Boulder, Colorado, present day
I killed my mother.
Okay, I didn’t exactly shoot her or stab her in the back or anything. But if I’d never been born, she’d still be here, simple as that.
Guilt by existence.
It wasn’t premeditated mom-slaughter—I’m not some monster. But it was my strangeness that did her in, no doubt about it. If you saw me, you’d never believe one skinny, sixteen-year-old girl could be responsible for so much tragedy.
But you’d be wrong.
An ancient curse says, “May you live in interesting times,” meaning dangerous and turbulent. That pretty much sums up my life. I mean, when your very existence in time is out of control, life can get pretty interesting. Every few months, I get yanked back in time for hours or even days. I don’t know why. I don’t know when. I have absolutely no control over it. I feel a tingle, and seconds later, I just shimmer, fade, and poof, I’m in the past.
Seriously.
My biggest fear was that it would happen at school, and before you could say, “Did you see that?” I’d be the next viral freak on YouTube. It would be a short walk from YouTube to a government laboratory somewhere remote. Yeah, like I wanted that to happen. My strategy was to fade into the woodwork, so if I vanished at school, no one would even notice.
The first time I disappeared, I was six months old. In the beginning, my trips were short, and I was only gone about a minute. Of course I don’t remember this happening, but I’d heard the story a million times. It was the primary topic at my house…until my mom checked out.
I was born in the fall. By spring, I had just learned to sit up and was grabbing everything I could get my hands on. It had been a long, cold winter, and my mom had waited weeks for it to warm up enough to show me the tree house. Built with love by her grandfather, it had always been her special place. Once inside, she lifted me up to touch the trunk that rose right through the middle of the room. And as soon as my tiny hand touched the bark—BAM, I was gone.
She totally freaked—I was in her arms one moment and simply gone the next. But before she could do anything other than just stand there in shock, I morphed back into existence fast asleep with my thumb in my mouth…or so the story goes.
If that had been the end of it, maybe she could have dealt…chalked it up to too much caffeine or something. But it kept happening two or three times a year, just enough to keep her on edge. The problem was that every time I disappeared—which wasn’t all that often, but still—my mom was the only witness.
She told her friends, but they just looked at her funny and began avoiding her. She tried desperately to convince my dad, Sam. But since he never saw it happen, what could he say? Talk about a rock and a hard place. He wanted to believe her, but he just couldn’t. Sam was a scientist. He needed evidence.
My mom tried a few times to get me to tell my dad—and I did. But Sam thought I was saying what she wanted me to say—you know, siding with my mom out of loyalty. I mean, I was disappearing, but I was just a kid. What did I know? I was confused and too young to make sense of it then. I just wanted them to not fight about it.
It was a dangerous equation. Scientist/nonbelieving dad + I-swear-it-really-happened mom = seriously-screwed-up-no-win situation.
They argued about it constantly. I’d listen to them late at night, huddled outside their door, wrapped in a blanket. My mom would lay out her argument, and Sam would bring in science. She’d say she saw it happen. Sam would say it was impossible. It tore them apart. Finally she gave up talking about it. Sam pretended she’d be fine if she got enough rest. I just hid in the tree house with my friends, Lex and Ipod.
I was seven the last time she saw it happen. That one was the last straw. She totally lost it. The doctors gave her drugs, and she walked around like a zombie, barely recognizing Sam and me. She started talking to herself, mumbling, and watching me like a hawk. She got all twitchy and jumped at the slightest noise. She lost her appetite.
It was another dangerous equation, this time for my mom. Disappearing kid + disappearing’s impossible = she must be crazy.
Near the end, she got caught up remembering her Grandpa Charlie, staying up all night, looking through photo albums. She was obsessed about his going crazy, thinking the same thing was happening to her, that it was genetic. Finally, I think, it was just too hard living with the uncertainty. So one day she took a boatload of pills and made the uncertainty go away.
At least for her.
My world got cold and empty real fast. I got through the funeral…barely. I never would have made it without Lex and Ipod. But I survived.
Then about a month later, Sam and I were alone in the back yard, and I felt the tingle. Looking down, I saw that I was starting to shimmer. I remember being so surprised. Somehow I thought it would all stop when my mom was gone…like maybe the craziness was because of her. That’s when I realized that everything—our whole, weird family nightmare—was my fault.
I looked up from my shimmering hands at Sam. He was staring at me as if he’d seen a ghost. I felt this hollow feeling in my chest…a dark, frigid emptiness. And then I disappeared right in front of a supremely stunned Sam.
I was only gone a few minutes. But when I returned, he was standing there, rigid as a statue, tears running down his face. I walked up to him and touched his hand, waiting for him to say something. He looked down at me with empty eyes and didn’t say a word. He just walked into the house, poured himself a drink, and that’s about all he’s done ever since. He’s never talked about it…not even once.
My guess is it wasn’t so much the shock of his reality blasting apart, or even the mysteriousness of my disappearance. It was the realization that he let my mom down. That he’d failed her. That she was right all those years and he was wrong. So now he’s following in her footsteps…via slow motion alcohol poisoning.
I suppose I’m at fault for taking him out too.
