Showing posts with label time travel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label time travel. Show all posts

Chapter One: How Soon is Now? by Paul Carnahan

Title: How Soon Is Now?
Author: Paul Carnahan
Publication Date: June 10, 2024
Pages: 462
Genre: Contemporary Fantasy/Time Travel

A troubled ex-journalist launches a perilous mission into his own past after being recruited by a mysterious group of time travelers.

Luke Seymour uncovers the secrets of the eccentric Nostalgia Club as he battles to solve the riddle of their missing leader, honing his newly discovered – and dangerously addictive – talent for time travel and plunging ever deeper into his own time stream … where the terrible mistake that scarred his life is waiting.

Set in Glasgow and Edinburgh in the 1980s, 1990s and near-present, ‘How Soon Is Now?’ is a gripping new novel loaded with unforgettable characters, intricate storytelling, dark humour and a unique twist on the mechanics of time travel – all moving towards a powerful and emotional climax.

Available at:

Amazon U.S.: https://www.amazon.com/How-Soon-Now-powerful-travel-ebook/dp/B0D1RG2GL5 

Amazon U.K.: https://www.amazon.co.uk/How-Soon-Now-powerful-travel-ebook/dp/B0D1RG2GL5

First Chapter: 

Time tidies up after itself better than most of us realise, so I’ll be brief. I want to get everything down while I can still remember how it happened.

It started with a note: Blue ink on a slip of paper you might mistake for a Christmas cracker joke, with these words written in a plain and precise hand: ‘We know. We can help. Come to the Thrawn Laddie, Edinburgh, 7.30pm Wednesday.’

I was at the off-licence, digging for change in the outside pocket of my suit jacket, when I found the note. I was down to one suit that still fitted and wore it most days – I was, more or less, still keeping up appearances – so the note might have been curled up there for hours, days or even months. I glanced at it without really reading it and stuffed it back into my pocket, where it stayed until I made it back to the flat with the evening’s beer supply.

Once the bottles were safely in the fridge, I emptied my pockets, throwing a fistful of old train tickets and crumpled till receipts into the bin. The note nearly joined them, but something about the neatness of the script caught my eye, and I read it properly for the first time. ‘We can help’. Who could help? How could they help? Where had it come from? I left it on the kitchen table for the rest of the week; a minor mystery pinned under a beer bottle.

It was a long week. Alison still wasn’t talking to me after The Incident at our college reunion, and even Malcolm wouldn’t return my calls. I eyed the note every time I passed the kitchen table on my way to the fridge and, by Wednesday evening, had convinced myself a minor mystery might be just the distraction I needed. One Glasgow-to-Edinburgh train and a 20-minute cab ride later – an extravagance, considering I was trying to make my redundancy money last – I was standing on Morningside Road, outside the Thrawn Laddie.

That October night was cold and crisp, and a wall of heat hit me as I opened the door. The pub – a dusty jumble of antique clutter and old-world charm – had changed so little in the 30-plus years since it had been one of our preferred student haunts that I half-expected to spot the old gang huddled in our favourite corner, but the place was now a near-empty refuge for elderly locals and a few wine-sipping post-work professionals. The students had moved on.

I checked the clock above the bar: 7.10pm. I could fit in a couple of pints, if I was quick. I ordered a Guinness and settled at a single table with a clear view of the door. By 7.30, the only new arrivals had been a pair of old gents who went straight to their friends at the end of the bar without looking in my direction. I finished my drink, ordered another and took it to my table. My second glass was nearly empty when the bored young barman, a skinny youth labouring under a misjudged haircut, loomed over me.

‘Mind if I give your table a wipe?’ he said. I lifted my pint glass and drained the remnants.

He ran a damp cloth over the table, gathered my empties and asked: ‘Another Guinness?’

‘No, thanks.’ I slipped my hand into my pocket, and my thumb and forefinger pinched the little note. ‘Maybe you can help me with something, though. Has anyone been asking for me? I’m supposed to be meeting someone.’

He stared at me, waiting for something. He cocked an eyebrow – the one pierced by a silver stud – and I added: ‘Seymour. My name’s Luke Seymour.’

He shook his head. ‘No one’s been looking for you, as far as I know,’ he said. ‘Who are you meeting?’

‘I’m not sure.’ He looked puzzled, so I added: ‘It might not be a person. It could be a group.’

The barman stuffed the cloth into his back pocket. ‘Might be the crowd back in the function suite, then. Are you one of them?’

‘One of them?’

‘The good old days mob,’ he said. ‘They rent the back room on a Wednesday night. Had an early start this week for some reason. You could try giving them a knock.’

‘I might,’ I said. ‘Who are they?’

‘The Nostalgia Club, they call themselves. They might be who you’re after. Past the toilets and turn right. You can’t miss it. Follow your nose.’ He pointed towards a corridor leading off the end of the bar.

I thanked him, left my table and followed my nose. As I turned the corner, the barman gave a soft cough.

‘Word of advice,’ he said. ‘I’d knock first. Good luck.’

After a brief stop at the gents, I followed the corridor off to the right. At the end was a dark oak door bearing a brass plaque: ‘Function Suite’. Below that, stuck to the door with a strip of sticky tape, was a sheet of A4 on which was written, in the same precise hand as the note in my pocket: ‘NOSTALGIA CLUB. PRIVATE.’

