Incident Epsilon
Posted: 2010-04-24 01:57am
This is the first installment of what I hope shall be a long and continuing chronicle of events from and up to the incident.
Caiaphas wrote:[1605] +6 days from Incident Epsilon
Incident Location: CERN
Incident classified 10642 Omega-Tetra
Interviewee: Dr. Horace Jordan Blackburn
Individuals Involved: Dr. Horace Jordan Blackburn, Dr. Sophie Hawthorne, Dr. Christopher John Chen, Dr. Nathaniel Blake Goodman
transcript follows
Q: Please give your name, first and last.
A: I-I’m Horace Blackburn. Who are you people?
Q: That is none of your concern. What was your position at CERN?
A: I-I was heading research there. W-Why?
Q: That is none of your concern. Please state what you were doing shortly before the Incident.
A: Well—we had just fixed the LHC again, so we were running a few tests on it. We wanted to restart operations by that afternoon, so we were all rushing a little bit trying to finish diagnostics. Th-then Dr. Hawthorne’s computer began feeding her junk data before it shut down. Then mine went out, then Dr. Chen’s, and everyone’s just went blank. [subject begins to shudder uncontrollably]
Q: Please continue, doctor.
A: Whe-when our computers went down, Dr. Goodman decided to go down to check if something had gone wrong with the power again, when all of the computers booted up again. The diagnostics weren’t up, though—we were getting something odd. [subject becomes visibly agitated]
Q: Odd as in what?
A: Odd as-as in impossible.
Q: Impossible how?
A: Impossible. It was impossible. It-it shouldn’t have existed. [subject becomes hysterical]
Q: Impossible how, doctor?
A: The data was scrolling across our screens and it was impossible, all of it was impossible all of it!
Q: How?
A: We hadn’t gotten finished with the diagnostics the LHC shouldn’t have been running it should have been shut down oh dear god what have I oh done dear god.
Q: Calm down, doctor, and elaborate.
A: [subject calms slowly] It—the, the data—it was wrong. We were getting reports of superheating from all around the facility, but other sensors were reporting temperatures of nearly zero Kelvin. That wasn’t the worst of it.
Q: What was the worst?
A: [subject becomes angry] You people took everything! You tell me! I don’t know what the hell we were getting! I don’t! All I know is, it was impossible for all of that! [subject suddenly calms and shudders]
Q: What was impossible, doctor? Please tell me.
A: The sensors were reading periodic pulses of energy, one every second, that were reaching one point one seven billion terajoules each and every time. And every time after a pulse was done, there was a chill in the air, like the heat was being sucked out of the air.
Q: Very good, doctor. What happened next?
A: After we began to get the readings, Dr. Chen went to go check on Dr. Goodman, just to make sure that he was alright. Before he had halfway turned the doorknob, that interval between the pulses hit again and froze his hand to the metal. We had to rip the skin from it to get him free.
Q: And next?
A: [subject begins to tremble, but continues to speak calmly] Five minutes or so after the anomaly began, everything cut out again. Heating, lighting, everything. We managed to get out before the helium reserves burst, but there was it on the surface.
Q: There was what, doctor?
A: You know. You know damn well! [subject becomes agitated] You know what the hell it is, damn you! What is it? What is it? What is it, damn you? [subject abruptly stands]
Q: Sit down, doctor, or I will be forced to pacify you. I said sit. Down.
A: [subject sits and calms] What was it?
Q: I don’t know. You’ll have to tell me what you saw, doctor.
A: It was the brightest thing I had ever seen, and thought I saw earth scorched into black glass underneath it. But at the same time it looked so dark that all light that fell upon the world was drawn into it. And it hurt the eye to look at it—not from the brightness. I could have looked at the sun through near that thing and it wouldn’t have so much as tickled my retinas. No—it just felt wrong.
Q: Felt wrong how?
A: It-it just felt wrong. [subject begins to sob] Please, please don’t ask me any more about it! Please!
Q: Alright. Thank you.
recording terminated. subject placed into care.