The Time War
By Gary LM Martin
Chapter 24: The Positronic President
The Luddites:
The quad was rapidly becoming a duo again.
Originally, the couple consisting of Tom Stoyer and Donna had joined forces with the duo of Maggie and Bradley. Officially speaking, anyway.
Unofficially, Tom was spending more and more time with Maggie, and it had reached a point where he no longer slept with Donna. And now Tom had taken it to the next level. Bradley only found out about it three days later, when Brad tried to initiate sex with his wife. He was kissing her and touching her and she responded, with no great joy, it seemed, but she did respond. However, when Brad moved to lift her shirt, she pulled on his hands.
"What?" he said, and his tone was already hurt.
"I... I can't," said Maggie, turning away from him in bed.
"Why not?"
"Tom ordered me not to."
"What?"
"Tom told me... I can't make love to you anymore." Maggie swallowed hard. "In fact, tomorrow, I'm moving in with him."
Bradley was speechless. Maggie was his wife. "Maggie... don't you love me?"
Maggie looked at him, at the man she had married six years ago. He was still the man she loved. But she had greater responsibilities now, more weighty obligations. "I do," said Maggie softly, caressing his cheek. "But I have a greater purpose now."
And in that moment, Bradley realized that Tom Stoyer had just stolen his wife.
********
Bradley tried to seek consolation with Donna. After all, she was a fellow member of their quad. The next day he cornered her in the kitchen while she was washing dishes and wrapped his arms around her from behind. He started squeezing her breasts, and suddenly life was good again.
"Bradley, stop," said Donna.
Bradley squeezed harder. Her breasts were nice and juicy, almost as much as-
"I said stop!" said Donna, pulling away from him.
"What's wrong?" said Bradley. "Aren't we all in a quad together?"
"Not any more," said Donna. She bit her lip. "It's just Tom and Maggie now."
Bradley suddenly realized the idea of a quad, four people in loving relation to each other which had seemed so progressive to him just six months ago, was a sham, simply a vehicle to steal his wife away from him. And now he had lost Maggie, and he didn't have Donna, and all he had was... nothing.
********
"My dear, dear friends," said Tom Stoyer at breakfast the following day. "We are ready to take action once again."
His followers cheered him, even as Bradley, and Donna, both looked glum.
"A key turning point in history was the election of the year 2000, nearly 450 years ago," said Stoyer. "The candidate who won, an actor named Charlton Heston, was in bed with the industrialists and the fossil fuel industry. He speeded up the era of Temperature Change which even now is destroying our planet. Every day the temperature fluctuates between twenty to thirty degrees,
all in a single day
! We know the sad truth, that this is caused by technology and factories and air cars, but the stubborn capitalists resist our efforts to tax and regulate our way to a healthier planet. There was a candidate running for president in the year 2000 who realized this. His name was Al Gore. If Al Gore had won, he would have deindustrialized our nation, ridding us of polluting power plants and technology. If he had won, we wouldn't have to live through a day when the temperature was 50 degrees, then 60 degrees and 70 degrees, all in the same day. And so we are going to help Al Gore win that election."
"But Tom," said Bradley. "In the year 2000, nuclear fusion hadn't yet been perfected. How will people get electricity without power plants?"
"Not to worry, my technically minded friend," said Tom. "There are many alternatives. Windmills! Solar power! Large scale gerbil farms!"
"Gerbil farms?"
"Farms where millions of gerbils run on treadmills," said Tom. "Also, there has been great strides harnessing the power of ants who build anthills. Do you know that there are literally billions of ants in the ground beneath us? Imagine if we could harness merely a fraction of the power they use to move!"
********
It wasn't long before the Continuity Service noticed the change.
"It's all... gone," said Sarah, staring at her holomonitors.
"What do you mean, it's all gone?" Colonel Strayker asked, wearing a severe looking brown suit with tall collars.
"Factories. Air cars. Power plants...." Sarah stared at the holomonitors. "This is a real time feed from our present, not the past. But from the state of affairs, this looks very much like the 18th century. Look at those primitive homes! Look at those horse drawn carriages! People are moving equipment around on carts and donkeys."
"What kind of change could cause that?" Strayker asked.
"I don't know, sir," said Sarah.
"Well, find out," said Strayker.
As Sarah worked, Calle reflected that it was a good thing that their underground base still had power.
"That's why we have the Temporal Suppressor," said Major Reynolds. "If the temporal suppressor wasn't protecting this building, the Time Shaft and our backup generator, we'd be standing in the dark."
"If we'd even be here," said Erica Green. "More likely than not we simply wouldn't exist. And if we stepped outside the base without getting a good anti-time dusting? We'd be gone as well."
"Has that ever happened to anyone?" Calle asked.
Erica shivered and turned away.
********
They went back to the year 2000 to try and figure out why Al Gore won the election. Sarah could find no obvious single cause she could attribute to the change in election results; at some point, Gore simply rose higher in the polls than Charlton Heston, but there was no reported reason for it.
John Calle was posing as a journalist. He stood in the front row during an Al Gore campaign event. He listened to Gore speak. What Gore was saying was ridiculous--portraying factories and power plants as evil things which were destroying the environment by generating carbon dioxide. Even back in the 20th century, it was well known that 97% of carbon dioxide was produced by natural sources--the land, the water, and animals--and only 3% produced by cars and factories. Human activity simply had no effect on the environment, at least not in this way. But Gore pretended as if facts didn't exist, and painted a world of violent temperature change, one which would destroy mankind unless it rapidly deindustrialized.
Calle frowned. He had read that Gore was a wooden public speaker, but in fact found him to be quite the opposite. Gore spoke with passion and genuineness and conviction. Calle didn't agree with what Gore said, but the way he said it was very compelling. When Gore finished giving his speech the audience gave him a rousing applause. Something here had changed.
After the speech, Calle was poking around backstage when a gorgeous blonde woman touched his hand. "Are you a reporter?"
"John Callenberger, with The Cleveland Star," said Calle.
"Oh, you must be new," said the woman. "My name is Maggie Galleher, I'm Vice President Gore's press secretary. Why don't we talk if you have a few moments?"
Calle did. Maggie led him to a small office and closed the door behind them. She sat down behind a desk and smiled at him. "So... you're the mysterious John Calle."
Calle started to reach for the compression pistol hidden in his jacket. But Maggie was quicker, raising the snout of a weapon of her own.