ankle and being unable to flee from sub-level zombies."
   I also summoned a torch on my wristwatch before walking down the stairs.  They were steep so I reached for the handrail.
   "Don't!" shouted Leafhead.  "That handrail could be a trap.  Might start this whole place collapsing."
   "It smells like--"
   "Baking soda and broiled caterpillars, I know," said Leafhead darkly.
   "Er... I was going to say a pile of dead bats."
   "Might be a few of those too.  I'm picking up a lot of scents, but nothing stronger than baking soda or broiled caterpillars."
   The stairs were caked with thick dust that filled the air with every footstep.  No one had been down here for awhile.
   "Here is a light-switch," said Leafhead as he flicked it.  Lamps came alive sporadically around the room.  Both our wristwatches extinguished themselves, having sensed the electric lighting.
   "What is this place?"  I marvelled, turning my head in all directions.
   Hundreds of framed pictures hung from the walls.  Some of them were of documents of science experiments, while the rest of them were people posing in front of famous landmarks.  In every picture the same man appeared standing beside a random group of people.  Nearer the far wall was a sleeping area that wouldn't have looked at all out of place as a movie set for a 1970s stoner basement.  A tall rack of ancient-looking vinyl records (flanked by lava lamps) was the centerpiece attraction.  Near the staircase was another Coney Island photo-booth that had been transformed into a weird machine. Oddest of all was the stretch of counters on which sat elaborate miniatures and models of landscapes, civilizations and entire worlds.  A tiny robot system of pulleys and cranes continued to function, silently making minor adjustments to the layout of the little lands.  We had no idea how important this would later prove to be.  After all, it looked like a bunch of toys.
   Leafhead took one of the framed pictures down from the wall.  He used his labcoat to wipe off the dust.  It left a grey streak in contrast with the usual alien colors.  The picture showed a group of people gathered on an icy tundra.
   "This was Melvin's room," he finally said.  "I wondered where it was.  Always thought he had a tree-fort or something."
   "This was Melvin, eh?" I looked at more of the pictures.  His life had clearly been an extraordinary adventure.  It seemed as if he visited everywhere, even the River of Five Colors during the actual appropriate time of year.
   "Where is that one from?" I asked, pointing to the icy tundra that Leafhead had chosen to look at.
   "Antarctica."
   "Was that the expedition you nearly died on?"
   "I guess it was," he said, returning the picture.  The lamplight glinted off Antarctica where it only dully hit the rest of the grey squares on the wall. 
   "It seems like no one has been down here for years.  Didn't Melvin die shortly before I got here?"
   "One never knows about time around here," said Leafhead.  "Especially when measured in dust," he added with his usual cryptic spin.
   "Is this another face-replicator?" I asked as pulled back the curtain to the Coney Island photo-booth.
   "No, definitely not.  This booth has been altered in a different way.  Don't go in there until I've deduced its purpose."
   I perused what looked like a shelf of bootleg VHS tapes.  They were labelled as different episodes of a documentary of sorts.  It seemed I was not the first intern to feel like my time here was worth recording. 
   "Look at all these tapes," I said.  "Did you know Melvin kept a video journal all about the experiments?"
   "I knew he was a filmmaker," said Leafhead.
   Suddenly I sneezed.  "Let's get out of here," I said, beginning to choke on the dust. 
   "Drink this," said Leafhead, producing a tiny vial.  "Anti-Dust agent I perfected years ago.  I once accidentally opened up a portal to a perpetually wind-stricken dust-world.  The house was instantly engulfed.  Was forced to invent this antidote quickly... barely survived the trials while I exhausted the entire local water supply.  Did you ever hear about the record-high draught of '89?"
   I drank the Anti-Dust Agent.  It was surprisingly delicious.
   "It tastes like--"
   "Cherimoya and Pomelo, I know," interjected Leafhead again.
   "Uh, sure," I said as we ascended the staircase.  "Do you think now might finally be a good time for that Q and A interview?"  I asked hopefully.  It wasn't something I frequently pestered Leafhead about.  I was down to mentioning it only every couple weeks.
   "I guess now is as good a time as ever," said Leafhead.
   I was elated.  We sat down at the library table, and so began... 
