Day 189
Writing exercise – Everybody called him Einstein, but long before he had made his last big mistake, people had forgotten why.
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Some legends are spoken at gatherings around night fires, times when folks liked to talk about olden times, times when life was different.
There were signs of a different civilisation, almost lost in the vegetation, of people who had lived very different lives from what we have now.
Our settlements were near these ruins, taking advantage of facilities that had been created or repurposed, and our progress was based on what we found.
But there was one legend of a person known as Buck, or perhaps his name could have been longer. The relic we found was only a small part of something larger.
One of the elders of our clan said he had heard, when he was young, of a relic called a book, where there was writing in a language that was once spoken by those who lived long ago.
It was still our language, taught down through the generations, as a mark of respect to the people we believed were our ancestors.
This Buck, he said, was also compared to another, a man called Einstein, a great man who lived many centuries before, one of many who contributed to creating the means of destroying the world, and nearly everyone on the planet.
That legend had faded because no one wanted to remember the people who had made our world the way it was, scarred, with often warring clans, fighting over the little resources we had.
It seemed silly that we had to spend more time and effort defending what we had rather than living our lives in peace, but that was something else we learned: not to be greedy and to covet other people’s property. It was a pity that other clans did not.
My question had been, if this man Buck was so clever, why were we not more advanced? The thing was, no one really knew why this Buck was so clever, why he was compared to that man called Einstein specifically, and no one really cared.
The day dawned, a fine day without winds or storms, and warm. It had been progressively getting warmer, and now, in my twentieth year, the cold only lasted for four months of the year.
It was my turn to go to the well and get the water. It was a morning chore that had its advantages. I got to meet up with the other younger people in the clan, and one in particular, a girl of my age, Anna.
If I did everything right, our families would eventually meet, and the bargaining for the marriage between us would commence. Everything had a value in trade. There was no money, a strange concept from long ago, only what we had to trade. Furs, food, timber, mud bricks, tools, weapons.
We did not fight each other, only the other clans, if we were attacked. Such a thing as crime and an ancient concept was not tolerated, and if committed, the perpetrator was expelled into the wastelands.
I joined the line and waited for my turn. There was a water monitor whose job was to make sure everyone got their fair share. I collected our water and then waited to see if Anna came.
She did, collected her water, and then came over time where I was waiting.
“Guy, how are you?”
“Anna. I am well. How are you?”
“I am also well. I trust your family is well.”
“They are. Yours?”
“They are also well. It looks like we will have more warm days this year. My father says it will extend the crops so we will have more food to store for the cold times.”
“That is good. We are hoping to have more cattle and sheep for meat and milk.”
“There are more people. My father says we will have to start exploring again.”
“We he be leading the expedition? I would like to go with him this time, if i can get permission.”
“I will ask. Now I must go. It was nice talking to you, Guy.”
“It was nice talking to you, Anna.”
My trips to the well were not only to meet Anna, but also the thrill of getting another clue to how we came to be.
Her father was one of the few elders trusted with the history of our clan, who organised expeditions beyond the boundary of our village, sometimes put into the expanse.
.
No one ever ventured there. It was uninhabitable with no water, no vegetation, and only ruins of a much older and advanced civilisation. The people, he said, had destroyed themselves through greed and paranoia.
It was said he had seen things no man should ever want to see or should.
He did not share these revelations with his family, but sometimes Anna acquired an artefact and would tell me, in hushed tones, or other times slip me a piece of paper she had written on, with the note to burn it when read.
It was all very secretive.
I checked my pocket, and there was a piece of much-folded paper. When I was alone and not to be interrupted, I carefully unfolded it. It was not handwriting. It was very neat letters, what she had called printing, where all the writing was elegant and easily readable.
We didn’t have books, and I don’t think any of us had ever seen one. We knew about paper, though our paper wasn’t the same as the relics we were told existed. This page I had could get me into trouble because it was a relic.
It was about a man named Albert Einstein, who lived many centuries ago, a man who developed the theory of relativity and contributed to the photoelectric effect, which is a phenomenon related to the interaction between light and matter.
It was obvious to me that to be classed as brilliant, you had to use words no one else could understand. I folded the page up and his it. I would give it back next time I saw her.
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© Charles Heath 2025