EARTH TIME LINE--THE PRESENT
Space and Naval Warfare Systems Center, San Diego, CA
Dane could see that Commander Talbot was looking at Earhart strangely—it wasn’t every day you met someone you’d read about in history books. Talbot spread his hands wide in invitation. “I’ve been ordered to extend you every courtesy and answer any question you have.”
The question everyone had was what was going on with the dolphin in the tank, but instead of asking it, Dane walked over to the closest free dolphin. Its head was slightly turned and one dark eye returned his gaze. As Talbot was about to say something else, Dane held up a hand, indicating quiet. He stood still for several minutes. Gradually, all work in the lab died down and everyone was watching him but he was unaware. His entire focus was on the creature in the water, which was as still as he was. Earhart was at Dane’s side. Ahana stood in the background, waiting.
“Do you track your dolphins?” Dane finally asked.
Talbot nodded. “They’re all tagged with transponders that are picked up by satellite, and the computer keeps a record of their movements.”
“Can you show me the tracks of all your dolphins in the last twenty-four hours?” Dane asked.
“Don’t you want a briefing first on what we’re doing here?” Talbot seemed a bit put out. Dane imagined that he had briefed others on his project, and it was a great source of pride to him.
“In due time,” Dane said. “There’s something I need to know first.”
Talbot led them over to a large screen and gave instructions to one of his technicians. A flurry of lines appeared on the screen.
Dane walked up to the screen and tapped a spot where all the lines intersected. “Where is this?”
“Coordinates,” Talbot said to the tech.
The man rattled off some numbers that made no sense to Dane, but obviously did to Talbot.
“About three miles from here. There’s a small fault line off the coast. That spot is right on top of the fault line.”
“Take us there,” Dane ordered.
Talbot looked surprised at such a blunt order, but he obliged, and within short order they were back on the surface and onboard a boat heading out to sea.
“It’s getting stronger,” Earhart said.
Dane nodded. “I know. What did you pick up back there?”
“Just a feeling.”
Dane leaned closer to her. “And that feeling was?”
“Hope.”
Dane nodded. “I felt the same thing.”
Ahana looked like she was going to say something, but didn’t. She was opening up a large plastic case that contained some of her monitoring equipment.
The boat slowed and then came to a halt, the helmsman using his engines and rudder to keep them in place against the current. Dane could feel it now--a low-level flow of power through his body, pulsing hypnotically, in a rhythm that Dane found familiar but could not place.
“There’s a gate near here,” he announced even though there was no black wall that normally indicated a gate.
Ahana was looking at her instruments. “I’m not picking up anything.”
“You won’t,” Dane said. “The signal is piggy-backed, and the gate is more of a window than a door.”
“What is the signal piggy-backed on?” Ahana asked.
“Give me a second.” Dane sat down on the deck in the lotus position and closed his eyes. He shut down his external senses one by one until there was only the inner world of his brain. He could feel the stream, more a trickle, of power passing through his body.
Dane’s eyes flashed open.
“What is it?” Earhart asked.
Dane pointed up. “It’s coming from there. Not from the ocean. From up there down to the ocean.” He kept his hand up, finger extended, and closed his eyes once more. He moved his hand ever so slightly, trying to make his body an antenna for the power. The variances were so slight that it was very difficult. Several times he thought he had the power line locked in, but then be would lose it. The sun was going down and a slight chill came with the evening breeze, but Dane didn’t notice.
The power line was getting stronger, of that he was certain. After slightly over thirty minutes, he realized that one of the problems was that the power line was shifting. Moving ever so slightly.
Dane froze his hand and opened his eyes once more. He looked up along the line of his arm toward where his finger was pointing, just above the horizon to the east.
“There.”
Everyone turned and looked. A full moon was rising over the mountains beyond San Diego.
“It’s being broadcast from there,” Dane said.
“The moon?” Ahana was skeptical.
Dane understood part of it now. “There’s a gate here and the other end of the portal is there. The transmission is coming from the Ones Before to a gate on the moon and then being broadcast to this spot where the dolphins pick it up. Then they retransmit in the form of the visions and voices those of us with the Sight can pick up. I knew I felt something strange about the other end of the Ones Before portal when I touched it in the sphere map.”
Dane felt a sharp spike of pain through the left side of his head and he staggered. Earhart grabbed his arm, steadying him. “Are you all right?”
Dane looked over the side of the boat. A dolphin floated there, gazing up at him. Another piece of the puzzle fell into place. “That’s my--” he whispered, searching for the right word. The pain was a little less intense now and he tried to focus his thoughts.
“What?” Earhart asked.
“That dolphin.” Dane pointed. “She’s”--he shook his head, frustrated that he couldn’t conjure up the word he needed. He tapped the side of his head where the pain was receding--“She’s the conduit through which I get my visions. Through which the voices reach me. We each have one. Each of us with the Sight. That’s why you haven’t had any visions in this timeline,” he said to Earhart. “You don’t have a dolphin counterpart here.”
“I don’t--” Ahana began but Dane shushed her as he leaned over the boat, close to the dolphin, which used its tail to lift its body a third of the way out of the water. For several seconds the tableau was frozen--the dolphin partly out of the water, Dane leaning over. Then Dane reached out and touched the dolphin’s forehead.
