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    Update

    July 3, 2011
    By Dan in Posts

    It’s slow, and though I know I should have all the time in the world, I don’t feel like that’s the case. Final editing is coming along nicely, but there’s so much to do. The first draft consisted of fairly polished narrative, but in a number of sections, Rich just provided notes and dialogue.

    I’ve spent most of my career writing technical manuals, so the craft isn’t exactly unknown to me, but still, telling a story in someone else’s voice is never easy, especially when that voice is your…well, friend.

    The August 14 date for publication will hold. Look for the book then.

  1. By Dan in Posts

    The draft of Chapter 10 – “Descent” posted at the bottom of the right hand column.

    And a photo for you:

    20110405-082941.jpg

    Hi TTB readers. Dan here.

    I know, I know. It’s been a long time, but you’ll be happy to know that we’re turning onto the home stretch, and the story will be finished soon.

    Though not much has been written about it, the time capsule Rich left for me to find was FULL of stuff. A couple items have been mentioned. The iPhone (which still worked after being charged!), a copy of the book that I’m putting together (which immediately upon realizing what it was, I put it aside – I’m not interested in any causality loops being my fault), and a number of moleskine journals that Rich filled while in the past.

    My plan is to include a lot of the text he wrote, in the book, but it may prove to be too much. If so, these notebooks in their entirety will make up a separate book. There was no copy of that in the time capsule, so I’m not sure if I do that or not, though.

    Rich had packed a number of black and blue moleskine notebooks in his “go bag” for when he traveled to the past, since they were of a classic design that wouldn’t attract attention if seen in the 30s or 40s. Rich wrote mostly with Pilot G2 gel pens, though he had to be careful, since they were far too modern to be on display in 1935. The gel ink has held up remarkably well, surprising, even though the notebooks were sealed for decades. The pages written in pencil have faded considerably, so two thumbs up for the Pilot G2!

    From the first journal, a page dated August 16, 1933:

    Ready to head East again tomorrow. It’s been a nice stay in Flagstaff, but I need to get moving on. Had a little bit of a close call with a guy last evening. Writing some notes, he came up to me, interested in what I was doing, who I’d been talking to and why?

    I used my standard “I’m a writer” thing on hm, but he was insistent. “What kind of writer?” He asked. “Novelist? Academic? Journalist?” I explained that I was a journalist who was traveling, researching a book on the U.S.

    Wrong answer. He began to ask questions about my views on Communism, Europe, Hitler and Jews. I think he took my reluctance to talk about it to be something other than what it was. I was trying madly to conceive of a cover story, but he saw me being dishonest. Which, of course, I was. Clearly, my ducking out of the diner looked to him like I realized I’d been unmasked as a communist. It’s time to move on. Fortunately, I know I’ll make it to Belton by November, so I’m not TOO worried. But I have to remember that this is a country and a time where the word “NAZI” is NOT yet a dirty word.

    The journals chart Rich’s journey from his initial appearance in 1933 (which didn’t occur in Indiana, much to his surprise), his journey across the country, and the story of day to day living in Depression-era Indiana. It’s roughly written, in need of a lot of editing, but a fascinating read, which one way or another, I’ll make available to you.

  2. By Dan in Posts

    Hi, Dan here.

    As so many readers have noted, it’s been a long time since the site was updated. Work is progressing every day, it’s just that with me being the site’s only remaining editor, you’re not seeing what I’m getting done.

    Let me update you a bit.

    1. The story. It’s almost finished. I’m by myself here at Mobius Manor, but that’s okay. That’s what the fates have decided for us all. I’ll explain very, very soon.

    2. The Book. Will be available VERY soon after the last post to the blog is put up. We’ve figured out how to integrate the site into an old-fashioned “dead tree” book that you’ll be able to hold in your hand, lend to your friends, or put up on a shelf never to look at again! I know for a fact that the book gets published, because I have a copy. I’m under strict orders from Rich NOT to even open it, because I’m the one who ultimately puts it all together. I didn’t reveal it at the time, but a copy of  the book was sealed in the ammo can I dug up here on the building site. Rich had taken it back with him, and then returned it via the time capsule. I’ve checked the ISBN code, and it’s a number that’s not yet been assigned. The book’s the real thing.

    3. The Movie. I’m really not terribly interested. I’ve had two different documentary film producers ask to talk about making a movie telling this story, but I’m not sure that’s in anyone’s interest.