There was muffled conversation on the other side of the door, submerged under the thin, scratchy strains of a wartime ballad. With my ear to the door, I could just about hear the voices, one male, one female, over the music.

‘—try again,’ said the woman. ‘What if he doesn’t —’

The man spoke over her in an even tone with traces of an accent I couldn’t place. ‘He will. We have to be—’

The ballad hit a crescendo of horns, strings and syrupy vocals, drowning out the voices.

I raised my hand, about to rap on the door, then let it fall to my side again, struck by sudden self-consciousness. What kind of help was I expecting to find in the back room of a Morningside pub? Things hadn’t been quite right for a while and the fits, as I thought of them, seemed to be increasing in frequency and intensity, but I hadn’t mentioned them to anyone – not even Alison. Especially not Alison. I suddenly felt foolish for travelling all that way hoping to solve a problem I couldn’t even admit existed, and was about to turn and leave when my fingers tightened into a fist. I rapped on the door, surprising myself with four sharp, firm knocks.

Before I could retreat, the music behind the door stopped. Voices – the man and woman now joined by others – overlapped. There was a thud, the sound of wood scraping on wood, then approaching footsteps. The door opened just enough for the long nose of a short, bald man to protrude into the hall. The nose’s owner peered up at me through jam-jar-thick spectacles and, with practised politeness, said: ‘This is a private gathering. You’ll find the toilets back along the corridor. Enjoy your evening.’

A faint smell of liquorice snaked through the gap and into the corridor. The bald man stretched his mouth into a tight smile and began to close the door. ‘Goodbye,’ he said. I grabbed the handle and pushed back. ‘No, sorry,’ I said. ‘I think I’m meant to be here. I found this note.’

I pressed my shoulder against the door while I reached into my pocket with my free hand, fished the note from my pocket and waved it in front of his nose. ‘Seven-thirty, Wednesday. That’s today.’

‘It is,’ he said, with a sniff. An expression of uncertainty passed across his face, and he looked over his shoulder.

‘Who is it, Marcus?’ the husky voice of the woman I’d heard from the other side of the door grew louder. Her head bobbed into view above his, her curious hazel eyes fixed on me. She placed her hands on the small man’s shoulders and steered him away from the door. ‘No need to be rude to our guest, Marcus,’ she said, pushing a tangle of hair, rich copper with a streak of grey, from her eyes. She had one of those faces – handsome and strong-jawed – that seemed immediately familiar, though I was sure we had never met. She opened the door wide, stepped aside to give me a clear view of the room, and there they were: The Nostalgia Club.

There were six of them in the function suite – a grand title for a spartan, parquet-floored room no bigger than 20 feet square and decorated in that queasy colour which can pass for either burnt ochre or decades of gathered nicotine. Marcus adjusted his spectacles and retreated to a small table, on which neat rows of glass vials, oil burners, incense sticks and tealight candles waited in front of a cardboard cigar box. A candle guttered, sending a ribbon of smoke across the room as he settled into his seat.

At another table to his left, a ginger-haired and heavily-bearded young man dressed in camouflage trousers and a black T-shirt winked at Marcus from behind an outsized laptop connected to a pair of speakers. ‘Thought you said he wasn’t coming?’ said the younger man.

‘I said he might not,’ grumbled Marcus.

A tiny, owlish old woman perched on one of the chairs lined up against the wall lifted the grizzled Cairn Terrier resting in her lap, took the dog’s paw in her hand and waggled it at me in a welcoming wave. ‘We knew he was coming, didn’t we, Biscuit?’ she said, bending to kiss the dog’s head.

Beside her, an impassive woman in her early 50s, smartly dressed, immaculately made-up and without a single blonde hair out of place, surveyed me silently.

At the centre of the room, hands gripping the metal frame of an incongruous sun lounger in an eye-watering floral pattern, stood an elegant man of about 35, slim and dapper in jeans, tweed jacket and herringbone waistcoat. His close-cropped hair and neat goatee framed a face dominated by large, inquisitive brown eyes that flicked between me and the woman who had opened the door. ‘Now, Ruth, aren’t you going to invite our guest in?’ he said. His voice was musical, lightly accented and tinged with a touch of World Service RP.

The red-haired woman held out a hand in welcome. ‘Of course. Come in, please,’ she said. ‘I’m Ruth. Welcome to the Nostalgia Club. Would you like to join us?’

As I hesitated in the doorway, Ruth placed a hand on my waist and guided me into the room, nudging the door shut with her foot. She was tall and walked with a slight stoop, as if trying to disguise her height. Spotting the slip of paper in my hand, she said: ‘I’m glad you got our note. We were starting to worry you weren’t going to find it.’

‘Or wouldn’t be mental enough to come all this way even if you did,’ grinned the man with the ginger beard.

I dropped the note back into my pocket. ‘I’m in the right place, then?’

The man with the goatee almost danced towards me, arms outstretched. ‘You most certainly are,’ he said, shaking my hand vigorously. ‘We’re delighted to see you at last. You must have a lot of questions.’

‘A few,’ I said.

‘Excellent! We’ll answer as many as we can, as soon as you’re settled.’

Ruth patted my arm, took a spare chair from the row along the wall and placed it beside the gaudy sun lounger to face the group. ‘Please,’ she said. ‘Make yourself comfortable. Can I take your jacket?’

