My name is Jessie Wayback. I am a Time-Travel Reporter. I prefer the title History Reporter, but my boss says people associate the word history with boring. I hope to change that opinion. This is how I got the job.
I was a journalism major at NYU. I was on my way to class, cutting through Cooper Triangle on the path through the trees, when a man suddenly appeared in front of me. Out of nowhere. Literally. He just appeared. Of course, I was a little shocked. Not totally shocked, this is New York after all, but shocked enough to stop in my tracks. Then he said my name.
“Hello, Jessie, my name is Myriad Era. I am a time traveler. In my origin time, I publish historical accounts. I am also working on a document entitled The Complete History of Mankind. It is obviously a large project. I’ve come to offer you a job.”
I just stared at him.
“I know it is hard to believe that time travel is real, but I assure you it is. You don’t have to take my word for it. Look at this photograph.”
He handed me a strange-looking phone. On it was a photograph of my grandfather when he was in the Vietnam War. I had seen a couple of photos of him from that time, long before I was born, but I had never seen this one.
“That doesn’t prove anything,” I said.
“Keep swiping.”
I swiped to the next photo. It was my grandfather again, after the war, before he married my grandmother. I had not seen this one either. I kept swiping—photo after photo of my grandfather at many different ages. Then the images of my Dad began—year after year. I had never seen any of them before either. Finally, photos of me. Dozens, from different years in my life. All of them were photographs I had never seen before.
“How did you get these?”
“I took them all today. Well, technically, over the course of 50 years, but they were all taken in a 24-hour time period.”
I was shaken, but I still didn’t believe him.
“Show me your time machine,” I said.
He chuckled and said, “I am afraid that is an old bit of human imagination. I don’t have a time machine. Well, I guess you could say I do, but it is implanted under my skin and controlled by my mind.”
I snorted my derision.
He vanished.
I looked around. This must be a prank, I thought.
He reappeared.
I stepped back.
“The human mind is the most powerful machine ever created. I figured out how to use it, in conjunction with a chip, to manipulate time. It’s quite tedious to explain. I will spare us both the lecture.”
I felt like I was losing my grip on reality. The disappearing and reappearing man recognized that also and said, “Well then, enough for today. Your mind isn’t ready to accept this truth. I will revisit you tomorrow.”
He vanished again.
My legs could no longer hold me, so I sat down on the pavement. The rest of that day was a complete waste. How could I have possibly concentrated on school when I had just witnessed a man vanish and reappear, and claim to be a time traveler? With photographic proof. I wandered around the city in a daze. I didn’t get much sleep that night either.
The next day, I expected someone to show up and tell me it was all an elaborate gag. At least I hoped they would. But it didn’t happen. Era showed up again in Cooper Triangle.
“Are you ready to consider my job offer?” he asked.
“Perhaps. First, take me to the past.”
“I will be happy to do so. However, it requires trust on your part. I can’t simply hold your hand and take you with me. It doesn’t work that way. If you want to be a time traveler, you have to allow me to implant a chip under your skin behind your ear. It is incredibly small. You will not notice it. Nor will anyone else. It is undetectable.”
“You’re not doing surgery on me,” I replied.
“Oh, it’s nothing so dramatic. It is injected. The process is quite painless and only takes a second.”
He pulled out a small medical tool. “This is it.” I press it against your skin and touch the screen with my finger. A second later, it will be done, and you will have the ability to time-travel. I will, of course, need to train you how to control it, but after training, you will be perfectly capable of time travel on your own.”
“Why me?” I asked.
“Simple. I like your style of writing. Your enthusiasm. Your courage. Your sense of humor. I know you love history, and I could use a different perspective. Plus, I am a man and you are a woman. You can go places I can’t. You can approach women without the social issues I face in previous times. ”
My head was still reeling. Unable to accept what I was hearing, but also alive with the possibilities if it were true. I could witness history as it was happening. I could walk among legends. Presidents. Kings. I could see events unfold. It was a heady thought.
Not sure if I was ready to throw caution to the wind and let him implant something in my neck, I decided to ask more questions. That’s what journalists do, right?
“What does the job entail?” I asked.
“It is quite flexible. I want you to visit significant people in history and interview them. And witness significant events in history and record them firsthand. I have done a lot of work already, but as you can imagine, there is still much left to do. The project may well outlive me. You are young. You may need to complete it. Or perhaps you may need to find another to pass the work onto. It is the job of a lifetime. Or perhaps I should say uncountable lifetimes.”