    There’s a BUNCH of work that I’m trying to get posted by Thanksgiving. At the very least, look for another 4 or 5,000 words added to the story by then. Maybe more.

    THANKS for reading!

    Dan

  3. Reunion

    August 15, 2009
    By Dan in Posts

    Mobius Manor is getting crowded, but I have to admit, it’s a fun crowd. Rich got here yesterday. It was one of the most shocking, yet wonderful things I’ve ever experienced. It was about 8 in the morning, and I walked out onto the large front porch with a cup of coffee, knowing that according to the information that came to me through the buried ammo box time capsule, Rich would appear any minute. I have to admit though, that despite the fact that I had built this house in about a third of the time that was really needed, all on the prediction that my friend Rich Girrard would suddenly appear here from 1936, I’m not sure that I truly believed it would happen.

    I had just taken a sip of coffee, and as I pulled the cup from my mouth, I saw him walking toward the house.

    “Dan?” Rich asked, surprised to see me. Of course he would be surprised to see me, I thought. The Rich who told me he’d be here was much older, and this meeting was part of his past. The Rich in front of me didn’t know I’d be here. This Rich smiled and came trotting up to the porch, his hand extended. He was a little thinner. A little more fit than the last time I’d seen him. Significantly more in shape than the Rich who left here 8 months ago. 3 years in the past had been good for him. I was a little startled too, when I noticed that he seemed to have more hair. How’s that work? I asked myself, making a mental note to ask Rich that same question later.

    We shook hands briefly, then he hugged me, slapping me on the back.

    “What’s the date?” He asked.

    “August 14th,” I replied. “Two thousand nine.”

    He nodded, and considered the answer. “Just about what I was shooting for!” He said, excitedly.

    Seeing my puzzled look, he explained. “I’ve been away for 3 years my time, and I’m starting to learn to control where I end up. I’ve even been able to hold off traveling twice!” He said, a proud look in his eye.

    Then, Rich looked around, seeming to see the house for the first time. “What is this place? Where are we?”

    “Well, I call it ‘Mobius Manor,’” I answered, “it’s your design.” I smiled, for once knowing something my friend didn’t.

    “I designed it? What are you talking about?” He said. “Wait a minute,” he said, almost interupting himself, and turning around to look out from the house. “Where are we?”

    “A couple miles outside of Belton.” I answered.

    Rich frowned, sighed subtly and suddenly seemed distracted, looking off to the side as he seemed to be calculating something in his head.

    “Why would I come here?” He said quietly to himself. Then, seeming to remember I was standing with him, to me, “I found that I’ve been able to direct my traveling to both places and to people.” He shook his head. “I was trying to travel to Molly. Shit.”

    “Looks like you made it,” said a voice behind us, from inside the house. Rich and I both spun around. It was Molly.

    Rich’s face lit up like it had done every time they were together when they first met. In the space of two heartbeats, Rich crossed the porch and took Molly into his arms, hugging her tightly. I could hear her softly crying as she held him.

    I decided to go check on a couple jobs I was working on in the detached garage/workshop.

    I have to admit, as I worked on sanding one of the legs of a chair I’d bought along with 3 matching pieces at an estate auction, the feeling I got from being an important player in the reunion I just witnessed choked me up a little. My two best friends were together again, and of all the things I’ve done in my life, the money I’ve made, the businesses I’ve built, the degrees I completed, this one project, that was just paid off with Molly and Rich embracing was the most satisfying I’ve ever been a part of.

    I got to the workshop, a smile still on my face, and heard the chirp of my Blackberry, telling me an email had just arrived from one of my important contacts. I pulled the phone out of my pocket, and read the message.

    For some reason, my Mother is coming to Mobius Manor. She didn’t say why, just that she’ll be here on the 18th.

    What’s this all about?

  4. By Dan in Posts

    Dan here. Molly and Samantha got here a couple days ago. I picked them up at the airport in Indianapolis, and brought them to the house. I was happy at how much Molly liked it, but Samatha? Not sure she was all that crazy about being here. Sure, she’s happy about seeing Rich, but as for the house? I think she’s a little uneasy about it.

    Molly and I have agreed to update the blog without reading the blog, if that makes sense. We had a long talk the night she and Samantha got here, and decided together that we wanted to play this out on the website as it happens, from our own perspectives. I didn’t want to read what she’d written, and she wanted to stay insulated from my thoughts. There will be plenty of time to read the whole story later.

