ns of me had disappeared. I knew something was about to happen, but I didn't know what until I got there. I have that same kind of feeling now. Too many of the older me's are acting strange. Very strange. The more I hang around them, the more I see it. I'm going to have to investigate August 13. * * * Is this it? Three or four of the youngest Dannys are here. They're in a quieter mood than usual though, almost grim. A couple of us frowned at them they really weren't welcome here; they should have stayed in their own part of the party; but most of the rest of us tried at least to tolerate them, hoping that they would lose interest soon and go back to their own time. "They're here to gape at us," complained one of me. "Well, some of us are gaping right back," snapped another. "God," whispered a third. "Were we ever really that young?" And then there was a pop! as another me appeared. It was a common enough sound. Somebody was always appearing or disappearing at any given moment. But this one was different. A hush fell over the room. I turned and saw two of me reaching to support a third who had suddenly appeared between them. He was pale and gray. He was half slumped and holding his heart. * * * Apparently the jump-shock had been too much for him; that sudden burst of temporal energy that jolts you sharply every time you bounce through time. They helped him to a chair. Somebody was already there with a glass of water, somebody who had been through this before, I guess. And the younger Dans were murmuring among themselves; was this what they had come to see? "Are you all right, old fellow?" someone asked the newcomer. He grunted. He was old. He was very old. His hands were thin and weak. His forearms were parchment-covered bones, so were his legs. The skin of his face hung in folds and he was mottled with liver spots. "Aaah," he gasped. "What day is it?" "August thirteenth." "Thirteenth?" Slowly he pulled his features into a grimace. "Then I'm too soon. It's the twenty-third I want. I must have made the wrong setting." "Take it easy. Just relax." The oldster did so. It wasn't a matter of recognizing the wisdom of their words; he simply knew that he didn't have to hurry. A timebelt is a very forgiving device. Besides, he was too exhausted to move. "What were you looking for?" asked one of the younger Dans. (They weren't me. I didn't remember ever having done this before, so they must have been variations from another timeline.) The fragile gray man peered at them, abruptly frowning. "No," he croaked. "Too young. Too young. Got to talk to someone older. Those are just just children." Some of us shouldered the younger ones aside then. "What is it?" they asked. (Others hung back; had they heard it before? The room seemed emptier now. There were less than ten of me remaining. Several of us had left.) 'Too tired," he gasped. "Came to warn you, but I'm too tired to talk. Let me rest ..." "Hey, have a heart, you guys. Don't press him." That was one of the quieter ones of us. I recognized him by his business suit; he had been hanging back and just watching most of the evening. "Take him in the bedroom and let him lie down for a while." He shoved through and picked up the frail old man God, was he that light? and carried him off to the downstairs bedroom. "You can talk to him later," he promised. Out of curiosity, I followed. I helped him put the old man to bed, then he led me out. "You know what's going on, don't you?" I asked him. He didn't answer, just got himself a chair and a book, and stationed himself in front of the door. "It might be too soon for you to worry about this," he said to me. "Why don't you go back to your party?" He opened the book and proceeded to ignore me. There was nothing else to do, so I shrugged and went back into the other room. A little later a couple of other me's tried to see how the old man was doing, but the business-suit-me wouldn't let them. He sat outside the room all night. The party was considerably dampened by this incident. Most of the Dans faded away and the house became strangely deserted. Here and there, one or two of me were picking up dirty glasses and empty potato-chip dishes, but they only served to heighten the emptiness. They were like caretakers in a mausoleum. I bounced forward to the morning, but the bedroom was empty and the business suit was gone too. So I bounced back an hour. Then another. This time he was there, still outside the door, still reading. When I appeared, he glanced up without interest. "Hmm? Is it that late already?" He opened his belt to check the time. I started to ask him something, but he cut me off. "Wait a minute." He was resetting his belt. Before I could stop him he had tapped it twice and vanished. I opened the bedroom door; the old man had vanished too. My curiosity was too much. I bounced back fifteen minutes. Then fifteen minutes more. He was sleeping quietly on the bed. His breath rasped slowly in and out. I felt no guilt as I woke him; he'd had more than six hours undisturbed. I wanted to know what was so important. He came awake suddenly. "Where am I?" he demanded. "August fourteenth," I told him. That seemed to satisfy him, but he frowned at me in suspicion. "What do you want? Why'd you wake me?" "What was supposed to happen last night? "Last night?" "The thirteenth. You came to warn us of something. ..." I prompted. "The thirteenth? That was a mistake. I wanted the twenty-third." "Why? What happens on the twenty-third?" He peered