*******************
There was no explanation for the way I was, although I spent a lot of time over the years trying to figure it out. If time travel had been the only weirdness, I would have pounced on the theory that I was just a normal girl who was being acted upon by some unexplained outside force. Like maybe I’d gotten caught up in some kind of bizarre time loop that kept sweeping me into the past for little stretches of time. As scary as that sounds, I would have loved that to be the answer. I really wanted to be a normal girl.
But somewhere along the line, I had come to accept the inevitable. It wasn’t an outside force. What was strange was me.
For as long as I remember, I’ve sensed things other people don’t. Ipod was the one who first called it “energy.” There are two types. The energy from trees, especially my tree, was soothing and healing. It kept me sane. The energy from out in the world, especially inside buildings and around crowds, was dissonant and jarring. It took a lot out of me just to manage it.
To minimize the impact and protect my secret, I kept a low profile and went virtually nowhere. But the one place I couldn’t avoid was school. To make it through, I had the code of invisibility. It had ten rules and I stuck to them religiously. At that moment, as I made my way down the noisy hall to P.E., I was following rules three and four—hug the walls and keep flowing in the direction you’re heading.
It worked well except for the snarky glare I got from Sloane Cheney, AKA the Bratz Doll, as I passed her ginormous, cheerleader chest. That chest was a powerful force at Boulder High. She carried it around like a display case, thrusting her “twins” in everyone’s faces as if she was selling popcorn at a ballgame. I’m guessing they each have names—cute ones. She probably sings them to sleep at night.
Why do I care?
Well, it’s her belief in
the spectacularness of that chest that she thinks entitles her to step all over girls like me, who are, shall we say, cleavage-challenged. But it’s not my chest or lack thereof that makes her treat me like dirt. She’s hated me since seventh grade when my essay won over hers in some stupid, mandatory contest. It wasn’t my fault she bragged that she was going to win and then looked like a dork when she didn’t.
Whatever.
But her hatred of me meant she was invulnerable to my invisibility. That made her dangerous. I avoided her like the freakin West Nile virus, but then, I avoided pretty much everyone. When you are my kind of strange, you do whatever it takes to stay under the radar.
My downfall was P.E.
If my brain had a search engine and you entered “things that suck,” the very first entry would be P.E. I hated it with a vengeance. It isn’t that I’m clumsy. I’m not. There’s just something about school that seems to drain the life out of me, literally decimating my strength by the hour. The longer I’m in a building, the weaker I get—brick buildings in particular. And crowds, especially loud ones, make my brain whack-out.
That made P.E. my kryptonite.
By my seventh period class, there was no way I could possibly get a ball over a net, or through a hoop, or to do whatever stupid ball thing the sport required. And since the Bratz Doll was in my class, it was a double hit. Still, her I could ignore. The bigger problem was that I had nothing to hide behind. More specifically, I had no hoodie.
I felt naked.
Waiting till the last minute, I snuck through the locker room and into a bathroom stall to change. No way was I going to brave the bench area. There was the routine fight over who had to take me on their team—the highlight of my day. That done, I played my usual game of keep-out-of-the-way with some degree of success, occupying myself with mental chatter and stealth wall hugging. I did okay with that until my mind wandered a little too far, and I lost my ball-avoiding focus.
“Move it, Moron!”
I jumped backwards, almost getting slammed by a kid twice my size.
“Keep out of the freaking way you stupid, little twerp,” growled the Bratz Doll, two inches from my ear. “I’m not going to have my team lose points because of your worthless ass. Next time you’re going down.”
I ignored her, following rule four, but the empty feeling in my chest grew a little colder. I shoved it down deep and checked the clock for the hundredth time. Come on already…let this class be over!
Finally, Ms. Norris blew her whistle, and the hordes rushed from the gym. I waited till the crowd thinned, and the Bratz Doll was gone, before I braved the locker room.
The empty feeling lifted a little, the moment I pulled on my oversized black hoodie. I zipped it up and yanked the hood, so it hung down like Kenny on South Park. I put on my tinted glasses. I slung my bag over my shoulder. Then I hugged the walls on the way to my locker, relieved once again, to be invisible.
Seattle, Washington, present day.
Lately, I’ve had to remind myself; I’m just a kid, not some attendant in a psych ward, or an actor in a horror movie waiting for my turn to scream. I take stock constantly, trying to hold on to what little thread of reality I have left. When things get really bad, I pull out my driver’s license and read it. Like if I didn’t remind myself who I was—the normal stuff—I might lose myself completely in this nightmare.
Each day, while I shave, I repeat the basics just to ground myself. I’m Constantine DeMille, a senior, seventeen, six foot one, 175 pounds. I have black hair, blue eyes, no identifying scars, or marks, except the tattoo of a tree branch around my left wrist. No rank, no serial number, not likely to acquire them in the future.
I’m not much for team sports, but I love a full-out run. So I do cross-country because it takes time to really feel the speed. I need music like I need air which means I play a mean guitar and am so-so on the keyboards. I love physics and art—chemistry, not so much. I’m young, alive, and walking around free.
Walking, that’s where the thread snaps. My brother will never walk again. Free…that’s becoming questionable.