It was like touching a live wire. But he maintained the contact for several seconds, until, with a flip of its powerful tail, the dolphin splashed back into the ocean and disappeared into the dark water.
Dane sank to his knees, leaning against the side of the boat. Earhart, Ahana, and Talbot knelt next to him in concern.
“Should I get a Med Evac?” Talbot asked.
Dane slowly shook his head. “No. I’m all right. I see most of it now. Not all. But I know what I have to do next.”
“And that is?” Earhart asked.
“Go to the Ones Before.” Dane got to his feet.
“Can you make it through this?” Earhart asked doubtfully.
“I’m not going there physically,” Dane said. “They’ve barricaded their end of the portal to prevent anything physical from coming through. Commander,” Dane said to Talbot. “Please take us to shore.”
“So how will you get there?” Earhart pressed.
“How else?” Dane didn’t wait for an answer. “With my mind.” He looked at Talbot. “When we get back, you can brief us on your project, please.”
The rest of the ride was made in silence.
Talbot led them down into the complex. The same dolphin was in the tank and in the exact same position. Talbot led them past the tank, down a short corridor and into a room with rows of chairs. He stood at the front, next to a screen.
“Ladies and gentlemen, this briefing is classified top secret, special compartmentalization.”
Dane felt a surge of anger. After all that had happened in the war against the Shadow, more secrets. From whom he wondered? He knew Foreman had gotten them access to this, but he also resented the CIA man for all he represented. All the deceptions and lies had played into the Shadow’s hand over the years and now the Earth was reaping the results.
“Just get to it,” Dane snapped, earning him surprised looks from Ahana and Earhart.
Talbot glared at Dane for several seconds.
“Gentlemen.” Amelia Earhart stood up. “If we could do without the pissing contest, maybe we could get to the facts?”
Dane leaned back in the chair and stretched his legs out. He put his hands on the arms of the chair and nodded. “Go ahead, Commander.”
“Have you ever heard of Operation Grill Flame?” Talbot asked.
Dane realized that Talbot was one of those people who could not adapt, who could not change to the situation. He was going to give this briefing the way he had in the past no matter what.
“No,” Dane said.
“Grill Flame was the code name for a Defense Intelligence Agency operation using remote viewers,” Talbot said.
“Remote viewers?” Earhart asked.
“Psychics,” Talbot explained. “People who could see things at a distance just by using their minds. Grill Flame was what it was first called in the sixties. It was renamed Bright Gate in the eighties. They used it to search for the hostages in Beirut. With no success. Something was lacking.”
“Then you got involved,” Dane said. surprising Talbot.
The Commander nodded. “Yes. To be honest, it was just damn luck. We were running a search and recover training mission with one of our dolphins in the Gulf of Mexico, near an oil rig. Bright Gate was running a remote viewing exercise, trying to get one of their operators to see the oil rig and describe it.”
“They connected,” Dane said.
“Yes,” Talbot stared at Dane, re-evaluating. “We found the dolphin was the one doing the transmitting. The remote viewer was just a receiver. So Dream Land came into being.”
Dane wondered if things would have been different if he had known about Dream Land. He had only just realized he received his visions and heard the voices via a dolphin. Here, they’d known for years that dolphins transmitted. Connecting the two might have made a difference.
“We worked on both transmitters and receivers,” Talbot continued. “Trying to increase both capabilities. We also tried to channel the process into remote viewing.”
Talbot picked up a remote and clicked a button. A slide appeared, showing a single tube with a man inside. The man floated freely, his arms and legs akimbo, a breathing tube leading into a black helmet covering his head along with numerous leads.
“We started with men because we knew more about the human brain. Plus”--here he glanced at Dr. Martsen--“there was the problem that dolphins couldn’t exactly tell us what they were seeing. We eventually realized that it was better to ramp up the dolphin’s transmitting power along with a human’s receiving power, so we began working on dolphins in the isolation tubes. The results have been interesting to say the least.”
Talbot paused, and Dane knew they were crossing the line now, moving from what Talbot and his scientists knew to what they could only guess about. He had picked up the same thing from Ahana and Nagoya when they started discussing the theoretical physics they thought might apply to the Shadow. He had a moment of doubt, wondering if they were so far behind the Shadow’s knowledge base that his vague plan of assaulting the Shadow’s timeline was an extremely naïve one.
Talbot began. “The science we are dealing with here is on the psychometric or virtual plane. While we have little actual understanding of how this works, our philosophy here has been to focus on what works, rather than how it works. What we’ve managed to do is not only remote view but to project an avatar onto the psychometric plane.”
“The what plane?” Earhart asked. “Project what? You’ll have to excuse me, Commander, but my science is several decades old compared to yours.”
Talbot tapped the side of his head. “The psychometric plane is the one that exists in our heads. What is reality?” He didn’t wait for an answer to the question he posed and Dane knew he had had to answer this question before. “What we perceive it to be. Even though we are all in this room, we are experiencing everything in a slightly different manner as our brain processes the input from our senses.
