Over the next several million years, a pattern emerged in Bobby's existence. The quantum temporal energy would build in his system until it reached a critical threshold, then violently discharge, hurling him through time and space to a new point in Earth's history.
Each dispcement left him in a different era, sometimes separated by thousands of years, sometimes by millions. Always, he found himself in prehistoric times—before recorded human history, before the civilizations he had read about in his youth.
He theorized that the singurity had somehow linked him to Earth itself, anchoring him to this pnet across its developmental timeline. The dispcements seemed random in timing but followed a rough chronological progression, moving gradually forward through Earth's history.
Between dispcements, Bobby established a pattern of his own. Upon arriving in a new time period, he would first secure shelter and assess the local environment. Then he would seek out the most advanced hominid species avaible, integrating himself into their society as circumstances allowed.
Sometimes he found himself among early Homo erectus, other times with more advanced Neanderthals or early Homo sapiens. Regardless of the species, Bobby approached each encounter with the same methodology—demonstrate value, avoid revealing his true nature, and form connections without significantly altering their development.
Each time, he built retionships. Each time, the quantum temporal energy tore him away.
After his fifteenth dispcement, Bobby decided to change his approach. The cycle of connection and loss had become too painful. Instead of seeking out human companionship, he would return to hibernation, sleeping through the intervals between dispcements.
He created a new chamber deep within a mountain range, using his telekinetic abilities to carve out a sanctuary simir to his original one. There, he would hibernate, allowing the nanites to maintain his body while his consciousness retreated from the world.
This strategy proved effective for several cycles. Bobby would awaken after a dispcement, confirm his temporal location, construct a new chamber, and return to hibernation. The emotional toll of losing companions was thus avoided, though the loneliness remained.
Until one particur dispcement changed everything.
Bobby awoke on a grassy pin, the quantum temporal energy dissipating around him. Initial observations suggested he had arrived in the te Pleistocene epoch—approximately 50,000 BCE. The air was cooler than in previous dispcements, suggesting an intergcial period.
As he oriented himself, Bobby detected smoke on the horizon—the unmistakable sign of controlled fire. Humans, then. Likely Homo sapiens at this point in history, possibly with some Neanderthal poputions still existing in isoted regions.
His first instinct was to follow his established protocol—find an isoted location, construct a chamber, and return to hibernation to await the next dispcement. But something made him hesitate.
The quantum temporal energy readings were different this time. The cycle appeared to be slowing, the energy rebuilding at a reduced rate. This suggested a longer interval before the next dispcement—perhaps decades rather than years.
Bobby stood on the pin, weighing his options. Decades of hibernation, or decades among humans who were now much closer to the species he had once been part of. The loneliness of his long existence pressed against him, a physical ache that even the nanites couldn't repair.
He made his decision and began walking toward the smoke.
The encampment was rger than any he had encountered before—nearly a hundred individuals gathered in a semi-permanent settlement near a river. Their technology was more advanced as well. They had constructed sturdy shelters using mammoth bones and hides, created sophisticated stone and bone tools, and developed complex social structures.
Bobby observed them for several days before approaching, learning their patterns and behaviors. They were unquestionably Homo sapiens—anatomically modern humans with the capacity for complex nguage, abstract thought, and symbolic representation.
When he finally approached the settlement, he did so openly, carrying freshly killed game as an offering. The reception was cautious but not hostile. These humans had likely encountered other nomadic groups and had established protocols for such meetings.
A tall woman with intricate tattoos covering her arms stepped forward, clearly a person of authority within the group. She spoke in a nguage Bobby didn't recognize, but the structure was complex enough that he could begin to decipher it through observation and his limited telepathic abilities.
Bobby offered the game with a respectful gesture he had observed among them. The tattooed woman accepted with a nod, then indicated he should follow her into the settlement.
The next few months were a revetion. These humans possessed not just nguage but art, music, and spiritual practices. They created cave paintings depicting hunting scenes and shamanic journeys. They crafted jewelry from shells, bones, and stones. They performed rituals at the full moon, movements and chants that Bobby recognized as early religious practices.
Bobby immersed himself in their culture, learning their nguage with a speed that occasionally drew suspicious gnces. He expined his presence as a traveler from a distant tribe, using his knowledge of survival techniques to justify his solitary arrival.
The tattooed woman, whose name transted roughly as "She Who Watches The Stars," seemed particurly interested in his stories and skills. She was the group's shaman, a position that combined spiritual leadership with practical knowledge of medicine and astronomy.
"Your eyes hold many journeys," she told him one evening as they sat outside her dwelling. "You see with the gaze of one who has walked far beyond the hunting grounds of men."
Bobby chose his words carefully. "I have traveled through many nds," he replied in her nguage. "I have seen things that are difficult to describe."
She nodded sagely. "The spirits speak through you sometimes. I hear them in your voice when you dream."
This was concerning. Bobby had been careful to maintain control of his psionic abilities, but perhaps during sleep, when his conscious mind rexed its vigince, something of his true nature showed through.
"What do the spirits say?" he asked, trying to sound merely curious.
She looked at him with eyes that seemed to see more than they should. "They speak of stars dying and bck skies. They speak of loneliness that stretches beyond the counting of seasons." She tilted her head. "Are you a spirit walker, stranger from far nds?"
Bobby felt a chill that had nothing to do with the cool evening air. This woman's intuition was remarkable, even without modern education or technology. He decided to offer a version of the truth that would make sense within her worldview.
"I have been blessed—or perhaps cursed—by spirits who have granted me a long journey," he said. "They send me from pce to pce, allowing me to learn the ways of many peoples."