    I hope.

    As I said before, I believe Rich knows things about the coming years, and wants Molly and Samantha (and hopefully him) to have a safe place to live. I think the answers are all here, in this “storage device” that was in the ammo can/time capsule, and though I’ve got the cube that it fits into, I have no idea how to access the information on it. There’s no cable, power cord or anything. I put the cylinder in the cube the only way it seems to fit, but nothing happens. I’m guessing that Rich knows how it works.

    And speaking of Rich, he’s due to return in a week, on August 19th.  I understand his visit will last two weeks. I’m very much looking forward to it. He’s coming from a time some 3 years after he left. We here at “Mobius Manor” have traveled forward in time about 8 months, while Rich has traveled over four times as far.

    I also wanted to tell everyone who has written that we appreciate your emails very much. I wish we had time to reply to all of them, but as you can image, we’ve been very, very busy, and I have to say it…Time is short. :-)

  5. Almost Ready

    August 4, 2009
    By Dan in Posts

    What a journey this has been. Oh sure, not as dramatic a journey as my friend, Rich’s, but still.

    In the matter of a 4 months, I’ve built a house, and it’s a really, really good house.  Small, but then in my opinion, that’s the best kind. Houses are meant to be shelter and home. The bigger they get, the more  they  own you, rather than the other way around. This one’s nice, log construction, a solid foundation, good basement for storage and best yet, completely liveable “off the grid.” That was very important for Rich, a point he made very clear in his instructions to me. There’s a generator, underground tanks for diesel, and above tanks for heating oil and LP gas. A big septic tank that’ll last 30 years, and a deep well, even though the water table’s pretty easily accessable here.

    It’s a good house. The least I could do for my friend Rich.

    I think he knows something’s coming. I haven’t written anything about it, mainly because I needed to think about what he’d written some more, but also because I wanted to talk with Molly about it before I put anything on the blog.

    Rich is coming here in a few days from 1936. When he gets here, he will have been in the past for about 3 years, and the journals I have from him, that he left me in the ammo box, say that once he’d met his grandfather in 1933, he left Belton and traveled, both geographically and temporally. In other words, he time traveled. A lot.

    Some of his trips were to the past, close to the period he was living in. But some extended to the future, even beyond now. Rich has written that when he traveled to the future before going back to 1933, being in the future was uncomfortable. The discomfort was greater the further into the future he traveled. I think he wrote that it was like a shreaking in his head that he couldn’t quite hear, but was very unsettling. Apparently, the discomfort wasn’t just internal, because in his journals he describes a near future that’s very, very difficult, and I think that’s  what  this house  is for. I believe that Rich has found a way to stay put in time, and wants to have a safe place for his family to live in this difficult time. That he needed me to build this house now, suggests that the troubling times are coming up pretty soon, and that worries me.

    I think the Rich that traveled to San Diego a couple weeks ago didn’t come from 1952 at all. I think he came from the future, to make sure his past happens as he needs it to. I believe that after he left two weeks ago, he traveled to 1952 to bury the ammo box and outline the preparations I’ve made on his behalf.  I am confident that he’ll share the whole story, and what  he’s been working toward when we see him in a couple weeks.

    It’s going to be a great story!

  6. More Details

    July 12, 2009
    By Dan in Posts

    Mobius Manor Building Site

    Thing are moving faster.

    The house is nearing completion. The work now is almost all interior finish and trim, and since there’s very little exterior landscaping (we’re going ‘natural’), once that’s done, this little place is done.

    I have to admit, it’s been a blast building it, even though the timeline (no pun intended) has been tight. It’s a nice place.

    Just got a call this morning from Molly, who was in an understandably strange mood, saying that Rich’s short visit is over. He ‘arrived’ exactly on time, and departed the same way. There one second, not there the next. Molly said that when she told him I almost had the house here completed, he nodded knowingly.  She said there was the least little bit of relief in his face, but at the same time, he it was clear he wasn’t surprised.

    The Rich who just left San Diego was 70 years old. Molly said she’d post a quick account of the visit here in the next couple days. Then, she’s got some things to tidy up before she and Samantha make the trip here next month. She’s going to come out a few days before Rich is scheduled to arrive here, but when I asked her how long she plans on staying, she said “I’m not sure. I’m buying one-way tickets.”

