CTE/Science Fiction1

Lost in Time
It was dark. Darker than he could ever see. This was the darkness of void. As he was now out of the known universe, a place called Metaverse. Metaverse was thought to exist beyond the Big Quantum Singularity. He, who had the alias of Ormuz in the project, suddenly felt anxious and afraid. Afraid of the ever present darkness. He could not see anything. He could not even blink because he did not feel his eyes. He was unable to feel his eyes, his head or his body. He felt he had no body at all. The equations and the model they had created had not prepared him for this. It was the strangest thing on the world, or on the Metaverse, because he was out of the universe. He was on a place that no human had been before. He was very much like Yuri Gagarin, the first man on space. Ormuz was the first human out of universe and out of time.

He did not know how much time had passed. 0 seconds was the correct answer, as out of the universe time did not exist. It was horrible, the feeling of not sensing anything at all. He tried to move his body, which was connected to a machine on the Earth, on the Experiments Room. But he felt nothing. It was worst than when people dream about flying, because they can still sense their body. He just felt nothing. Maybe tetraplegic people would feel like that, he thought. He did not know how much time had passed neither how much time would pass before he reentered the universe. Mental time would be as he would the only one to notice it.

The mission was simple, as they had planned. They had found a way to send objects to the Metaverse by opening wormholes. Those are like 2 way holes in which matter can pass through and exit in another part of the universe or time. But they found that the transmission of matter or information was not instant, as with entangled particles. The objects exited to some unknown place and then went back to the real world at a random position in time. At first, the scientists had discovered a way to travel back to time, not to the future neither to distant stars. Nevertheless, it was the greatest discovery of humanity, maybe only comparable to the discovery of relativity and quantum mechanics.

--Complete--