“An avatar is a form that represents the original in the virtual plane,” Talbot continued answered. “If you play a computer game, whatever form you take in the game is your avatar. We’ve found avatars to be important because it allows the remote viewer to orient oneself in the psychometric plane.”
Earhart shook her head. “I don’t understand. How can reality be different? There is one reality in this timeline.”
Talbot considered her for several seconds, and Dane could almost sense him counting back the years to when she had disappeared into history. “We--scientists--in the last hundred years or so have been digging deeper into the physics of what makes up reality. If you’d asked a scientist a hundred years ago what he thought reality was, he would have said pretty much the same thing you just said.
“For centuries, the most learned men of their age believed that matter and reality consisted of four basic substances: fire, earth, water, and air. We’ve come a long way since then, but it is foolish to believe we have reached the end of that path of knowledge. In some ways, people two hundred years from now may look at us as we look at those who believed in the four base elements composing all matter.”
“That’s if there is anyone around two hundred years from now,” Dane interjected.
“We at Dream Land,” Talbot continued, “believe that the psychometric plane is beyond the plane of quantum physics, which scientists are still groping to understand, although there are some proven laws of physics we can connect to it.”
“Such as?” Dane pressed.
“Think of the psychometric field like a magnetic field,” Talbot suggested. “The Earth’s magnetic field is all around us, yet we don’t feel it. We need something special, like a compass, to indicate its existence. In a somewhat different manner gravity is all around us, but we can’t see it, only its effects.
“We call these invisible fields, hyperfields. Quantum physics, with its quarks and wave theory, is a hyperfield. But there are others. They are around you all the time. In fact, there is a concurrent hyperfield to the quantum physical one. A psychometric field. Existing side by side at times with the real plane, at other times existing very separately from the other. It is the boundary between these two planes that is the entire focus of our efforts at Dream Land. Where we can project into the psychometric and see into the real plane. Without getting into the philosophy of it, a mental field--what you perceive in your brain--is a virtual field. If you perceive something to be with your mind, then it exists in the psychometric field.”
Ahana finally spoke up. “But not in reality.”
“Most physicists would say no, not in reality as it is currently defined,” Talbot agreed. “But if our thoughts are not reality, what are they? Everything humans have ever invented or done has come out of our thoughts. So they are real in some way. Or become real at some point. So there is definitely a link between the psychometric world and the real world. The line between the two is constantly being breached. And that line, with the proper equipment and training, we are able to breach at Dream Land.”
If only they could have linked up Ahana and Talbot at the beginning, Dane thought to himself. He had a feeling this is what the Shadow had managed to do--combine physics with mental power in some fundamental way. As Talbot had said, Dane had seen the results of the two fields meeting when Sin Fen shut the Bermuda Triangle Gate using the abandoned Atlantean pyramid and the power of her mind.
Dane could still see Sin Fen’s skull changing from flesh and bone into crystal and channeling the power coming out of the pyramid against the darkness of the expanding gate. Between that experience and what happened on the Nazca Plain, Dane believed there was a connection between a powerful force deep inside the planet and the ability of the mind to tap into and use that force.
Talbot brought up a new slide. On one side was the label Real Plane and on the other was Psychometric Plane. There was a line linking the two.
“These two planes exist inside each of us. We have our minds, which operate on the psychometric plane, and then we have our bodies, which operate in the real plane. And they are connected through the nervous system. We can take ideas from the psychometric plane of our imagination and make them real in the physical world, say in a painting or a computer program or a book. And we can process things from the physical world into our brains, remember them, even change them with our thoughts. You have to consider the fact that a memory is not really what happened in real terms, but how we processed what happens. No two people remember things exactly alike.”
“That’s not true,” Ahana said. “Everyone in this room would agree that two plus two is four.”
“That’s not a memory,” Talbot said. “That’s a concept that exists on the psychometric plane and resides in our minds. We can share the same concepts but no two memories are alike, much like snowflakes are all different.”
Ahana frowned, but didn’t say anything as she digested this.
Talbot continued. “What we are doing here is trying to shut down, as much as possible, the physical part so we can focus on the mental. Then we link our man with the power of the dolphin’s natural transmitter.”
“What have you achieved?” Dane asked.
“We’ve been able to remote view anywhere on the planet with a high degree of accuracy.”
“Does your man go where he wants to or where the dolphin wants to?” Dane asked.
“That’s an interesting question,” Talbot said. “Most of the time, the dolphin doesn’t seem to”--he searched for a word, then shrugged--“care. Our RVer can tap into its power and project toward a target area. But once in a while, the dolphin seems to be doing, thinking, something else, and the RVer has no control.”
“Where do they go then?” Dane pressed.
Talbot shrugged once more. “We don’t know. That’s what we call a blackout situation. The RVer sees nothing. We usually shut those down pretty quickly as there’s no point in continuing.”
“Can you hook me up?” Dane asked. “To a dolphin?”
“I have trained people who can RV,” Talbot said. “Tell me what you want my men to do, and we’ll get it done.”
“I don’t think they can go where I want to go,” Dane said.
“And where is that?”
“To the Ones Before. And they’re not on this timeline or on this planet.”