It occurred to me
after he'd left that he never told me his name. He looked strangely
familiar, though. He had a longish beard that was beginning to turn
white. His receding hair was brown with flecks of grey, but looked as
if it had once been red. He was at least twice my age. He was dressed
much the same as I was, in jeans, trainers and a t-shirt. This
surprised me a little: I always imagined – or did back then –
people in the future wearing weird clothes. Perhaps I'd been watching
too much Blake's 7.
I was sitting on the
settee in our flat in North London, staring through the window at the
sky, through the colours of a rainbow-transfer we'd stuck on the
glass. I was listening to an Ian Dury album I'd just bought. It was
3rd June, 1981. I'm usually hopeless with dates but that one's not
one I'm likely to forget in a hurry.
I never got to
actually see his time machine. All I saw was a black flash, like a
negative of a flash of lightning, and there he was, standing in the
corner of the room. He stood for a moment, wide-eyed and open
mouthed, looking round.
“New Boots and
Panties!” he cried.
A strange
exclamation for the first known time-traveller from the future.
Speechless and disorientated, I nodded, got up and went over to the
hi-fi to take it off. I suppose I thought it was the polite thing to
do. He must've realised what I was doing.
“No, no! Leave it
on,” he said. “It's one of my favourites. And on vinyl!”
I did as he said,
but turned it down a bit.
“These were the
days!” he said.
“How did you – “
I began.
“Don't ask,” he
said. He laughed.
He made for the
chair under the window and sat down.
“It's great to see
you again,” he said.
“Have we met?” I
said.
He chuckled and
smiled knowingly, but offered no further explanation. Perhaps I was
too nonplussed to demand one. Somehow, though, we skipped all further
pleasantries and settled down to talking as if we'd known each other
for years. He told me how all the ecology stuff that was just
starting to get trendy in my time was really important and how, in
his time, the world was in the middle a climate catastrophe. He said
we already were, in our time, only it wasn't public knowledge. People
in the UK were getting poorer, too. He explained to me what foodbanks
were and how people had to queue at them for food. It got worse: the
world, in his time, had been struck by a pandemic and millions had
died. And, to make matters even worse, the situation in the health
service had been allowed to deteriorate to the point where even the
doctors and nurses were going on strike.
“And did I mention
the war in Europe?” he said.
“No,” I said. I
started to laugh. I must've been watching too many alternative
comedians. I thought he was joking.
“Straight up,”
he said.
“Really?”
“Really.”
Neither of us said
anything for a moment.
“Has anything
changed for the better?” I said, finally.
He thought for a
moment. He told me how although it'd not all been plain sailing, most
people were probably a bit
more accepting – a bit, mind you – of people different to
themselves. Then he tried to explain how everyone was linked up by
computer. He called it the internet. I told him it sounded good.
“It is, I think,”
he said. “But if you put it another way and tell people computers
are taking over the world, it sounds a lot less attractive.”
“And you've
invented time machines,” I said.
“Well, no,” he
said. He went on to explain how he'd stolen his from a
quadrillionaire entrepreneur from the 2060s who'd happened to
materialize in his living room. He'd told him that in 2060, spaceflight was old hat and time travel was the latest thing.
The guy had made the
mistake of putting his remote control box down on the table and my
visitor, on impulse, had grabbed it and pushed the button on it. It
seemed the right thing to do, he said. And here he was, in 1981. He'd
left the quadrillionaire stranded in 2023. Not something, he said, he
was likely to lose any sleep over. I noticed, for the first time,
that he was holding a device like a TV remote control in his left
hand.
“I felt I just had
to come back and warn you,” he said. “Don't fall for the 'jam
tomorrow' scam. If you do, things just get worse. Tomorrow never
comes.”
Then he told me he
had to leave. The quadrillionaire had mentioned, in the brief time
they'd spent talking, that you could only spend so long in the past
before your material integrity began to deteriorate. He stood up and
stepped back into the same corner of the room he'd appeared from. He
fixed me with an earnest stare.
“It's been
wonderful seeing you,” he said. He sniffed a little. He seemed to
be fighting back emotion. “But you've got to do something!”
he said. “All of you!” He looked around as he said it, waving his arms in a helpless gesture to all the people who weren't there with us.
I saw his finger close
on the button on the control-box and then he vanished, just as he'd
appeared, in a black flash.