Nine-Tenths
Meira Pentermann
Copyright © 2011 Meira Pentermann
All rights reserved.
This book or any portion thereof may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever without the express written permission of the author or publisher except for the use of brief quotations in critical articles or reviews.
This is a work of fiction. Names, places, businesses, characters and incidents are either the product of the author's imagination or are used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons living or dead, actual events or locales is purely coincidental.
Cover Design by Gale Haut
ISBN Numbers for Paperback Released in September 2011
ISBN: 0615524753
ISBN-13: 978-0-615-52475-7
1. Science Fiction-Dystopian 2. Political-Fiction
3. Nine-Tenths
For Emo
You opened my eyes
Chapter One
Nine-tenths of a second is just long enough for someone to make an irrevocable, unforgivable mistake. The moment before and the moment after might seem to belong to divergent realities. Nine-tenths of a second can change the world.
Leonard Tramer understood this only too well. Nine-tenths of a second haunted him, possessing every thought. He did not dispute the fact that his momentary lapse in concentration deserved to be deemed unforgivable. What the aging inventor could not accept was the notion that his error was irrevocable. For decades, Leonard tinkered and toiled in an effort to rectify the horrible mistake he had made on May 9th — thirty-one years, four months, and two days ago. He intended to pursue his quest for the duration of his life, if necessary.
Hunched over a desk, Leonard cursed under his breath while delicately manipulating a fine-tipped solder iron. The desk, littered with wires and electronic parts, had endured decades of blasphemy, burns, and solder stains. An ancient computer stood in the center, its fan clattering in protest, while a relatively new laptop rested in the corner, as far removed from the chaos as possible.
“Damn.”
Leonard placed the soldering iron on its cradle, pushed his chair away from the desk, and ran one hand through his thinning hair. Mostly gray, with a hint of brown, his short, loose curls scattered as his fingers passed. He had not showered in at least two days, and he could only imagine the state of his ever-decaying appearance. A two-day-old beard and a smattering of freckles accentuated fifty-one years of well-earned creases. A loose white t-shirt, half tucked into faded jeans, nearly blended with his pallid skin. Still, his medium build and square jaw preserved an essence of dignity. A shave and a smile would likely transform him, but grooming and pleasantries were not on his agenda that afternoon.
He noticed Michelle out of the corner of his eye and swiveled to face her. She stood in the doorway glaring at him, a small red suitcase at her feet. Her cropped, black hair did little to soften her long, thin features.
“I’m leaving, Leo.”
With a weary, defeated expression, Leonard stared at the young woman. “Okay. Do you have everything?”
“Okay? Is that all you’re going to say? Okay?”
He shrugged.
“I wasted nearly a year of my life trying to rescue you from this mess.” She gestured around the room. A disorderly array of boxes, disassembled electronic devices, and dog-eared books spoke volumes. A well-worn armchair in one corner betrayed the fact that Leonard rarely left the room, resting briefly in-between periods of manic productivity that paid the bills, and stretches of creativity that fueled his obsession.
“I didn’t ask for a rescue.”
“You’re wasting away in here, pursuing this MacGyver-meets-Flash-Gordon nonsense. You had so much potential.”
“MacGyver meets the Time Traveler.”
“What?”
“MacGyver meets the Time Traveler from H.G. Wells’ The Time Machine. That would be a better analogy—”
“Whatever.”
“I’m just saying—”
“The boy is dead, Leo. You’re never going to bring him back with this insane delusion. He. Is. Dead.”
Leonard jumped to his feet and swiftly crossed the room, stopping inches from her face. She grimaced and took a step back.
“Tommy Richardson,” he shouted. “He is not the boy. His name is Tommy Richardson. And I will save him if it consumes my entire life.”
Michelle folded her arms, tears forming at the edges of her eyes. “It has consumed your life, Leo. Can’t you see that? Can’t you imagine all the things you could have done if you hadn’t embraced this crazy notion that you can change the past?” She pointed at the open door on the far wall. “This ridiculous conviction that you can build a time machine in your closet?”
