Date: Wed, 9 Jun 93 18:31:01 MDT From: tperreau@banshee.VLA.NRAO.EDU (This space for rent) Message-Id: <9306100031.AA00726@banshee.vla.nrao.edu> To: alt-ql-creative@cisco.com Subject: Future Perfect -- Author's Notes Future Perfect Author's Notes Perhaps the best advice that any new author can use, besides the one of "write, write, and write some more" is "write what you know about" -- and so I did. I have visited Iona, and Perth (though I missed Scone to go to Comrie), along with many other Scottish places on a whirlwind vacation about two years ago. Scottish (and Irish) history and customs are one of my favorite reading topics, along with Irish mythology and the new wave of fantasy novels based on Irish tales. Now, a little history. Iona Iona is a small island (3.5 miles long by 1 mile wide) off the coast of the isle of Mull, which itself is off the coast of Scotland. The only way to reach Iona is by ferry. There are bus tours that leave from Oban on the western coast and travel through the southern half of Mull to reach Fionnphort, where one takes a single car ferry across the sound to Iona. The abbey is roughly 300 yards distant from where the ferry docks, and you go by a ruined Augustinian nunnery. The abbey itself is a reconstruction of the 15th century Benedictine abbey (they did use the original stones in the reconstruction). The oldest building on Iona is the chapel of St.Oran, which was built by Somerled, Lord of the Isles, in the 12th century. In Future Perfect, the chapel is about where the chapel of St. Oran is, and the bee hive cells were to the north, roughly the location of the present day abbey. There was one omission that I will most likely correct, in that of the cross of St. John. This was a massive Irish celtic style cross, 15' tall and 7' across at it's widest point. Carved with the now famed knotwork, it is a piece of art which is under shelter. A replica stands in it's place. This cross is the oldest known piece of construction on Iona, dating back to the mid-7th century. This cross would be visible anywhere in the area. Reilig Oran This was the famed burial place of the Scottish kings up to the time of MacBeth (who was the last king buried here). Forty Scottish kings are buried here, along with four Irish kings, and eight Norse kings. For almost 600 years, Iona was the center of the Celtic Christian Church, which was different in organization than the Roman Catholic Church. Eventually, the Catholic Church, with it's greater number of followers, wealth, and power, won out against the poorer Celtic Church. There is an ad in The Highlander magazine that reads "Before Charlemagne and a strong papacy, St. Columba's disciples brought Celtic Christianity to Scotland and beyond by starting monestaries as far away as Russia." The Celtic Christian church on Iona was founded by St. Columba in the year 563. For many years, the services were held exposed to the elements. Future Perfect is set in the waining days of the Celtic Church, though it gained some strength during the rule of MacBeth, it would never be as powerful as it once was back in the mid-700 to mid-800's when it's power covered Ireland, Scotland, Northumbria, and monestaries in France and Germany. Loch Ness The Great Glen is the natural division line in the Highlands. At the western end is the isle of Lismore and Ben Nevis, the highest mountain in Scotland. At the eastern end is Inverness, and Loch Ness. Inverness, the english translation of Inbher Ness, was the capital of the northern Picts (Scone, incidently, was the capital of the southern Picts). St. Columba did travel here in the 570's, when he was in his late fifties to early sixties. The first documented sighting of the Loch Ness monster was at this time, and according to legend, Columba commanded the water demon to depart, which it did. The Book of Kells The Book of Kells was actually started on Iona. However, due to the increasing number of attacks by Norsemen, the book was taken to the abbey of Kells in Ireland (also founded by Columba) where it was completed. Today it resides in Trinity College in Dublin, sealed under glass in a nitrogen atmosphere. There are several good books on the Book of Kells. Perhaps the most reproduced page is the Gospel of St. John, which is also called the Chi Rho page (for the two Greek letters that predominate in the illustration). The Book of Kells is considered by many to be the pinnacle of Celtic illumination. MacBeth Contrary to Shakespeares' play, MacBeth had an