Prison of a Billion Years
by Stephen Marlowe
Copyright© 2025 by Stephen Marlowe
Science Fiction Story: The story follows a man who is convicted of murder in the 20th century. Instead of a normal prison sentence, he is subjected to a new punishment.
Adam Slade was a man who had nothing to lose by making a break for it. The trouble was, he knew that no one had ever escaped from the—
Adam Slade crushed the guard’s skull with a two foot length of iron pipe. No one ever knew where Slade got the iron pipe, but it did not seem so important.
The guard was dead. That was important.
And Slade was on the loose. With a hostage.
That was even more important.
The hostage’s name was Marcia Lawrence. She was twenty-two years old and pretty and scared half out of her wits. She was, before she became a hostage, a reporter for Interplanetary Video. She had been granted the final pre-execution interview with Adam Slade and she had looked forward to it a long time but it had not worked out as planned.
It had not worked out as planned because Slade, only hours from the execution chamber with absolutely nothing to lose, had splattered the guard’s brains around the inside of his cell and marched outside with a frightened Marcia Lawrence.
Outside. Outside the cell block while other condemned prisoners roared and shouted and banged tin cups on bars and metal walls and judas-hole-grills. Outside the prison compound and across the dome-enclosed city which served the prison.
Then outside the dome.
Outside the dome there was rock. Rock only, twisted and convoluted and thrusting and gigantic like monoliths of a race of giants. Rock alone under the awesome gray sky. Steaming rock, for some of the terrestrial waters were still trapped at great depths. And the sea far off, booming against rocky headlands, hissing tidally and slowly, in an age-long process, pulverizing the rock. The sea far off, a clean sea, not sea-smelling sea, a sea whose waters must evaporate countless times and be borne up over the naked rocks in vapor and clouds and come down in pelting, endless rain and rush across the rock, frothing and steaming—a sea which must do this countless times in the eons to come, and would do it, to bring salinity to its own waters.
“It kind of scares the hell out of you, doesn’t it?” Adam Slade said. He was a big man with a thick neck and heavy, sleepy-looking eyes and a blue beard-shadow on his stubborn jaw. He said those words as he climbed out of the prison tank with Marcia Lawrence. The tank’s metal was still warm from over-heated travel.
“I didn’t think anything would scare you,” Marcia Lawrence said. She had conquered her initial terror in the five hours of clanking tank flight from the prison. They had come a great many miles from the prison dome, paralleling the edge of the saltless sea and then finally, when their fuel was almost gone, clanking and rattling down toward the sea. She was a newspaperwoman, that above all now. She must not be afraid. She had a story here. A story.
“Get moving,” Adam Slade said. “I got nothing against you, lady,” he told her for the tenth time. “But you try anything, you’re dead. You get that? I got nothing to lose. One time is all they can kill me. But first they got to find me, but they won’t be able to take me as long as you’re here. Just stay meek and you’ll stay alive.”
“How long do you think you can hold out?” Marcia Lawrence asked practically. They had begun to walk away from the now useless tank. Adam Slade was carrying the dead guard’s M-gun in the crook of his bent left arm and walking with long, easy, ground-consuming strides. Marcia almost had to run to keep up with him as they went down a stretch of slightly sloping black rock toward the steaming, hissing, pounding, roaring, exploding surf.
Slade smiled. “Plenty of water,” he said.
“But no food, Mr. Slade. There is absolutely no food on earth now and no possible way of getting food unless you want to stick around for a few million years.”
“You think I came out here without a plan?” Slade asked with some hostility.
“I don’t know. You were desperate.”
“As long as you’re with me I figure they might follow, but they won’t rush me. They might even send over a ‘copter, but it won’t try anything. Not with you here. Desperate? I’m not desperate, and don’t you forget it. Desperate you don’t think straight. Once is all they can execute me. I stayed behind, they’d of done it. If they catch me, they’ll do it. What’s the difference?”
“You said you had a plan.”
hey reached the edge of a thrusting headland, an enormous beak-shaped cliff of beetling black rock which leaned out over the young, still saltless ocean. Slade paced back and forth quickly, with a powerful leonine grace, until he found a fault in the rock. The fault tumbled jaggedly, steeply down almost to the edge of the sea.
