From the Other Side of the End of the World
A time travel story for @inklings-challenge.
Thanks to @awesomebutunpractical, @thatscarletflycatcher, and @rogerhamleys for beta help that made it possible to finish this.
I. Josephine Forester to Rachel Forester
Agril 19, 551 T.E.
Grimsfell, North Arza
Dear Rachel,
At last! The war is over! I know my history as well as anybody, but it still took me by surprise. I sobbed with relief when news of the treaty came. We haven’t heard any shelling for three days. No more wounded have arrived. It seems like a miracle.
But the work is far from done. Grimsby Hall is still filled with wounded soldiers, and we hard-working nurses are kept busy from morning til night. It will be weeks before some of these boys are well enough to travel, and years until they are completely healed, if they ever are at all.
The suffering I’ve seen! There is little even modern medical knowledge can do to ease their pain. Their war machines are primitive—cannons, tanks, machine guns—but they've wrought destruction on the land unlike anything we could imagine in our time. If I hadn’t seen our future, I’m not sure I could believe this land could be healed, that the world could ever find peace. But I have seen it, and the hope it inspires is the greatest gift I can give to these people.
Now, more than ever, I know that I've been called here. My research will be invaluable to history, but more than that, I feel a connection to these people, this place, this time. This is where I'm meant to serve.
I have a connection to you, too, of course. Your letters always make me feel I'm right there with you. Write back soon. I want to know about everything.
Love,
Josephine
P.S. I’ve shared a couple of the stories you wrote me with some of my patients. I hope you don’t mind—they need cheering up, and there's nothing in your stories that requires knowledge of the future. They very much enjoy them.
II. Rachel Forester to Josephine Forester
Agril 32, 771 T.E
Variby University
Dear Josie,
I know it’s taken me ages to write back, but the life of a college girl is a whirlwind. I made a list of all the things I’ve done this week, so you can see that I barely had time to breathe.
Two papers, three exams, and a presentation about the life cycle of the Aribanian tree frog.
Airball playoffs and championship. (I scored twenty-eight points!)
Trip to Grimsby. Twelve of us in one car. Visited the war museum. No pictures of you. Try to pose for any cameras if you see them.
Climbed the bell tower after Ferdie dared me to. Am now the hero of the school.
It sounds terribly shallow compared to what you're going through, but if I didn’t do all these things, where would I get the charming anecdotes that fill my letters and raise your poor, war-weary spirits? Even though the war is over, it still sounds dreadful. I don’t know how you manage it. At least you'll be home soon—it's a little over a month, right?
If I ever had hopes of becoming a time traveler, your letters would burn that dream right out of me. I'm perfectly happy in the safe and cozy modern day. I'll stay here in comfort and leave the do-gooding to you.
I’m glad you could make some use out of my stories. I’ve half a mind to tell that worthless university magazine editor that they’ve proven to be truly timeless. I’ll send another one along with this letter. Let your soldiers read it to their hearts’ content.
I could tell you loads more, but I’ve got play practice in an hour. I’ve been cast as Elsie in Less Boring, and I’ve got to learn my lines. (I've been laughing my head off. Darrin Royston is a genius).
I promise I’ll write more promptly next time.
Your sister,
Rachel
III. Josephine Forester to Rachel Forester
Maj 3, 551 T.E.
Grimsfell, North Arza
Dear Rachel,
It's always good to know things are going well for you. You're right—my term is over in less than a month. I had almost forgotten. It seems impossible. There's so much I still have to do.
I don't have time to give a proper response, except to tell you that I gave your story to the most voracious reader among my patients, and he's already finished it. It's exactly the type of story that he likes best, so he's asked to write a note of appreciation to the authoress. I’ve allowed it—my letter-link isn’t all that different to the ones they have in this time period. Maybe this will make up for the magazine’s lack of appreciation for your work.
Your sister,
Josephine
IV. Darrin Royston to Rachel Forester
Maj 3, 551 T.E.
