A Pair of Docks

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A Pair of Docks Page 25

by Jennifer Ellis


  Tears came unbidden to Abbey’s eyes. “But Mom, are you really a camel, and what does that mean?” She couldn’t believe her beautiful mother was dying.

  Her mother rose and placed her lips against Abbey’s forehead. “Shush, my child. It’s time for bed. We’ll talk in the morning. Like I said, nothing is set in stone. There are ways of overcoming this, and your father and I will find them. But I need to you to promise me, please, that you’ll never use the stones again. They’re dangerous. There are the obvious risks of being killed or ending up in Nowhere, of course. But they’re also addictive. Every time you use them, their hold on you gets stronger. I’ve seen witches become obsessed with the future and never live in the present. You don’t want to experience that.”

  “Like Mantis, you mean.”

  “Like Mantis. Please, promise me. Let your father and I deal with the stones.” Her mother grasped Abbey’s hands urgently, bringing their faces centimeters from one another.

  “I promise,” Abbey whispered. She allowed her mother to tuck her into bed like a young child. When Abbey was under the covers, her mother bent to turn out the lamp on the bedside table.

  “Mom, if Dr. Ford isn’t the Guardian, who is?”

  Her mother paused in the doorway. “I am, of course. I love you, Abs.”

  “Love you too, Mom,” Abbey whispered.

  And then her mother vanished down the hallway, closing the door gently behind her, and Abbey tried to close her eyes and sleep.

  Abbey tossed and turned until the clock read three o’clock. She couldn’t fit any of the night’s events into a clean line. Had they gone to the real future, or a vision of it? Were there millions of parallel universes, or just one universe? Or just three universes? And what could possibly split the world?

  At a quarter after three, she rolled over and extracted her iPhone from her jeans pocket. She should plug it in. The screen illuminated at her touch. It was charged. How could that be? She flicked the bar to unlock it and saw she had a text message. From whom? She tapped the screen to open the message app. A list filled the text bubble on the screen. It read:

  < Russell Andrews/ALICE

  Save Jake – March 9, 2013

  Beware false prophets/Find an ancient you can trust

  Catalysts may not create paradox

  Mark and Sam may be able to help

  Find Mom’s files

  Quentin Steinam investments

  Lex Parsimoniae

  Nothing is set in stone – But please, do not change too much – Sam is the right choice

  Do NOT listen to Mom

  Do NOT let Mom use the stones on May 6, 2013

  July 12, 2013 – Date of the bomb that was not a bomb? >

  Abbey’s iPhone trembled in her hand. The message was sent from…her own phone. Her future self? Or someone else who had accessed her phone?

  Sam is the right choice? The bomb that was not a bomb, in less than a year? On July twelfth? That was the week of Science Camp. And what on earth did Russell Andrews have to do with anything? She’d forgotten that Dr. Ford had mentioned Russell. Mentioned Russell, as if he knew about the stones, too.

  Her fingers shook as she typed ‘Russell Andrews Coventry City’ into Google. The circle icon at the top of her iPhone whirled, and then text started to fill the screen.

  Andrews Mining Company, read the entry at the top of the list.

  Andrews Mining Company. Could it be Russell’s dad’s company? Russell Andrews/ALICE, the text message read. What did Russell Andrews have to do with Aluminum Ice?

  So many questions, and she was too exhausted to make sense of any of them. She needed rest, but her mind kept playing back the items on the list in a recursive loop.

  Save Jake.

  Don’t listen to Mom.

  July 13, 2013.

  Do not change too much.

  Abbey lay back down and tried to silence her racing thoughts by reciting the derivatives of displacement.

  The 0th derivative of displacement is position…

  The 1st is velocity…

  The 2nd is acceleration…

  The 3rd is jerk…

  Gradually her thoughts began to stray, her mental litany blurring, framing the events of the past few days. The ongoing displacement in her position four days ago had seemed safe, with slow, predictable rates of change in velocity and limited jerk. How much had her position changed in the past four days? What was her velocity now? Her acceleration? The rate of change in her acceleration?

  At last, sleep came, but not before two last thoughts echoed through her brain…

  What is my fate?