I shook my head, but I sat. The goateed man studied me with undisguised delight while Ruth stood at his side. ‘This is Mahdi,’ she said. ‘He can probably explain better than any of us what this is all about.’

‘I wouldn’t go as far as that, but I’ll do my best,’ said Mahdi. ‘How can we help you?’

That was a bigger question than he knew, but I kept my voice steady and restricted myself, for the time being, to the basics. ‘You could tell me who you are and what this note means,’ I said. ‘And if you can let me know how it ended up in my pocket, that’d be great, too.’

Mahdi laughed and clapped his hands. ‘That should give us enough to begin with, Mr Seymour.’

‘You know who I am, then?’

‘To an extent,’ said Mahdi.

‘Why don’t we start with the note?’ said Ruth. ‘It ended up in your pocket because we put it there.’

‘You could’ve just handed it to me – or introduced yourselves and said whatever you wanted to say, like normal people.’

Mahdi and Ruth exchanged a glance, and Mahdi said: ‘That didn’t seem like a good idea at the time.’

‘Why not?’

‘You didn’t seem to be in the mood for introductions,’ said Ruth.

‘Or for standing upright or walking in a straight line,’ said Mahdi. Ruth gave his hand a sharp tap and said: ‘We decided, under the circumstances, it might be better to leave the note with you and hope to meet you properly when you were in a better frame of mind.’

‘When was this, exactly?’ I asked.

‘Three weeks ago,’ said Ruth.

The reunion was the last time I’d been in Edinburgh. ‘Benson’s?’

‘Bingo,’ she said.

The few clear memories I had of that night were enough to leave me cringing over whatever other horrors I might have forgotten. No wonder Alison and Malcolm weren’t talking to me.

‘You weren’t there the whole night, were you?’ I asked, my cheeks reddening.

‘Oh, no,’ said Mahdi, shaking his head. ‘Just long enough to deliver our message.’

My fingers reached to toy with the note in my pocket. ‘How many of these notes did you hand out?’

‘Only one,’ said Mahdi. ‘We’re very careful about who we invite.’

‘You can’t be that picky if you invited me.’

‘No need to be modest,’ said Mahdi. ‘We’ve been waiting for you.’

‘Why?’ I said. The room was uncomfortably warm, their attention made me uneasy, and my voice rose in irritation and discomfort. ‘You still haven’t told me who you are.’

‘We’re the Nostalgia Club.’

‘Then you’ve been waiting for the wrong guy. Nostalgia’s not my thing.’

Mahdi bent forward, hands on his calves, his eyes fixed on mine. ‘Are you sure, Mr Seymour? We’re all partial to an occasional wander down memory lane, aren’t we?’

‘I try to avoid it.’

‘You do?’ he said, sounding surprised. Ruth stepped in front of him and said: ‘We’ll explain everything, I promise, but perhaps you should meet everyone first.’

I checked my watch. ‘And then you’ll tell me what this is all about?’

‘We will,’ said Ruth. ‘You’ve come this far. Hear us out?’

I folded my arms and leaned back in the chair. ‘I’ll try.’

‘Splendid,’ said Mahdi, stepping away and raising his arm with a flourish, like a ringmaster about to present the next incredible act. ‘Allow me to introduce you to our little group. The charming gentleman you met at the door is Marcus Millar, doyen of the olfactory arts, and beside him is our master of music and sound, Mr Duncan Creighton.’

Marcus harumphed from behind his spectacles, while Duncan gave me a salute.

Mahdi dodged around the sun lounger to the two women seated against the wall. ‘No meeting of the Nostalgia Club would be complete without Margaret Boyle and her charming friend Biscuit,’ he said, tickling the terrier’s chin. ‘And beside them, we have Miss Barbara Kinsella.’

Barbara gave a curt nod, while Margaret offered a puckish smile: ‘Nice to meet you, son,’ she said. ‘We hope you’ll stay a while.’

‘Finally,’ said Mahdi, ‘we have Ruth Temple and myself, Mahdi Azmeh. We are the Nostalgia Club.’

‘Hello,’ I said, crossing my legs. ‘Nice to meet you all. Why am I here?’

Mahdi sat in the spare seat beside Barbara and, for a moment, stared at me in silence. ‘You really don’t know?’

‘I really, genuinely and absolutely haven’t a clue. I’m not even sure why I came.’ I stopped and waited for his response, but he continued to stare at me. ‘Maybe I was just bored,’ I said.

‘Maybe,’ mused Mahdi. ‘Or perhaps something compelled you. An impulse, possibly? An idea that seemed to arrive from out of nowhere?’

He was closer to the truth than I was ready to admit. ‘The note says you can help me.’

‘I certainly hope we can.’

‘With what?’

His foot tapped against the hard floor. ‘How would you like us to help you?’

Duncan sighed loudly and stretched out his long legs. ‘Cut the cryptic shite, Mahdi,’ he said. ‘You can see the guy’s not into it.’

Mahdi turned to him and dipped his head in lieu of a bow. ‘Thank you, Mr Creighton. Direct as always.’ To me, he added: ‘What if I said we can help you make sense of a few things and set you on an interesting new path? Would that clarify matters?’

‘Not much,’ I said. ‘I’m quite happy with the path I’m on, thanks.’

‘Are you, though?’

