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A Pair of Docks

Page 5

by Jennifer Ellis


  He’d tried to distract her earlier by tossing his cup on the floor and throwing his potatoes at the wall. But still, she’d looked up from her mopping of the milk-soaked potatoes—as if she had a sixth sense—just when the kids came down the hill. He’d screamed then, his high-pitched scream, and banged his head against the table. She’d taken this to be normal behavior, just part of an already bad day for him, and now he lay in bed and she sat out on the porch, smoking.

  Mark could understand emotions in theory. Sad was when something you didn’t want to have happen, happened. He could also understand mad and happy (theoretically). They’d given him little laminated yellow cards on a key chain when he was younger. There was a happy face, a sad face, and a mad face. He was supposed to hold one of them up to show what he was feeling, or if he understood what someone else was feeling. But he couldn’t do it, and in the end his mother had taken to using the cards herself to try to make him understand what she was feeling. He needed her to be holding up a card now.

  He ran through the list again: Greenland, Mozambique, Italy, Lake Superior, Amazon River, Indian chief. He had to stay awake until she came in.

  She checked on him when she did, peeking her head in his door.

  He feigned sleep.

  His mother returned to the kitchen and dialed the phone, the rotary dial ambling back around to its origin with each number.

  Mark strained to hear the words.

  “It’s Betty. We have some new ones. Three neighborhood kids. … Pretty sure. … I’ll watch over the next couple of days. They’ll go back. They always do.”

  There was a long silence then. Mark wondered why, what the person on the other end of the phone line could be saying.

  His mother resumed speaking. “Do you want to deal with it or should I? … Okay, I’ll call you in a couple of days.”

  She hung up the phone, and he heard her getting ready for bed.

  It had started then. He’d waited for so long. His mother had called herself Betty, not Francis, her real name, which meant she was talking to one of them.

  He wondered which one.

  He had to do it differently this time. So he could pick a different little laminated yellow card for himself.

  Chapter 4

  Mantis and Asparagus

  Abbey savored the feel of her velvet flannel pillowcase against her face as the house came to life around her—the furnace kicked in, the shower ran as her mother prepared for work, the spoon clanked against the pot as her dad made oatmeal. Wallace hopped around in his cage energetically, making soft peeps as he tossed cedar chips into the air with his hind legs. Her Essential Elements periodic table, with extra details about the periodicity of each element, including its cubic radius, melting and boiling points, uses, and a drawing of the atomic structure, covered the wall behind his cage. Physics and chemistry textbooks formed a tidy row of blues, greens, and yellows on her desk. Farley had already been through to thump his tail against her bed and press his head into her pillow with his vile dog breath. Soon her dad would knock on her door to tell her it was time to get up and prepare for school.

  If she tried, Abbey could almost pretend yesterday’s events hadn’t occurred—that it had been just a dream she’d woken from, nestled in her warm, safe bed. But dream physics tended to match normal physics. Light travels in straight lines, objects are undistorted, and time travel isn’t possible. Unless you got into the world of quantum physics, where events seem to occur in a chaotic and random manner, slipping in and out of time, and maybe universes. Or the world of lucid dreams, where some people apparently could slow their own acceleration as they plummeted to the ground. Abbey shivered. Either way, she wasn’t sure if she liked it.

  She wished she could just stay in her pink and orange room reading all day, instead of trudging down the hill to the aromatic stew of teenage sweat glands, chicken noodle soup, and pencil shavings. Today she’d have to sit through Chem and Physics 12 with kids three years older than her. A body at rest tends to stay at rest. A body in motion tends to stay in motion. The knock on her door came. Abbey got up, fed Wallace, and dressed.

  When they had reached the bottom of the hill the night before, Simon and Caleb had made her swear not to tell their parents anything. “At least until we figure things out,” her brothers had both said. “We can’t stress Mom out now.” They’d seemed giddy with the thrill of it all, and not really their normal selves. Still, she had sworn to hold off saying anything until at least the next day. Perhaps she’d been giddy herself, or just relieved to be once more sharing secrets with her brothers.

