. One
day, they stopped at the terraced house as normal and Ron left Trent and the driver to enter
the property. He was longer than usual and Trent became restless after an hour passed by. He
was on the verge of leaving the car and entering the house when Ron came back outside and
returned to the car.
“Everything alright?” asked Trent.
Ron was shaking a little but stared through the windscreen, seemingly fascinated by the
views outside the car. Trent stared at Ron and then the driver. He was relieved when Ron
spoke.
“Yes, never better. Best I’ve felt in a long time,” said Ron. “Trent, there is something I
have to do, something I am meant to do. I need someone to help me with it.”
“Do we need to pick up someone you work with?” asked Trent.
“No. It has to be you, Trent,” said Ron. “Just you and me together, totally alone. No one
else.”
Trent looked at Ron and placed a hand on his shoulder.
“Ron, what is it? Are you sure about this?” he asked.
“Tell the guards to keep away from the property. I don’t care how you do it. And get
Karen to take Carol out for a meal or something,” said Ron.
“Okay Ron, not a problem,” said Trent.
Trent phoned the guards at the house and told them to step back from the property, telling
them that the assassin might be trying to access the boundary from either the wood or the
fields. He then rang Karen, who agreed to take Carol out for dinner. Ron noticed Trent was
busy texting Karen as well but did not ask why. He just smiled and enjoyed the night-time
views from his seat in the car.
As they pulled up to the gates, the two men blocking their entry opened the gates and
waved them through. In the rear-view mirror, Ron could see both men leaving the grounds of
the house in a black BMW. The driver pulled up by the front of the house and then as Trent
and Ron made their way into the house he left as well. Karen and Carol had already left and
the house was completely empty except for Trent and Ron.
Ron was pouring his fingers over the bullet hole in the portrait of his father.
“He never thought I would amount to anything. He called me a fanatic, a dreamer, a man
who did not know the meaning of sacrifice. He was wrong,” said Ron.
He moved away from the painting and sat down at the small writing bureau. Taking out a
notepad from the drawer, he ripped a page from it and wrote what looked like a single word
on it. He crumpled the paper up into a small ball and gripped it tightly in his right hand.
“I am ready,” he said, and looked up at Trent.
Trent stood no more than four feet away from Ron, his gun pointing at Ron’s head. Ron
raised an eyebrow for a second but said nothing.
“I’m sorry,” said Trent. “We have become good friends, I know, but what you are going to
do, I have to stop it. I put the bullet in the portrait of your father. It isn’t disrespectful but no
man could hit you from there, I had to get inside. I also had to keep Karen and me safe. We
cannot go back. We have to give ourselves time to get away and start a new life. This has cost
us so much already. A personal bodyguard, close to the target was the only way. It has taken
so long to get you alone, but this way it will be at least four or five hours until they discover
your body.”
Ron still said nothing, but started to twirl a pen around in circles on the top of the wooden
bureau.
“Ron! Ron! Don’t you want to know why?” asked Trent.
Ron looked up at Trent and smiled at him as if he was silently forgiving him.
“In six weeks time you realise the breakthrough you have been working on. Dark matter
will become a reality for the world. You will be able to harvest it and provide an endless
supply, solving all the energy needs of the world. One man will corrupt it however, he will
convince you that it can meet all sorts of needs and you will harvest so much that you can no
longer control it. Our world will be grey and dark. My world, Ron,” said Trent. “The trees are
all dead and the oceans are a murky brown mud. The atmosphere is barely breathable and
when you look to the sky at night, all you can see is the black fog. No sun, no stars, just the
impenetrable black fog.
“I had to come back and prevent you from bringing this slow death to the world. Johnson
said it wasn’t possible, that we could not go back in time, but we found a way, Ron. We
cannot go back though. It’s a one-way ticket, so I had to bring Karen with me, my wife. One
of our leaders, Johnson, argued against it. He seems to prefer our world as it, poisoned and
less populated, easier to control and rule, but the council voted against him and sent us back.
If there was another way to do it, I would, but I cannot take any risks. The only solution is to
kill you.”
Ron still did not move but spoke at last. “Tell me. This dark matter? Will it make me
famous, would it make my father proud?” he asked.
“Initially yes, and I suppose your father would be proud, but…” said Trent.
“Then do it. Do it now, while I still have resolve. While I still believe in sacrifice,” said
Ron.
Trent steeled himself and fired the gun, sending a single bullet through his friend’s
forehead. Ron slumped, face down on the bureau, his blood spilling across the wood. Trent
holstered his gun and took a moment to kiss his friend lightly on the back of the head.
“God forgive me,” he said. “I’m so sorry.”
Trent ran from the building and made his way across the grounds. Vaulting the boundary
fences and running into the woods, he pushed back the branches and twigs as he ran in and
out of the trees. In the distance, every ten seconds, a car horn made a single sound. He ran
towards the noise, breathless, afraid and distraught at what he had just done. The tears
streamed down his cheeks. As he left the woods, he fell into the arms of Karen, sobbing
hysterically.
“It’s okay, it’s okay,” said Karen, stroking Trent’s hair.
“It’s not okay. He was my friend. He trusted me and I killed him. I killed him, Karen,”
said Trent.
“You had no choice. What else could you do? You did what you had to,” said Karen.
Trent looked at the silver Fiesta parked by the side of the woods.
“It’s a rental. False ID. By the time they find Ron, we will be long gone. New identities
and a new life. This is our world now Trent. We cannot go back, but we at least know our