    Molly cleared up the question of the “thumb drive,” as well. It IS data storage, and Rich brought a small device with him that apparently will read it. Molly said that Rich told her not to ship it, but instead carry it here to give to me. She said he told her that what it’s for will be clear when I use it.

    I know. A lot more loose ends to clean up. We’ll get there.

  7. By Dan in Posts

    As I finish cleaning the portable BBQ, seal up the last of the dinner scraps (raccoons have been nosing around a LOT lately) and watch the citronella torches flicker, it’s time to fire up the laptop, read a little of today’s news and blog about what’s going on here. It’s easier to do when a lot has been accomplished during day. Which it was!

    I thought I would tell you a little more about this project, born when I dug up the time capsule Rich buried in 1952. He had put together complete specifications about what this house would look like, as well as the technologies that went into its design. It’s a small, compact design, but looks like it will be very comfortable and most importantly, self-sufficient and totally off the grid. Rich made it very clear in the letter to me that he sealed in the ammo box, that this house must be constructed to last, and to live off the electric and sanitation grid. As I look around the property it’s on, and think more about what I know Rich went through, I’ve come to conclusions that I thought I’d float here.

    Rich traveled, bodily, from December, 2008 to 1933. According to the journals he put in the ammo box time capsule, in 1935, he traveled to August of this year. I’m building a house for him to stay in during that trip. He’ll be here for several days, and the house is so he, Molly and Samantha can have some time together. Though he won’t know it at the time (I’m assuming), he’ll be going back to the thirties and will be there, except for some side trips to other times, for the following two decades. He makes a trip in 1952 to later this month (July, 2009), and from the information in the ammo box, he uses that trip to San Diego, to convince Molly and Samantha to meet his younger self here in August. THAT’S why I need to have the house finished by then. His visit here is of longer duration, and he’s asked me to be here with them. I do know that he gets back to the early 50s for long enough to put together and bury the instructions I dug up a few weeks ago. He clearly had time to prepare the area as well, since a lot of the woods were planted about that time. I didn’t notice at first, but upon closer inspection, it became plain to see that this mini-forest was planted with fairly fast-growth hardwoods that in 50 years created an excellent source of renewable timber that would provide homesteading resources like building materials and firewood for decades.

    Interesting, isn’t it?

    In Rich’s notes, and earlier posts, he talks about making trips to the future, and how physically uncomfortable it is. I have a gut feeling that he’s been there quite a bit. One of the items in the ammo box, I still haven’t been able to identify. It’s about the size of a thumb drive, but completely smooth and a little warm to the touch. I have no idea at all what it is, but can tell you when I put it next to a compass, the needle goes crazy. It doesn’t react magnetically to any kind of metal, but it makes compasses go spin madly. I think Rich got it from the future, and I’m sure he put it in the ammo box for a reason.

    Here’s what I think this is all about:

    I think Rich is preparing to take care of his family in the difficult days that are coming. I don’t know how much time he’s going to get to spend here, but I think the house is for Molly and Samantha, because I think he knows something about the west coast that he’s not telling, and he’s building an “ark” for his family to weather some kind of storm. Not a storm of the rain and wind variety, but one of the economic / social variety. It’s not the details of this project that tell me that, however, it’s his zeal in getting it done. The letter in the ammo box is very direct and imploring. “Get this done for me,” he says.

    So I will.

  8. By Dan in Posts

    FireworksRural America rocks, and is the USA’s future! I’ve spent the vast majority of my time either in a huge city, or spots so remote there’s virtually no civilization. While I build Rich’s house, I’m for the first time, living in a place that’s somewhere in the middle. Small town America is very cool.

    The fireworks at a nearby lake were awesome. Met a bunch of very friendly people. Getting up early this morning, smiling at the great time I had, I’m really thinking of selling everything in Dallas and building my own house nearby. We’ll see if that feeling stays once I’ve finished Rich’s house. If so, I think I’ll do it!

    Back to work today. Time is running short. Rich will be in San Diego, from 1952 in about a week and a half. He’ll show up here from 1935 in about 6 weeks. On schedule, but still need to keep the push on to get this place done and ready for his visit. How often do you get a visitor from 74 years in the past?