  She, Caleb, and Simon sat wordlessly at the kitchen table, spooning porridge with brown sugar into their mouths. Fog shrouded the wood on Coventry Hill as droplets of rain tumbled past the window. Their father, Peter, drove them to school when it rained. Their mother had already departed with a press of lipsticked lips, her dark hair a cloud around her.

  The election was in November, and for the first time it looked like the Environmental Coalition might win. “Just a few weeks longer,” their mother kept saying about her long days at work as the Environmental Manager at the Granton Dam—even longer now that the Dam was undergoing expansion—and her late evenings of campaigning and strategy meetings. “Then we’ll return to normal life again, I promise.” Abbey had her doubts. She expected that being mayor would prove to be as all-encompassing as trying to become mayor. Her mother fought for important issues—the environment, the eradication of poverty, and a sustainable local economy. The balance of doing societal good and caring for her family always weighed on her. Which was more important? Who needed her most?

  Abbey’s parents would often discuss this late at night. Abbey’s mother would fret about her choices. “The kids are fine. They’re teenagers now. They need their freedom and responsibility,” Peter Sinclair would say over and over. “You’re doing critical work, Marian.” Then they’d talk about the importance of setting an example for Abbey that women could do anything they wanted. After all, Marian Beckham had given up ten years of her career to stay home with Abbey, Caleb, and Simon when they were young, and now she had to make up for lost time.

  Abbey knew her mother’s work was important, but she just seemed so distracted and distant all the time now. And when she wasn’t, she would look like she wanted to say something, but instead would reach out and hug Abbey with a fierceness that Abbey found a trifle disconcerting.

  “I don’t know what you’re worried about,” her friends Kimmie and Becca would say when Abbey mentioned the problem. “We don’t tell our mothers anything. They’re crazy.” And then they’d whisper and giggle about their latest crushes, Kimmie’s sleek brown hair pressed against Becca’s blond curls. Abbey knew she was supposed to be more like Kimmie and Becca, disdainful and embarrassed of her mother. It was part of an evolutionarily driven rewiring of the teenage brain that was supposedly already underway, a rewiring that would render Abbey more independent and her parents more inclined to let her go into the world alone. She knew it was happening. She knew it had to happen. She just hadn’t expected it to feel so lonely.

  “Meet under the bleachers at ten-minute break,” Caleb murmured as they exited the van and went their separate ways. “I have a plan.”

  Abbey doodled noble gas valence shells through first-period English 9—helium, neon, argon, krypton, xenon, radon. At ten-minute break, she pulled the hood of her purple sweatshirt over her head and went to meet Simon and Caleb in the rain.

  Simon scowled from beneath his black skull toque as he approached the bleachers. He stopped a few meters away from her and thrust his hands into his pockets, his face an etch of wary indifference. His school expression. Coventry High wasn’t generally kind to quiet computer geeks who disdained sports. Abbey tried not to be hurt. He’d started to seem like her brother again for a little bit yesterday.

  Caleb arrived with a book under his arm and his usual quiver of excitement. “I had computer class this morning.”

  “So?”
said Abbey.

  “So,” said Caleb, “ever heard of Google?”

  Abbey squinted at him. “What did you Google? 2036? Nostradamus?”

  “Very funny, Ab. You’re not the only one with a scientific mind in the family. I made a list.” Caleb pulled a sheet of paper out of his pocket and unfolded it.

  “Of?” asked Simon, coming a bit closer.

  “Of what we know.”

  Abbey leaned over Caleb’s shoulder. In her twin’s tight careful script, it read:

  Newellay

  2036

  Greenhill kid = Fly kid

  SS = S Systems = Sinclair Systems or Salvador Systems

  Twinkle Free Air

  Crazy hailstorm

  Alice

  Shoreline

  Abbey wrinkled her nose. “What are the last two?”

  Caleb smiled. “Alice is what we picked up in Newellay. I asked when I was up front.”

  “Alice?” asked Abbey. “Was she in pieces and suspended in saline?”