Leonard looked at his feet. “Leave.”
“Leo, I—”
“Leave,” he said, his voice deep and menacing. When he glanced up, she was gone.
Michelle, Lisa, Brenda, and a series of other women who came and went meant little to Leonard. In fact, they proved to be a distraction. Online dating chat rooms. Late night blind dates in bars. Florence Nightingales hell-bent on delivering him from evil. What did these women want from him, really? He vowed for the sixteenth time since he traded the love of his life for his obsession that he would swear off women.
He returned to his desk and resumed the task at hand.
***
At 2:09 a.m., Leonard awoke from another nightmare. Three to five times a week for over thirty-one years the recurring nightmare taunted Leonard, spurring him on. The images, far more elaborate than they had been in the beginning, etched themselves on Leonard’s brain, details he could not possibly have witnessed at the time — eleven-year-old Tommy Richardson pushing his hands against the back of the passenger seat in an effort to minimize the impact; the horrifying sound of a boy screaming as the car frame buckled and crushed his little body; blood rushing down his face; eyes frozen in terror, devoid of life.
Leonard sat up, rubbing his temples. His tear ducts, long since dried up from overuse, merely twitched in irritation. He sighed, stumbled over to the closet, and examined the useless contraption born out of decades of research and experimentation.
A small chair stood in the middle of the four-by-four space. Hard, plastic gloves, suspended mid-air, gripped a steering wheel which was bolted to the wall. A numeric keypad and a small screen glowed at eye level. Boots attached to pedals on the floor gave the eerie impression of a bodiless driver navigating a ghostly vehicle. Next to the boots a small fire extinguisher lay on its side. Wires and circuit boards clung to the walls and ceiling at what appeared to be random intervals. Several computers, stacked in one corner, languished in a tangle of cables. On the ceiling, a dark visor attached to a helmet hung from a retractable cord. To the left of the chair an enormous circuit breaker, positioned upright, seemed to be waiting for the incorporeal motorist to awaken and flip the switch.
An inoperative virtual reality game, the sum of a man’s life.
Leonard retrieved a circuit board he had finished soldering earlier in the evening before he had fallen into the armchair, exhausted. He stood on the closet chair, unhooked several wires, and proceeded to add the board to a convoluted circuit on the ceiling.
His freshly soldered wire was an inch too short.
“Shit.”
He began to untwist the wires on the left, but he stopped short, gaping at the configuration on the ceiling as if noticing something amiss. He counted the circuit boards and followed the wires with his fingers to see where they led.
Leonard jumped from the chair, ran to his desk, and yanked open a large drawer on the right. Inside were dozens of composition books with notes and diagrams. He fumbled through the books until he found what he
was looking for — book six, which he had completed and tossed aside twenty years ago. He flipped through the book, finally stopping in the middle, and inspected the diagrams sketched on the page. He shook his head and laughed.
You idiot.
Two hours later, after carefully disconnecting and reconnecting the circuit boards, Leonard stood back several feet from the open closet and stared in awe. This isn’t the first time you thought you finally had it, Leonard, he cautioned himself. Still, after years of fruitless endeavors that took him nowhere near the past, it was just one more jump into the sea of possibility. I only need two minutes, three tops. Just enough time to get my bearings, size up the situation, and hit the brakes.
Having attached one boot to the brake and the other to the gas, Leonard had already presumed his reflexes might be compromised. He practiced driving with both feet so many times, he nearly caused another accident in the real world. At some point in the last five years, he stopped driving altogether, ordering take-out food and shopping via the Internet, in addition to using his various girlfriends as chauffeurs. By now well acquainted with the way the time machine’s pedals worked, he was not going to make a mistake. He was ready.
He stepped into the closet, closed the door, and sat down. The small screen glowed with a series of numbers that represented the date, time, location, and duration of the visit. Leonard checked the numbers previously entered. After spending three minutes in the past, rectifying his fatal error and righting the unsettled universe, Leonard Tramer would embrace the present. Once his mission was complete, he planned to lock the closet and return to the real world in search of the life he had put on hold for over thirty-one years.
