Brian Stableford

Prelude to Eternity


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      BORGO PRESS BOOKS BY BRIAN STABLEFORD

      Alien Abduction: The Wiltshire Revelations

      Asgard’s Conquerors (Asgard #2)

      Asgard’s Heart (Asgard #3)

      Asgard’s Secret (Asgard #1)

      Balance of Power (Daedalus Mission #5)

      The Best of Both Worlds and Other Ambiguous Tales

      Beyond the Colors of Darkness and Other Exotica

      Changelings and Other Metaphoric Tales

      The City of the Sun (Daedalus Mission #4)

      Complications and Other Science Fiction Stories

      The Cosmic Perspective and Other Black Comedies Critical Threshold (Daedalus Mission #2)

      The Cthulhu Encryption: A Romance of Piracy

      The Cure for Love and Other Tales of the Biotech Revolution

      Designer Genes: Tales of the Biotech Revolution

      The Dragon Man

      The Eleventh Hour

      The Face of Heaven (Realms of Tartarus #1)

      The Fenris Device (Hooded Swan #5)

      Firefly: A Novel of the Far Future

      Les Fleurs du Mal: A Tale of the Biotech Revolution

      The Florians (Daedalus Mission #1)

      The Gardens of Tantalus and Other Delusions

      The Gates of Eden

      A Glimpse of Infinity (Realms of Tartarus #3)

      The Golden Fleece and Other Tales of the Biotech Revolution

      The Great Chain of Being and Other Tales of the Biotech Revolution

      Halycon Drift (Hooded Swan #1)

      The Haunted Bookshop and Other Apparitions

      In the Flesh and Other Tales of the Biotech Revolution

      The Innsmouth Heritage and Other Sequels

      Journey to the Core of Creation: A Romance of Evolution

      Kiss the Goat: A Twenty-First-Century Ghost Story

      The Legacy of Erich Zann and Other Tales of the Cthulhu Mythos

      Luscinia: A Romance of Nightingales and Roses

      The Mad Trist: A Romance of Bibliomania

      The Mind-Riders

      The Moment of Truth

      Nature’s Shift: A Tale of the Biotech Revolution

      An Oasis of Horror: Decadent Tales and Contes Cruels

      The Paradise Game (Hooded Swan #4)

      The Paradox of the Sets (Daedalus Mission #6)

      The Plurality of Worlds: A Sixteenth-Century Space Opera

      Prelude to Eternity: A Romance of the First Time Machine

      Promised Land (Hooded Swan #3)

      The Quintessence of August: A Romance of Possession

      The Return of the Djinn and Other Black Melodramas

      Rhapsody in Black (Hooded Swan #2)

      Salome and Other Decadent Fantasies

      Sexual Chemistry

      Streaking: A Novel of Probability

      Swan Song (Hooded Swan #6)

      The Tree of Life and Other Tales of the Biotech Revolution

      The Undead: A Tale of the Biotech Revolution

      Valdemar’s Daughter: A Romance of Mesmerism

      A Vision of Hell (Realms of Tartarus #2)

      War Games

      The Walking Shadow

      Wildeblood’s Empire (Daedalus Mission #3)

      The World Beyond: A Sequel to S. Fowler Wright’s The World Below

      Writing Fantasy and Science Fiction

      Xeno’s Paradox: A Tale of the Biotech Revolution

      Year Zero

      Yesterday Never Dies: A Romance of Metempsychosis

      Zombies Don’t Cry: A Tale of the Biotech Revolution

      COPYRIGHT INFORMATION

      Copyright © 2009, 2013 by Brian Stableford

      Published by Wildside Press LLC

      www.wildsidebooks.com

      DEDICATION

      For Jane, the Mistress of My Maze

      ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

      This story could not have been composed without the assistance of inspiration and crucial exemplars provided by numerous individuals, most importantly Dedalus, Plato, Pietro Locatelli, Heinrich von Biber, John Dee, Voltaire, Anton Mesmer, Richard Trevithick, Félix Bodin, Thomas Love Peacock, H. G. Wells, and A. E. van Vogt.

      CHAPTER ONE

      THE LEVIATHAN OF STEEL AND STEAM

      It took Michael Laurel a full five minutes to make his way along the platform at King’s Cross Station in order to join the admirers ogling the steam-belching steel Leviathan that was England’s most recent candidate to be the Seventh Wonder of the Modern World. It was reputed to be a prodigy, and a monster: a dragon such as the world had never seen, even in the Age of Myth and Magic.

      When he finally arrived within sight of the locomotive, though, he was a trifle disappointed. It was certainly large and loud. It had the promised doorway to its infernal heart, into which the stoker would soon be shoveling coal at a furious rate. It had the promised sweat of steam oozing and belching from various narrow orifices. It had the promised smokestack generously distributing a fine fog of sooty particles. It was freshly painted in the claret-and-gold livery of the Academy. To Michael’s eyes, however, trained to the study and reproduction of fruit and flowers, cloudy skies and expressive human faces, it lacked something.

      He could not quite decide, at first, what to call the mysterious something that the locomotive lacked. It was not beauty, although the machine did have a certain irredeemable ugliness about its undeniable grandeur. Nor was it sublimity, although there was certainly a raw brutality about its innate power. Nor was it humanity, although there had been much talk in the coffee-shops where “Bohemian” artists and writers liked to congregate of the essential “soullessness” of the new generation of machines that was “despoiling the bosom of Nature”. Indeed, it seemed to Michael, although it was merely a whimsical intuition, that the machine had far more humanity than most of the people he knew, and that machinery in general was more fully and more fervently ensouled than the quiet rural world of trees, meadows and streams—which, as a city-born and city-bred individual, he had never quite taken to his heart, although he liked to paint it well enough.

      No, he finally decided, what the locomotive lacked, was not beauty, nor sublimity, nor humanity. What it lacked was mystery. Like all the products of modern technology, it was defiantly unmagical. It was the product of mathematical planning and precision workmanship. Nothing in its design and construction had been left to chance; there was no margin of hazard within which it might remain tantalizingly undefinable. In spite of its reputation, it was not a dragon at all, in the true sense of the word.

      Michael knew that he ought to be grateful for the mathematical exactitude of the locomotive’s planning and the scrupulous organization of its many parts. He was, after all, going to entrust his life to the monster, which was scheduled to reach the previously-unimaginable speed