    I know, I know. You need a timeline. So do I. The final product of this project will include one, I promise!  :-)

  9. By Dan in Posts

    Got another section added to Chapter 9 “Angels 30″ from Molly. As you can imagine when you read, it was a particularly difficult section for Molly to edit, and quite frankly, it was when she was editing it that she almost gave this whole thing up. Fortunately, I was able to talk her off that ledge.

    Molly has promised me she’d finish editing everything Rich had left in the next 3 weeks. It’ll be posted as soon as I get it. She tells me there appears to be 12 chapters to what Rich wrote about his time travel experience to his own past.

    By the way, by popular demand, I’ve started Twittering. You can follow me on Twitter – DanGarmen is my Twitter username. Now that I’ve got 3G here at the construction site, things are much easier.

    Thanks for reading!

  10. Construction

    June 30, 2009
    By Dan in Posts

    "Mobius Manor" Under Construction

    Outside of Belton, IN – Rich Girrard and I couldn’t be more dissimilar when it comes to lifestyle. Rich is all technology and gadgets, computers and iPhones, social networking and LCD screens. Me? Give me one of my Jeeps, camping gear, some MREs (Meals Ready to Eat) and a map and I’m in hog heaven. I’ve been “sleeping semi-rough” the past 3 weeks, building something for Rich, and having the time of my life.

    The irony is, Rich is the one who apparently, found himself in 1933, in a time when a vacuum tube radio represented “high-tech.”

    Molly and I have an agreement. I’ll tell her everything, except what Rich has asked me not to tell her. She’s agreed to believe me when I say that I’ve seen glimpses of the future and as far as I can tell, things may well work out so that we’ll all have happy endings. Well, almost all of us, anyway.

    I’m not completely convinced, mind you, because I think the future Rich has seen isn’t necessarily the only future that exists, so I’m working hard to bring the “happy ending” future into being. Another irony in this whole thing, is that when you see what is “to be,” it makes you work hard to either make that future happen, or make it not happen. Then, looking back on the past you made, it becomes the only one possible.

    I’m building a house. For a guy who died in 1962. How’s that for irony? Rich will be in San Diego in July. He’ll be there to tell Molly and Samantha to be in Indiana in August, in the house that I’m building right now. It’ll be a family vacation. Rich’s trip to San Diego will be from 1952, 10 years before he dies. I’m not going to tell him he’s got a decade to live, because I’m not sure if to someone 70 years old that would be a lot or a little. I’ll tell him “you’ve got a lot of time left,” and leave it at that. Rich will leave this time, return to 1952, put up a small concrete obelisk and bury an ammo case, that I will then dig up a few weeks ago.

    Sometimes, all this makes my head hurt.

    Rich’s trip here in August, however, will be from 1935. He’ll be a couple years older than the last time I saw him, and won’t have any idea about what is coming for him. The instructions written by his 70 year old self suggested I don’t tell him exactly what’s coming, but that I be positive and be supportive of his plans.

    So, that’s what I intend to do. And that’s all I feel comfortable in sharing, here. It’s hard not telling the whole story as I know it right now, but I can’t, because of the agreement Molly and I have.

    Rich and Molly are my best friends, but in truth, I’ve known Molly longer than Rich. Molly and I went to the University of Iowa together, and got to know each other when she dated one of my roomates. In fact, Rich and Molly named Samantha after my mother, even though they’ve only met a handful of times, more in the past 10 years than before. She dotes on her namesake from a distance, though, since I’m an only child. My mother, a healthy and active 86 has always kept the world at arm’s length, which we’ve talked about a lot, but she assures me she’s happy in that, and that she’s simply an observer of the world. That has been especially since my father died in the mid 80s.

    The house, that I have unofficially named “Mobius Manor,” is very cool and taking shape quickly. The funds available to me have been more than adequate for the job, since investing when you know what’s going to happen in the world kind of makes it all a slam dunk. Everything from permits, to materials and getting sub-contractors to show up, is easier when there’s plenty of money to work with, too. The specifications for the house were in the ammo box, and it was clear that a lot of time had been put into the preparation of them. I’ve got another 7 weeks to finish the house before it’s needed. In the meantime, I’m up at dawn, working through the day and sleeping not long after the sun goes down. Except for the computer tethered to my Blackberry for internet connectivity, it’s like pioneer days.

    Again, I’m having the time of my life.

    More soon.