Leonard’s feet slid automatically into the boots as they had done countless times. He pulled the helmet over his head and flipped the visor down before slipping his hands into the gloves. He stared at the image in the virtual visor — the dusty, smudged dashboard of his red Ford truck, the one he drove years ago when he attended college in Colorado. The vehicle’s window looked out on a wall of gray, as if the car sat facing a cement barricade. If the time machine was properly calibrated, the cement wall should dissolve and Leonard would return to May 9th on that crucial day, heading north on Interstate 225 at 7:46 p.m. — the sun low in the sky, bouncing off the side mirrors. Every other time he attempted to return to the past, the cement wall had refused to vanish. This time he knew it would be different. This time, he prayed he would succeed. He removed his left hand from the glove briefly, flipped the circuit breaker, and held his breath.
The cement wall dissolved.
Leonard felt the steering wheel jolt, and he tightened his grip. Tapping the gas, he accelerated slightly to match the speed of the surrounding vehicles. The sun caught the truck’s left side mirror, and a flash of light nearly blinded Leonard. Shielding the side of his face, he looked in his rearview mirror, searching for the blue sedan, the Richardsons’ Chrysler.
There.
Leonard saw it approaching, passing on the left. In a moment the Chrysler would surpass the Ford, leaving the truck just behind the sedan’s blind spot. Leonard would lean over and attempt to reach a candy bar lying on the floor, nudge his foot against the gas pedal, and look up just in time to see Mrs. Richardson merging. The sedan would clip the front of Leonard’s car, do a three-hundred-and-sixty-degree turn and careen over a damaged guardrail, landing upside down in a small greenway, taking one of its occupants to his death. Leonard would brake hard and come to a rest on the shoulder.
He glanced in the virtual rearview mirror. Mrs. Richardson was peeking over her shoulder, talking to her son. She wasn’t paying attention. The shame of three decades diminished just a hair. All you have to do now is brake.
Leonard braked slowly, mildly annoying the driver behind him, but creating distance between the Ford and the blue sedan on his left. A beautiful, spacious distance, enough room for two Chryslers to merge with no collision.
Unfortunately, at the precise moment Mrs. Richardson’s tire touched the white line, the driver of a yellow sports car in the far left lane noticed the spacious gap created by Leonard’s skillful braking maneuver, and the sports car driver changed two lanes at once. The yellow car clipped the rear of the blue sedan and — as the Richardsons’ vehicle had done thirty-one years, four months, and three days ago — it began to spin.
Leonard gasped as the images faded and the cement wall re-formed before his eyes.
“No,” he screamed, unable to believe what he had witnessed. “No!”
He turned the steering wheel back in forth in vain, willing the traffic to reappear. A circuit board on the ceiling caught fire and a tendril of smoke slithered into the small room. Leonard yanked off the helmet, pulled his hands from the gloves and pounded the steering wheel.
“No, no, no.”
A cinder dropped from the burning circuit board and fell on his hand. It sizzled, and the aroma of burnt flesh and hair mingled with the smell of smoldering electronics. Leonard did not move. His eyes fixated on something far beyond the little room, he gazed listlessly. For the first time in a decade, tears streamed down his face.
Nine-tenths of a second changed nothing. Nine-tenths of a second were pawns in a cosmic twist of fate. Leonard Tramer had sacrificed his life in pursuit of nine-tenths of a second that made no difference at all.
Chapter Two
Eventually, the toxic air drove Leonard from his prison. He grabbed the fire extinguisher and discharged it into the closet as if unloading a machine gun into a loathsome predator. Leonard slammed the door shut and gave it a good kick. Unfortunately, the solid door did not yield and he yelped in pain. A sturdy home, constructed out of wood and bricks, it had served the Tramer family throughout Leonard’s childhood and young adult life. When his parents moved to a retirement home in Florida, he inherited the house. Nothing could have satisfied him more. Staying put allowed him to build and rebuild the time machine in his bedroom closet. He could never move, at least not before his devastatingly disappointing visit to the past. What will I do now? In a moment of overwhelming grief, Leonard realized that he had no dreams outside the time machine. As his pointless obsession slipped into irrelevance, the void left in its wake suffocated him.
