The Prometheus Paradox

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19

The candle guttered in its brass holder, casting long shadows across Nathaniel Hale's study. Outside, the Thames fog pressed against the windowpanes like a living thing seeking entry. Inside, the fire had burned down to embers, and the room smelled of old paper, beeswax, and the peculiar metallic scent of a mind that had been working too long without rest.

Nathaniel stared at the manuscript on his desk. Three hundred and forty-two pages. Written in a cipher he had spent a month breaking and three years understanding.

It was, he had concluded, a record of the future.

Not prophecy in any traditional sense—no visions, no divine inspiration, no burning bushes. Just facts. Dates. Events. Causation chains so detailed they read like a historian's commentary written by someone who had actually lived through every moment.

From 1645 to 1986. Three hundred and forty-one years of human history, compressed into a single leather-bound volume.

He had read it cover to cover. He had verified entries from his own lifetime against known events. Everything checked out. The English Civil War. The Commonwealth. The Restoration. The Great Plague. The Great Fire. The Glorious Revolution. The American Revolution. The French Revolution. The Napoleonic Wars. The Industrial Revolution. Two world wars. The atomic age.

Everything was there.

He was twenty-seven years old. He was a Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge. He was a member-in-waiting of the Royal Society. And he was the keeper of a secret that made Prometheus stealing fire from the gods look like a child's harmless prank.


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