equal right to the throne of Scotland. He was cousin to Duncan, and moarmer of Moray, probably second in power only to the King of Scots. Thorfinn, the jarl of Orkney, was MacBeth's half-brother. Together, they would rule Scotland for seventeen years; MacBeth the land and Thorfinn the sea. Was MacBeth a good king? Little is known, other than he was able to leave Scotland for a year while he went to Rome to visit the pope. Few leaders dared to do this, for fear of not having a kingdom to return to. MacBeth was probably very much a man of his time. It must also be said that MacBeth gained the Scottish throne in the time honored way -- he killed for it. The majority of Scottish kings before MacBeth were either killed in battle (as was Duncan), or assassinated. In the year 1040, MacBeth would be killed in battle by Duncan's bastard son, Malcolm, who would turn out to be one of Scotland's better monarchs. MacBeth was the last of the line of Celtic kings that had ruled the Scots for over 500 years. Temporal Corps and Starfleet It made sense to me that in a "Star Trek" universe, that Starfleet would eventually start to monitor and research time travel -- heaven knows that there has been enough time warps, time loops, space-time continuum ruptures, etc; not to mention the Guardian of Forever! The point from investigating to actually tampering with the timestream would be almost a given. Thus, at first, the Monitor program (part of Ziggy, now known as Tempora) which would make sure that the proper past remains that way, then agents that could travel backwards in time to correct problems. I feel that the Paratemp Corps would be a natural outgrowth of Starfleet, and exist side by side with Starfleet. The concept of "ephem" leapers was shamelessly borrowed from the movie "Trancers". The injecting of a drug, along with some other steps, to allow your spirit, soul, ka, whatever you want to call it, to travel back into the past to take over an ancestor of yours. Armed with enough knowledge from the 27th century, one could significantly alter the timestream, creating a "broach". Broaches are disruptions in the timestream. The problem that one faces when writing about linear time travel is that is the affect in the past instantaneous in the future? If so, then why have Monitor and Paratemp agents? I decided that, like throwing a rock into a stream, there are ripples (the expanding wavefront of the broach) but they are not felt instantly a mile away downstream. The same with broaches and the timestream. This would allow Monitor to detect, track, and send agents back to correct the problem. Naturally, the bigger the rock, the bigger the splash -- and Dr. Beckett is a very big rock! Further Reading There is a book called "MacBeth the King" by Nigel Tranter. If you can find a copy, get it! It's an English print book, and probably unavailable in the US unless it is special ordered. Folks near Canada might run across the border and get a copy. It's good reading, and historically accurate. For general Scottish history, the best book that I've found is "Lion in the North: A Thousand Years of Scottish History 745 - 1745" by John Prebble. Any good bookstore or library should have this book. I've seen it advertised in Barnes & Noble. It's not too detailed, but has enough information to get you started. Thanks Thanks go out to the several people who wrote me, expressing enjoyment in reading Future Perfect. This is the reason why I write, to spin a tale that others will enjoy. I guess that every writer has an inspirational author that they try to emulate, and mine is H. Beam Piper. His science is simplistic, but he could tell a story. If you've never read anything by him, pick up "Little Fuzzy". If I can tell a tale half as good as Piper, then I will consider myself an author (now, in my next QL story, I'm going to be closer in spirit to H. P. Lovecraft than to H. Beam Piper (I hope) ). I wnat to express thanks to Cheryl Bellucci, who informed me that the Foriegn Technology Division at Wright-Pat is no longer called the Foriegn Technology Division, but something else. I also want to thank Roberta Chi-Woon Kwong for her discussion on Star- fleet, and her comments about the set up of Future Perfect. And last, but by no means least, a big thank you to Terri Librande, who said that I should write this in the first place. Now I know the meaning of "the woman behind the man"! :) Tony Perreault Array Operations Very Large Array Radiotelescope Observatory Socorro, New Mexico