  “Dunno, but it’s a clue.” Caleb paused. “On the ‘SS’ or ‘S Systems,’ I was thinking that Max kept thinking we were with ‘Sinclair.’ What if ‘S Systems’ is ‘Sinclair Systems’? Possible, yes?” Caleb did a little almost-tap-dance routine and spread his arms wide in a gesture of ‘ta-dah’.

  Abbey reluctantly nodded that, yes, it was possible.

  “But get this,” Caleb continued, “I Googled ‘SS’—you know, the initials—on the computer. And once I got past the records about Hitler’s police and boats, I found a computer company called Salvador Systems run by a guy named Sylvain Salvador in Granton. And Max said Salvador. Remember? When he was talking about that new OS, whatever that means. Maybe it’s the same guy.”

  “That’s quite the leap, Caleb. We don’t even know if we were on Earth, never mind if it was real. It could have all been a dream,” Abbey said.

  “A collective one?” asked Simon.

  “Yes, maybe,” said Abbey. “Some sort of hallucination.”

  “Seemed pretty real to me,” Simon put in. “And an OS is an Operating System.”

  Caleb started flipping through the book he carried, comparing a crumpled piece of paper to each page.

  “What’s that?” Abbey asked.

  “It’s a map of the shoreline of Newellay. I sketched it while we were landing. I figured if I got an atlas, I could figure out where we went based on the shoreline.”

  “Really?” Abbey peered over Caleb’s shoulder. Simon joined them.

  “I can’t match it to anything though. I’ve looked all through the book.”

  “Maybe we could ask Mark. Isn’t he a map guy?” Simon asked.

  “Mark? He’s crazy.”

  Abbey rolled her eyes. “Caleb, he isn’t. He just has Asperger syndrome. He’s very high functioning.”

  Caleb waved his hand. “Asparagus, asperama, whatever it is…he tried to throw himself out of a picture window at us.”

  “He might’ve just been having a bad day,” Abbey said. “He has maps all over his bedroom. I’ve seen them from his window. Maybe he just needs someone to be nice to him.”

  Caleb frowned. “I don’t know, Ab. He looks dangerous. Anyway, I figure we split these up and do some research. I’ll take the Shoreline and Newellay. Ab, you take Twinkle-Free Air, the storm, and Alice. Simon, you use your hacking skills to find out more about the Greenhill kid and S Systems. And then we’ll meet back at the stones after school.”

  “And what?” Abbey asked.

  “Take the left door, of course.”

  “What?”

  Caleb smiled. “We take the left door of the mirrored building and go into the town and figure out where we were.”

  “No.” Abbey felt her stomach sink.

  Caleb looked quizzical. “What? You don’t want to go back?”

  “No. I don’t know,” she answered. It was possible for some risk-averse individuals to overcome their risk aversion if they knew the probabilities associated with their actions. Abbey had already conducted statistical analyses of the risks associated with roller coasters, entering dark basements where black widow spiders live, and downhill mountain biking. How could one run a statistical analysis on going to some strange land, or the future? There were no probability tables available for that. Abbey dug her toe into the dirt, creating furrows in the wet soil.

  Caleb cocked his head. “If you don’t want to go, Simon and I can go do recon today by ourselves. Let’s meet at four at the stones. Mom and Dad have that dinner tonight so they won’t be home.”

  The warning bell rang. Abbey turned to head back into the building.

  “I found another email,” Simon said, withdrawing a piece of paper from his pocket.

  Caleb threw his hands in the air. “When were you planning to share that vital piece of information with us? Next year?”

  Simon scowled and passed the paper to Caleb.

  Abbey leaned over Caleb’s shoulder again.

  Envelope-to: mantis55@western.com

  Date: Mon, 19 October 2012 07:15:34 -0700

  From: flykid

  Subject: Re: agreement

  To: mantis55@western.com

  The deal has been struck. He’s not too happy about hurting Sinclair, but he says he’ll do it.

  Hurting Sinclair? Abbey’s stomach fizzed with nerves. There was no denying someone had ill intent this time. The second bell rang.

  “Four o’clock at the stones,” Caleb said, hurrying off, “and do your homework. We have to figure this out.”

  Simon turned and slunk off into the rain.