world will not be poisoned,” said Karen.
Trent dried his eyes and slowly composed himself.
“Johnson said it could not be done. He said you couldn’t change the past because it has
already happened. Irrevocable he called it. Yet, here we are. Johnson was wrong, thank God. I
am so glad he was wrong but I hope that wherever Ron is, he forgives me. Carol is safe, isn’t
she?” asked Trent.
“I left her at her mother’s with one of the security team. We saved her at least. Ron was
my friend too and I am trying not to imagine Carol’s grief when she discovers what has
happened,” said Karen.
Trent pulled himself to his feet and the couple climbed into the Fiesta. Karen sat in the
driver’s seat and looked across at her husband, who was still struggling to hold back the tears.
She leaned across, kissing him gently on the cheek before starting the car. They both turned
and smiled at each other and clasped hands gently.
The lorry losing control on the corner behind them came hurtling through the rear of the
Fiesta, pinning it between itself and a large oak tree, crushing it into a pile of twisted metal
and killing the occupants instantly. Only the hands of the couple were visible in the carnage,
still holding each other tightly.
* * *
The group of people moved away from the grave and began to disperse into smaller groups,
all having their own respectful discussions. Gary stood behind the man placing a single white
carnation on the grave.
“You never told me about him. You never told anyone about him, only Carol,” said Gary.
Ronald Mason stood up and straightened his coat.
“He was the same as me. A scientist. Truth is he was brilliant, far better than me,” said
Rod. “But father ridiculed him because John wanted to talk to other worlds, different
dimensions. He was thirty years old when he claimed that he could talk to people in the
future. His behaviour grew erratic. He would wake up screaming; even attacked people,
saying that they wanted to kill me. We found a gun in his house and that was the last straw. I
had no choice but to keep John away from the rest of society, for his sake as well as theirs.”
“Schizophrenia?” asked Gary.
“Paranoid schizophrenia,” said Ron. “Very acute.”
“I have put my resignation on your desk back at the house,” said Gary.
“Why?” asked a shocked Ron.
“Why? The people I put close to you were the very people who wanted to kill you,” said
Gary. “I swear that at the time I put my faith in them, they had worked for me for years.
Valued and trusted employees. Yet now, after their death, I know that they came to see me
just six weeks before the bullet hit your father’s portrait.”
“Who were they?” asked Ron.
“We don’t know. The cops don’t know. It’s as though they came from another world. No
trace of a real identity, although they had a brace of brilliantly forged identities.”
“They nearly got away, I’m told.”
“Yes, an unfortunate or fortunate accident, depending how you look at it,” said Gary.
“Lorry driver lost control on a corner, swears that the wheel just went loose. Their car was
crushed between the truck and a tree. The sniper rifle and bullets that match the one in your
wall were in the boot.”
“I wonder why they wanted to kill me?” asked Ron. “John kept saying that someone was
coming to kill me. The man in his head warned him that he had to save me. On the day Trent
shot John, I stopped off at the house as normal only to find his two carers unconscious. I
found John in a room by himself, he kept saying it’s today, it’s today. Sacrifice, I know
sacrifice, he kept saying. I asked him who warned him, tried to calm him before phoning for
help for the carers but he just said, ‘I will tell you after I am gone’. Then he stuck a syringe in
me and the world went black. Woke up in just my underpants,” said Ron.
“He switched clothes with you and climbed into the car with Trent,” said Gary. “Trent
thought John was you. He never suspected a thing.”
“Identical twins. Even the hair,” said Ron. “You know, he insisted on changing his name
just before he lost it completely. Said it was important, he made me promise never to tell
anyone. He even managed to falsify documents to show that he had died at birth. For all
intents and purposes, I had no brother, well not one that the history books would know of,
anyway. He said they must not know of him, whoever they might be. The man in his head
told him this,” said Ron.
“Trent thought it was you. Thought he had his man. I’m sorry Ron,” said Gary.
Ron smiled and wiped a tear from his cheek before placing a hand on Gary’s shoulder.
“You’re not responsible for this, Gary. They fooled us all; me, you and the police. In two
weeks time I have a very important announcement to make. I have discovered something that
will change the world. I need people around me I can trust. I am refusing your resignation. I
expect to see you back at work tomorrow morning, nice and early,” said Ron.
Gary smiled and nodded and walked away as Carol embraced her husband from behind.
“You alright?” she whispered in his ear.
“I guess so,” said Ron. “How did he know that on that particular day someone would try
and kill me? Father ridiculed him, but he was a bigger man than us both. Somehow, he knew
he was going to die and yet he made sure I was safe. He made the sacrifice.”
“Didn’t he say the voice in his head warned him of all this?” asked Carol.
“He always said he would tell me how. I guess we’ll never know now,” said Ron.
Carol hugged Ron tightly and he returned her embrace. Gary was running back towards
them, holding something in his hand. Ron and Carol separated as Gary approached.
“I almost forgot,” said Gary. “John had a piece of paper crumpled up in his hand when
they found him. He had written just one word on it. It makes no sense to me or the police but
you should have it.”
Gary gave Ron the crumpled paper and turned to leave as Ron unravelled the paper.
On the paper written in ink was just one word.
Johnson.
* * *
* * * * *

L J Hick’s contribution to the Wyrd Worlds II anthology.

You can download the complete anthology for free using the links below

AMAZON  BARNES AND NOBLE SMASHWORDS ITUNES

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