at me again. "You're too young." He pushed himself off the bed and stood unsteadily. And tapped his belt and vanished. Damn. * * * Naturally, I went straight to the twenty-third. My old man was there, of course. A dozen times over. Wrinkled, gnarled, and white. Their hands hovered in the air, or scrabbled across their laps like spiders. They clawed, they plucked. But not all of them were that old. There were one or two that even looked familiar. "Don?" I asked one who was wearing a faded shirt. If I remembered correctly, he had gotten that ketchup stain on it just a few hours ago at the poker table of the thirteenth. He looked at me, startled. "Dan? You shouldn't be here. You're still too young. I mean, let us take care of this for now. You go back to the party." "Huh?" I tried to draw him aside. "Just tell me what's going on." "I can't," he whispered. "It wouldn't be a good idea " Abruptly, a familiar business suit was standing before us. Was it the same one? Probably. "I'll take over," he said to Don. "Thanks," Don said, and fled in relief. I looked at the other. "What's going on here?" He looked at the clock in his timebelt. "In a few more minutes you'll find out." He took me by the arm and led me across the room. "Stand here. I'll stay right by you the whole time. Don't say anything. Don't do anything. Just watch, this time around." I shut my mouth and watched. The air in the room was heavy. The few conversations still going on were the merest of whispers. The supposedly silent hum of the air conditioner was deafening. Almost all of these wrinkled faces, pale faces, were deathly. The few tan ones stood out like spotlights. They were grim too. The old men, their eyes were like holes in lampshade faces, but nothing glowed within. Their expressions were bleary. Uniform. Frightened. And there were so many of them. More and more; the room was filling up. This house, so often a happy place, was now a cloister house of the infirm. The laughter of youth had shaded into the garish cackling of senility. What had been a firm grip on life had degenerated into a plucking and desperate claw, scratching on the edge of terror. Who were these men why could I not accept what I was seeing? And what drove them together here? How old am I? (And here is the fear ) I don't know. I don't know. Am I one of the tan faces or the pale ones? Does my skin hang in pale folds, bleached by age? (I touch my cheek hesitantly.) As the air pops! softly and the body that crumples to the floor is me. * * * Of course. It was the jump-shock that killed him. Will kill me. He was old. The oldest of them all. (But not so old as to be distinguishable from the rest. He could have been any of them. Us.) There was silence in the room. Then a soft shad- owed sigh, almost a sound of relief, as too many ancient lungs released their burden of breaths held too long. They'd been expecting this, waiting for it eagerly? the curiosity of the morbid draws them again and again until the room is crowded with fearful old men. Each praying that, somehow, this time it won't happen. And each terrified that it will. And perhaps perhaps each is most afraid that the next time he comes to this moment, he will not be a witness, but the guest of honor himself. . . . * * * Two of the younger men (younger? They were older than I or were they?) moved to the body. It was still warm. One of them clicked the belt open; the last setting on it was 5:30, March 16, 1975. (Meaningless, of course. He could have come from there, or it could have been a date held in storage. There was no way of knowing.) They took charge efficiently, as if they had done this before. Many times before. (And in a way, they had.) They slung the body between them, tapped their belts and vanished. "What're they going to do with him?" I asked the Don in the business suit, "Take him back to his own time, to a place where he can be buried." "Where?" He shook his head. "Uh-uh. When the time comes youll know. Right now it wouldn't be a good idea." "But the funeral " "Listen to me." He gripped my arm firmly. "You cannot go to the funeral. None of us can." "But why?" "There'll be others there," he said. "Others. A man should attend his own funeral only once. Do you understand?" After I thought about it awhile, I guessed I did. * * * As for me . . . I'm almost afraid to use the timebelt now. * * * But now I know who I am. I guess I've known for some time. I'm not sure when I realized; it was a gradual dawning, not a sudden flash of aha. I just sort of slipped into it as if it had been waiting for me all my life. I'd been heading toward it without ever once stopping to consider how or why. And even if I had, would it have changed anything? I don't think so. At first I tried to ignore the events of August 23. I went back to the earlier days of the party, but burdened as I was with the knowledge of what lurked only a few weeks ahead, I could not recapture the mood. (And that was sensed by the others; I was shunned as being an irritable and temperamental old variant. Nor was I the only one; there were several of us. We put a damper on the party wherever we went.) For a while I brooded by myself. For a while I was terribly scared. In fact, I still am. I don't want to die. But I've seen my own dead body. I've seen myself in the act of dying. Death comes black and hard, rushing down on me from the future, with no possible chance of escape. I wake up cold and shuddering in the middle of the night, and were it not