That was enough to ignite the irritation that had been building since I had entered the room. I pushed back my chair, rose and marched to the door. I was reaching for the handle when Ruth called out behind me: ‘We can help you. We really can.’

I turned the handle.

‘You feel like your life isn’t quite your own, don’t you?’ she said. ‘That you’ve ended up somewhere you’re not supposed to be.’

I kept my fingers on the handle, my back to her.

‘Sometimes you feel like you’re not really here at all. And sometimes you go back, don’t you?’

‘We can help,’ the note had said. Perhaps they could.

I turned to face her. ‘I haven’t been feeling right lately. There’s been a lot going on.’ My hand clasped and unclasped the door handle. ‘I shouldn’t have come.’

In just a few paces, Mahdi was at my side. ‘You did the right thing. We’re here to help.’ He gently eased my fingers from the handle and ushered me back into the room. ‘Please, sit.’

I sat, and he settled into the chair opposite. ‘Forgive me – we seem to have been talking at cross purposes. I assumed you were at least somewhat familiar with our activities. I’ll try to explain.’

‘Properly,’ said Ruth.

‘Of course,’ said Mahdi. ‘A few things first.’

Marcus took off his glasses, laid them on the table and rubbed his eyes: ‘Can we do it without the theatrics?’ he said. ‘He’ll stay, or he won’t stay. Just tell him, and we’ll find out which it’s to be.’

‘I’m with Marcus on that one,’ said Duncan. ‘Just this once.’

Mahdi ignored them. ‘Some people are born with talents,’ he said. ‘Some are gifted artists, some have a beautiful voice, some are extraordinary athletes. Others might have a gift for persuasion, for mimicry, for knitting, for mathematics, or poetry, or—’

Ruth stood behind my chair and leaned to half-whisper in my ear, loud enough for Mahdi to hear: ‘He’s going to get to the point any minute now.’

‘Of course I am,’ said Mahdi. ‘Many gifted individuals discover their talents early. Others bloom later in life, thanks to a chance encounter or a helping hand. Some talents are so rare, so specialised that, without careful nurturing, a person might never even realise—’

‘Oh, for fuck’s sake,’ said Duncan. ‘This could take all night. Cut to the chase: We’re time travellers. That’s what this is. We’re time travellers.’

I laughed, but no one else did. ‘Time travellers?’

‘Yes,’ said Mahdi with more than a hint of pride. ‘We travel—’

‘—in time,’ I interrupted. ‘I get it.’ I waited for the laugh, the wink, the smirk, but it never came. They stared at me in rapt expectation. ‘Like some kind of role-playing game?’ I said.

‘No. It’s not a game,’ said Mahdi.

‘Definitely not,’ said Ruth.

‘A joke, then?’ I demanded.

‘It’s no joke, son,’ said Margaret. ‘That’s what we do.’

I looked from face to face and, in as neutral a tone as I could summon, said: ‘You’re time travellers? All of you?’

They all nodded.

‘Even the dog?’

Margaret giggled and bounced Biscuit on her lap. ‘Don’t be daft. He’s just a dog.’

‘Okay,’ I said, contemplating the safest and fastest way to exit a room full of lunatics and retreat to a safe pub and a steadying drink. ‘You’re time travellers from the year three million who like to hang about in the back room of an Edinburgh pub every Wednesday night?’

‘We’re not from the future,’ said Mahdi.

‘Outer space?’

‘No,’ said Ruth. ‘We’re all very much from here, now. We’re not spacemen from the future or anything like that. We’re just normal people, who—’

She paused, looked at the ceiling, and then swallowed hard. ‘Travel in time,’ she concluded, clearly aware how ridiculous it sounded. ‘That’s why we’re all here.’

‘All right,’ I said. ‘Let’s have a look at it, then.’

‘At what?’ said Ruth, baffled.

‘Your time machine. Where is it?’ Besides Duncan’s laptop and speakers, the only equipment in the room was a whirring mobile air purifier close to Marcus’s table.

‘We don’t have a time machine,’ chuckled Mahdi. ‘Popular fiction has misled you on the mechanics of time travel, Mr Seymour. You won’t find any elaborate Victorian devices or bigger-on-the-inside phone booths here.’

Duncan frowned and muttered: ‘Police box. It’s a police box.’

‘Or police boxes,’ continued Mahdi. ‘Nothing of that sort. You’re already travelling in the most efficient time machine of all.’

I looked down at my belly straining against my slightly-too-tight trousers.

‘The human body,’ said Marcus, helpfully.

‘Yes, I get that,’ I said, opting – for the moment – to humour them. Now that I was in the middle of it, it might at least make a funny story to help break the ice with Alison and Malcolm. ‘How’s it done, then? You just make a wish and go flying off into the middle of next week?’

‘Not next week,’ said Marcus. ‘Or the week after. Not even as far as tomorrow.’

‘So you’re time travellers, but you don’t even go into the future?’ I scoffed.

‘Sadly not, other than by the usual means,’ said Mahdi. ‘We’re obliged to move forward a second at a time, just like everyone else.’ I opened my mouth to speak, but he carried on: ‘Think of it this way: We’ve already created our path from the past to now, so we can follow it back. None of us has been to the future, so there is no path to follow.’

It made as much sense as anything else I’d heard so far. ‘Fine,’ I said. ‘So you only travel into the past. Are you going to tell me how you think you do it?’