Of course the prison is of my own making.
I felt like I’d been sent to the auto graveyard, smashed by a crusher into a jagged block, and piled with the rest of my family into a useless mountain of metal. Then someone came along, toppled the mountain over, and tried to iron us out into identifiable shapes—make us as we were before. But we were so damaged; we were beyond repair. We’d always be dinged and banged up and scratched and scraped. We’d always be a pile of junk.
And I’d caused the accident.
How do you atone for something like that? I couldn’t even confess because my parents didn’t know the secret, the “not-normal” part of me—and I’ve sworn not to reveal it. They didn’t know about the Guild or time travel. They didn’t connect the accident with me. They just sat in the dark, moaning, “why did this happen?”
I wanted to shout, “Because I messed up—I’m really, really sorry!”
But that’s not an option.
I wasn’t home when my brother fell off the roof, snapping his spine, changing our lives forever. I wasn’t there when my mom found him lying broken on the ground. I wasn’t there when they told my parents he’d never walk again. But mostly, I wasn’t there to catch him when he fell…like I was the first time it happened. They didn’t know I’d changed the timeline. My parents didn’t know I was the why.
But the Guild knew.
I remember the sentencing like it was yesterday. It played over and over in my brain, driving me crazy, stamped for eternity on the hard disk of my mind. They came for me, two suits, and told me I’d been summoned. I had no choice but to comply. The stark room was empty, except for a long steel table, at which sat the six Regents who would judge my crime and decide my fate. A spotlight provided the only illumination, and it focused on me, the guilty one. Shadows of the Regents loomed large and ominous against the wall, making giants of my judge and jury.
Making me seem small.
I was a frame in a graphic novel, drained of color, with a faded background, and my agonized face laid bare for all to see.
I wanted desperately to turn the page.
Head down and hands behind my back, I stood alone. My throat was dry, and I regretted not grabbing a drink before the trip. But the suits hadn’t given me time to do anything. They’d simply appeared beside my redwood tree, each one grasping an arm, and seconds later, we were morphing into the Guild courtyard. Talk about a speedy trial. The vibes in the room were cold as ice, and I suppressed a shiver and the urge to rub my arms. Wishing I’d worn a jacket, I waited, saying nothing.
I had no defense.
I also had no clue what abilities these Regents possessed. The hardwood floor was old and bare, and I worried they might be using it as a conductor to mindspeak with each other, leaving me in the dark. I wasn’t clueless. I knew, that they knew, that I knew, I’d broken a rule. The most important rule, the one they hold most sacred. It was too late now, but I was deeply regretting my impulse-control issues.
Slowly I raised my head and flinched as accusing eyes attacked me. My kind, we have unusual eyes. Our pupils are large—our glares intense. And when those eyes look at you—especially six pairs of them—you know you’re being looked at. This was not good. I was on the shit list of a group that could zip back in time and keep my parents from meeting. I took a step back, bracing for the attack.
Finally, the head Regent stood. He was tall and thin, with a long face, and bristly, gray hair. “You know the Prime Dictate,” he said as he glared at me, accusing, blaming, waiting for me to answer.
They all waited.
I fought the urge to toss out excuses. “Yes, sir,” I said, instead.
“And it is?” he gestured. The shadow of his hand moved across the wall like a gigantic clutching claw.
I felt my throat constrict, along with a desperate urge to haul-ass out the door.
He looked like he wanted to stran
gle me. Who knew? I had no clue, really, about the inner workings of the Guild hierarchy. Without consequences to their actions—since they can go back in time and change anything—who knew what they did behind closed doors.
“Manipulating one’s own timeline is forbidden,” I answered as I shifted my balance from side to side.
“Yet, you did exactly that.”
“I was only trying to—”
“It doesn’t matter what you were trying to do, Mr. DeMille. You dove head first into the deep, dark world of consequence…on a whim no less. You broke the Prime Dictate.”
“But I—”
“Do you know why it is forbidden?” The interruption came from an ancient woman, who’d been staring hate darts at me since she walked into the room. She curled her lip and arched her eyebrows, and it was clear that she, at least, completely had it in for me. I was toast.
“Going back in time and editing the past is the most serious of actions,” I recited, trying to sound respectful. I could see by their faces that they were underwhelmed. I was not only toast; I was ten ways of totally screwed. I hesitated, fumbling for the words.
“Mr. DeMille…? She gestured for me to continue.
“As Editors, our numbers are few, yet our purpose is to ensure that Earth survives the technological age,” I continued. “Tampering with one’s own timeline is seductive. It can quickly become an addiction. An Editor, who becomes addicted, not only endangers our purpose, he or she is a danger to all of humanity.”
“And yet you did this willingly for…what was it again?” she asked.
I had an answer all planned; but with them glaring at me, my mind went blank. “I—”
“To get out of being grounded,” said the head Regent in disgust. “Isn’t that right, Mr. DeMille?”
“Yes, sir,” I admitted, biting the inside of my cheek.
He grabbed a tablet and scrolled down the page. “So that you could see a rock concert.” He sighed heavily and looked at the others who shook their heads in disappointment.
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