Miss Rachel Forrester,
Your sister Josephine has informed me that you are the authoress of a little tale that has brought light and joy to my sickbed. Your comic fantasy is one of the most enjoyable works of fiction I have read in recent memory. It isn’t often one finds just such a blend of the beautiful and the silly. Too often, the comic fairy tales neglect their world, while the more grounded fantasy works take themselves too seriously. Yours struck just the right note.
There's little enough cheer in the world these days, and I'm glad to find that someone still remembers its secret. I pray—if it's not too presumptuous—that you have many more such works for your sister to pass on for our amusement.
Gratefully,
Darrin Royston
V. Rachel Forester to Josephine Forrester
Maj 3, 701 T.E.
Josephine!
You let Darrin Royston read my stupid little stories?
“They’re just the kind of thing he likes to read,” she says.
Because they’re based on the kind of thing he writes! Or did write. Or will write.
How old is he?
Have we broken history?
What if, having read my stories, he doesn’t write one of his great works? How would I know if he didn’t write it? Maybe you’ve already erased a dozen masterpieces from history, and I’ll never know they were never written!
Couldn’t you have given me some kind of warning before showing my fiction to one of the great literary minds of the post-war era? I want to curl up and die at the thought of his eyes looking at my inane scribbles. I might have done it already if his letter hadn’t suggested that he, for some reason, enjoyed it.
Maybe the war shattered his sanity. Maybe he has some kind of infection. You should check.
Rachel
VI. Josephine Forester to Rachel Forester
Maj 5, 551 T.E.
Grimsfell, North Arza
Rachel,
Who is Darrin Royston? You’re the one who knows about authors. To me, Darrin Royston is a dark-haired, undersized private recovering from a broken leg, who has every right to read your stories if he wants to.
You don’t have to worry about changing history. I’ve told you before—it can’t be done. History is chronological—everything that happens as a result of time travel has always happened that way. I’m here because I was always meant to be here.
It’s possible your story inspired whatever it is that Royston wrote, but it won’t erase anything.
His words were genuine. He really did enjoy your story. Take it as a compliment. It sounds like a good one.
And maybe send another story? The boy’s going stir-crazy and he’s driving me up the wall.
Yours,
Josephine
VII. Rachel Forester to Josephine Forester
Maj 6, 701 T.E.
Josephine,
Who is Darrin Royston?
Time travel is wasted on you.
He's only one of the most brilliant writers of the last century! Poems, plays, essays, novels—you name it, he's written it. He has wit, wisdom, genius. He's a little bit niche, but you've lived with me. You should at least have known his name! I just told you I'm acting in one of his plays!
There are a million things I'd love to ask him about, but he probably hasn't done any of them yet.
What does he look like? What's he like? I need details!
Yours,
Rachel
P.S. I've sent along a nice, long story. I hope it won't destroy his opinion of my literary talents.
VIII. Josephine Forester to Rachel Forester
Maj 8, 551 T.E.
Dear Rachel,
That Darrin Royston? Now that you mention it, the name sounds familiar. You have to admit this whole situation is mildly hilarious. I never expected to accidentally introduce you to a celebrity.
I'm not sure what you want to hear about him. He's dark-haired. Slender. Not over-tall. Has a melancholy streak. Rather too quiet—except when he's demanding reading material. Your story is keeping him nicely pacified. I leave my letter-link next to his bed (with all the personal letters hidden, of course—though I can't say I wasn't tempted to let him read that last one).
He's not what I would have expected the author of Less Boring to be like. (I guess I have seen that play. I remember laughing.) But he's young, and this isn't exactly a cheerful setting. Broken bodies, broken minds—blood, bones and suffering, dust and dirt and smoke. Even with the shadow of the war gone, it left plenty of darkness behind.
You're going to think this is crazy, but I've written to ask the university for an extension of my time here. The people here have become my friends and allies. There is so much work to be done. I can't leave them to deal with it alone.
It's only another six months, and after all, what's time to a time traveler? I'm going to miss you, but you have plenty to keep you busy. Before you know it, we'll be back together again.
I hope you understand. Pray for me.