‘We don’t think we do it,’ said Marcus. ‘We do it.’

I pointed towards the sun lounger at the centre of the room. ‘If you time travel in your own bodies, I assume that’s got something to do with it. What is it, hypnotism?’

‘It’s not hypnotism,’ said Ruth. ‘It really happens. You’re still looking for reasons not to believe it.’

‘I’ve got plenty of reasons not to believe it. It’s ludicrous. Isn’t it?’

‘You think so?’ said Duncan, looking up from his laptop. ‘Why?’

‘Because time travel’s impossible. Even if it wasn’t impossible, it’s hardly likely to have been discovered by a bunch of oddballs in the back room of a pub.’

‘We didn’t discover it,’ said Duncan. ‘We just use it. None taken, by the way.’

‘None what?’

‘Offence. For the “oddballs” thing.’

‘Oh, right. Sorry. Anyway – time travel? It’s impossible.’

‘It’s not impossible,’ said Duncan. ‘You’re doing it right now.’

I thought for a moment. ‘Because I’m moving forward into the future? That’s not time travel. That’s just living. Everyone does that.’

‘But not everyone can do what we do,’ said Mahdi. ‘We aren’t constrained by the same laws as everyone else.’

Ruth crouched at the side of my chair. ‘What I said earlier – about feeling like you’re not quite here … it made sense, didn’t it?’

‘No.’ I stifled a shiver and struggled, again, to evade thoughts I’d been avoiding for months. ‘You think I can do this time travel thing as well, don’t you? That’s why you wanted me to come here.’

‘Yes,’ said Ruth.

‘I think I’d know if I was a time traveller,’ I said, forcing a laugh.

Mahdi looked at me with discomforting intensity. ‘Would you? Perhaps you just haven’t found the right conditions so far. That’s what our little club is for – together, we nurture and amplify our talents. We can do that for you, if you’ll let us help you. And, if you find you like it, well—’

He stopped and exchanged a glance with Ruth. ‘Perhaps you might be able to help us with a little problem of our own.’ He walked to the sun lounger and sat on it, bouncing gently. ‘You’re sceptical, I can see that. Try it for yourself, and I promise everything will become clear. Your past is waiting to be explored, Mr Seymour. All of it.’

I could have left, right then. I could have walked out, closed the door behind me and never seen any of them again. But I didn’t. Instead, I asked: ‘All of it? What if I don’t want all of it?’

‘I understand,’ said Ruth, ‘but don’t worry. You choose where you want to go. No nasty surprises, I promise.’

‘You’ll love it,’ said Margaret. ‘Just take a wee lie down. It’s easy.’

The orange-and-purple floral pattern on the lounger was a migraine waiting to happen. ‘On that thing? You think I can just lie on that and pop off to Culloden, or the Stone Age or … wherever?’

Mahdi stood, motioning for me to lie down. ‘Nothing as dramatic as that. Our travels have their limits. For now, we could try something simple. You were asking earlier how we managed to pass you our little invitation. Would you like to take a look?’

The last train home was still hours away – and lying down on the lounger might make a good punchline for my story. ‘Why not?’ I said, rising from the chair. ‘What do I have to do?’

‘Just lie back, and we’ll guide you through the rest,’ said Ruth, switching off the air purifier.

‘Does the sun lounger go back in time as well?’

Mahdi patted its frame. ‘No, no. The lounger stays here. Now, please. Lie down. Relax.’

I settled into the lounger, which proved unexpectedly comfortable. Duncan’s fingers flew over the keys and trackpad of his laptop. At the same time, Marcus took two vials of liquid from his collection, mixing drops from each into a slim tube, which he plugged with a plastic stopper, shook and held up to the light before adding another drop from each of the vials.

‘Please place your arms at your sides and close your eyes,’ said Mahdi.

‘Am I going to concentrate on your voice and then feel very, very sleepy?’ I asked, closing my eyes.

‘If you wish,’ said Mahdi. ‘The main thing is to let your mind detach from the here and now, to slip loose while focusing on your destination. Benson’s, three weeks ago.’

He paced around the sun lounger. ‘I’ll do my best to guide you along the first steps, but you’ll be doing most of the work, such as it is.’

‘Okay. What can I expect on the other side?’

‘You’ll arrive within yourself as you were three weeks ago. Inside, looking out. The best seat in the house, you might say. But first, Mr Millar and Mr Creighton will create the appropriate conditions to help guide your trip. Are you ready, gentlemen?’

I opened one eye to watch as Marcus poured four drops of liquid from the tube he had just prepared onto one of his oil burners, then lit a tealight beneath it. Duncan pressed a key on his laptop, and sound erupted from the speakers. He winced and lowered the volume, reducing the burst of noise to something more recognisable: A hum of conversation, laughter, the clink of glasses and the occasional chime of a till. Bar room sounds.

‘Close both eyes, please, Mr Seymour,’ chided Mahdi. ‘You’ll find the whole experience more rewarding if you follow my instructions.’

‘Sorry. Instruct away.’

‘And try to take it seriously.’ He lowered his voice, and I focused on his soft footsteps as he padded around the lounger. ‘Listen to my words, but focus on the sounds and smells we’ve provided for you. Use them to draw yourself to your destination. Visualise it. Envelope yourself in it.’