This expnation seemed to satisfy her. Indeed, it elevated his status within the group, as one touched by powerful spirits was considered both potentially dangerous and valuable.
As the seasons changed, Bobby found himself drawn deeper into the community's life. He contributed his knowledge of tool-making, hunting techniques, and medicine, carefully modified to seem pusible for a well-traveled human rather than a time-dispced immortal.
He formed retionships—friendships with the hunters, intellectual exchanges with the shaman, and eventually, a deeper connection with a woman named Lana who crafted the group's pottery with remarkable skill.
Lana was widowed, her former mate lost to a hunting accident the previous winter. She had two young children who initially regarded Bobby with suspicion but gradually accepted him as he proved himself a reliable provider and patient teacher.
Their retionship developed slowly, built on mutual respect and genuine affection. Bobby was careful to maintain appropriate boundaries, aware that his time with this community was limited, even if longer than previous cycles.
"You speak to the cy," he observed one day as he watched Lana work, her fingers coaxing a simple lump of river cy into a beautifully proportioned vessel.
She smiled, not looking up from her work. "The cy speaks to me. I merely listen."
Bobby recognized the artistic intuition in her words—the same connection he had once felt with quantum equations in his distant past. "Your vessels hold more than water or grain," he said. "They hold your spirit."
Lana gnced up at him then, her eyes thoughtful. "Is that why you watch me work? To see my spirit?"
"Perhaps," Bobby acknowledged. "Or perhaps I simply enjoy watching something beautiful take shape."
Their retionship deepened over the following months. Bobby found in Lana a complexity of thought and emotion that resonated with him across the vast gulf of time that separated their origins. Her children, a boy of nine and a girl of six, gradually accepted him, particurly after he began teaching them tracking skills and simple mathematics disguised as hunting games.
For nearly a decade, Bobby lived among these early humans, experiencing a stability he hadn't known since before his fall through the singurity. The quantum temporal energy continued to build in his system, but at a significantly slower rate than in previous cycles.
He began to hope that perhaps the energy was stabilizing, that he might have decades or even centuries with this community before being dispced again. The thought was both comforting and terrifying—comforting because he had found a pce where he felt almost at home, terrifying because the inevitable separation would only be more painful for the deeper connections formed.
In his tenth year with the community, as Lana's children had grown into capable young adults and Bobby had become respected as an elder despite his seemingly unchanged appearance, disaster struck. A series of unusually violent storms caused the nearby river to flood, destroying much of the settlement and drowning several community members.
In the aftermath, as the survivors struggled to rebuild, Bobby noticed the quantum temporal energy in his system suddenly accelerating. The crisis had somehow triggered a change in the cycle—perhaps the intense emotions or the surge of adrenaline had catalyzed the process.
He had days, not years, before the next dispcement.
The night before he felt the dispcement would occur, Bobby sat with Lana in their dwelling, watching as she taught her daughter the finer points of cy preparation. The domestic scene—so normal, so precious—made his chest ache with the knowledge that he would soon be torn away from it.
Later, as they y together on their sleeping furs, Bobby held Lana close, memorizing the contours of her body, the sound of her breathing, the scent of her hair.
"You are troubled," she said, proving once again her perceptive nature. "Your body is here, but your spirit wanders."
Bobby sighed. "I must leave soon," he said simply.
Lana was silent for a long moment. "The spirits are calling you to another journey."
It wasn't a question, but Bobby answered anyway. "Yes. I cannot refuse their call."
She turned in his arms to face him, her expression solemn in the dim light of the dying fire. "I have known this day would come. You never truly settled here, even after all these years. A part of you was always listening for a voice I cannot hear."
The insight was so accurate that Bobby felt momentarily disoriented. How could this woman, separated from his origin by nearly 70,000 years of human development, understand him so well?
"I would stay if I could," he said, the truth of it aching in his chest.
"I know." She touched his face gently. "But you belong to the spirits more than you belong to us. More than you belong to me."
Bobby kissed her then, pouring into the gesture all the things he couldn't say—his gratitude for the decade of normalcy she had given him, his admiration for her wisdom and strength, his sorrow at having to leave.
The next morning, Bobby rose before dawn. The quantum temporal energy was reaching critical levels. He left gifts for Lana's children—carefully crafted tools and small tokens he had made during his time with them. For Lana, he left a cy figurine he had secretly created, depicting her at work on her pottery.
He slipped away while the settlement still slept, not wanting witnesses to his departure. Only Lana stood at the edge of the camp, watching silently as he walked into the morning mist.
Bobby raised his hand in a final farewell, then turned and continued walking until he was well out of sight. He found a secluded clearing in the forest and waited as the quantum temporal energy reached its peak.
The pain was familiar now—the sensation of being torn apart and reassembled at the quantum level. As reality distorted around him, Bobby closed his eyes, holding the image of Lana and her children in his mind.
When he opened them again, he stood in a different world.
The air was warmer, the vegetation different. A quick astronomical observation confirmed he had moved forward in time—approximately 10,000-15,000 years based on the stelr configurations.
And so the cycle continued. But something had changed within Bobby. The decade with Lana and her community had reawakened his desire for human connection, had reminded him of what it meant to be part of something rger than himself.
He would no longer hibernate between dispcements. Whatever time he had in each era, he would use it to connect, to learn, to share. The pain of separation was the price he would pay for the joy of belonging, however temporarily.
As he oriented himself in this new time period, Bobby Kestrel—quantum engineer, time traveler, immortal witness to humanity's long journey—began walking toward the sound of distant voices, ready to begin again.