A breakthrough in transportation promises to erase distance, delay, and inconvenience with the push of a button. People step into a transmitter in one city and emerge moments later in another, intact, conscious, and amazed. Governments celebrate it. Businesses depend on it. Millions embrace it without hesitation. Travel by wire becomes so normal that no one pauses to ask what might go wrong.
The story unfolds through the voice of one of the engineers who helped make it possible. His account is confident, witty, and unsettling in equal measure. Early experiments succeed just enough to justify pushing forward, even as accidents pile up, explanations grow thinner, and responsibility becomes easier to deflect. Each improvement brings wider adoption, but also stranger failures. Some are quietly erased. Others are explained away with statistics, lawsuits, or humor.
As the service expands, the tone shifts from triumph to unease. The narrator insists the system is safe, refined, and profitable. Yet his casual descriptions reveal a gap between technical success and human cost. The final irony lands not with a catastrophe, but with a choice. When the time comes for him to travel, he refuses to step inside the machine he helped unleash.
Arthur C. Clarke was already a recognized voice in speculative science when he wrote this story, blending rigorous technological thinking with sharp social observation. His work regularly appeared in magazines such as Astounding Science Fiction and Science Fantasy, and he would go on to write Childhood’s End, The City and the Stars, and 2001: A Space Odyssey. Travel by Wire reflects Clarke’s early fascination with communication systems, infrastructure, and the unintended consequences of rapid innovation—told with humor, restraint, and a quietly chilling final note.