  11. A time to build

    June 13, 2009
    By Dan in Posts

    I’m hard at work for my friend Rich, the guy who died in 1962 and who I’ll see again in a few weeks. I sound very flippant about that, but you have to understand that flippancy is only a negative thing in a linear world, and that isn’t what we live in. Most of us believe we live in a cause and effect, straight-line, linear world, but we don’t. It’s all simply a burst of creativity, an expression of the “is” that is.

    There is no beginning and no end. There just “is.” I know, very Richard Bach.

    But you know, from what I’ve learned over the past few months, I’m starting to believe he’s very right.

    I wish I had time to bring the readers of this blog up to date, but time is so short, and I have so much to do before I see my friend again. But do it I will, and some important pieces to this puzzle will be put in place.

    I promise.

  12. By Dan in Posts

    As you know, if you’ve been following this blog for any amount of time, there’s a lot going on here, mostly told from a place where the view is of the past. Rich’s story, the one in the sidebar that started in 2005, and wraps up just before he “leaves” for 1933, is only one of the tales. The other one is here in the blog, where you can track what is happening as it happens on the timeline you and I are traveling.

    I’m not a time traveler. Well, as Isaac Asimov would say, I am. My time traveling is just one way, however. I’m going forward in time, like you are. Rich apparently was able to get off that one-way temporal highway for some side trips. That’s why, even though he died in 1962, I’m going to see him two more times, once in July and once in August. That’s from my point of view. From his, he made it clear that our time together in San Diego in July would be the last we’d see each other. He didn’t say how he knew that, only that he was certain of it.

    In the collection of things he left for me in the ammo box, there were some very specific instructions about a project I need to complete between now and August, a project that he wrote he “knew I would complete.” I’ve begun that project, and will share some details with you in the next few days.

  13. Some More Details

    May 17, 2009
    By Dan in Posts

    jeepSorry for the rather brusque, matter-of-fact delivery of the news about Rich. I received enough email to understand that it was a bit of a shock for a lot of readers. Sorry about that.

    Here are a few details about how I came upon the details of Rich’s fate.

    Rich had a drawer in his desk at home in San Diego, that he’d always told Molly to open if he was “gone” for more than a couple weeks. In January, after he’d been gone for almost a month, Molly opened the drawer and pulled out two sealed 8.5 x 11 inch sized packets. One was for her, the other had my name on it. Molly sent me the envelope, which I opened as soon as I received it. There were some pictures of Rich and me, taken at different events we’d both been at, a personal note from Rich and another sealed envelope instructing me to call and ask for an attorney at a small law firm in Indianapolis. He said in the note that a certain attorney would ask for a code word, which was written on a small piece of paper also in the envelope.

    I called the number provided, asked for the attorney, introducing myself when he came on the line. As the note said he would, he asked for the code word, which I clearly spoke. He then asked if I had a pencil and paper. When I said I did, he gave me a set of latitude and longitude coordinates, said the date “November 17th, 1962,” and then said “that is all the information I have for you.” He repeated the coordinates, then asked me to read them back to him, which I did. At that point, he thanked me, and said that his firm had discharged their obligation to the client and that as is stated in the original instructions, all the files in their possession would be destroyed. He then hung up.

    In early April, I arranged things at work (I own my own surveying and cartography service in Dallas) and took one of my Jeeps north to Indiana. Rich and I had talked about Belton, especially in the past couple years since his adventure started, but I’d never been there. The location referenced in the geographical coordinates the attorney gave me were about four miles outside of Belton, and easy to find with the sophisticated GPS equipment I use in my work and travels.

    It was a nice bit of real estate. Not far off a main highway, it was about two acres of trees, bordered on all sides by farmland. When I got close, it was clear where I was going. A gravel road ran past the mini forest, and I parked the Jeep and with my handheld GPS, a pack with some tools, a shovel and a metal-detector, walked into the woods. A few minutes in, and I saw what I was looking for, a concrete obelisk about 3 feet tall. I walked up and examined it closely. No writing was engraved on it at all, but the weather had obviously taken its toll. It had been here awhile.

    ammobox1I sat the pack and shovel on the ground and fired up the metal detector. It didn’t take long for it to register a hit – a fairly large return of metal a couple feet from the oblelisk. I turned the detector off, picked up the shovel and started digging. 20 minutes or so later, I hit the top of a large, metal ammo box, wrapped in a thick polyethylene sheet.  A few more minutes, and I had it out of the ground. I pushed the dirt back into the hole, picked everything up and left without opening the ammo box. I wanted to be behind closed doors when I opened it.

