1. This is the story of a man
marked by an image from his childhood.
Copy !req
2. The violent scene that upset him,
Copy !req
3. and whose meaning
he was to grasp only years later,
Copy !req
4. happened on the observation deck
at Orly Airport
Copy !req
5. a few years
before the outbreak of World War III.
Copy !req
6. Parents take their children to Orly
on Sunday to watch the departing planes.
Copy !req
7. Of this particular Sunday,
Copy !req
8. the child whose story
we're about to tell
Copy !req
9. would long remember the frozen sun,
Copy !req
10. the setting at the end of the deck,
Copy !req
11. and a woman's face.
Copy !req
12. Nothing distinguishes memories
from ordinary moments.
Copy !req
13. Only later do they become memorable
by the scars they leave.
Copy !req
14. That face was to be
the only image from peacetime
Copy !req
15. to survive the war.
Copy !req
16. He often wondered
if he'd really seen it
Copy !req
17. or just invented
that tender moment
Copy !req
18. to counter the moments
of madness to follow.
Copy !req
19. The sudden roar,
Copy !req
20. the woman's gesture,
Copy !req
21. the crumpling body,
Copy !req
22. and the cries of the crowd,
blurred by fear.
Copy !req
23. Later he realized
that he'd seen a man die.
Copy !req
24. Soon afterwards,
Paris was destroyed.
Copy !req
25. Many died.
Copy !req
26. Many died.
Copy !req
27. Some considered themselves victors.
Copy !req
28. Others were taken prisoner.
Copy !req
29. The survivors settled in underground
passages beneath Chaillot.
Copy !req
30. Aboveground, Paris,
like most of the world,
Copy !req
31. was uninhabitable,
riddled with radioactivity.
Copy !req
32. The victors stood guard
over a kingdom of rats.
Copy !req
33. Prisoners were subjected
to experiments
Copy !req
34. apparently of great concern
to those who conducted them.
Copy !req
35. The outcome was disappointment
for the experimenters,
Copy !req
36. and for the subjects,
either death
Copy !req
37. or madness.
Copy !req
38. One day they came to select a new
guinea pig from among the prisoners.
Copy !req
39. He was the man whose story
we are now telling.
Copy !req
40. He was frightened.
Copy !req
41. He had heard
about the head experimenter
Copy !req
42. and was prepared
to face the mad scientist
Copy !req
43. or Dr. Frankenstein.
Copy !req
44. Instead, he found
a reasonable man
Copy !req
45. who calmly explained
that the human race was doomed.
Copy !req
46. Space was out of the question.
Copy !req
47. The only hope for survival
lay in time.
Copy !req
48. A loophole in time
might make it possible
Copy !req
49. to reach food, medicine, energy.
Copy !req
50. This was the aim of the experiments:
Copy !req
51. To send emissaries into time
Copy !req
52. to summon past and future
to the rescue of the present.
Copy !req
53. But the human mind recoiled.
Copy !req
54. To wake up in another time
Copy !req
55. was to be born again, as an adult.
Copy !req
56. The shock was too great.
Copy !req
57. After sending lifeless or unconscious
bodies into different time zones,
Copy !req
58. the inventors now focused on men
with powerful mental images.
Copy !req
59. If they could conceive of
or dream of another time,
Copy !req
60. perhaps they would be able
to enter into it.
Copy !req
61. The camp police spied
even on dreams.
Copy !req
62. This man was selected
Copy !req
63. due to his fixation
on an image from his past.
Copy !req
64. First, the present and all its supports
must be stripped away.
Copy !req
65. They start again.
Copy !req
66. The subject doesn't die
Copy !req
67. or go mad.
Copy !req
68. He suffers.
Copy !req
69. They continue.
Copy !req
70. On the tenth day,
Copy !req
71. images begin to well up
like confessions.
Copy !req
72. A peacetime morning.
Copy !req
73. A peacetime bedroom.
A real bedroom.
Copy !req
74. Real children.
Copy !req
75. Real birds.
Copy !req
76. Real cats.
Copy !req
77. Real graves.
Copy !req
78. On the 16th day,
he's on the observation deck.
Copy !req
79. It's empty.
Copy !req
80. Sometimes he finds
a day of happiness,
Copy !req
81. but it's a different one.
Copy !req
82. A happy face,
but it's a different one.
Copy !req
83. Ruins.
Copy !req
84. A girl who could be
the one he seeks.
Copy !req
85. He crosses her path
on the observation deck.
Copy !req
86. She smiles at him from a car.
Copy !req
87. Other images pour out
and mix
Copy !req
88. in a museum
that is perhaps his memory.
Copy !req
89. On the 30th day,
the meeting takes place.
Copy !req
90. This time he's sure
he recognizes her.
Copy !req
91. In fact, it's the only thing
he's sure of
Copy !req
92. in this timeless world
that amazes him with its riches.
Copy !req
93. All around him
are astonishing materials:
Copy !req
94. Glass, plastic,
Copy !req
95. terry cloth.
Copy !req
96. When he shakes off his fascination,
Copy !req
97. the woman has disappeared.
Copy !req
98. The experimenters tighten their control
Copy !req
99. and send him back on the trail.
Copy !req
100. Time rolls back again.
The moment returns.
Copy !req
101. This time he's close to her
and speaks to her.
Copy !req
102. She greets him without surprise.
Copy !req
103. They have no memories, no plans.
Copy !req
104. Time takes shape
painlessly around them.
Copy !req
105. Their sole landmarks
are the taste of the moment
Copy !req
106. and the markings on the walls.
