Genre: Science Fiction/Thriller
CAN A BRIDGE MURDER?
It had been welcomed by the scientific community as a life saver, as the next step in metal technology and a new generation of those shining babies was about to be unleashed on the world.
CAN A BRIDGE MURDER?
It had been welcomed by the scientific community as a life saver, as the next step in metal technology and a new generation of those shining babies was about to be unleashed on the world.
The
team that had developed the idea at Los Alma had received the Nobel
Prize that year and were ready to be courted by every large
manufacturing company.
They
had no need to worry where their next research dollar was coming from,
indeed none of the team had any need to work for the rest of their
lives.
The principal was simple although the actual practical solution had taken decades of research:
A material that repaired itself.
You see it wasn’t so terrible when you put it down on a piece of paper like that. It seemed so innocent, beneficial almost.
The
plan was that one day, aircraft while in flight could self-medicate, a
nut or a bolt here would be re-grown and replaced. However that was
still some way off and the actual exposure of the general public to
SeRep (Self Repair), as it was christened, was minimal.
It
was planned that cars too would have the ability to repair themselves -
although there had been several showdowns at government level between
the makers of the materials and the car manufacturers. The way things
were looking, it meant that after you purchased a new car, and with a
good headwind, it could last you a lifetime (and the rest).
As you can imagine, the automobile industry was readying for a fight - big time.
The
first public structure to be made of SeRep was a bridge in Illinois,
chosen by some wise guy at Los Alma who had stuck a pin in a map of the
Ohio river.
A
Bridge had been selected as a structure that could suffer wear and
tear, be exposed to public use and certainly be enhanced safety-wise by
the use of the new material.
The Tamaroa bridge was the one chosen and it crossed the Ohio at the southernmost tip of Illinois.
As
with all great ideas there were teething problems. The material, for
instance, had to be guarded because of theft. The ‘bridgits’ as they
became known would hack off a piece of SeRep meaning the bridge would
have to repair and replace and then they'd sell it (or at least try to)
on the 'Net.
Sometimes the material that had been stolen was so large that the bridge displayed a permanent scar. Just like human skin.
At
night when there was less traffic going over the bridge (that’s not to
say it was totally quiet as people came from all over to see the wonder –
day and night), but at night when the bridge was repairing itself it
sounded like a muffled cry and this caused the bridge to be nicknamed
the Bridge of Sighs. It almost sounded like a child in pain.
There
had been the odd accident, the biggest of which was the General Custer,
a tourist boat hired by some big corporation, packed with sweaty, drunk
salespersons on a free trip to see the Bridge.
At
the inquiry it had been shown that the Captain had been more than a
little drunk and had almost destroyed the bridge supports on the
Illinois bank. The damage was so severe that the SeRep guys decided to
give the bridge a helping hand and assisted in the repairs.
Yet
anytime the bridge was left alone it would still continue to do the
work it had been created for and it could always be heard to sigh.
Janus
Jones was a mid western boy straight out of college and about to set
off for the Florida panhandle in a car his Pappy had bought him. The
present was not for finishing school but for staying out of jail unlike
Kevin, his older brother. Janus could have flown pretty cheaply but he
wanted to follow the Mississippi all the way south and then cut across
to Tallahassee.
So it was a surprise when he found Kevin loading a bag into his new car on the morning of his trip.
“Coming
with you Bro’. No arguments, I got nothing from Paw but aggravation and
you get this brand spanking new car – so the least you can do is take
me as far a New Orleans.”
Then Kevin jumped in the car.
And
so the two Jones brothers (you’d have sworn they’d had different
fathers) set off on a trip that would shake their worlds forever.
At
the trial Kevin, although missing most of his left arm, was still able
to act as a credible witness. The way he told things it was as if the
brothers had been the innocent victims. That wasn't totally true.
Just
before the incident Kevin had driven for several hours south which had
let Janus sleep, although with Kevin at the wheel Janus tended not to
sleep too soundly. They’d stopped at the very last bar in Illinois going
south to allow Kevin a few beers, Janus drank cola and several of the
witnesses had told the court that Kevin had forced Janus to stay, and
that Kevin had drank too many beers. That was just Kevin.
As
they left the car lot, instead of Janus driving, Kevin jumped into the
driver’s seat and was beginning to move off. Janus had no choice but to
jump in over the rear of the car. Chances are Kevin would have left him
for cold, just standing there and let him make his own way home – Kevin
had done it before.
“Where you at?”
Kevin ignored Janus and continued down the narrow road.
“This ain’t the way.”
“Tis, if you’re going to the Tamaroa. I wanna see the magic bridge.”
The
traffic started slowing about a mile from the bridge as there was a
queue of cars taking their time crossing. At one point, due to the
weight of cars on the bridge and regardless of its properties, the cops
had stopped the cars coming north, to allow the south bound queue to
clear.
As
Kevin approached the bridge he swerved over to the left hand lane and
drove down the wrong side. Some of the cops started giving chase on foot
but Kevin put his foot on the accelerator and then started hollering
and whooping.
“Yee-haa, little bro’, yee-haa. Let’s just see how good this thing is at rebuilding.”
Kevin
drove the car so close to the edge that sparks flew from the girders.
Janus’ new car was badly damaged down that side. Not satisfied with
this, Kevin started to run the car into the supports causing them to
buckle and bend.
It
was just as Kevin was ready to inflict a fatal blow on the bridge that
the road beneath them opened up and Janus, Kevin and the car plummeted
to the river below.
The
cars behind, seeing what had just happened, had managed to swerve
around the hole. Kevin swam to shore leaving Janus to sink with his new
car. The older boy was way too drunk to try any heroics and was probably
lucky just to save himself.
Janus’
father grieved for his good son and wasn’t going to let something like
the Bridge of Sighs or its owners or the Los Alma scientists get away
with their responsibilities and so he took them all to court.
I
guess it would be more accurate to say he put the bridge on trial.
Janus’ father claimed that the bridge had opened up the road to dump the
car in the river in order to protect itself.
The newspapers had a field day – ‘The Bridge that kills’
What
the father attempted to prove in court was that the bridge, or at least
the material, was self-aware and that it had made a positive decision
to break a hole in the road in order to rid itself of an irritant.
Of
course the court over-ruled the claim and declared the accident as
death by misadventure. Whatever was fully known was never put in the
public domain, the bridge manufacturers were ordered to dismantle the
structure and the material SeRep was banned from use in any public
construction.
It
wasn’t the end of SeRep however, the armies of NATO built tanks and
weapons from the material. They’re using them at this very moment in the
wars out east.
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