for the fact that I am always there to hold and comfort myself, I would go mad. (And I still may do so ) Uncle Jim once told me that a man must learn to live with he fact of his own mortality. A man must accept the fact of death. But does that mean he must welcome it? I'd thought that the measure of the success of any life form was its ability to survive in its ecological niche. But I'd been wrong. That doesn't apply to individuals, not at all only to a species as a whole. If you want to think in terms of individuals, you have to qualify that statement. The measure of the success of any individual animal is based on its ability to survive long enough to reproduce. And care for the young until they are able to care for themselves. I have met half that requirement. I've reproduced. (It's said that the only immortality a man can achieve is through his children. I understand that now.) * * * I went back to 1956 to bring up my son. He was right where I had left him. I named him Daniel Jamieson Eakins, and I told him I was his uncle. His Uncle Jim. Yes. That's who I am. In many ways, Danny is a great joy to me. I am learning as much from him as he is learning from me. He is a beautiful child and I relish every moment of his youth. I relive it by watching it. Sometimes I stand above his crib and just watch him sleep. I yearn to pick him up and hug him and tell him how much I love him but I let him sleep. I must avoid smothering him. I must let him be his own man. * * * I yearn to leap ahead into the future and meet the young man he will become. It will be me, of course, starting all over again. Wondrously, I have come full circle. Once more I am in a timeline where I exist from birth to death. So I must avoid tangling it. I will try to live as. serially as possible for my child. (No, that's not entirely true. Several times I have bounced forward and observed him from a distance. But only from a distance.) On occasion I still flee to the house in 1999. But I no longer do so desperately. I go only for short vacations. Very short. I know what awaits me there. But I also know that I will live to see my son reach manhood, so I am not as fearful as I once was. I know I have time; so death has lost its immediacy. And the party has changed.too. The mood of it is no longer so morbid. Not even grim. Just quiet. Waiting. Yes, many of these men have come here to die. No to await death in the company of others like themselves. They help each other. And that's good. (I don't need their help, not yet, so right now I can be objective about it. Maybe later, I won't.) So I'm relaxed. At ease with myself. Happy. Because I know who I am. I'm Dan and Don and Diane and Donna. And Uncle Jim too. And somewhere, Aunt Jane. And little Danny. I diaper him; I powder his pink little fanny and wonder that my skin was ever that smooth. I clean up his messes. My messes. I've been doing that all my life. I'm my own mother and my own father. I'm the only person who exists in my world but isn't it that way for all of us? Me more than anyone. * * * How did this incredible circle get started? (Or has it always existed? Could it have begun in the same way the timebelt began in a world that I excised out of existence? In a place so far distant and so almostpossible that the traces of the might-have-been are buried completely in the already-is?) Many years ago I pondered the reason for my own existence. (Why "me"? Why me as "me"? Why do I perceive myself and why do I experience me as "me" and not somebody else? Why was I born at all? It could have been anyone!) It almost drove me mad. I had to have a meaning. I was sure I had to. Variants of me did go mad seeking that meaning but only those of me who could accept the gift of life without questioning it too intensely would survive to find the answer. I wrote in these pages that if there were an infinite number of variations of myself, then what meaning could any one of us have? I wondered about that then. I know the answer now. I know my answer. I am the baseline. I am the Danny from which all other Dannys will spring. I am a circle, complete unto itself. I have brought life into this world, and that life is me. And from this circle will spring an infinite number of tangents. All the other Dannys who have ever been and ever will be. Who the others are, what they are that is for each of them to decide. But as for me, I know who I am. I am the center of it all. I am the end. I am the beginning. * * * So, before it is over, I will have done it all and been it all. I will take the body back to the summer of 1975 and lay it gently in my bed, to be discovered in the morning by the maid. I will take his timebelt and put it in a box, wrap it up for my nephew and take it back a month to give it to my lawyer, Biggs-or-Briggs-or-whatever-hisname-is. I will leave Danny the legacy of ... our life. Later I will go back in time and visit him again. This time, though, I will handle the situation properly. It's not enough to just give him the timebelt after my death; I must visit him early in 1975 and explain to him how to use it wisely. Especially in the case of Diane. I've already spoken to the nineteen-year-old Danny once, but I felt I mishandled it, so I went back and talked myself out of it. Later I will try again. Perhaps a little earlier. May of 1975. Or April. (I must be careful though. Each time I change my mind about how to tell Danny, I have to go back earlier and earlier. That way I excise the later