I couldn’t help myself. ‘That’s just remembering. Memory isn’t time travel.’

‘Concentrate, Mr Seymour,’ said Mahdi. His footsteps stopped, and I could feel his breath on my ear. ‘Memory is where time travel begins,’ he said. ‘It’s the fuel for what we do. Tell me, Mr Seymour, do you ever go to the gym?’

I kept my eyes closed. ‘Look at me. What do you think?’

‘Perhaps not. But the principles are the same – this is like exercising a muscle. It may be a struggle at first, but you will gain in ability and strength each time the exercise is repeated. Short hops will be enough of a challenge at the start, but you’ll quickly manage – crave, even? – more.’

The smell of the room was changing. The liquorice scent was gone, replaced by warm aromas of hops, whisky and hot breath. A question came to me – a ridiculous one, but I asked it anyway. ‘How do I get back?’

‘So you believe you might actually go somewhere?’ Even with my eyes closed, I could sense the smile on his face. ‘We’re making progress.’

‘I didn’t say I believed it,’ I said, sitting up and opening my eyes. ‘But if I did, how would I get back?’

‘Don’t worry. It takes only a slight effort of will to return to your starting point. In any case, I’ll be here to guide you back, if required. Lie back and close your eyes, please.’

I shuffled in the sun lounger, closed my eyes and turned my attention to the filigree of sound flowing from Duncan’s speakers. With enough concentration, I could pick out individual strands and found myself switching, as though using a TV remote to change channels, from the chiming of the till to the chatter of the drinkers and then the noise of feet on creaking boards. New sounds emerged: particular voices, a distinctive laugh, the clunk and swish of the door opening. The smells became richer and more complex, too, with new notes drifting to the fore: a hint of aftershave, rain drying on an old coat, stale smoke on a passing stranger’s breath. There was something else – a savoury scent I could almost taste. Light and shadow flickered across my closed eyelids.

‘Something’s cooking,’ I said, and my voice sounded faint and far away.

‘Is it really?’ said Mahdi. ‘What do you think it is, Mr Seymour? Can you tell? Smell it. It’s close, isn’t it?’

I chased the scent past wisps of furniture polish and sliced lemon until I pinned it down. Bread, butter and cheese heating together. ‘Cheese toastie,’ I said – or thought I said. A drowsy weightlessness was spreading up and down my spine, rippling across my limbs and into my hands and feet. 

Mahdi’s voice had taken on a peculiar echo. ‘You’re nearly there. Keep going. Further.’

My entire body was tingling, filled with a familiar and not-unpleasant sensation of simultaneously floating forward and sinking back, swaddled in swarms of humming static. ‘Breathe in,’ said Mahdi, from an impossible distance away. ‘What do you hear? What do you smell? What do you see? Where are you?’

Footsteps circled me. ‘Take a deep breath and hold it for as long as you can.’

There was a chill to the air as it hit my lungs. I held it there, warming it in my chest for what felt like hours, until Mahdi spoke again. ‘And … breathe … out…’

I exhaled slowly through my mouth, drifting further from the lounger, the function suite and the ties of the present. When I breathed in through my nose, the tang of bubbling cheese made my nostrils twitch. That toastie was close to burning. The floating feeling spread across my chest, out to my arms, down my legs and across my scalp in tingling waves. Cold air prickled at the back of my neck and blew past my ears, becoming a rising wind which drowned out the sounds of the bar and bloomed into a howling rush of pummelling energy which threatened to whirl me around and knock the air out of my lungs. Then, as quickly as it had arrived, the roaring tumult whipped across me and was gone.

And I’m here.

About the Author


Paul Carnahan was born in Glasgow, Scotland, and grew up in the new town of Cumbernauld. After studying journalism in Edinburgh, he began a decades-long career in local and national newspapers.

‘How Soon Is Now?’ is his first novel. The second, the Britpop-era romance ‘End of a Century’, will be released early in 2025, and a third is currently a work in progress.

Website & Social Media:

Website www.paulcarnahan.com 

Twitter https://twitter.com/pacarnahan  

Instagram https://www.instagram.com/paulcarnahan6/ 

Goodreads https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/211423352-how-soon-is-now

The Water Is Wide by Laura Vosika


Title: THE WATER IS WIDE
Author: Laura Vosika
Publisher: Gabriel’s Horn Press
Pages: 451
Genre: Time Travel/Historical Fiction