He glanced up and stepped back in shock. His office looked nothing like it had when he entered the closet. Tidy and charming, it appeared to be someone else’s home. No solder-covered desk sat in the corner. A neatly made queen-sized bed adorned with a floral bedspread stood in the center of one wall, flanked by two oak bedside tables. Leonard laid the fire extinguisher against the wall and cautiously opened the closet door. No longer smoking, it now contained dozens of shirts, pressed pants, and dresses. Dresses? He slammed the door and retreated several steps. Then he tentatively surveyed the walls. A Renoir print claimed the space that previously held a pair of Avalanche hockey sticks. Oddly, the impressionist painting hung above Leonard’s childhood dresser. It didn’t make sense. The nightstand clock read 5:13 p.m. Impossible. This must be a dream.
A dream. Leonard so deserved a peaceful dream after years of unforgiving nightmares. He opened the door and stepped into the hallway. Similar unfamiliar decorations greeted him. He headed for the stairs, nearly slipping on the polished wooden floor. He heard voices coming from the dining room. Pleasant voices. Tears formed in the corners of Leonard’s eyes. A happy dream.
“There you are,” a kind, female voice called. “Come. Before the food gets cold.”
Leonard’s heart leapt as he approached the table and the woman’s features came into focus. Her deep brown eyes stared into his astonished face.
“Alina?” he whispered.
The lovely woman cocked her head. “Don’t you look rugged tonight?”
Leonard glanced down at his disheveled clothing. He felt the stubble on his chin. Why, at this moment, did he have to look so unkempt?
The only woman he ever truly loved, Alina Marsh, sat at his dinning room table. Her long, dark hair as lustrous as he remembered an
d her smile as radiant. Soft crinkles around her eyes and a few creases here and there betrayed the passage of time, but she appeared not nearly as worn or broken as Leonard himself. He reached the table, gripped the back of the chair at the far end, and stared at his long-lost lover.
“Are you okay, Dad?” a young voice on Leonard’s left piped up.
He jolted and turned toward the voice. A girl, modestly touched by the signs of puberty, stared at him. She sat upright with a fork in one hand. Leonard smiled at the pretty young girl who looked so much like Alina — dark hair, caramel skin, and a delicate nose. Did she say Dad? Leonard choked back the tears. It was such a beautiful dream. The imaginary daughter had Leonard’s gray-blue eyes, eyes designed to guard secrets. She appeared to be eleven or twelve, and she wore a navy-blue hoodie with “DEPS 007934” written in bright white letters across the chest.
“I am absolutely wonderful…uh…” He did not know her name. “…darling.”
“Darling? Sit down and eat, Dad. You’re gaga.”
He took his seat and fumbled with his napkin. The meal consisted of a small meatloaf, canned peas, a weak broth that served as gravy, and a huge bowl of mashed potatoes. Nevertheless, it was a feast in Leonard’s eyes, for he rarely ate anything that did not emerge from a box and pass briefly through the microwave.
“Natalia, would you please pass the potatoes to your father?”
“Natalia. What a beautiful name,” Leonard said merrily.
Natalia froze, holding the bowl of potatoes mid-air. Two pairs of eyes gazed at Leonard, mildly concerned, shaking him from his musings and drawing his attention to how stupid he must sound. He wanted to enjoy the dream, relish the alternate reality it presented, so he needed to suspend logic and act like a credible father.
He cleared his throat. “Why don’t you tell me about your day, Nuh, Natalia. What were the highlights?” Leonard felt content, gazing at his daughter while sitting across from his only true love. This is the life I could have had. Suddenly, a wistful regret swept away his contentment.
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