Always your loving sister,
Josephine
IX. Rachel Forester to Josephine Forester
Maj 11, 701 T.E.
Josephine,
Are you crazy? Is the university crazy? The fact that you want to spend more time in that horrible time and place should be proof that time travel has messed with your mind.
I get it. Now that you're hob-nobbing with celebrities, ordinary modern life just can't compare. I should never have told you who Darrin Royston was. He can't be that interesting. He won't even write anything for another ten years. Can he really compare to your charming, adorable sister?
But seriously, Josie, what are you thinking? Time travel is cool and all, and I'm sure you're doing good things, but you belong here. In a safe, civilized century. There are plenty of people in this time period who need you—I'm at the top of the list.
You're going to miss my birthday now, you know that?
Disgruntled,
Rachel
X. Rachel Forester to Josephine Forester
Maj 15, 701 T.E.
Josephine,
Are you mad at me? I'm sorry if I got snarky. I'm upset you're not coming home, but you're a big girl and we both have our own lives and you can make your own decisions. I can respect your choice to stay.
I know that you're busy, but can you spare ten seconds to send me a line so I know I haven't destroyed our relationship forever?
Rachel
XI. Rachel Forester to Josephine Forester
Maj 20, 701 T.E.
Josie,
Are the people of that century so much more important that you can't even send a line to your little sister? I know I'm not one to talk about prompt letter-writing, but under the circumstances, this is worrying. And kind of hurtful.
Rachel
XII. Rachel Forester to Josephine Forester
Maj 20, 701 T.E.
Josie,
I'm sorry.
Please write back.
Rachel
XIII. Darrin Royston to Rachel Forester
Maj 20, 551 T.E.
Miss Rachel Forester:
I am writing with a heavy heart to inform you of the death of your sister, Nurse Josephine Forester. She went missing several days ago, and her body was found yesterday. She seems to have been killed in an accident with a stray shell near the hospital grounds. Millions of such unused artillery shells litter the countryside, and I'm afraid your sister was unfortunate enough to stumble upon one and become a casualty of war even in this time of peace.
No doubt you will receive notification through official channels, but I am aware she often contacted you via this letter-link, and I thought you might prefer to receive the news through a more personal route.
Your sister was a credit to her profession. She was a diligent, cheerful, kind, and invariably patient nurse. I am forever indebted to her for her personal kindnesses that brought light to hellish days.
Know that you and your family have my sympathy and my deepest condolences. You will remain in my prayers.
Yours,
Darrin Royston
XIV. Rachel Forester to Darrin Royston
What do you mean, dead?
She can't be dead. She won't be born for a hundred and fifty years.
Time travel's not supposed to work like that. She was supposed to do her research and come home.
It can't happen like that. I refuse to believe it. God wouldn't do that to us.
I haven't heard anything from her, but that's because you stole her letter-link. That must be it. Give it back, you thief, and think again before you go terrifying me with wild stories.
XV. Rachel Forester to Darrin Royston
Mr. Royston,
Don't read my last response. It wasn't supposed to send. Please ignore it. Give Josephine her letter-link back.
Thank you,
Rachel Forester
XVI. Darrin Royston to Rachel Forester
Maj 21, 551 T.E.
Miss Forester,
I'm afraid I read both your of your letters, and they greatly puzzle me. Is this a fragment of one of your fantastical tales? That would be the most sensible assumption, except that the unopened letters you sent to your sister seem to confirm an impossible truth. Your sister came to us from a different time, you exist far in the future, and I am writing to a woman who has not yet been born.
I apologize for reading words that I was not meant to see, but the confusion they've caused has more than punished me for my curiosity. The implications of what you suggest are dizzying.
You are not writing in Valorian, which suggests that the peace holds, and you seem to write from a far more peaceful time. No wonder your stories held such hope. I can barely imagine a world beyond this battlefield hospital.
If I am reading the story correctly, your sister left a place of safety and peace and came to serve the suffering in a time of war. It makes her actions even more heroic and her death even more of a tragedy.
I don't pretend to understand how this is possible, but you have my gratitude and my sympathy.
