This is an example of what a bored mind can do... Written about four years ago, it was edited and edited till it didn't make you want to throw up after reading. Of the 8 people who have read it, only 3 interpreted it the way the author intended. Are you the fourth to join the assylum?

The Visit

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1:00 hours….15th May

Every dawn hides many secrets only to reveal them later in the day. But men were never good keepers of secrets. In the eagerness to impress people they believed were important, they failed to see beyond the mundane. That was most certainly the case with Derek van Guerin. He could not wait for the first rays of sunshine to penetrate the thick woods he was traversing on his way to, what he presumed was glory.

Even though he was a man who embraced the changes the birth of the new millennium brought with it, he loved nature. That did not prevent him from wanting to manipulate the basic laws of nature. He not only adored nature, but he wanted to toy with it. After all, despite having constantly irked Nature and suffered her wrath, humans continued to exist. In fact, they did more than just exist.

He could not help but wonder what his professor would tell him should the old man meet his pupil at this hour- on a rendezvous with the man he had detested till death intervened. But then, van Guerin was too ambitious to empathize with an old man who was not alive. To say anything more would be an overstatement which might undermine van Guerin’s other incredible credentials and that most certainly is not the point. Not at this juncture.

 As he got out of his old Ford Explorer, the giant oak doors in front of him left him in awe. Such was the wealth of the man inside. As a matter of fact, van Guerin knew that if this man gave that small push, the world would forever remember him. Just as he got closer to the door, the events of the previous day rolled in front of him. What an amazing day it had been…

Yesterday

Van Guerin was frustrated. He was staring at the screen which showed a long flat line. That meant his fortunes had not taken an upswing, yet. He had tried everything possible and still there were no signs of improvement. Having spent a decade under an old man, who did nothing but chide, just to learn the nuances of robotics and physics, no man would relish failure after failure. His device was hypothetically successful and it should work, unless the laws of science were fallacious theories conceived by men of undeserved greatness.

His colleague Michael Wellesley had helped him all the way. They had used every source of energy known to mankind. None could sustain their invention.

Then it happened. Out of the blue, the sensitive recorder started showing waves of activity. For the first time, they were sustained. This excited van Guerin but he wanted to be sure he was alone at the moment of his success. He saw Mike around the corner, having a burger.

He turned towards van Guerin and smiled. Instead of returning the smile, van Guerin asked Mike to take the day off. It would indeed have been strange for Mike as he never was let go, not in the midst of an ongoing process. But Mike obliged-with obvious suspicion at his partner who was eyeing at the canisters with avarice.

***

1:10 hours 

Van Guerin knocked the Giant Oak doors. It was opened by a balding man in his mid fifties. The man seemed to be expecting him. His look suggested that it was not the first time that a stranger had popped in to meet his master at unearthly hours.

Unearthly-that word brought a new dimension to his thought. What if it was indeed an extra terrestrial force that had manifested itself in his Lab? But he instantly dismissed the notion as he felt it was more than just ludicrous.

The drawing room was spacious. It was as large as his apartment. Several neo noire paintings decorated the walls. One of them, he recognized as a work of Henri de Toulouse Lautrec. Apparently, this man was a fan of the Moulin Rouge. He was not certain if they were the originals, but then, he also knew that the Agnew could afford them. He then saw the man. He was seated in front of the piano. Evidently, he had been playing the instrument to bide his time. Van Guerin felt honored. Such a great man had been waiting to see him. No one spoke for quite some time. The ice was broken by the butler.

“Master, Mr.van Guerin seeks an audience”

Van Guerin was taken aback. Such pompousness was not what he had expected. Evidently, he was nothing like van Guerin’s mentor who personified simplicity. Arrogance stemming from intellect, van Guerin thought and he was certain he sensed condescension emanating from every cell of the old man in front of him

The moment Agnew got up, van Guerin was not sure if he had been right in his assumptions. For a fraction of a second, the old man gave a friendly smile which disappeared from his face as swiftly as it had appeared. In the place of his right leg, there was a mechanical aid. He walked in short steps with an odd noise being produced with every act of flexion. His face however suggested nothing about him. He asked the butler to leave the room and asked van Guerin to take a seat.

***

Yesterday

Finally his device showed life. But what caused the sudden surge in energy was something van Guerin could not understand. For the answer, he had to meet the person whom his teacher loathed. After fixing an appointment, van Guerin tried to study the new source of energy in his canister.

 It never stopped being active. Its mass was negligible. If it was what he thought, then he had done the impossible. He had a few hours before the rendezvous and he decided to carry out preliminary examinations. It was difficult, for the source of energy did not follow many rules of atomic physics.  It took him every nanosecond left in the day to identify what had caused so much excitement.

 It was Crystallized Ectosium-something that existed only in the highly advanced thesis papers. Besides, it had never been isolated. As a matter of fact, it was merely by matching its diffraction patterns and a few other procedures which even van Guerin had never tried before had he come to the conclusion that it was indeed Ectosium.

When he was done with it, it was well past the time he had been allotted to visit Dr. Agnew. He made another call to apologize and embarked on the journey of his life to find out if he had truly solved the issues of proton decay and unification.

Van Guerin was brought up by a pious father who attributed everything to God. Such was the impact of his father, that he even contemplated joining the church. Realizing his remarkable talent in science, his father wanted him to ‘go to higher places’. That was just what the young man did. He had no problems getting into MIT and when he came out of the college, he lost faith in God. Nobody-not even his father knew what brought about the drastic change.

Avram Glazer was the man who turned the aspiring yet devout young man into a man who snubbed any claim refuted by science. Glazer was as ruthless as he was efficient. The nine years van Guerin spent under Glazer made the young man despise his mentor as much as he revered him. What the old man did not know was that his pupil’s claim to fame would be addressed by his fiercest rival.

A Hatred-strengthened over the years, one similar to the one between two great minds of the previous century, so similar it was that both the men even refused a Nobel Prize just because they had to share it. Glazer did not live to see his student rise to prominence as one of the promising minds in the planet.

 Van Guerin did not shed a single drop of tear for his teacher, who had left every one of his worldly possession for his apprentice to use.  That was how van Guerin came across the research paper. It was exactly what he had dreamt all his life. It was obvious that Glazer had failed, for the work was not complete. Van Guerin worked for several years before realizing he needed help. When Mike entered the fray, things seemed to fall in place. But the last piece of the puzzle was not solved.

Until this moment


***