This tale is based on the short story "The New Accelerator", written in 1901 by H.G. Wells. Wells' characters and the basic scientific premise have been used here but in a much altered form. Much of Wells' literary output is available online, and it is well worth reading some of the lesser-known short stories. Though the style and language seems rather antique to us now, many of the ideas are still fresh.
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Think of this as a confession, if you will, or an explanation if you are more charitable. You may have read the little story about me and my good friend Professor Gibberne that I wrote many years ago. The times being what they were I could not, of course, relate the whole of it. And many remarkable things came to pass afterwards, so I have set my mind to telling the whole of it so far. Forgive me if my phrasing seems somewhat dated, but I was born a long time ago, and it is hard to shake off the habits of one's youth.
I told the story to the point at which Gibberne and I had tried the Accelerator but once out of the house and numerous times under controlled conditions in the laboratory, until we were sure that we had measured and understood its effects. In brief, my good friend Professor Gibberne was a most ingenious scientist, with a particular interest in the effects of drugs on the human body. After many years of study and experiment dedicated to seeking a drug which would invigorate the body and accelerate the nervous system to new heights he perfected the New Accelerator. Although he had been hoping for a doubling of energy and speed he succeeded beyond his wildest dreams. The New Accelerator increased the tempo of the body a thousandfold, and allowed the user to do in minutes what he would ordinarily do in hours or days.
At first the Professor had thought to market the accelerator immediately under the name Gibberne's Nervous Accelerator and to provide it in strengths of 200, 900 and 2,000 to 1. Thus, we spent many weeks experimenting with the dosages in the laboratory, until we had finally perfected the manner of controlling both the rate of acceleration and the length of time the effects would last.
So, well satisfied with our progress, Gibberne and I sat one evening in his library and discussed our plans for the future.
"This will allow me to secure a place in the annals of science. I will be listed among the greats! And of course the money to be made from this will enable me to continue my researches at leisure without worry about the future."
"Most assuredly," I replied. "But should we not be concerned about the effect on society? I know that as scientists that is not our concern; yet, I would not like to think that we will be remembered for the evil that we have unleashed, like a modern Pandora."
"Nonsense!" exclaimed Gibberne. "We are merely extending the boundaries of science. What use is made of that we cannot guess, nor be held responsible for. Any tool may be used for both good and evil, and it is up to the civil authorities to control the effects. I have no doubt that the accelerator will be put to evil uses by some, but think of the good it can do. Firemen able to go into a burning building and rescue the occupants at their leisure. Scholars able to research in a day what would take many months or years in ordinary time and without the petty annoyances and disruptions that plague us in daily life."
"You are right, I suppose. There will be much of good that can come of this. And yet, I cannot help but think of the evil that will also surely come."
And yet I acquiesced without demur when he suggested that I join him in the experiments in the use and dosage of the New Accelerator. You may have read my first story abut the next events, as we tested and refined the Accelerator. You may have noticed how brief and lacking in detail that story was; that of course, was due to a deliberate evasiveness on my part. As we were preparing to put Gibberne's Nervous Accelerator onto the market, a bit of publicity was felt to be efficacious in bringing our product to the attention of the market, but we neither of us dared to reveal the full and true story of our experiments. This, then, is as much in the way of a confession as it is a journal, and given the way our world has changed since the introduction of the New Accelerator, I now feel free to tell the entire story.
Allow me to go into a little more background behind this stupendous elixir. As I said, it allows an individual to work, to move, to think, to live at a much faster rate than the ordinary flow of time. But only the individual. Time moves at its regular pace in the world at large; all substances, air and water and earth and fire, continue at their measured pace, one second per second of elapsed time as the earth follows its course in the heavens. But the individual lives at a far greater rate, dependent on strength of the dosage of the Accelerator that he has taken. Thus, if I take the 200 strength draught, I live at a rate 200 times faster than the world around me. A gentle stroll of three miles per hour is, to the outside world, a superlative run of 600 miles per hour. Should I stand beside you for a minute by my internal measurements, then you will notice a brief blur lasting a mere three tenths of a second. And you may imagine what will happen at the dosages of 900 or 2,000 to 1.
And so our experiments proceeded. We did not foresee the results of these experiments on the world or on ourselves. Or rather, we chose to turn a blind eye to the consequences that might ensue.
So without further remonstrance I shall tell you of our adventures after those which were previously recorded. When next we ventured out of doors we had a much better idea of the dosages and their effects and how to prepare ourselves for the adventure. We first donned tight clothing, so that the wind could not whip our coats and pants around as we moved. Then we took a dosage of 200, fearing that the higher dosages were too great to use out of doors. We had left the front door of Gibberne's house open, remembering the consequence inertia had on inanimate objects in our accelerated state, and strolled out carefully after the Accelerator had taken effect.
Because we were using a dosage much weaker than we had previously tried outdoors we were not subject to the same heat from friction and its consequent problems. We made our way down the road to the village, observing passers-by as we went. All were still, caught in an instant of repose as they went about their tasks. I particularly observed the women, looking like statues holding their parasols as they strolled in the park. I could not help looking at them closely, the form of their breasts and bottoms drawing my eyes. You must remember that in those days all was concealed, and bachelors like ourselves did not dare to look too closely at a lady lest we be shunned as perverts.
"Quite a sight, eh W?"