Breve história sobre coisas sendo aleatoriamente deslocadas no tempo

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Há uma pequena história que provavelmente li nos anos 60 ou 70. Eu acredito que pode ter sido na primeira pessoa por alguém que estava olhando através de artigos de jornal sobre ocorrências estranhas envolvendo deslocamentos de tempo em pequena escala.

Exemplos incluíam uma casa com uma listra estranha em seu exterior que acabou por ter sido o resultado de que a seção da casa voltou ao seu estado em um momento anterior, antes da casa ter sido pintada. Outro exemplo envolvia uma mulher que voltava do trabalho todos os dias e um cachorro estranho a esperava, esperando que ela entrasse na casa. Cada dia o cão aparecia em uma condição cada vez mais faminta e finalmente parou de aparecer. Mais tarde, a mulher adotou um filhote e um dia, quando ele foi cultivado, ele desapareceu ... então ela percebeu que tinha sido o mesmo cão ... e tinha sido transportado para trás no tempo. (Talvez você possa ver porque eu perdi um pouco de sono com isso ao longo dos anos).

Durante anos, eu estava confiante de que isso estava em minhas prateleiras em uma antologia, mas não consigo encontrá-lo agora. Pode ter sido em SF Hall of Fame vol. 1, que não tenho mais em minha posse.

    
por Curious One 12.02.2014 / 07:44

1 resposta

"Estou com medo" < Jack Finney , originalmente publicado em 15 de setembro de 1951, edição de >>> Collier's . Você pode ter lido em uma destas essas coleções .

Exemplos incluíam uma casa com uma listra estranha em seu exterior que acabou por ter sido o resultado de que a seção da casa voltou a seu estado em um momento anterior, antes de a casa ter sido pintada.

Na verdade, a faixa é da casa que está sendo pintada no futuro:

On July 20, 1950, Mr. Trachnor told me, he walked out on the front porch of his house about six o'clock in the morning. Running from the eaves of his house to the floor of the porch was a streak of gray paint, still damp. "It was about the width of an eight-inch brush," Mr. Trachnor told me, "and it looked like hell, because the house was white. I figured some kids did it in the night for a joke, but if they did, they had to get a ladder up to the eaves and you wouldn't figure they'd go to that much trouble. It wasn't smeared, either; it was a careful job, a nice even stripe down the front of the house."

Mr. Trachnor got a ladder and cleaned off the gray paint with turpentine.

In October of that same year Mr. Trachnor painted his house. "The white hadn't held up so good, so I painted it gray. I got to the front and finished about five one Saturday afternoon. Next morning when I came out I saw a streak of white right down the front of the house. I figured it was the damn kids again, because it was the same place as before. But when I looked close, I saw it wasn't new paint; it was the old white I'd painted over. Somebody had done a nice careful job of cleaning off the new paint in a long stripe about eight inches wide right down from the eaves! Now who the hell would go to that trouble? I just can't figure it out."

Outro exemplo envolveu uma mulher que voltava do trabalho todos os dias e um cachorro estranho a esperava, esperando que ela entrasse na casa. Cada dia o cão aparecia em uma condição cada vez mais faminta e finalmente parou de aparecer. Mais tarde, a mulher adotou um filhote e um dia, quando ele foi cultivado, ele desapareceu ... então ela percebeu que tinha sido o mesmo cão ... e tinha sido transportado para trás no tempo.

In October 1947, about eleven at night, Miss Eisenberg left her apartment to walk to the drugstore for toothpaste. On her way back, not far from her apartment, a large black-and-white dog ran up to her and put his front paws on her chest.

"I made the mistake of petting him," Miss Eisenberg told me, "and from then on he simply wouldn't leave. When I went into the lobby of my building, I actually had to push him away to get the door closed. I felt sorry for him, poor hound, and a little guilty, because he was still sitting at the door an hour later when I looked out my front window."

The dog remained in the neighborhood for three days, discovering and greeting Miss Eisenberg with wild affection each time she approached on the street. "When I'd get on the bus in the morning to go to work, he'd sit on the curb looking after me in the most mournful way, poor thing. I wanted to take him in, but I knew he'd never go home then, and I was afraid whoever owned him would be sorry to lose him. No one in the neighborhood knew whom he belonged to, and finally he disappeared."

Two years later a friend gave Miss Eisenberg a three-week-old puppy. "My apartment is really too small for a dog, but he was such a darling I couldn't resist. Well, he grew up into a nice big dog who ate more than I did."

Since the neighborhood was quiet, and the dog well behaved, Miss Eisenberg usually unleashed him when she walked him at night, for he never strayed far. "One night—I'd last seen him sniffing around in the dark a few doors down—I called to him and he didn't come back. And he never did; I never saw him again.

"Now our street is a solid wall of brownstone buildings on both sides, with locked doors and no areaways. He couldn't have disappeared lake that, he just couldn't. But he did."

Miss Eisenberg hunted for her dog for many days afterward, inquired of neighbors, put ads in the papers, but she never found him. "Then one night I was getting ready for bed; I happened to glance out the front window down at the street, and suddenly I remembered something I'd forgotten all about. I remembered the dog I'd chased away over two years before." Miss Eisenberg looked at me for a moment, then she said flatly, "It was the same dog. If you own a dog you know him, you can't be mistaken, and I tell you it was the same dog. Whether it makes sense or not, my dog was lost—I chased him away—two years before he was born."

    
12.02.2014 / 08:12