    45 minutes later, in my room in a basic, but nice motel in Rockville, I opened the ammo case and saw that it was filled with an eclectic collection of artifacts. There were a number of black moleskine notebooks, several traditional composition books, a dozen or so empty Pilot G2 gel pens (Rich’s favorites), five 45 rpm records, some newspaper clippings, and one entire Indianapolis Star from 1952. There was also some hardware, a couple watches, a Nikon digital camera sealed in its own bit of plastic, a small stick of some sort of silicon-like material, about the size of a thumb drive and one rather worn looking Apple iPhone. I held the leather-cased phone for a minute, pressed the buttons to no effect and then got up from the round table I was sitting at, crossed the room and dug into my backpack. Being a Blackberry user, I don’t have an iPhone, but I do have an iPod, and wondered if the plugs were compatible.

    They were.

    Plugging the iPhone in, after a few seconds, I couldn’t believe what I saw. The screen came to life with the picture of a red-colored battery. It was charging. Steve Jobs would be proud. The first iPhone to be working, or at least charging, after being dormant for over 75 years! There was also a note from Rich, with my name on the envelope. I can’t go into the specifics of the letter in the envelope, since it contained some financial instructions, but will share some of it here in the next few days.

    I read and reread the letter, and then looked through the stuff in the ammo box again, making notes on a legal pad so I could understand the whole thing. About two hours later, I checked on the iPhone and saw that it was halfway charged. I disconnected it from the cable and saw that it appeared to be working. 3 bars! Amazing. Not wanting to startle Molly with a call from Rich’s phone, I called her using my Blackberry. She answered, saying “Hi Dan. What did you find?”

    “A lot,” I answered. Call me back on Rich’s phone.

    “Rich’s phone,” she said, more statement than question.

    “Yes.”

    We hung up without “good-bye” and I waited 2o seconds or so until the iPhone in my hand, Rich’s iPhone, vibrated and then rang, his ringtone a bit of a classical trumpet piece he’d always loved. I saw that it was Molly and pressed the green “answer’ button on the touchscreen. “Hi Molly.”

    My heart broke as I heard her sobbing, unable to speak. I waited a couple minutes until she regained her composure and heard her say, “What happened to him?”

    “He died in 1962, Molly.” I could hear her stifling a sob on the other end of the phone, and waited a few seconds before continuing. “But he’ll be back home for a couple days in July.”

    “What? How?” She asked, suddenly hopeful.

    “He buried a box of stuff that I’ll bring to you. He intended for me to find it, and there’s a letter than says just before he buried the box, he traveled to San Diego in July of 2009. The 17th and 18th. He’ll be there in the house in the morning about 7am on the 17th.”

    “Thank God,” Molly replied, “but only for two days? Maybe he can figure out a way to stay!”

    “I don’t think so,” I said. “Keep in mind, Molly. He’ll be older. About 70. He’ll be  coming from 1952.”

    “Oh.” A pause, then “I don’t care. I’ll take whatever I can get.”

    “Good girl,” I said. “Listen, I’m going to take care of some things here over the next couple days, and then head back to Dallas. I’ll be in touch, and I’m going to fly this box to you personally.”

    “OK. Thanks, Dan,” Molly said.

    “No problem. I’ll email you some more details,” I said. “Chin up. It’s all going to work out.”

    “OK. Good-bye.” Molly hung up.

    I smiled. I’d told her everything she knew, but not everything I knew.

    More in a few days.

  14. We Found Rich

    May 12, 2009
    By Dan in Posts

    journalGood news and bad news.

    The bad news is, that Rich is gone. He died in 1962.

    The good news, is that he will be back, for a short time, in July. I found his journals in Belton, and they tell a story I’m still working through, but am fascinated with. Here’s what I can share with you right now:

    Rich did travel to 1933, met his grandparents, signed the letter his grandfather wrote, and left Belton. He spent the next 45 years, to use a Star-Trekism, “staying out of the way of history.” He obviously did that very well.

    Don’t get me wrong, he used history to take care of his family (more on that later), but he didn’t interfere. Theoretically, he couldn’t interfere, after all. History was as he lived it. Both times.

