It was 1989, Weymouth,
Massachusetts; Ralph Talbot Elementary School. Ten Year Old Me was at recess
wearing brown pants and an equally brown shirt with a stegosaurus on it. The
shirt said “Save the dinosaurs.” I think I got it at the science museum, but my
mother might have purchased it for me somewhere else. I don’t know if the
brown-brown ensemble was her idea; the years have shown her to have better
taste than that. I fear I had nobody else to blame for looking like a chubby,
pale underage UPS employee.
Most ten-year-olds have a
dream future: “I want to play for the Red Sox!” or “I want to be President!” or
“I want to be Garfield!” Ten Year Old Me had a slightly different plan. He felt
that time machine technology was most likely imminent, and would certainly be
made available to a certain chromatically challenged dresser. And for some
reason (perhaps the stability of the space-time continuum) only to him.
Yes, the brainy lab-coat types would search for TYOM like wandering lamas
looking for the reincarnation of their former master. Upon finding my third
period class, or possibly waylaying me in the science section of the library
behind the ‘Apple Iie’s, they would test me by asking how many planets there
were (9, at the time) or what scale began with absolute zero (Kelvin of
course).
One possible scenario. |
Forthwith I would receive
the prototype and be allowed to go home early for beta testing. Not that I knew
what beta testing was at that point. Once safely in my parents’ basement I
would reach into my Trapper-Keeper and take out the plans, written in front of
a mirror ala da Vinci, and begin my plan for World Domination. Ten Year Old Me had
a plan. I had read about the Silk Road and the race to find an easier
path to the Orient for spices in the 15th century in history class
and remembered the bit about pepper being worth more than gold. I did the math.
Mowing the lawn got me 5 bucks or so. Pepper was about a dollar or so per jar.
All TYOM had to do was to tear a wormhole through the fourth dimension (or
whatever sci-fi plot device I had in mind to explain the logistics) after
setting the coordinates for 15th century England. I picked England
because I spoke English, of course. I was vaguely aware that English was
different back then but since my best friend's parents were from Ireland and
since I could mostly understand them I figured I was aces.
Once I had safely landed
in ‘Merry Olde England’, I would seek out the nearest noble; perhaps the king
or maybe that “Duke of Earl’ my father was always going on about. I would, of
course, immediately be presented to said noble with a hand full of peppercorns.
I would wait for him to push his eyes back into their sockets and then commence
the negotiations. Now, you might ask, how was I to prevent him from simply
taking the peppercorns and having me thrown in the dungeon? I had a camouflaged
bag hidden in the woods full of many more, and could sell them at my
leisure with the promise of copious peppercorns to keep the Duke of Earl
honest. What if some peasant found my backpack? Easy, they had neither nylon nor
camouflage at that point in history so it would have been basically invisible.
The time machine would be kept on my person, of course, in case of emergencies.
OK, maybe I'd bring back a couple of 'princess babes' too. |
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