  Nothing is set in stone.

  Book Two of The Derivatives of Displacement coming soon

  Banned from using the stones, Abbey Sinclair can only watch as her mother becomes increasingly obsessed with going to the future to try to save her own life. Abbey’s brother, Simon, is sent to juvenile detention for his role in hacking into the City Hall computer system, and Coventry Hill is sold to an unknown investor for redevelopment. Meanwhile, Russell Andrews’s actions become even more mysterious, the ancients roam Coventry causing havoc, Dr. Ford tries to establish himself as the new doyen of the stones, and Mantis continues to meddle with the timeline.

  It’s up to Abbey to figure out whom she can trust, what she needs to know, and how much she can tell Caleb. Because only Abbey can save her mother, stop Russell and Mantis, and prevent the bomb that isn’t a bomb…without changing too much.

  Acknowledgements

  I started this novel eleven years ago when my oldest son was a newborn because I thought having a baby would be similar to having a housecat and I planned to use my time ‘off’ work productively, because really, what else would I be doing? I imagined myself writing all day with my baby contentedly beside me in a car seat. My son’s days as a housecat were short-lived. Within three weeks of birth, he became rather more like a sometimes cuddly and very demanding Tyrannosaurus Rex crossed with a border collie. However, three weeks was long enough for me to imagine the characters, sketch out the plot and draft the first chapter. It then sat for seven years while I wrangled toddlers until Angie Abdou taught a manuscript course, which gave me the impetus and opportunity to turn this novel into a living, breathing thing. Angie’s initial comments, edits and encouragement were essential to getting this off the ground.

  From there, it went to early readers, Brad, Dave and Michelle and my own children, for feedback and ideas, and then to a professional editor, David Gatewood, who made me laugh at my Canadianisms and occasional late night lapses into dessert (when I meant desert). Then it went back to more readers and reviewers. Then an amazingly thorough and uncalled for review by proofreader Jo Michaels of Indie Books Gone Wild, and a second proof by Roz Nay of FreshEdit. With all of their input, I spent many hours wrestling with commas, semi-colons, ellipses and what punctuation one should use when something is Googled. Sometimes there are no easy answers. In the end I must give them all credit and thanks for their fantastic advice, and yet take responsibility for the final decisions. I have Andrew Brown of Design for Writers to thank for the wonderful cover design and Jo Michaels to thank for the beautiful formatting of the print edition.

  Along the way, my writing friends and acquaintances were an ongoing (or occasional but much needed) source of encouragement—Deryn Collier, Kristene Perron, Mark Kusnir, Elena Aitken, Susan Toy, Yolanda Ridge, Rosa Jordan, Kim McCullough, Maureen Brownlee, Martin Crosbie and Angie Abdou. Kim and Angie, in particular, went above and beyond with their encouragement and advice. My non-writing friends are no slouches either—you know who you are. I owe all of you my thanks. And, of course, thanks most of all to my ever-supportive family, who did not see any reason at all for this book to not be a reality.

  About the Author

  Jennifer Ellis lives in Rossland, BC with her husband, cat and two boys. She skis, does ballet, cooks, joins book clubs and tries to avoid her real job as an environmental researcher by writing. You can vi
sit her website at www.jenniferellis.ca for random blogs and updates on her next book or find her on Twitter (@jenniferlellis).

  Table of Contents

  Chapter 1 Coventry Hill

  Chapter 2 Newellay

  Chapter 3 Operating Systems

  Chapter 4 Mantis and Asparagus

  Chapter 5 Proteins and Periodicity

  Chapter 6 To Be an Elephant

  Chapter 7 A Light in the Dark

  Chapter 8 A Story with No Words

  Chapter 9 Profits and Pairs of Docks

  Chapter 10 Finding Dr. Bed Truck

  Chapter 11 Operating Systems…Again

  Chapter 12 A Shadow in the Future

  Chapter 13 A Camel for Nowhere

  Chapter 14 Dark Matters and False Prophets

  Chapter 15 The Long Way Around

  Acknowledgements

  About the Author

 

 

 


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