Copy !req
107. Later they're in a garden.
Copy !req
108. He remembers that there were gardens.
Copy !req
109. She asks him about his necklace,
Copy !req
110. the combat necklace he wore at the start
of the war that is to break out someday.
Copy !req
111. He makes up an explanation.
Copy !req
112. They stop before a redwood trunk
marked with historical dates.
Copy !req
113. She mentions a foreign name
he doesn't understand.
Copy !req
114. As in a dream, he points beyond
the tree trunk and hears himself say,
Copy !req
115. "That's where I come from"...
Copy !req
116. and falls back, exhausted.
Copy !req
117. Then another wave of time lifts him up.
Copy !req
118. They probably give him another shot.
Copy !req
119. Now she lies sleeping in the sun.
Copy !req
120. He thinks that,
in the time it took him
Copy !req
121. to return to her world, she died.
Copy !req
122. She wakes up.
He speaks to her again.
Copy !req
123. The truth being
too fantastic to be believed,
Copy !req
124. he mentions only the essentials:
A distant land,
Copy !req
125. a long way to travel.
Copy !req
126. She listens and doesn't laugh.
Copy !req
127. Is it the same day?
Copy !req
128. He no longer knows.
Copy !req
129. They'll take countless walks
like this one,
Copy !req
130. and an unspoken trust
will grow between them,
Copy !req
131. trust in its purest form.
Copy !req
132. No memories, no plans,
until the moment he senses
Copy !req
133. a barrier ahead.
Copy !req
134. Thus the first set of experiments
came to an end.
Copy !req
135. It was the starting point
for a series of tests
Copy !req
136. in which he'd meet her
at different times.
Copy !req
137. He meets her a few times
before their markings on the walls.
Copy !req
138. She welcomes him simply.
Copy !req
139. She calls him her ghost.
Copy !req
140. One day she seems frightened.
Copy !req
141. One day she leans over him.
Copy !req
142. He never knows
whether he moves toward her
Copy !req
143. or is pushed,
Copy !req
144. whether he's made it all up
or is only dreaming.
Copy !req
145. Around the 50th day,
Copy !req
146. they meet in a museum
filled with ageless animals.
Copy !req
147. Now their aim is perfect.
Copy !req
148. They can aim him at a given moment,
Copy !req
149. and he can stay there
and move around at ease.
Copy !req
150. She too seems to have adjusted.
Copy !req
151. She accepts the ways of this visitor
as a natural phenomenon,
Copy !req
152. how he comes and goes,
exists, talks,
Copy !req
153. laughs with her, falls silent,
listens to her,
Copy !req
154. and then vanishes.
Copy !req
155. Once back in the laboratory,
Copy !req
156. he sensed that something
had changed.
Copy !req
157. The camp director was there.
Copy !req
158. From what was said around him,
Copy !req
159. he gathered that after the success
of the experiments in the past,
Copy !req
160. they now meant
to launch him into the future.
Copy !req
161. His excitement
made him forget for a moment
Copy !req
162. that the meeting in the museum
was their last.
Copy !req
163. The future was better armored
than the past.
Copy !req
164. After several
even more grueling attempts,
Copy !req
165. he eventually caught
some waves of the world to come.
Copy !req
166. He crossed a planet transformed...
Copy !req
167. with Paris rebuilt...
Copy !req
168. 10,000 incomprehensible streets.
Copy !req
169. Others were waiting for him.
Copy !req
170. It was a brief encounter.
Copy !req
171. They clearly refused
this slag from another time.
Copy !req
172. He recited his lesson:
Copy !req
173. Since humanity had survived,
Copy !req
174. it couldn't refuse to its own past
the means of its own survival.
Copy !req
175. This sophism was taken
for fate in disguise.
Copy !req
176. They gave him a power unit
Copy !req
177. strong enough to set
all human industry in motion again.
Copy !req
178. Then the gates of the future
closed once again.
Copy !req
179. Shortly after his return,
Copy !req
180. he was transferred
to another part of the camp.
Copy !req
181. He knew his jailers
would not spare him.
Copy !req
182. He'd been a tool in their hands.
Copy !req
183. His childhood image
had served as bait to train him.
Copy !req
184. He'd lived up to their expectations
and played his part.
Copy !req
185. Now he only waited to be executed,
Copy !req
186. with the memory of a twice-lived
moment in time somewhere inside him.
Copy !req
187. Deep in this limbo, he received word
from the people of the future.
Copy !req
188. They too could travel through time,
Copy !req
189. and more easily.
Copy !req
190. There they were,
Copy !req
191. ready to accept him
as one of their own.
Copy !req
192. But he had a different request.
Copy !req
193. Rather than that pacified future,
Copy !req
194. he asked to be returned
to the world of his childhood
Copy !req
195. and that woman
who might be waiting for him.
Copy !req
196. Once again
on the observation deck at Orly...
Copy !req
197. on this warm Sunday before the war
where he could now stay,
Copy !req
198. he thought confusedly
how the child he'd been
Copy !req
199. must be there too,
watching the planes.
Copy !req
200. But first he sought out
a woman's face
Copy !req
201. at the end of the deck.
Copy !req
202. He ran toward her.
Copy !req
203. And when he recognized the man
who'd trailed him from the camp,
Copy !req
204. he realized there was
no escape from time,
Copy !req
205. and that that moment
he'd been granted to see as a child,
Copy !req
206. and that had obsessed him
forever after...
Copy !req
207. was the moment of his own death.
Copy !req