Part 2 (1/2)
The typing continued. ”It has noDinganSich . Therefore-” A key stuck, and others piled up on top of it. His double at the desk swore and reached out a hand to straighten the keys.
”Don't bother with it,” Wilson said on sudden impulse. ”It's a lot of utter hogwash anyhow.”
The other Bob Wilson sat up with a jerk,then looked slowly around. An expression of surprise gave way to annoyance. ”What the devil are you doing in my room?” he demanded. Without waiting for an answer he got up, went quickly to the door and examined the lock. ”How did you get in?”
”This,” thoughtWilson, ”is going to be difficult.”
”Through that,” Wilson answered, pointing to the Time Gate. His double looked where he had pointed, did a double take, then advanced cautiously and started to touch it.
”Don't!”yelled Wilson.
The other checked himself.”Why not?” he demanded.
Just why he must not permit his other self to touch the Gate was not clear to Wilson, but he had had an unmistakable feeling of impending disaster when he saw it about to happen. He temporized by saying, ”I'll explain. But let's have a drink.” A drink was a good idea in any case. There had never been a time when he needed one more than he did right now. Quite automatically he went to his usual cache of liquor in the wardrobe and took out the bottle he expected to find there.
”Hey!” protested the other. ”What are you doing there? That'smy liquor.”
”Yourliquor-” h.e.l.l's bells! It was.h.i.+s liquor. No, it wasn't; it was-their liquor. Oh, the devil! It was much too mixed up to try to explain. ”Sorry. You don't mind if I have a drink, do you?”
”I suppose not,” his double said grudgingly. ”Pour me one while you're about it.”
”Okay,” Wilson a.s.sented, ”then I'll explain.” It was going to be much, much too difficult to explain until he had had a drink, he felt. As it was, he couldn't explain it fully to himself.
”It had better be good,” the other warned him, and looked Wilson over carefully while he drank his drink.
Wilson watched his younger self scrutinizing him with confused and almost insupportable emotions.
Couldn't the stupid fool recognize his own face when he saw it in front of him? If he could notsee what the situationwas, how in the world was he ever going to make it clear to him? It had slipped his mind that his face was barely recognizable in any case, beingdecidedly battered and unshaven. Even more important, he failed to take into account the fact that a person does not look at his own face, even in mirrors, in the same frame of mind with which he regards an-other's face. No sane person ever expects to see his own face hanging on another.
Wilson could see that his companion was puzzled by his appearance, but it was equally clear that no recognition took place. ”Who are you?” the other man asked suddenly.
”Me?” replied Wilson. ”Don't you recognize me?”
”I'm not sure. Have I ever seen you before?”
”Well-not exactly,” Wilson stalled. How did you go about telling another guy that the two of you were a trifle closer than twins? ”Skip it -you wouldn't know about it.”
”What's your name?”
”My name?Uh-” Oh, oh! This was going to be sticky! The whole situation was utterly ridiculous. He opened his mouth, tried to form the words ”Bob Wilson,” then gave up with a feeling of utter futility. Like many a man before him, he found himself forced into a lie because the truth simply would not be believed.
”Just call me Joe,” he finished lamely.
He felt suddenly startled at his own words. It was at this point that he realized that he wasin fact, ”Joe,”
the Joe whom he had encountered once before. That he had landed back in his own room at the very time at which he had ceased working on his thesis he already realized, but he had not had time to think the matter through. Hearing himself refer to himself as Joe slapped him in the face with the realization that this was not simply a similar scene, but thesame scene he had lived through once before-save that he was living through it from a different viewpoint.
At least he thought it was the same scene. Did it differ in any respect? He could not be sure as he could not recall, word for word, what the conversation had been.
For a complete transcript of the scene that lay dormant in his memory he felt willing to pay twenty-five dollars cash, plus sales tax.
Wait a minute now-he was under no compulsion. He was sure of that. Everything he did and said was the result of his own free will. Even if he couldn't remember the script, there were some things heknew ”Joe” hadn't said.”Mary had a little lamb,” for example. He would recite a nurseryrhyme and get off this d.a.m.ned repet.i.tious treadmill. He opened his mouth- ”Okay, Joe Whatever-your-name-is,” his alter ego remarked, setting downa gla.s.s which had contained, until recently, a quarter pint of gin, ”trot out that explanation and make it snappy.”
He opened his mouth again to answer the question,then closed it. ”Steady, son, steady,” he told himself.
”You're a free agent. You want to recite a nursery rhyme-go ahead and do it. Don't answer him; go ahead and recite it-and break this vicious circle.”
But under the unfriendly, suspicious eye of the man opposite him he found himself totally unable to recall any nursery rhyme. His mental processes stuck on dead center.
He capitulated. ”I'll do that. That dingus I came through-that's a Time Gate.”
”A what?”
”A Time Gate.Time flows along side by side on each side-” As he talked he felt sweat breaking out on him; he felt reasonably sure that he was explaining in exactly the same words in which explanation had firstbeen offered tohim.”-into the future just by stepping through that circle.” He stopped and wiped his forehead.
”Go ahead,” said the other implacably. ”I'm listening. It's a nice story.”
Bob suddenly wondered if the other mancould be himself. The stupidarrogant dogmatism of the man's manner infuriated him. All right, all right! He'd show him. He strode suddenly over to the wardrobe, took outhis hat and threw it through the Gate.
His opposite number watched the hat snuff out of existence with expressionless eyes, then stood up and went around in back of the Gate, walking with the careful steps of a man who is a little bit drunk, but determined not to show it. ”A neat trick,” he applauded, after satisfying himself that the hat was gone, ”now I'll thank you to return to me my hat.”
Wilson shook his head. ”You can get it for yourself when you pa.s.s through,” he answered absent mindedly. He was pondering the problem of how many hats there were on the other side of the Gate.
”Huh?”
”That's right. Listen-” Wilson did his best to explain persuasively what it was he wanted his earlier persona to do.Or rather to cajole. Explanations were out of the question, in any honest sense of the word. He would have preferred attempting to explain tensor calculus to an Australian aborigine, even though he did not understand that esoteric mathematics himself.
The other man was not helpful. He seemed more interested in nursing the gin than he did in following 'Wilson's implausible protestations.
”Why?” he interrupted pugnaciously.
”Dammit,”Wilson answered, ”if you'd just step through once, expla-nations wouldn't be necessary.
However-” He continued with a synopsis ofDiktor's proposition. He realized with irritation thatDiktor had been exceedingly sketchy withhis explanations. He was forced to hit only the high spots in the logical parts of his argument, and bear down on the emotional appeal. He was on safe ground there-no one knew better than he did himself how fed up the earlier Bob Wilson had been with the petty drudgery and stuffy atmosphere of an academic career. ”You don't wantto slave your life away teaching numskulls in some freshwater college,” heconcluded. ”This is your chance. Grab it!”
Wilsonwatched his companion narrowly and thought he detected a favorable response. He definitely seemed interested. But the other set his gla.s.s down carefully, stared at the gin bottle and at last replied: ”My dear fellow, I am not going to climb on your merry-go-round. You know why?”
”Why?”
”Because I'm drunk, that's why. You're not there at all.Thatain'tthere.” He gestured widely at the Gate, nearly fell and recovered himself with effort. ”Thereain't anybody here but me, and I'm drunk.Been working too hard,” he mumbled, ”'mgoin ' to bed.”
”You're not drunk,”Wilson protested unhopefully. ”d.a.m.nation,” he thought, ”a man who can't hold his liquor shouldn't drink.”
”Iam drunk. Peter Piper pepped a pick ofpipperedpeckles .” He lumbered over toward the bed.