“Down there,” Slade said. “We’ll follow the sea coast back to the prison.”
“Back?” Marcia said in disbelief.
“Hell yes, back. You said it yourself. There’s no food out here. Since there ain’t no life, of course there’s no food. Oh, it’s a great place for a prison, all right. Whoever thought of it ought to win a prize. A prison—a billion years in the past. What’s the word?”
“Archaeozoic,” she supplied.
“Yeah, archaeozoic. An archaeozoic prison. You can escape to your heart’s content, but what the hell’s the difference. There’s no life back here, not yet. The Earth’s just a baby. So you escape—and you starve to death. It makes every maximum security jail before this one look like a kid’s piggy bank.”
“There hasn’t ever been an escape,” Marcia said hopefully as they made their way down to the sea, she in front and Slade behind her with the M-gun.
“There ain’t never been a hostage before.”
“No-o.”
“There’s a hostage now.”
Marcia Lawrence took a deep breath and asked suddenly, “Are you going to kill me?”
“Hell, I don’t know. I got no reason to—unless you make me. We’re going back there. We’re double-tracking along the beach, get me? Back to the prison dome.”
“But—”
“Adam Slade won’t starve to death out here. We’ll double back to the dome—and the time machine.”
“Oh,” she said. They began to walk along the edge of the sea, its waters sullen gray, mirroring the sky. Here on this dawn earth the sky has as yet never been blue, for the primordial waters were still falling, falling. It rained almost all the time and the air was thick with moisture and every night when the sun—as yet unseen by the dawn earth except as an invisible source of light—went down and darkness came, the mists rolled in from the sea. In the morning whether rains had fallen or not the ground was soaked and tiny freshets rushed down to the sea, returning to it.
“Look out!” he cried suddenly, and shoved her against the base of the cliff which overlooked the water. The cliff top thrust out over them, umbrella-wise. The base of the cliff was thus a concavity and they pressed themselves against it now, in shadow. The waters of the infant sea were a hundred yards away, surging and booming against the rock.
She heard it soon after he did. A helicopter. She wanted to scream. She wondered if they would hear her scream. But she looked at Adam Slade’s face and did nothing. Soon the helicopter came, buzzing low over them, searching. It circled a great many times because the abandoned tank was there. It circled and came down on the beach and two uniformed figures got out. Now she really wanted to scream. One sound. One sound and they would hear her. One quick filling of the lungs and—
Adam Slade hit her suddenly and savagely and the black loomed up at her but she did not remember striking it.
When she awoke, the helicopter was gone.
“Sorry I had to poke you one,” Slade said. He did not seem sorry at all. He said it automatically and then added: “You ready to walk?”
She nodded. She got up and staggered a few steps before her legs steadied under her. Then with Slade she walked down along the rocky beach. This, she thought, was a story. It was the only big story she had ever had and probably she would not live to write it. As a woman, she was almost hysterical with fear, but as a videocaster she was angry. The story was hers—if she lived to tell it.
Then she had to live.
Time prison. Sure, she thought. Utterly escape proof—unless someone like Slade could take a hostage, double back to the prison dome, the hermetically sealed dome and somehow trick or overpower the guards who watched the time traveling machine outside the prison dome.
Outside. Naturally, it would be outside. That way the prisoners couldn’t get at it.
Unless, like Slade, they too were outside.
Outside, where life had not yet been born. Outside, the infant earth. Let a man escape. What did his escape matter? He would live exactly as long as it took a man, reasonably healthy, to starve to death.
Unless he had a hostage and a plan...
he became aware of rain when they left the cliff overhang. There was almost no wind and the rain came down slowly at first, huge slow drops which splattered on the black rock.
“If it gets any harder,” Slade said, “we’ll have to duck under the cliff for protection. You don’t know what a rain can be like back here. I seen them through the dome.”
But they couldn’t go under the cliff for protection, not if they wanted to keep going. For the cliff dropped suddenly in a wild jumble of rocks and then there was nothing but the sloping black beach, sloping down to the sea.
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