tracks, the incorrect ones. But I must be careful not to go back too early I must give him a chance to mature. I think of the old Dan who went chasing after the young Diane. I must be careful, careful.) Perhaps I should just leave him this manuscript instead. These pages will tell the story better than I can. Maybe that would be the best way. * * * There is just one last thing . . . What is it like to die? There is no Don to come back and tell me. And I'm scared. It's the one thing I will have to face alone. Totally alone. There will be absolutely no foreknowledge. Nor will there be any hindknowledge. The terrible thing about death is that you don't know you've died. Or is that the terrible thing? Maybe that's the blessing. It's the jump-shock that will kill me. I know that. I will tap my belt twice and I will cease to exist. Cease to exist. Cease to exist. The words echo in my head. Cease to exist. Until they lose all meaning. I try to imagine what it will be like. No more me. The end of Danny. The end. (What happens to the rest of the universe?) I am afraid of it more than anything else in my life. Absence of me. * * * Dear Danny, Time travel is not immortality. It will allow you to experience all the possible variations of your life. But it is not an unlimited ticket. There will be an end. My body has not experienced its years in sequence. But it has experienced years. And it has aged. And my mind has been carried headlong with it this lump of flesh travels through time its own way, in a way that no man has the power to change. I've had to learn to accept that, Danny, in order to find peace within my mind. My mind? Perhaps I'm not a mind at all. Perhaps I'm only a body pretending the vanity of being something more. Perhaps it's only the fact that language, which allows me to manipulate symbols, ideas, and concepts, also provides the awareness of self that precedes the inevitable analysis. Hmm. I have spent a lifetime analyzing my life. Living it. And rewriting it to suit me. I once compared time travel to a subjective work of art. That was truer than I realized. I am the artist of time. I choose the scenes I wish to play. Even the last one. And that scares me too. Just a little. I don't know when that body was coming from. It he tapped the belt and came back to August 23 Thinking he was going to witness the arrival of himself. Thinking he was going to witness his death. Or maybe he was seeking it. I don't know when that body came from. I don't know when it's starting point is/was/will be. I don't know when I'm going to die. But I do know it will be soon. I admit it. I'm scared. But perhaps it will be a gentle way to go. I will never know what happened. I will never really know when. And I will die much as I lived in the act of jumping across time. It will be a fitting way to go. Danny, you cannot avoid mortality. But you can choose your way of meeting it. And that is the most that any man can hope for. Live well, my son. * * * Maybe this will be the last page. I think I should add something to "Uncle Jim's" diary. Uncle Jim has given his life back to himself that is, to me. Now that I know the directions in which I will go no, can go the decisions are mine. I need do none of the things that Uncle Jim has described. (In fact, some of them shock me beyond words.) Or I could do all of them I may change as I grow older. The point is, I know what I am beginning if I put on this belt. I feel a strange empathy for that frightening old man. He was bizarre and perverse and lost. But he was me and all those things he did and felt and wrote about echo profoundly in my own soul. I feel a terrible sadness at his loss, greater than I did before I knew who he was. And not just sadness; fear and horror too. I cannot be this person in this manuscript. This is too much to assimilate. Is this me? I am drawn to it and simultaneously repelled. It can't be true. But I know it is. My god. What have I wrought? What will I? I wish he were here now. I wish there were some way to reach him punish him, scream at him, berate him. How dare he do this to me? And ... at the same time, I want to hug him and thank him and tell him how much he means to me. Even though I know he knows knew. I saw him in his coffin. I sat through his funeral. He's dead. And he isn't. I could go looking for him. . . . Should I? I want to reassure him. And be reassured by him. And the tears roll down my cheeks. I'm crying for myself now more than him because now I know how truly isolated I really am. I am abandoned by the universe. There is no god who can save me. I am so alone I cannot bear the pain of it. Now I know how desperately isolated one human being can be. What have I done to deserve this? I will surely go mad. * * * No. I will not. I can't escape that way either. I know what choice I have. And it is no choice at all. The decision is mine. A world awaits me. The future beckons. All right, I accept. I am going to put on the belt. * * * About the Author David Gerroldôs Career began when, as a college student in 1967, he sold his first television script, "The Trouble with Tribbles," to Star Trek. He went on to write more television scripts, as well as such novels as The Man who Folded Himself, the Hugo-nominated When HARLIE Was One, When HARLIE Was One: Release 2.0, and the first three books in The War Against the Chtorr series: A Matter for Men, A Day for Damnation, and A Rage for Revenge. He is currently working on the fourth novel in the series.