A silence fell upon the Lords again. They looked at their pensive brother, and Vala said, “What do you make of it, Jadawin?”
“I’ve been thinking back to the time that the first animal we saw vanished,” he said. “I’ve been trying to calculate the lengths of their disappearances and the correlation between the number at one time and at succeeding times.”
He shook his head. “I don’t know. Maybe. It doesn’t seem possible. But how else explain it. Or, if not explain, describe, anyway.
“Tell me, have any of you ever heard of a Lord having success with time-travel experiments?”
Palamabron laughed.
Vala said, “Jackass!” She spoke to WolfL “I have heard that Blind Orc tried for many years to discover the principles of time. But it is said that he gave up. He claimed that trying to dissect time was a problem as insolvable as explaining the origin of the universe.”
“Why do you ask?” Ariston said.
“There is a tiny subatomic particle which Earth scientists call the neutrino,” Wolff answered. “It’s an uncharged particle with zero rest mass. Do you know what I’m talking about?”
All shook their heads. Luvah said, “You know we were all exceedingly well educated at one time, Jadawin. But it has been thousands of years since we took any interest in science except to use the devices we had at hand for our purposes.”
“You are indeed a bunch of ignorant gods,” Wolff said. “The most powerful beings of the cosmos, yet barbaric, illiterate divinities.”
“What has that got to do with our present situation?” Enion said. “And why do you insult us? You yourself said we must quit these insults if we are to survive.”
“Forgive me,” Wolff said. “It’s just that I am sometimes overwhelmed at the discrepancy . . . never mind. Anyway, the neutrino behaves rather peculiarly. In such a manner, in fact, that it might be said to go backward in time.”
“It really does?” Palamabron said.
“I doubt it. But its behavior can be described in time-travel terms, whether the neutrino actually does go into reverse chronological gear or not.
“I believe the same applies to those beasts out there. Maybe they can go forward or backwards in time. Perhaps Urizen had the power to create such animals. I doubt it. He may have found them in some universe we don’t know about and imported them.
“Whatever their origin, they do have an ability which makes them seem to hop around in time. Within a three-second limit, I’d say.”
He drew a circle in the dirt with the end of his stick. “This represents the single animal we first saw.”
He drew a line from it and described another circle at its end. “This represents the disappearance of it, its nonexistence in our time. It was going forward in time, or seemed to.”
“I’ll swear it was not gone for three seconds when it first disappeared,” Vala said.
Wolff extended a line from the second circle and made a third circle at its end. Then he scratched a line at right angles to it, and bent it back to a position opposite the second circle.
“It leaped forward into time, or can be described as doing so. Then it went back to the time-slot it did not occupy when it made the first jump. Thus, we saw a beast for six seconds but did not know that it had gone forward and backward.
“Then the animal-let’s call it a tempusfudger-jumped forward again to the time at which its first-avatar-had come out of the first jump.
“Now we have two. The same animal, fissioned by time-travel.
“One jumped the three seconds forward again, and we did not see it during that tune. The other did not jump but ran about. It jumped when tempusfudger No. 2 reappeared.
“Only No. 1 also jumped back just as No. 2 came out of the time-hop. So we have two again.”
“But all of a sudden there were five?” Rintrah said. “Let’s see. We had two. Now No. 1 had made a jump, and he was one of the five. He jumped back to be one of the previous two. Then he jumped forward again to become No. 3 of the five.