His
name was Alto Friedrich. He was a German-born mathematician who moved
with his only daughter Penelope to England in the year 1864. In his
calculations, Alto learned that the world was to end on March 16,
1897. And there was nothing anyone could do in his era to prevent it.
Some
say the machine was invented by Tesla, others that it was Friedrich's own creation. Either way, it
was never finished, and the science that powered it never fully
understood. In a letter to Friedrich, Tesla told him his machine was
unsafe, and would become more and more unstable with each use.
This
did not stop Friedrich. When and where he traveled exactly, no one
knew. But to the amazement of family and guests, he would disappear in a
cloud of smoke from his drawing room at 315 Bell Street. At first, it
was only for a few moments at a time, and then he would re-appear holding some strange
device or plant, totally foreign and unfamiliar to all present.
But what started out as a little smoke, and a few moments gone; became clouds of smoke, and days gone.
Friedrich's
daughter Penelope was his only remaining love in the world, and he
hated to leave her for such long times. On one trip, he returned home
with a curious baby bird from some prehistoric era, which she kept as a
tame pet. It loved minnows and singing when it was gray outside.