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Killing Time
by CALEB CARR
Somewhere in the Mitumba Mountain Range of central Africa:
September 2024
We leave at daylight, so I must write quickly. All reports
indicate that my antagonists are close: returning scouts tell of
a wide swath of scorched earth moving steadily down from the
north, following the same route I used to get to this place. My
host, Chief Dugumbe, has at last given up his insistence that I
allow his warriors to help me stand and fight, and instead
offers an escort of 50 men to cover my escape. Although I'm
grateful, I've told him that so large a group would be too
conspicuous: I'll take only faithful Mutesa, the man who first
dragged my exhausted body out of the deepest part of this
jungle, along with two or three others, armed with some of the
better French and American automatic weapons. We'll make
straight for the coast, where I hope to find passage to a place
even more remote than these mountains.
It seems years since fate cast me among Dugumbe's tribe, though
in reality it's been only nine months; but then reality has
ceased to have much meaning for me. It was a desire to get that
meaning back that made me choose this place to hide, this
violent, fractious corner of Africa where men kill each other in
the name of tribal grievances handed down from generation to
generation by word of mouth alone. Once I would have scorned such
people; now I see this as a place where I can at least be
marginally sure that the human behavior around me is not being
manipulated by that same unseen hand that is pursuing me; a hand
that, just a year ago, I accepted in friendship, only to
subsequently watch it wreak havoc and chaos across the globe.
There are no newspapers here, no televisions and above all no
computers, which means no damned Internet. Dugumbe forbids it
all. His explanation for this stance is simple, though no less
profound for its simplicity: information, he insists, is not
knowledge. The lessons passed on from one's elders, taught by the
wisest of them but recorded only in the mind, these, Dugumbe has
always said, represent true knowledge. The media I've mentioned
can only divert a man from such wisdom and enslave him to what
Dugumbe calls the worst of all devils: confusion. As I say, there
was a time when I--a man of the West, the possessor of not one but
two doctorates--would have laughed at and disdained such beliefs.
But in a world stuffed full of deliberately warped information,
of manufactured "truths" that have ignited conflicts far greater
than Dugumbe's tribal struggles, I now find that I cling to the
old King's ideas perhaps more tightly than even he does.
There--I've just heard it. Distant, but unmistakable: the rolling
thunder that heralds their approach. It'll appear out of the sky,
soon, their spectral ship; or perhaps it'll rise up out of the
waters of Lake Albert. And then the burning will begin,
particularly if the strange yet extraordinary brother and sister
who command the vessel detect the arms stockpiles that Dugumbe
and his enemies have built up throughout these mountains. Yes,
time is running out, and I must write faster--though just what
purpose my writing serves is not quite so clear. Is it for the
sake of my own sanity, to reassure myself that it all truly
happened? Or is it for some larger goal, perhaps the creation of
a document that I can feed out over what has become my own devil,
the Internet, and thereby fight fire with fire? The latter theory
assumes, of course, that someone will believe me. But I can't let
such doubts prevent the attempt. Someone must listen, someone
must understand--
For it is the greatest truth of our age: information is not
knowledge...
In retrospect, the pattern was there to be seen, by anyone
attentive enough to trace it. A remarkable series of
"discoveries" in history, anthropology and archaeology that had
made headlines for several years. But they were all, on their
surface, attributable to the great advances made possible in
each of those fields by the continued march and intermingling of
bio- and computer technology, and so those of us who might have
detected a controlling criminal presence at work simply got on
with our lives. Our lives; yes, even I had a life, before all
this began...
In fact, by the standards of modern capitalism, I had a good
life, one graced by both money and professional respect. I taught
criminal psychology in New York (the city of my birth and
childhood) at John Jay University, once a comparatively small
college of criminal justice that had grown, during the movement
toward privatized prisons that gained such enormous momentum
during the first two decades of this century, to become one of
the wealthiest educational institutions in the country. Even the
crash of '07 and the resultant worldwide recession had not been
enough to stop John Jay's expansion: the school has always
produced America's best correctional officers, and by 2023, with
mandatory drug and quality-of-life punishments so stringent that
fully 2% of the nation's population was behind bars, the nation
needed nothing so much as prison guards. All of which allowed
those who, like me, taught the headier subjects at John Jay to be
paid a more than decent salary. In addition, I'd recently written
a best-selling book, The Psychological History of the United
States (the second of my degrees being in history), and could
therefore live in Manhattan.
MORE>>
PAGE 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13
This is the first installment of a novella that will be
serialized in each of TIME's five Visions 21 issues. (c) 1999
Caleb Carr
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