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The General stood over the console, staring at Callahan's beacon as it drifted somewhere in the past -- but then it suddenly disappeared.
"What?--where did he go now?" the General growled.
"I don't know," the young operator said. "He's disappeared."
"What does that mean?" the General asked.
"He's...probably in the future...somehow they've moved from the past to the future..."
"But that's not possible!"
"It's the only explanation that fits," the operator sighed, resting his forehead on his hands.
Yet one of the other screens flashed brightly, then the General now saw Callahan and Didi Goodman thrashing around in the orca pool, and he bolted from the control room and ran as fast as he could for the pool area. When he got there both Callahan and Goodman were treading water while two orcas circled them, in effect preventing the humans from getting out of the water.
Yet as suddenly, when the General entered the vast cavern the two orcas stopped swimming and raised their heads, eyeing the General as he came to the water's edge--and now they made no move to prevent either Callahan or Goodman from moving to get out of the pool.
"You two better get out while you can," the General said, but even from ten meters away he could see that both Callahan and Goodman were now icy blue, so he called for a medical team to meet him in the pool area. Gurneys were summoned and about the time Brendan and Deborah Eisenstadt arrived Callahan was being wrapped in heated blankets, while docs worked on Didi Goodman.
"What's wrong with Didi?" Eisenstadt said as she walked up to the General.
"Extreme hypothermia," he said, "and it's led to some kind of rhythm disturbance."
"Rhythm? You mean cardiac?"
The General nodded and when Brendan began crying Eisenstadt moved to comfort the man-child. She looked at Harry as EMTs began pushing his gurney towards the clinic and he too seemed rigid with extreme cold, but at least he smiled once and shot her a brief thumb's up.
"What happened?" Brendan sighed. "Where'd they go?"
"We're not completely sure," the General lied. "When they're better maybe you ought to have a talk with them. Maybe you can find out more."
+++++
Two hours later Callahan lay on a hospital bed drifting in and out of sleep, his mind a hazy blank, the events of their brief trip now gone from memory. He still felt icy cold--despite the heated blankets and the warm fluid coming into his arm by IV. Then he saw an intense and very brief flash of light through his closed eyes and he struggled back to wakefulness...
...only to find Jim, the very tall alien from the high desert, kneeling over him.
"Are you aware of me?" Jim thought into Callahan's consciousness.
"Yes, I think so."
"Do you know where you have been?"
"I've been somewhere?"
"Yes. Do you recall meeting people? Even important people?"
"No. I can't remember anything that happened today."
"I must touch you now. Do not be afraid," Jim thought as he leaned close, putting the tips of his spidery fingers around Callahan's head.
Then Callahan felt an intense vibration then, just before a flood of unlocked memory washed through and into his conscious mind. And as his mind began to process these events he reeled under the weight of so many incomprehensible consequences of the people and places he'd been...
"You have not yet learned to retrieve these memories," Jim thought now. "Tell me, what did Roosevelt have to say to you?"
Callahan told him.
"You are no longer safe here," Jim thought bluntly. "You must come with me."
Callahan looked at the ECG hooked up to Didi--and then he noticed that her cardiac trace had simply stopped, almost like the machine had frozen within a moment of time, and he started to say something to Jim...
...but Jim stopped him. "Time has stopped for you now, at least while I am here."
"What about Didi? Shouldn't she come with me?"