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BOOK BLURB:
After his failure to escape back to his own time, Shawn is sent with Niall on the Bruce’s business. They criss-cross Scotland and northern England, working for the Bruce and James Douglas, as they seek ways to get Shawn home to Amy and his own time.
Returning from the Bruce’s business, to Glenmirril, Shawn finally meets the mysterious Christina. Despite his vow to finally be faithful to Amy, his feelings for Christina grow.
In modern Scotland, having already told Angus she’s pregnant, Amy must now tell him Shawn is alive and well—in medieval Scotland. Together, they seek a way to bring him back across time.
They are pursued by Simon Beaumont, esteemed knight in the service of King Edward, has also passed between times. Having learned that Amy’s son will kill him—he seeks to kill the infant James first.
The book concludes with MacDougall’s attack on Glenmirril, Amy and Angus’s race to be there and Shawn’s attempt to reach the mysterious tower through the battling armies.
CHAPTER ONE
Bannockburn, Present
Angus warmed the car while Amy used the restroom. He tapped gloved fingers on the steering wheel, a tight frown creasing his forehead. After a minute, he pulled out his phone and dialed his partner on Inverness’s police force. “Clive,” he said, moments later. “Here’s a riddle. What’s the link between Shawn Kleiner, twenty-first century missing person, and Niall Campbell, fourteenth century laird?” His mind flitted around Rose, Amy’s mentor, teacher, and friend. Think outside the box, she had told him.
But Kleiner was not living in two centuries, regardless of his cracks at his last concert.
“Two of a kind,” Clive said promptly. “If Kleiner’d lived in Niall’s time, he’d’a’ mooned MacDougall, too.” He laughed. “Seriously, MacLean, Kleiner called himself Niall Campbell—the day she found him, and again at his last concert. You know that.”
“Seriously,” Angus said. “When she told me she was pregnant, I thought that’s what she’d been hiding. But she just found out her student has an identical twin, and it’s got her agitated over Niall Campbell.”
There was a brief silence before Clive’s voice dropped. “What’s he to do with her student’s twin?”
“Aye,” replied Angus. “It’s like when we talked to her at the hotel. She’s not saying something. She knows a great deal about Campbell but evades when I ask for her sources.” He cleared his throat. “Being pregnant doesn’t explain her saying Kleiner’s never coming back. Why do these twins get her upset about a medieval knight?”
“I’ll think on it,” Clive said. “Though how I’d even begin to research such a thing, I’d not know. Ancestor? Family curse? Buried treasure?”
“I’d say don’t be ridiculous,” Angus said, “but I can think of no rational connection.” Watching the door, he lowered his voice. “There’s something else. I didn’t want to say it before. I feel disloyal.”
“If she’s lying, you’ve no reason to,” Clive said
“You’ve met her,” Angus shot back. “Do you believe for a minute she’s a bad sort?”
“No,” Clive said. “But clearly she’s hiding something.”
“Why does a good person hide things?” Angus asked. “Because the timing of her break up with him has been bothering me for a time now.”
“I’ve been thinking on it, too,” Clive said. “And it can’t be as she told you.”
“You see the problem, too.” Angus drummed his fingers on the steering wheel, watching the door. “She said they broke up the night before he disappeared.”
“Witnesses say he spent that evening playing harp at the re-enactment in Bannockburn. His phone was with her, over two hundred kilometers away at the hotel in Inverness.”
“Could he have called her from someone else’s phone?”
“Possible,” Clive said. “But unlikely. Hold on.”
“I’ll have to hang up if she comes out.” Angus listened to the soft shuffle of paper over the line, and muffled tones of Clive speaking to someone. The door of the pub swung open. He took a quick breath, but Sinead’s family emerged. He relaxed against the seat, listening to the girls chatter as they passed. He watched them, identical in their black, bouncing curls, dark eyes, and sprinkle of freckles, and smiled.
“Here,” Clive said. “That Rob fella said she broke up with him in the tower.”
Angus frowned. “I don’t remember that.”
“Pat down the hall overheard him and mentioned it to me but last week.”
“But that can’t be,” Angus objected. “That was two weeks before the re-enactment.”
“He was quite put out that they were back on such good terms. Very good. Kissing-backstage-after-the-concert good.”
Angus frowned, less than pleased with the image himself. For a fleeting moment, he sympathized with Rob. “So ’tis odd she’d break up with him again. Apart from the lack of a phone or any witness to him using one.” He watched the twins argue beside their car, wondering which was Sinead. One girl grinned at him, waved, and hopped into the vehicle.
“Angus?”
“What?” Angus snapped his attention back to Clive.
“I asked, are you sure you want to be involved in this?”
“Don’t think badly of her,” Angus said. “I’ve always had a good sense for character, and I don’t believe she’s done anything wrong.” He watched the second girl stomp around her family’s car.
“She seems a good sort,” Clive agreed. “But you’re on shaky ground already, seeing someone you were assigned to on a case.”
“Aye,” Angus admitted.
“Have you found out why she believes he’s not coming back?”
“I’ve not asked,” Angus said. “I’m not here as an inspector.”
“Come now, Angus, you ought to know what you’re dealing with.”
“She’ll tell me when she’s ready.”
“She’s suggesting he’s dead! You’re losing your professional sense for personal reasons!”
“I am,” Angus sighed. “But I like being with her.”
“You mightn’t have a choice, in the end,” Clive warned.
The pub door swung open again. “Text me if you think of anything.” Feeling guilty, Angus stowed the phone as Amy appeared, her white hat snug over thick, black hair spilling the length of her back. She smiled. He jumped from the car, rounding it to open her door. He desperately wanted her in his life, the Glenmirril Lady who’d brought his feelings gloriously alive after eight dormant years.

