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Emmeejay's avatar

I’m an old woman reading this sitting beside a deserted North African shore of the Atlantic Ocean as the sun goes down. It made me wonder, what is in us that yearns for knowledge or certainty of our future life and death and yet can hardly bear for it to be revealed? We peek through our fingers. But peek we must. The inevitability of every step we take. Looking back over the years I can see it was all so predictable. The sound of the surf almost drowns my thoughts. I love your writing.

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Sam Redlark's avatar

I enjoyed the story. One of the things I enjoyed was getting to the end of the second paragraph and then realising that I was unexpectedly reading fiction, and not a journey into the past.

Their are consequences (besides those that are eventually faced by Arnold) to being able to accurately predict the time and circumstances of a person's death: For one, it establishes their end as a predetermined event in spacetime. For them to reach that point, many other events (perhaps the totality of events) must also be predetermined. In this scenario, the universe that we think of as crystallising before us, has already crystallised. We spend our lives discovering a small part of it, the way one discovers a book, but we cannot influence it, or shape it to our will.

I suppose this must be the case for anyone who believes in an omnipresent deity. I imagine there is comfort to be had in the knowledge that the invention of the wheel and the song 'S Club Party' are both integral parts of the design of some unfathomably powerful being. Equally though, such determinism could be as random and as ephemeral as the pattern in a kaleidoscope, before it is ground away by a twist of the lens.

While, on the face of it, Arnold's ability is morbidly limited, it is possible to make inferences about the future based upon the circumstances of a person's death. If he meets large numbers of people who all die from the same disease at around the same time, then it would be rational to conclude that another pandemic is imminent. If he encounters someone who will be killed by a flying car, two-decades hence, then we can assume flying cars will have become a reality.

Or, it could be that this person is killed by an ordinary car – a Tesla or a Ford Focus, perhaps – that has somehow become airborne. Where psychic powers are concerned, you can never fully discount some sideways fuckery suddenly swerving out of your blind-spot like a reckless tackle. There is a comic titled 'Ex-Machina' in which a New York politician, named Mitchell Hundred, discovers that he can talk to machines. All seems to be going well, until the day he discovers that a gun, that told him that it was unloaded, had lied to him. If you do not know the provenance of your clairvoyant powers, then you should prepare yourself for an eventual lesson in the limitations of induction.

I can think of a situation that would put Arnold's ability to the test: He runs into an unmarried women who is fated to be killed by her husband. The rational course of action in such a situation would be to avoid getting married – an easy enough thing to do, if you avoid the cocktails at Las Vegas, and any Elvis impersonator wearing a ministerial collar. Maybe the woman marries on her death bed and then her husband plays a role in her assisted suicide.

What if Arnold keeps bumping into unmarried men or women who are destined to be killed by their spouses. Surely some of these deaths will be murders. If that is the case, then I think most people would forgo marriage, in the same way that someone with an allergy to bee stings would cross apiarist off a list hobbies.

It is a shame that Arnold was taken from us so soon, and in such disturbing circumstances, before the possibilities and the limitations of his foresight could be properly explored.

The only talent I have manifested while under the influence of acid, has been the ability to lose shoes – two pairs so far. The logical explanation is that I take them off. I prefer to think of them as peace offerings to the monsters who inhabit the black, sunless depths of my unconscious mind.

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