  Abbey flattened the rows of mud with her sneaker. The probability of her brothers making bad decisions hovered at around ninety-eight percent. “If you’re going to insist on being lunatics, I’m coming too,” she said, more to herself than anyone.

  Chem 12 dragged by. The windows had misted over from the rain, and the room had the murky odor of mold and boy sweat. The topic was periodicity, and the class had been instructed to write out the atomic number and corresponding energy levels of the first twenty elements of the periodic table. On a separate piece of paper, Abbey had written ‘Alice’ and then ‘ALICE’ and then ‘A.L.I.C.E’. She’d Googled ‘Alice’ quickly before the teacher had come in, but after sorting through the collection of hits associated with Alice in Wonderland, she’d found nothing of any promise. She left it at the top of her desk and returned to her assignment. Caleb was right; they had to figure this out.

  Abbey had reached Aluminum in the periodic table. Aluminum, Al, atomic number thirteen, three energy levels, thirteen electrons. She was drawing the atomic structure when she glanced back up at the page on the top of her desk. Alice. ALICE. AL. Aluminum. She shifted the letters around slightly to form Al-Ice. Aluminum Ice. She remembered reading something about it in one of her science journals last month. When the teacher left the room for a few minutes, Abbey slipped back up to the computer. With shaking fingers, she Googled ‘Aluminum Ice’ and waited impatiently. The list flashed up on the screen. Aluminum Ice Could Power Future Space Travel was at the top. Maybe it hadn’t been a dream. She wasn’t sure if that was good or bad.

  Abbey felt a sudden brush of air against her shoulder and looked up to see the freckled face of Russell Andrews. She clicked the close button as quickly as she could. Russell was a redhead too, and would’ve been the smartest student in the class if not for her. She’d noticed him watching her lately. She knew on a theoretical level that boys stared at girls they were interested in, but Russell was three years older and popular. He couldn’t possibly be interested in the brainiac geek-loser genius, as she called herself, a compilation of some of the names she’d been branded with over the years. Or her favorite: Inquisitive Abbey. Her fourth-grade teacher had bestowed that one upon her with a smirk and a hint of sarcasm because, Abbey suspected, the teacher disliked the fact that a student was better at math than she was. Inquisitive Abbey—as if she were nosy, as if that were the only thing t
hat mattered about her. Guys weren’t interested in inquisitive girls, especially not senior guys. Besides, Russell definitely had some conflict going on with Simon. But this was her first year with the seniors, so she hadn’t yet quite figured out what Russell was all about. She just knew his pale-blue eyes made her jittery.

  “Doing a special project?” he asked.

  “Nope. Just a mistake. I was looking for something else.” She swivelled around on the chair so her body blocked the screen.

  “I hear your mom is running for mayor,” he added, leaning closer to her and resting one hand on the computer desk. Abbey could smell his deodorant mixed with a faint whiff of sweat. His full lips twitched into the self-satisfied smile that made all the sophomore girls swoon.

  She was definitely not swooning, but she had to admit the smile wasn’t completely ineffective. “Yup.”

  “Are you interested in politics too?”

  “I’m not sure.”

  “If you were, I wanted to let you know a space just opened up on student council. I thought you might like to join.” He smiled, but the intensity of his gaze made her squirm.

  She could feel the heat emanating from his arm, which was so close to hers. “I thought you had to be a senior for that.”

  Russell looked around the room at the other Chem 12 students and raised his eyebrows. “You’re taking senior chemistry. I think that’s good enough. The meeting is Wednesday at four. Be there if you’re interested.”

  He returned to his desk and Abbey bolted back to hers, her heart throbbing in her chest. What could Russell Andrews possibly want with her? She seriously hoped it wasn’t a date. She hadn’t scheduled dating into her mental life plan for at least two years—and then definitely not a senior, and definitely not Russell. She glanced up from her books at the same time he darted a look over his shoulder. His eyes were cool, but frankly appraising, and she whipped her head around to stare at the periodic table on the wall. Aluminum: a poor metal with high electrical conductivity and a low melting and boiling point. She was a geek, a science geek. Guys occasionally paid attention to her because they thought she could help them with their homework. But that was it.

 

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