“How much does it pay?”
He laughed. “Money is inconsequential. It is freely available for those who know what will happen next. This job pays in experiences—more experiences than anyone could have in one normal lifetime. You can see revolutions unfold. Watch kings be crowned. Visit great artists and watch them paint, or perhaps even pose for them. Witness great musicians’ first performances. Talk to geniuses as children. Talk to cowboys in the old west. Travel in space. Visit human colonies on other worlds. All I ask in return is your account of the adventure.”
It was getting harder and harder to resist.
“How do I know any of this is real? It sounds impossible.”
“I could show you more photographs or videos, but they will not convince you any more than the ones I have already shown you. You must decide if you trust me. I have other candidates for the position, but you are my first choice. I will return tomorrow. If you are not ready to commit by then, I will bother you no more.”
“Let me choose the location for our meeting tomorrow.”
“Very well, if it will ease your mind. What is your choice?”
“Sheep Meadow in Central Park. Dead center.”
“Good choice. A wide open lawn with no way to hide trickery. Sheep Meadow it is.”
“Aren’t you afraid people will see you appear out of nowhere?”
“Not at all. I appear instantly. Anyone who sees me will simply assume I was there all along. Their minds will compensate for my sudden appearance, and if not, who would believe them?”
Then he vanished.
I desperately wanted this to be true. At the same time, I hated Era for putting me in the position of having to decide. I already had a plan for my life. Become a journalist, climb the ranks, and make a name for myself. Then quit, write books, and raise a family. Corny as it might sound to most people, I firmly believed I could pull it off. Now I was in agony. Torn between choosing two lives.
The next day, I walked through Central Park. Across West Drive, careful of the joggers, cyclists, and businessmen in suits riding powered scooters to work. Past the rows of older people sitting on benches watching the joggers and cyclists, and down the path to Sheep Meadow. I walked out onto the lush green lawn, past the tourists with their cameras focused on the surrounding skyline or each other. Past the locals sitting on blankets, desperate for some greenery in their concrete and steel lives. To the center of the meadow, where I unfolded my blanket. I sat down and pretended to read a book, although my mind was far too busy to concentrate on the words.
I didn’t have to wait long before Era appeared and sat down next to me.
“I was here in 1864 when 200 sheep grazed on this meadow. They trimmed the grass and fertilized the lawn. It was quite ingenious. Did you know that when Central Park was being designed, city commissioners called for a large greensward, or open field, to allow militia displays and military parades? This location was home to several small communities of poorer New Yorkers, mainly German, Irish, and African Americans. They were uprooted and moved. Large boulders and a high ridge were blasted to level the land, and two feet of topsoil was trucked in from New Jersey. You could say this is a little bit of New Jersey in New York. Once it was complete, the park designers, Olmsted and Vaux, shrewdly convinced the commissioners that a scenic park was not really the best place for military displays. They introduced the sheep to give it an English countryside feel.”
“You were really here then and saw them?” I asked.
“Yes. I saw Grover Cleveland dedicate the Statue of Liberty in 1886. I watched the Empire State Building being built. I saw the first Ali-Frazier fight at Madison Square Garden in 1971. Saw the horror of 9/11. Watched the Simon and Garfunkel concert on the Great Lawn in 1981.”
“I’m ready. I’ll do it. Give me the chip,” I said.
“I am beyond pleased. But I would be unfair and untrue if I did not warn you that time travel will have its own costs. Aside from the obvious danger of visiting dangerous events, there is the personal cost. You will never have a normal life. A family of your own is not a realistic possibility. The pull of time travel is too great to resist long enough to maintain a family. There will be time for brief love affairs—in many centuries—but nothing lasting. It will be cruel to those who love you, for you will surely leave them. Guilt, loss, and regret will haunt you at times. This job will consume your life and change you. Do you understand?”
“Yes. I think I do.”
“You don’t, but you will. Very well then. Shall we walk to a less conspicuous location so I can inject the chip?”
“Lead the way.”
As we walked to a quieter location in the park, Era asked, “Where would you like to visit first?”
“Surprise me.”
Where would you go first?
Thanks for reading and responding. You make it fun.
Mark
I would enjoy seeing the caves in Northern Spain being drawn in 30,000 years ago....
I have a time-travel Western in the drawer that I may serialize on Substack someday. We'll see.
Good job on this one, Mark! I hope you will revisit it from time to time.