CHAPTER 1
Bob (SFC-Sergeant First Class (E-7) Robert Throckmorton) sat in the front passenger seat of the Hummer as they drove through the desolate scrub of rural Afghanistan. He kept his eyes moving, scanning, always scanning, for anything out of the ordinary, anything that looked out of place or potentially dangerous. He was going out with a small team from his platoon of medics to pick up a couple of slightly wounded soldiers not too far from the FOB (Forward Operating Base) they were temporarily stationed at in support of some Engineers. The injuries weren't combat related, rather they were the result of carelessness while erecting a prefab bridge over a ravine.
He'd just turned his head toward his driver to warn him they were approaching dangerous terrain and to be very cautious when the world exploded. There was a large roar, a flash of light, and he felt the vehicle begin to roll. He could still see the afterimage of the explosion and the roiling dust when the vehicle landed on the driver's side, skidded slightly and rolled over on its top in the left ditch.
Bob's vision darkened from the shock and pain. He lay still for a moment getting his bearings. He felt moisture running down his body from what he was sure were several shrapnel wounds. His legs were damp. He could smell diesel fumes. His world was going dark once again but he forced himself to move, to make his way to the apparently unconscious, hopefully not dead, driver and help him exit the vehicle. The pain whenever he moved was excruciating.
He pushed and pulled until he and the driver were both nearly out of the burning vehicle when the wetness on his legs that he thought, almost hoped, was blood ignited with a whoosh. Instant searing pain crawled up his legs as the fuel from the spare can that drained onto him ignited. He knew nothing else until much later when he saw a shadow kneeling over him. He reached for his pistol just as a voice said, "Easy there Sarge. You're going to be ok. We have dustoff (a medical evacuation helicopter) inbound."
"Who pulled me out? What happened to Pvt. Swallow?"
"I don't know. When we got here I found you laying right where you are now. There was no one nearby, they were all in defensive positions. It took us a while to get turned around. The men in the vehicle behind you said you were trying to get out of the vehicle then you were here. You don't remember crawling over here?"
"No. The last I remember I was trying to get Pvt. Swallow out, then my legs caught on fire and I screamed."
That was the last Bob remembered for several hours. The next time he became aware of his surroundings he was on an aircraft headed for Germany and the Army Hospital there. They did some work on him, stabilized him further and he was in the air once more headed for Brooke Army Medical Center (BAMC) in San Antonio (Ft. Sam Houston) Tx., the home of the Army's premier burn treatment center.
Weeks went by, most filled with agony he never knew existed as he healed from the burns and surgeries on some of his other wounds. Then the skin grafts began and more pain. He almost had to learn to walk again after his grafts healed enough for him to try. Physical therapy was excruciatingly painful as well.
While he recuperated from the burns and other injuries, Bob began to worry about a different problem. He felt his memory had been adversely affected by the explosion. Finally, after he made enough comments and was surprised by or claimed he had no knowledge of many items that should have been common knowledge, he was referred to a psychiatrist.
After the normal pleasantries of the initial meeting the Doctor leaned back in her chair and asked, "Now, Sergeant, tell me in your own words what the problem is."
"Ma'am, I'm scared. I just seem to be out of phase with almost everything. Some of the simplest things, things a child should learn, seem completely different than I remember them. For example, I Know Donald Trump is President but I've seen a man that looks somewhat like him called Donal Tromp on TV addressing the nation as President. I've read the Vice President is somebody named Ponce.
"I've found other people with slightly different names as well. Of course I've encountered some people with names I know and they look like the people I remember who had those names. Most of the time though they act slightly different than I remember.
"Much of the history I learned, or think I learned, or lived through, is different than I remember. For example, the world trade center was crashed into by highjacked aircraft piloted by members of a religious Muslim nut group killing thousands. The same day other aircraft were highjacked by the same group. One crashed into the pentagon, another in a field. When I reminded someone that was why we were in Afghanistan I was informed no such thing happened.
"I was in Afghanistan fighting Taliban religious fanatics that harbored some of those terrorists but now people say we were there fighting a group of drug marketers, trying to improve the country and keep the farmers from growing poppies. Some of the wars I remember never happened. Much of the social unrest caused by the President I remember doesn't exist here. The population lives harmoniously, well more harmoniously than I remember. There's less poverty and a more equal distribution of wealth than I remember and way more interracial couples.
"I can go on and on but what's the use? I think my brain got scrambled or something."
"Hummm. That is strange. Well, lets do some tests and make sure there's not a medical reason for your problems then, if we rule out medical issues, we'll talk more."
After several X-Rays, CT Scans, MRI's and blood tests, Bob once again met with the Colonel (his female Psychiatrist). She said, "Sergeant, all your tests came back completely normal. Now I need to delve very deeply into your past. Please bear with me until we finish our discussions before we discuss your condition in any detail."
For the remainder of that meeting and two more, Bob was basically led through his entire life's memories from his earliest ones to the present day. She pressed him for names, places, dates (if he could remember them), events, and even his thoughts.
Finally, the questions ended. She said, "Sergeant I think that's all I need to make a diagnosis. I want to discuss your case with some colleagues before we delve into it further. We'll go over things in detail at our next session."
Bob was extremely worried about his problem for the next four days. Finally, the time for his next session arrived and he got to the Doctor's office almost 30 minutes early. A few minutes after the scheduled time for his appointment, Bob was allowed to enter her office. After the greetings and getting Bob seated, the Doctor leaned back in her chair and said, "Sergeant, I've read about cases like yours and, frankly, I thought they were far fetched, perhaps even complete fabrications. If one of my colleagues hadn't personally been involved with a case like yours I would probably have blown you off as a nut case, or you trying to better your disability rating.
"Fortunately, or, perhaps not, from your standpoint, that's not the case. Sergeant, we believe you're what we call a World Walker. There are only fifty seven known cases world wide. I know you feel as if everything is off kilter, slightly different than you remember. Well, you're right. We checked everything you told us you remembered from your life and literally everything is slightly different than the information you gave us. Where you named names, a similar person existed in most cases we found, but the name was slightly different and, mostly, their actions were less controversial than those undertaken by the person you named. Very few people whose names you mentioned had the same name and even those people were slightly different than you described them, or at least their lives were different.
"Come on, I mean ACTORS being elected President? What could our electors possibly be thinking? Professional politicians? Impossible! The constitution has iron clad term limits built in even if someone would want to spend their entire life in government service. Our forefathers knew serving the country was a duty, an onerous duty in some cases, and allowed for it, limiting the time any one person would need to spend doing their civic duty. Even those who run for the office do it as a civic duty, mostly to implement certain legislation or help with problems they forsee.
"Anyway, back to the test results and my and my colleagues thoughts on your problem. As you know, we checked your DNA. You're definitely who you say you are.
"You are SFC Robert Throckmorton, but, you're not. At least mentally, you're not OUR SFC Throckmorton. You're basically a different person, from a different time stream or dimension or whatever. We haven't determined which for sure because there's no way to verify any of this. The first few World Walkers we encountered were locked away and put through the wringers until the idiots in the intelligence agencies finally decided they just didn't know anything out of the ordinary and decided to leave them alone."