Yours,
Darrin Royston
XVII. Rachel Forester to Darrin Royston
Maj 22, 701 T.E.
Darrin,
Yes, my sister is from the future. Yes, she came to help out during your war. And yes, you people killed her.
She could have been an aloof researcher, gathering information about the Western War, but she decided to help because she couldn't stand by while people were suffering. And she died for it.
What does it matter if you know the truth? Josephine always said that history can't be changed. I can't even wish that she hadn't gone on the trip, because apparently, the fact that she died in the past means she always died in the past. She was dead before she was born.
But how is that any different from the rest of us? Where I come from, you're long dead. To people in the future, I'm long dead. There's nothing we can do to change that, even with time travel, so what does anything matter?
If our every action is part of an unchangeable history, we're just cogs in a cosmic machine. It doesn't do any good to cry over it.
Rachel
XVIII. Darrin Royston to Rachel Forester
Maj 23, 551 T.E.
Rachel,
I can't pretend to understand how time travel occurs, and the philosophical questions you pose seem far beyond my ken. But it is clear that you are grieving, and I can try to offer what comfort I can.
I'm no philosopher, but I know that the things we do, whenever we do them, matter. From where I lay in this hospital, your sister's actions were far from meaningless. She did not control her fate, but she had free will within it. Her choices made a world of difference to the men she helped.
We have a God who is outside of time. He incorporates our choices into His divine plan. Even if He, the author, knows the end of our story, our actions are what make the story what it is. We can choose to care or be callous, to create or destroy, and those choices ripple across time, for good and for ill.
This war will have effects far into the future, but there is also goodness that transcends time. God sent your sister to help from far in the future. I pray for you from far in the past. Your sister, outside of time, is now better able than ever to pray for us both.
I can't pretend that your sister's death was good. I can't pretend that this war is good. But if there is goodness beyond the end of the war--as your letters suggest--perhaps one day you will find some good that exists beyond the bounds of grief.
Yours,
Darrin Royston
XIX. Rachel Forester to Darrin Royston
Maj 24, 701 T.E.
Darrin,
I wish I could believe in what you say, but right now, hope seems impossible. Thank you for trying.
Rachel
XX. Darrin Royston to Rachel Forester
Maj 25, 701 T.E.
Rachel,
That did get rather abstract, didn't it? I wish I could express myself in a way that makes the truth felt.
Maybe someday I'll have wisdom enough to do so.
Yours,
Darrin Royston
XXI. Rachel Forester to Josephine Forester
Maj 27, 771 T.E.
Josie,
The university sent me your personal belongings today, your letter-link among them. My last connection to the past—and, it feels like, to you—is gone. But Darrin says you're outside of time now, so maybe writing in here can reach you. I'm pretty sure that goes against science and philosophy and theology and probably lots of -ologies, but those were your kind of thing. I can never understand anything but stories.
I'm afraid I've loused things up. I freaked out and revealed time travel to Darrin Royston. It doesn't seem to have broken anything yet, but I feel terrible. You went into the past to help these people through suffering I can't even imagine. Meanwhile, I'm living in comfort and asked the poor boy to deal with my problems on top of his own. I've been selfish from beginning to end, and it's giving me a lot of guilt.
All the time travel in the world can't change that. All I can do is move forward. But I can't believe I can do that, not without you. Whatever stupid things I did, I knew I could count on you to have my back. To understand. To pull me back from the edge of the cliff or pick me up if I jumped off it. Now it's just me and I feel frozen. I'm cut off from the past and the future's a blank. How am I supposed to go on?
Pray for me, I guess. It's supposed to work across time and outside of time. It's the best we've got now. But it's nothing like getting a letter from you.
Love,
Rachel
XXII. Josephine Forester to Rachel Forester
Maj 11, 551 T.E.
Rachel,
Happy birthday!
Anyway, it'll be your birthday when you read this. I'm sorry I'm not there to celebrate with you, but maybe a good present will make up for it.