   ...The Part With Only Expository Dialogue in Script-Format.
   Jonathan
   What exactly is your full name?
   Leafhead
   Doctor Voracious Klonduke Leafhead II, ASC.
   Jonathan
   ASC?  You're a member of the American
   Society of Cinematographers?
   Leafhead
   Not yet.
   [Laughs]
   But I consider myself a bringer of light and vision.
   Jonathan
   Let's go back to the beginning.  Your newspaper
   ad made mention of getting to be a part of
   "historical breakthrough events that will tear down
   all that we think we know about the inner-workings of
   Earth and the Universe."
   Leafhead
   Sounds like something I might say.
   Jonathan
   I have seen things here that could change the world.
   Yet you seem to keep all your inventions to yourself.
   Leafhead
   [Lights a pipe].  
   You've seen things here that have changed the world.
   I don't publicly unleash the entirety of my inventions
   because it is far too much for people to handle.
   Instead, I have anonymously leaked my knowledge into 
   the mainstream gradually over a course of many years.
   You wouldn't believe just how much I've influenced 
   humanity over the last century.
   Jonathan
   That brings me to one of my main questions. 
   How old are you?
   Leafhead
   I think I will be turning 103 next October.
   If you don't include the years I spent in cryo-freeze.
   Jonathan
   So you are immortal.  Was it the Jellyfish?
   Leafhead
   [Laughs again].
   What?
   Jonathan
   I thought you were interested in Jellyfish
   because they contain some ingredient
   needed for an immortality formula.
   Leafhead
   Not sure where you got that idea... but the reason
   for my immortality is that once while on Mars I had 
   the incredible fortune of stumbling upon a pair of 
   well-seasoned travelers of time and space.  Their
   names were Dr. Wilx, an Astrospeciologist of the
   highest order of intelligence, and Dr. Rip T. Brash the Third, 
   a belligerent sort of fellow that I wouldn't advise you 
   to try to shake hands with.  They were beings from a 
   very high-order on the universal scale.  I guess their blood 
   acted as a catalyst or something for effects of immortality.  
   I traded one of my favorite inventions, a lab coat with 
   never-ending pockets that lead into another dimension, 
   for an injection to the eyeball that was assured to 
   grant me a life of hundreds of years.
   Jonathan
   Not only have you been around a long time, 
   but you've been to a lot of places too, haven't you?
   Leafhead
   I've been to most places on Earth, yes.  
   Thanks to my teleporter.
   
					     					 			; Jonathan
   Not just places.  I mean times.
   Leafhead
   Er, right.  That. 
   [Lights pipe again].
   Jonathan
   We've already met, haven't we?
   Leafhead
   Of course we've already met.
   Jonathan
   What I mean is that you had met me before I even saw
   your newspaper ad, at a point later in my life than now.
   Leafhead
   What makes you say that?
   [Here I briefly left the room so as to
   retrieve the proof in the form of Leafhead's Will].
   Jonathan
   I'm mentioned in this will, yet it is clearly dated from
   before my actual birth.  At what point in the future
   have you traveled to and met my older self?
   Leafhead
   You found that old thing, eh?  I wouldn't think
   much of it at this point.  But if I'm going to be
   telling you everything then we might as start with
   your first day at the house.  Remember when
   you were bit by that poisonous reptile and I had to
   filter your blood through the De-Toxifier?
   Jonathan
   As if someone could forget.
   Leafhead
   That wasn't exactly an accident.
   Jonathan
   The part about me being attacked by
   a hybrid reptilian creature, nearly dying and having
   to be subjected to some sort of medieval torture device?
   You mean that was the part that wasn't an accident?
   Leafhead
   Exactly.  It was all part of my brilliant planning.  You see,
   after the death of Melvin I decided to never again lose
   a valuable assistant.  I endlessly labored to perfect a
   cloning device.  It is a very simple machine.  All I need is
   a sample of someones blood and I can make a perfect 
   replica of both their mind and body.  The reptile creature was 
   instructed to bite you so that I would have an excuse to put you
    in the De-Toxifier, which is actually the Cloning Machine.
   Jonathan
   There's a clone of me somewhere in the house?
   Whereabouts?  I'd like to see.
   Leafhead
   That's the tricky bit.  You've only