    Last month, I was able to take some time off and Jeep to Belton. I’d never been there before, but had some detailed information about the place Rich had imparted. I also had some latitude-longitude information I’d received (more on this later) that led me to a treasure trove of information, and I found the things that Rich wanted me to find.

    Molly has decided to leave this project in my hands, something I completely understand. I think this has been harder on her than anyone else, and she’s concentrating on getting her life back together and taking care of Samantha.

    Job one is finishing up the narrative of Rich’s “trip” to the past after the crash. Then, I’m going to work on the story of his trip to 1933, and figure out a way to package these parts together. I’ll make that package available, in printed form, to all of you following this site. Rich’s journals from 1933 onward are in fantastic shape, and are fascinating to read.

    But, of course, the story’s not over yet.

  15. Chapter 8 update

    March 14, 2009
    By Dan in Posts

    Hi, Dan here.

    We decided to put some more of Chapter 8 up, and Molly asked me to shed some light on what’s going on and why we’re slowly publishing the story.

    First of all, we’ve had no word from Rich at all. I’m going to Belton in early April for a research trip and to see if I can find any evidence that Rich spent time in that area in the 1930s. I’m not sure what I’m looking for, but have a few ideas. Rich left me a note with some instructions that after my trip, I may or may not reveal on the blog.

    Secondly, Molly wanted to keep the pace of updates intact when we took over, so we decided not to just dump the whole story online at once. Rich would write, then edit and post. Most of what he wrote past Chapter 7 hadn’t been heavily edited and cleaned up, so Molly (who happens to be an online news editor herself) is doing that work. She then sends me what she wants to publish.

    Working helps Molly a lot, but we’re both a little unsure about whether we want to keep updating the site, not knowing where or when Rich is. We see the web numbers, and know the site gets read a lot, but we’re not sure just how many people are really that interested in the story.

    Feel free to email me at dan.garmen@gmail.com if you’d like us to keep updating the site. Your feedback and input helps.

    Tags: ,

  16. By Dan in Posts

    It’s funny. It’s Wednesday morning, and I’m sitting in a McDonald’s in Dallas, working on Rich’s blog and working on posting the work he’s done. Molly gave me the g0-ahead a little while ago to post the rest of Chapter 7 – Acceleration, and as I was hitting “Publish,” the song “Little Wonders,” by Rob Thomas came on the overhead speakers. It’s a beautiful song, from the touching movie “Meet the Robinsons.”

    Which is about time travel.

    The universe works in weird, mysterious ways, doesn’t it?

    Enjoy Chapter 7 – Acceleration.

    I’ll have Chapter 8 up when Molly says OK.

    - Dan

  17. Hello, and an update

    February 18, 2009
    By Dan in Posts

    A lot of readers have emailed, wondering what’s happened to Rich, so Molly asked me to help out with the blog, something I’m happy to do. Rich and I have been friends for over 20 years, and he asked me to help out in the event he took an “extended vacation.”

    First, I don’t know where (or when) Rich is. What I do know, is that on December 2 while on his way home from work and on a cell phone call with Molly, Rich started to get the feeling he was going somewhere. He pulled over into a parking lot in Mira Mesa, grabbed the leather bag he always carrys with him and got out of the car. Molly could hear the sounds of him opening the car door, and as he started to say something she couldn’t make out, the call dropped.

    As best we can tell, since the letter from his grandfather said he came from 2008, and it was December of that year, there’s a guy running around 1933 Indiana with an Apple iPhone. Or, there WAS a guy running around 1933 Indiana with an iPhone.

    Fortunately, Rich prepared well and left account names and passwords, and we were able to log in here. He backed everything up using online storage, and going through it, I realized Rich had written some stuff he hadn’t yet published. So, I’ll be posting it in the next couple weeks.

    He’d pretty much finished the story and gotten everything up to date. I just want to go over it with Molly and make sure she’s okay with it all. There’s obviously a reason Rich hadn’t posted the rest of it yet, so I just want to make sure everything is as it should be. I have to say, I thought I knew Rich’s story, but I didn’t. There was a lot he hadn’t shared. When I read the unposted material, I understood why. It had to be difficult to write. I can’t imagine going through what Rich has been through the past three years.

    Here’s hoping my friend Richard returns soon. The story continues soon. Bear with us.

    Dan Garmen

The Time Traveler's Blog is a work of fiction. All characters appearing in this work are fictitious. Any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.