I can't send objects through time, but I sent a message to Harriet on the research team, and she's come through. This will arrive on your birthday, even if I can't come with it.
What you hold in your hands is a first edition of Darrin Royston's first collection of stories. Given recent events, it seemed only fitting. Here's proof your letters haven't stunted his career.
You're amazing, Rachel, and you've got a great future ahead of you.
Love,
Josephine
XXIII. Dedication in New Beginnings by Darrin Royston
For Rachel
May hope reach you at the proper time
Octon 12, 561 T.E.
XXIV. Rachel Forester to Harriet Zima
Maj 33, 771 T.E.
Harriet,
Thanks for the help with the birthday present. It means more to me than you can know.
Could you do me one more favor? For Josie's sake?
I have another thank you to send.
Rachel
XXV. Rachel Forester to Darrin Royston
Maj 33, 771 T.E.
Darrin,
I read your book. Actually, I reread it. I've read every one of those stories before in anthologies, in collections, as standalone stories. I had some of them practically memorized. But this was my first time reading the original collection. So it's the first time I read the dedication. And it's the first time I've known they were written for me.
I can't begin to explain what that feels like. Imagine a whole lot of tears—joy and guilt and just sheer overwhelmed—and you'll have a general idea.
The stories are fantastic, of course—they're classics! They're funny, profound, sweet, witty, thoughtful.
But the thing that means the most to me is the writing of them. I know something of what your life was like there at the end of the war—Josie sent me plenty of letters. You had so many problems of your own. You didn't need pampered little me throwing more problems on you. But you cared. You built a life after the end of the world and you sent out a light to brighten mine.
That's all we can do, isn't it? Every moment in time. Care about each other. That's what gets us through when it seems like the world has ended. It transcends time. You told me about it back then, but your book showed it to me. I can't imagine what I could have done to deserve such consideration ten years after our few letters, but I can't thank you enough.
Your future and forever friend,
Rachel Forester
XXVI. Harriet Zima to Rachel Forester
Rachel,
I'm letting one last letter through. Only because this is awesome. But I don't have the budget to justify any more favors.
Harriet
XXVII. Darrin Royston to Rachel Forester
Novrum 23, 561 T.E.
Rachel,
Your stories brought me comfort and hope at a time when I felt that I had none. The least I could do was return the favor.
These years since the war have brought grief and suffering, but also more joy and healing than I ever could have imagined. Time is a great healer--and I needed time to see the truth of that for myself, before I could begin to make others believe in it.
My little book, even now, is gaining attention. It is gratifying to know it will last. I can only pray my other words will last long enough to reach you. If ten years of experience can teach me this much, I am curious to see what I can learn with a little more time.
May we meet again on the bookshelves.
Your friend,
Darrin Royston
P.S. I've visited your sister's grave three times since the war. Knowing I will be her only visitor for more than a hundred years makes it a solemn duty, but it is also an honor to visit one who proved so good a friend. Each time, I ask her prayers for both of us. I know they are answered.
XXVIII. Rachel Forester to Josephine Forester
Maj 12, 702 T.E.
Josie,
I visited your grave today. The war-torn country you described in your letters is a lovely springtime meadow. Grimsby Hall is torn down, but there are plaques where the hospital stood, and the little graveyard stands in a peaceful grove of trees. The world has healed, and, slowly, so am I.
Your grave is marked by a clean white stone that's been kept free of moss and dirt. Darrin's family cared for it well. It only has the date of your death, but its existence proves that there are times in the past where you're alive. Outside of time where you are now, you're even more alive.
One day, we'll meet again, but until then, I've got work to do. I tried to avoid suffering in the past, leaving the painful work to you. But pain finds us no matter where we are. I can't stay focused on my own and ignore everyone else's. There are plenty of people, even in our own time, who need help. I've added some volunteer work to my rampant social schedule, trying to find out exactly where I can do the most good.
My experience with your work makes me a good candidate for the time travel program. I'll admit that I'm considering it. There's plenty of work to be done in the post-war world, and I've got connections there.
Love,
Rachel



