Stirling, Present

“Alec, what are these?”
Alec looked up to see his intern holding a medieval helmet, sword, and heavy puddle of iron. “Chain mail?” Alec’s forehead wrinkled. “Where’d you find that, now?”
“The old lockers down at the end,” the boy answered.
“Those haven’t been used in months,” Alec replied. “Did you find paperwork on them?”
The boy shook his head. Alec swiveled his chair to a cabinet and dug through. He pulled a file, read it, frowning, and reached for the helmet atop the pile in the lad’s arms. It tumbled from his hands, its weight surprising him. Dirt fell from it, dusting his desk. He brushed at it, smearing his report, before lifting the helmet and irritably shaking filth to the floor. The boy waited, silent but for the clink of chain as he shifted under the weight of mail and sword.
Alec ran his finger along the swirls of artwork adorning the helmet’s edges. He scratched at a dark fleck, before realization hit him. “It’s blood!” He yanked his hand back. The helmet rattled to his desk. “Whose are these?” He snatched the papers from under the crusty helmet. “The re-enactment,” he murmured. He looked up to the boy. “I’m no expert, but they look real.”
“My Uncle Brian works in the Creagsmalan archives,” the boy volunteered. “Will I call him?”
Alec pondered only a moment, before nodding. “And find out what happened to whoever owns these.



Excerpt Reveal: ‘In Time for You’ by Chris Karlsen


In Time for YouXXTitle: In Time for You
Author: Chris Karlsen
Publisher: Books to Go Now
Genre: Time-travel romance
While horseback riding in the English countryside, sisters Electra and Emily Crippen find themselves trapped in a tear in time. Thrown back to 1357 England and caught by a local noble, they are in a place that is home but as frightening and unfamiliar as an alien world would be. With no idea how the tear in time came about, the one thing they do know is: they must stay together and stay near to where the event took place in hopes of discovering the way back to their modern life. That certain need to stay together is the first certainty taken from them when one sister is forced to remain in England and one is sent miles away to Wales by royal order.
There is one other hope for help the sisters don’t know exists. It’s Electra’s lover, Roger Marchand. A time traveler himself, he never told her of his past. When he realizes what has happened to the sisters, he enlists the help of a scientist friend to help him open the suspected passageway through time. Any effort to save Electra and Emily will likely cost him his life. This was the time Roger came from, a time when his country, France, was at war with England. If he is discovered on English soil while searching for the sisters, he will either be killed or taken prisoner of war. Any risk is worth saving the life of the woman he loves.
EXCERPT
While she ate, the button on Electra’s sleeve fell out of the frog loop. She didn’t hook the button again, reaching for her wine instead. The sleeve pulled back from her wrist to expose her watch, which she hadn’t thought to remove.
“What is that?” Simon asked and pointed to her Seiko.
“A watch.” What a bizarre question. There wasn’t a corner of the planet that people didn’t recognize a wristwatch.
A frown slowly formed and he stretched across Emily and took hold of Electra’s hand to tug it toward him for a better look. He turned her hand over and in a matter of seconds had the clasp undone.
He brought the candle in front of his trencher closer and held the watch under it. “What do the numbers mean?”
“It’s a clock, a miniature timepiece you wear on your wrist.”
From his expression, the explanation puzzled him. “Do they not have candle clocks in this Greenland you claim you’re from?”
How to explain the abundance of various clocks to a man who apparently has no context for the anything beyond a candle clock or similar ancient means of telling time?
“Are you saying you’ve never seen a clock?” Emily asked.
“One like this? No, I have not.”
Emily bent her head nearer Electra and whispered, “Are you thinking what I am?”
“Sadly, yes.”
Simon ran his finger over the watch face. “These small digits, what is their meaning?”
“It’s the date and year: 5.14.15.”
He shook his head. “What year is 15?”
“2015, of course.”
“You are mad. It’s the year of our Lord, 1357.”
“What year were you born?”
“1327, why?”
Electra didn’t care for the speed which Simon answered. She held onto the small hope this was some odd reality show and that he’d stumble or hesitate before coming up with a year. “No reason, I was just curious.” She turned to Richard who’d been chatting with the serving girl. She tapped his arm. Getting his attention she asked, “Richard, what year is this?”
He tipped his head like a dog hearing a strange noise. She assumed he too thought her mad for asking. “1357. Do you measure your years differently in your native country?”
“Yes, it’s a different time there.” A different world. She looked over at Emily, who’d been listening. The color had drained from her face.
For both their sakes, Electra fought to keep from falling apart in front of the whole room. She failed and began to tremble uncontrollably. She balled her hands into fists and turned from Simon to Richard. “I need to go outside. I feel sick.”
“I’d like to go too,” Emily told Simon.
“I’ll go as well.” He smiled. “Just to make certain nothing untoward befalls you.”
#
About the Author
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Chris Karlsen is a Chicago native. Her family moved to Los Angeles when she was in her late teens where she later studied at UCLA. She graduated with a Business Degree. The daughter of a history professor and a mother who was a voracious reader, she grew up with a love of history and books.
Her parents were also passionate about traveling and passed their passion onto Chris. Once bitten with the travel bug, Chris spent most of her adult life visiting the places she’d read about and that fascinated her. Her travels have taken her Europe, the Near East, and North Africa, in addition to most of the United States. She most frequently visited England and France, where several of her books are set.
After college, Chris spent the next twenty-five years in law enforcement with two agencies. Harboring a strong desire to write since her teens, upon retiring from police work, Chris decided to pursue her writing career. She writes three different series. Her historical romance series is called, Knights in Time. Her romantic thriller series is Dangerous Waters, and he latest book, Silk, is book one in her mystery/suspense series, The Bloodstone series.
She currently lives in the Pacific Northwest with her husband and five wild and crazy rescue dogs.
My website is: http://chriskarlsen.com/