“I know, right? Anyway, maybe we can get back to Sanur and fix this before existence ends.”
A great tearing sound shook the earth as time slipped loose from its moorings.
…
There was a great tearing sound, like the world was phonebook getting ripped in half by an old-timey strongman, from back when phonebooks were actually a thing.
“We?” I asked Oldme. “You’re the one who time-travelled in the first place. Seems you’re the one who should be fixing it.”
“What happened to being the same person?” he asked.
“Whatever,” I said as another rent opened up in the sky, a colour without a name streaming through from the void. “I don’t think it matters, anyway. No-one’s getting from here to Sanur in time, by the look of this.”
Oldme’s shoulders slumped. “Maybe you’re right,” he said. We were silent for a moment, watching the world falling apart around us.
“How did you come to find me here, anyway?” he asked eventually.
“Got a message on Facebook telling me you were here,” I answered.
“Fucking Facebook,” he said.
“Yep. Couldn’t agree with me more on that one.”
For the hell of it, I was about to ask about my wife, and where he’d found her, when something struck me, and the world went out.
…
I looked at the unconscious body of my younger self, whom I had just felled with fallen coconut. I dropped it, blood on its husk and on my hand.
The idiot never asked about the other times I had gone through the time portal, how I managed to keep avoiding that crocodile. The trick was to always go through with some other food for it, like a diversion. I normally carried a couple of dead chooks in each hand when I dived into the water of the lake.
I dragged his body towards a scooter parked by the beach, garish red and white. Somehow I knew it was his, maybe his memories were merging into mine as time swirled. Maybe he was right. Maybe I’d never make it to that long-abandoned theme park in Sanur in time.
But I have to try.
At least I will have something to distract the crocodile if I get there.
Red roofs, frangipanis in Lovina
As suspected, the end of the world can be largely blamed on Facebook.
I mean, if you really wanted to, you could blame me instead. It would be more accurate, to tell the truth, but come on. I think we can all agree Facebook makes a much better villain.
Fuck you, Facebook. The world is about to pop out of existence and I don’t even have a Dislike button to press to let people know how I feel about it.
Anyway, I first heard about myself when Lena sent me a message on the annoyingly convenient social media service. I was sitting on my balcony at Lovina, looking out over the red-tiled roofs and trees laden with coconuts and frangipanis, when the little ‘bloop’ sound of an incoming message alerted me to my existence.
I had been seen on the beach at Jimbaran, Lena’s message told me. Apparently I was older, with grey hair and a beautiful wife. Straight away, I knew time-travel must be involved. I decided I had to go and find myself immediately. If my future self had chosen to come back to this little island at this particular point in time, clearly he meant for us to meet up. Oldme must have valuable information for me - stock market tips, betting results, disasters to be averted, deaths to be avoided, the location of buried treasures and the where, when and how of gaining a beautiful wife.
It’s what I would do, if I were me. And I am me. So that settled it.
I set off the next day on my little candy-cane scooter, red and white and no substance to it at all. Fortunately there’s not much scope to travel more than 40km/hr in Bali, so the scooter’s lack of guts wasn’t really a problem. I wound my way up over the mountains in the north of the island, and then dodged my way through the traffic in the south and by the time the sun began to set I was in Jimbaran.
As I rode, however, a series of thoughts kept trying to force its way to the front of my mind. What if Oldme wasn’t here to see me? What if, by seeking out my older self, I was fucking up the space-time-continuum-thingy…or whatever it was called on bad television? What if Oldme didn’t tell me anything? What if he just sat there, all smug with vague hints and bullshit about how I have to find the way myself, like a real-life version of the Monk Joke that my sister Jacinta tormented her younger siblings and cousins with that time on the beach at Rutland?
By the time I arrived at Jimbaran and parked my scooter, I was feeling particularly ill-disposed towards myself. Things didn’t improve when I saw Oldme, right away, like it was preordained. I was getting out of the sea from a swim, in way better shape despite the grey hair and additional years. I saw my face drop as Oldme caught sight of me, and heard myself say in a voice of deep dismay:
“Oh…fuck…off!”
Goddamnit.
…
As soon as I saw my younger self by the beach, I knew I had stuffed up. The malnourished-looking bastard wasn’t supposed to be here.
I knew my own memories. December 2022 - I was supposed to be in Malaysia, on my way down to Singapore. I had taken a particularly dodgy ferry from southern Palawan to Sabah - avoiding pirates, terrorists and proposals from desperate Philippino girls along the way. I got a hell of a story out of it. I never went to Bali on this trip…that was next year, after I went home for Christmas…fuck.
Shit.
I’ve fucked up the timelines, somehow.
This was my fourth time, coming back to the past. I always tried to keep the changes to a minimum, but somehow it has all gone wrong. Maybe just the accumulation of little alterations, the build-up of beats of that chaotic butterfly’s wings…whatever it was, it was bad news.
In shock, I think I just told myself to fuck off.
…
Since it seemed pretty clear I would be getting no help at all from Oldme, I decided the only thing to do was antagonise myself. Perhaps it arose from a certain variety of jealousy, who knows? Should be good for a laugh at any rate, I thought.
“…you’re not supposed to be here. Why aren’t you in Malaysia?” he was saying.


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